tv Breakfast BBC News June 14, 2020 6:00am-9:01am BST
6:00 am
sharing the hello, this is breakfast with chris mason and sally nugent. good morning, here's a summary of today's main stories from bbc news. more than one hundred people have been arrested after a number of protests turned violent in central london yesterday. groups including some far—right activists had gathered in the capital, saying they were protecting statues from anti—racism protestors. police were attacked with bottles, smoke grenades and flares. six officers received good morning — minor injuries. welcome to breakfast with chris mason and sally nugent. our headlines today: disturbances break out overnight in the us city of atlanta, protesters have ta ken where a black man has been to the streets of the us city of atlanta in response to the fatal shooting by police of a black shot dead by police. man on friday. the restaurant where the fast—food restaurant the incident happened has been where the shooting took set on fire by crowds overnight. place is ablaze. officers have used tear gas rayshard brooks, who was 27 years to disperse protestors. old, was fatally wounded more than 100 people are arrested during a struggle with police after a day of violent clashes in central london, after he fell asleep in his car. atlanta's police chief has involving some far—right activists. the individuals who are basically put in the safety of our police resigned over the matter. officers and the public will expect to face the full force of the law.
6:01 am
borisjohnson commissions a review french police have clashed into the two metre social with activists in several cities across the country, protesting distancing rule, as non—essential against racism and alleged police shops across england prepare brutality.around 15, 000 people to reopen tomorrow matt lucas and david gathered in central paris walliams apologise but clashes erupted, for the use of blackface make—up and police fired tear gas at protesters who threw fireworks and bottles. demonstrators demanded an end to racism as part of the worldwide in the comedy series little britain. black lives matter movement. boris johnson has ordered a review of the two—metre social—distancing rule. rory mcilroy and justin rose are three shots off the lead many businesses — and some of mrjohnson's own mps — in texas as the pga tour returns. have warned that large parts it could have been very of the hospitality industry will not different, though. two bogeys and a double bogey survive if the rules aren't changed. the review will aim to be for rose in his third round. the good morning. lengthy sunny completed by the ath ofjuly, when pubs and restaurants spells and slow—moving downpours with low cloud persisting on the in england could open. east coast. more detailed view in about 15 minutes. shops in england can re—open from tomorrow for the first time since lockdown began at the end of march. it's sunday 14th june. northern ireland saw our top story. stores open on friday, disturbances have broken out but scotland and wales are yet to announce dates for re—opening. in the us city of atlanta 25 retailers have today backed a call from the british retail after the fatal shooting consortium for people to shop by police of a black man. responsibly and follow instructions protestors have set fire when they return to stores. secondary school head teachers say to the drive—thru restaurant they're having to overcome
6:02 am
an array of challenges, as some pupils in england prepare to go back to classes tomorrow. more than 300 schools where the incident took place, and colleges have told police have responded by firing the bbc they will be offering between five tear gas. 27—year—old rayshard brooks was shot and 30 hours of face—to—face and killed on friday. teaching each week, but only the city's police chief a quarter of eligible pupils will be has now resigned. the incident follows weeks allowed in school at any one of protests across the us and around time, and there will be the world, after the police killing of george floyd in minneapolis. added safety measures. here's our north america correspondent peter bowes. the police said rayshard brooks, who was 27, had fallen church bells across london will ring asleep in his car while waiting 72 times, in remembrance in a queue at a drive—through of those who died in the grenfell tower fire — restau ra nt. he was shot during a as today marks three confrontation with two white years since the disaster. officers after the police survivors and bereaved say he resisted arrest, having failed a sobriety test. families are urging people to illuminate their homes tonight with green lights as he's fleeing, he turns to remember the dead. back over his shoulder the grenfell united campaign group with what appears to the naked says the fight for safe homes eye to be this taser that and justice continues. it's holding a series eyewitnesses told us they saw the individual have that of memorial events which will be broadcast online. belongs to one of the officers, and as he turned it over — you'll be able to see on the video — the atlanta the stars of little britain, officer literally reach down matt lucas and david walliams, to get his service weapon have apologised for their portrayal of other races in their tv series.
6:03 am
and as he gets his weapon, the shows have been pulled from several streaming mr brooks begins turning his services because some sketches used blackface make—up. body away from him, i presume, both comedians have tweeted to flee, and it looks to say it was wrong — like that's when the discharge and say they're "very sorry." goes off — the weapon goes off then. it's just like that, literally. announcing the resignation of the police chief, the mayor, keisha lance bottoms, said the police needed to rebuild trust with the communities they were intended to protect. while there may be debate as to it's exactly 7:33am. whether this was an appropriate time now for our daily appointment with the gp. use of deadly force, today, dr nighat arif i firmly believe that there is a clear distinction between what you can do joins us from chesham. and what you should do. i do not believe that this hello, good morning. nice to talk to was a justified use of deadly force and have called for the immediate termination of the officer. you. where should we start? we should start with shops reopening in england tomorrow. lots of shops that have been closed being back open. in your assessment, how safe is is it for us to be venturing out?|j your assessment, how safe is is it for us to be venturing out? i think it's ok at the moment because people are going to be taking precautions. protesters gathered at the scene of the shooting, and elsewhere in atlanta, to express their anger at the way mr brooks died. the going to make sure there is hand they shot him! cold blood! the officers need to be arrested, period! gel, make sure there is no the officers need to be arrested!
6:04 am
and it's not ok! person—to—person contact and people it's not ok that every single are ready to go out, they going to day, i have to wake up and learn a new name. the park, going out in groups of it follows almost three weeks six, they got the support of all the of demonstrations over the death in police custody of george floyd in minneapolis. people are forming so they have more peter bowes, bbc news. contact than is ok to do. that's lets show you some pictures live in lovely. we need to slowly start getting back to normality because atla nta rig ht lets show you some pictures live in atlanta right now, it'sjust lets show you some pictures live in atlanta right now, it's just gone one o'clock in the morning. you get there is loneliness and mental a sense they are of the ongoing health conditions. mental health is demonstrations and protests and as you can see in peter's report, the just off the charts. let's talk fire still blazing pretty about race coverings. as part of significantly at the restaurant venturing out in trying to do so where the shooting took base. these safely, based coverings are a big protesters we believe a part of the pa rt safely, based coverings are a big part of it, particularly on public group who had been calling the transport but what about four people action of course after the death of heading into shops for instance. mr brooks and as we heard in that report, it is believed that rayshard would you advise it? with had lots of contradictory suggestions from the scientists about the extent to which they are useful. personally i brooks had fallen asleep in his car would advise it because you are going to be in a confined space, a in the drive—through lane of the small amount of space and
6:05 am
wendy's restaurant, very close to the petrol station, just after one u nfortu nately you small amount of space and unfortunately you will get people who won't be at abiding by the rules o'clock in the morning there. still and might come to close and pick up significant crowds on the street. we will keep an eye on those pictures what they need. there are studies to and developments in atlanta throughout the programme this morning. here, more than 100 people have been arrested after a number suggest it's between a0 and 60%. i of protests turned violent in central london think it's a good idea because the yesterday. groups including some far—right activists had mask protect me and you. surely gathered in the capital, saying they were protecting statues from anti—racism protestors. that's a good idea. we've got to police officers were attacked with bottles, smoke grenades and flares. sean dilley has this report. drive the economy but let's look at other countries and they are endorsing mask so let's do that. it's very short period of time. it thousands of people join protests until we can get through this despite calls from police to stay at pandemic, hopefully next year and home. many were peaceful but violent just keep the public safe so that we clashes soon broke out. police officers were attacked throughout the day as they attempted to keep can drive down the virus. and also distance between antiracism and far right groups. a barrage of missiles keep pressure the nhs down. we re right groups. a barrage of missiles can drive down the virus. and also were launched at them. in whitehall, keep pressure the nhs downlj can drive down the virus. and also keep pressure the nhs down. i was interested in what you said a couple of moments ago about the number of
6:06 am
the crowd pushed their way through people coming to you and talking about anxiety and those associated and tried to attack photographers. concerns as a result of us being the prime minister, borisjohnson, locked down for so long. you think condemned the minority of protesters the sort of speed of things on twitter. he said: reopening is about right because this has always been a tricky trade—off hasn't it between protecting ourselves from the virus the individuals that are basically but also not causing lots of other put in the safety of our police officers and the safety of the public at risk will expect to face problems which are associated with not leaving the house. it's such a the full force of the law. people tricky question to answer because is from a variety of backgrounds turned out as self acclaimed protectors of it about right? 0nly tricky question to answer because is it about right? only time will tell. statues after winston churchill's monument was damaged last week. this the government, they say they are protester told us he felt dish being advised by science and as gps, history under attack. come on. i we are trying to endorse that because i see loneliness and not mean, he had some racist views but stop not just because i see loneliness and not stop notjust in the elderly at the end of the day, he led us population, it's the younger groups through our darkest hour. i mean, that are finding it challenging. they are getting really anxious and i'm from south london, i've grown up symptoms of depression, not seeing with black people. we are all the trends, some not even going back working class, live side—by—side. to school and putting more pressure
6:07 am
on families and women in particular, nobody here is an issue with blm. because what they do, they go after work, children are going back to school so we're particularly in police are investigating this incident outside parliament. women, that they are rather memorial is to pc keith palmer who considering changing their jobs was killed the 2017 westminster women, that they are rather considering changing theirjobs or leaving their career. it will be interesting to see on monday how terror attacks. 0utside waterloo many people are going back to school station, police stepped in to quell because of child care. that's had a scuffles. across the day, six officers were injured, protesters as massive impact on confidence and earnings in the south. there is a well. this man carried to safety by huge gender pay gap before. i think another protester. sean dilley, bbc it's going to get wider stop and get news. french police have clashed a stand woman on this one. with her with activists in several cities across the country, protesting against racism and alleged police concern expressed during this brutality. around 15,000 people pandemic about people being gathered in central paris but clashes erupted, unwilling to pick up the phone to and police fired tear gas at protesters who hit threw fireworks and bottles. people like you, to the doctor demonstrators demanded an end to racism as part of the worldwide surgery. with other health concerns black lives matter movement. because of the concern about the nhs being busy already in the concern boris johnson has ordered about venturing into a gp surgery. a review of the 2—metre social—distancing rule. have we seen an uptick in recent weeks, has your phone been ringing many businesses — and some of mrjohnson's own mps — more often in terms of people have warned that large parts ringing up with non— covid —related
6:08 am
of the hospitality industry will not survive if the rules aren't changed. the review will aim to be completed by the 11th ofjuly, concerns? i was on a few weeks ago when pubs and restaurants could open saying call me, so people did call me. it's good that people are doing at the earliest in england. that. we are seeing a lot more you non—essential shops in england can open from tomorrow. chronic conditions which is stores fantastic. women are coming in for their smears and all those in northern ireland started to trade again on friday, procedures we should be doing, but no date has been set asthma checks, diabetic checks. for scotland or wales yet. retailers are backing calls we're still doing childhood from the british retail consortium vaccinations, come and see because for people to shop responsibly they are really important. it's and follow instructions when they return to stores. here's our business correspondent katy austin. important that we do preventative ca re important that we do preventative care and we are getting busier. tha nkfully care and we are getting busier. thankfully i'm very pleased about that we do worry if we do get the new shopping experience. safety busier, there is the capacity in the measures first used in supermarkets system for secondary care, there are are now familiar sight. marks & lots of delays. last week, i know spencer has already been selling clothing basic from food all stores like this one in reading. from tomorrow, all shops in england colleagues, because they are prepared for the busyness, in order selling nonessential goods including cloths can welcome customers back to pre—empt how busy we are going to in. it's been a really big challenge
6:09 am
for all the staff to move the store get, and again, i come back to how thatis get, and again, i come back to how around several times over the past that is going to impact mental few weeks but we're really of the health and burnout. we have tojust effort they have put in and we're looking forward to monday and see how it goes. we are learning welcoming the customers back in. numbers of people in store here will every day, aren't we? indeed. we be limited and there are one—way systems. different shops will have appreciate your expertise. i think slightly different processes and i'm going to award you the spot 's marks & spencer ‘s, their hand kitchen award of the morning. it's sanitiser stations around the store, so impression. it isn't my kitchen! you can touch the clothes around the rails but the fitting rooms are closed. it's one of 25 retailers rumbled. it looks terrific. we urging customers to q considerately, really appreciated. very wise words. follow instructions and respect start after shops had gone to the effort of making their premises safe. lockdown has been tough it's time for sport with jane. financially for many non—food retailers on the move to more on justin rose is having a bit of a line shopping is sped up. big nightmare with his golf? not a great day for him. they are still in questions are, how many people return to shop in person and how profitable will stores be with social distancing? contention. some secondary school pupils england's justin rose will return to class in england and northern ireland's rory mcilroy are in connention as they go tomorrow after months of studying at home. into the final day of students facing gcse and a—level
6:10 am
the charles schwab challenge in texas. exams next year will get some they're both three face—to—face teaching, shots behind the leader so they can start catching american xander schauffele, up. but only a quarter of eligible as the pga tour gets back underway. pupils will be allowed however, rose could have been in school at any one in a far better position. time, and there will be he had a double bogey added safety measures. here's our education at the fifth and then two bogeys on his back nine. both he and mcilroy are on 10 under. after a three month wait, editor bra nwen jeffreys. rory says it good but strange to be back. it's funny. i feel for a saturday afternoon, the marks of change are everywhere, being in contention, pga tour, i feel sort of weird out there. the first couple of days it was fine from social distancing outside to but definitely today, it's feeling strange and i'm sure ta ke from social distancing outside to take adopt desks in classrooms. tomorrow will feel pretty strange, tomorrow, year ten and 12 will start especially with so many guys in and around the lead. to come back. core subject lessons norwich city have confirmed one for gcse, a—level seminars for the of their players has tested lower sixth. so on friday, staff positive for corona virus with being briefed. they will need a day after they played in a friendly against tottenham. to guide students through. it's making sure that the 25% of its out of 1200 players and staff tested coming back is safe, so we've done in the premier league two positive to me to distancing and all results came back. corridors, very signs, and i think (00v) in a statement the club said: safety measures, lots and lots of "norwich city can confirm that one banners and posters encouraging children, reminding them about the —— in a statement the club said:
6:11 am
hand washing, reminding them about "norwich city can confirm that one one way, so we put one—way systems of its players has returned a positive test result following the recent in. plans shared with the bbc from round of covid—19 testing. in line with the premier league's protocols, the player will now hundreds of schools and colleges self—isolate for a period of seven days before being tested again show mainly 5—30 hours of at a later date." face—to—face teaching with on line backup. struggling pupils are being the spanish league returned last night, given priority. pastoral support for with barcelona looking anything but rusty, scoring 66 seconds into their match mental health is on offer. in some against real mallorca. their star player lionel messi secured the comforable win. rural schools are paying for taxis. he made it a—0 with his 20th goal of the season. barca are now five points clear those who have spent months trying to study at home, still challenges of their la liga rivals real madrid ahead with exams next year. when i at the top of the table. think about my exams next year, i feel quite nervous because it is yesterday, we showed you fans still unknown as to what is ahead of returning to rugby stadiums me don't know how much longer learning will be split between home in new zealand for the first time since the pandemic. and school and a worried time will now tennis fans at novak go very quickly, there will be djokovic's club in belgrade have been allowed in to watch bigger gaps in my knowledge from a tournament organised by the world time at home, especially in number one in serbia after almost three months of no competition. comparisons to one side learn at it wasn't all serious though as the wimbledon champion challenged school deviancy. managing social a ball boy, who took a point off him! a day he will never forget! distancing a school isn't easy. england hopes to get all pupils back in september of the classroom could
6:12 am
be mixed with home for many months ahead. the stars of little britain, matt lucas and david walliams, have apologised for their portrayal let's watch this return where he of other races in their tv series. the shows have been pulled from several streaming just gets it out of reach. what a services because some sketches used blackface make—up. both comedians have tweeted to say it was wrong great day for him. and say they're "very sorry." time now for a look racing and there was a shock 200 to one winner at today's papers. at newbury yesterday. a photo of protesters clashing with police in london yesterday makes the front inter—cessor ridden of several papers. by ciaren fallon edged out the favourite nas—waary to become the joint longest priced winner in british flat racing history. a great moment for those of you who love backing an outsider! and finally, many of you will have missed that feeling of celebrating a late winning goalfor your team. well, take a look at the borussia dortmund manager lucien favre. after this headerfrom erling haaland in the 95th minute, the sunday mirror calls the violent which kept their slim hopes protests "shameful", of the bundesliga title alive — the coach appeared to injure saying a "far—right mob" himself celebrating! hijacked a demonstration. te daily mail's top story he might have a sore calf this
6:13 am
morning but i'm sure looks at the two metre social distancing rule. it was worth it. it says borisjohnson is taking "personal control" of any decision to change the guidance. the express leads on the re—opening of non—essential shops from tomorrow. it quotes the chancellor, rishi sunak, who is encouraging something of an embarrassing injury people to head to their local high to go home with, isn't it? it's street and shop safely to help the economy recover. quite something, isn't it. it's not and online, the i reports on the lonely often the manager gets themselves households now able to reunite as part of support bubbles, that came into effect injured. all these stadiums around the world that are packed. not in england yesterday, germany, yes. whether it be serbia or new zealand, given we will have lots of lovely pictures of people cardboard cutouts and a couple of seeing grandparents for the first days. it's better than nothing, i think that's what we will say. three time. such powerful moments this weekend as those bubbles take shape days to go! in england. should we look at the the wildlife trust is encouraging people across the country to re—connect inside pages? the best stories on with nature and go wild for the month ofjune. lockdown walks have become a routine the sunday papers are well in. for many of us in the past few months, and the trust is providing insulation is ruining our wine us with ideas and resources on how to capture some apparently. the paper is saying that of our favourite outdoor moments. 0ur correspondent because houses these days are much better at keeping the heat in, the tomos morgan reports. average house now is 21 degrees
6:14 am
all the variations of the long where is 50 years ago it was 13 degrees. a bit nippy 50 years ago which is all very well, 21 degrees weekend. as far as keeping you warm and toasty but it's no good to the old lizards, birds and badgers, just some of the wildlife thousands of people across the country have been sauvignon ‘plonk‘. toasty but it's no good to the old sauvignon 'plonk'. i'm guessing it's enjoying as part of the wildlife the red wine that gets toasty? and trust's 30 days of wild campaign. 30 days of wild is the wildlife white one as well. it suggests if trust month—long engagement campaign yourfridge is too white one as well. it suggests if your fridge is too good, white one as well. it suggests if yourfridge is too good, it white one as well. it suggests if your fridge is too good, it could get too cold. what you require is a where we ask for everybody to do one wild thing every day injune, from walking barefoot in the grass temperature controlled wine cave. we to listening to glorious birdsong. all require one of those. temperature controlled wine cave. we all require one of thoselj temperature controlled wine cave. we all require one of those. i am thinking shoving it next to the lack in the cupboard. surely there is a hello, we are the king family from hartford west in pembrokeshire. temperature controlled wine cave in now that there is more scope for us mason towers. there really isn't. i to enjoy the outdoors again following devolved governments' don't believe you for a minute. this easing of restrictions, families like the kings have been isa using the outdoors as a way don't believe you for a minute. this is a story that is close to my of balancing working from home heart. the real lockdown mystery, and keeping the children engaged. what's that? hedgehog food. and even catching hedgehogs where have the wimbledon on camera in the process. strawberries gone? 0f where have the wimbledon strawberries gone? of course, it's a usually we would have really extra for us on bbc been down here every
6:15 am
other day, but it's a nice change for ben as well, to go back to the beach, brea kfast, really extra for us on bbc breakfast, carol absolutely loved that. we do occasionally partake of a little cheeky strawberry. 0f he loves it on the beach. course this year, because a block down, because wimbledon was another family looking forward to reconnecting cancelled so early, wimbledon didn't with the outdoors are the davies. put their order in with their living near picturesque ceredigion, this is the first time they've gone strawberry supplier so there is a back to their local beach less glut and what you do when you have than a mile from their home of strawberries? you make extra jam and they are excited to spot local life again. dolphin spotting. and that is what is going to happen, pots and pots of wimbledonjam. 0ne one more. there is a fema from my selections this morning. whisky. —— they fill half the harbour here on a daily basis so we're looking forward femur. this is from inside the to seeing them again. the easing of restrictions has also observer. whiskey is becoming a hit been a blessing for the more green thumbed among us. i came down here and i was upset among women. whiskey is the only to see the state of the plot. thing possibly i can't drink. they i even considered at the time giving it up. don't like the taste. a lot of my malcolm has had an allotment friends do. i know it is really in cardiff for almost a0 years and at 77, he's been popular. it's just self—isolating at home for 11 weeks. finally he's out and about again, friends do. i know it is really popular. it'sjust the haves been a doing what he loves outdoors. although heartbroken to see
6:16 am
massive increase in the amount of the state of his patch, whiskey being drunk by women. a0 this place is an important million more glasses of whiskey per part of his life. year by women in the uk than consumed in 2010. and that'sjust in part of being on an allotment is the social side, mentally lockdown! yes, quite. lots of people as well as physical, and this is what i think most people would agree on. it's the relaxation down here. say when they say i don't like whiskey say it is because you are drinking the wrong type. apparently the advice from all the devolved the right type is gorgeous. governments now is that everyone, drinking the wrong type. apparently even those who have been the right type is gorgeousm drinking the wrong type. apparently the right type is gorgeous. it is only when i have ran out of wine and shielding and self—isolating, that they can go outside beer i would ridge for the whiskey the physical exercise and meet bottle. there is one in there next others at a social distance to the laptop... that doesn't happen but doing so after such a long period at home may with your attempt to control one be tricky for some. case. let us go straight to helen. do you think those people who have been shielding and self—isolating good morning. sally and chris, thank for a number of weeks, there will be a level of anxiety going out again? you very much. good morning. there will be some really decent spells of strong june sunshine for most of us today. many places warm and dry. but they've been indoors for quite a long time we had our downpours yesterday and and going outdoors where the virus will have our downpours again today. is still very much present can be the details coming up. some rather worrying, but we do know that being outdoors with nature, great weather near the east coast, around green spaces, has been shown to reduce contrasting with some gorgeous anxiety and levels of depression.
6:17 am
sunrises across the uk right now. we already have some showers with us at least i'm in the fortunate position, i will have next year, this morning, meandering around an as there are tens of thousands area of low pressure settings south of people who will not have a next year, so i think it's of us at the moment. that's what we have those showers. even here they a case of counting your blessings to some extent. will be more isolated than yesterday. this is the low cloud i malcolm is a changed man, according to his family, have talked about. the eyepatch of since being able to go outside mist and fog, clearing out, the sun again, working on his pride and joy is up. we have a sea fog. that could with the help of his family at a social distance. and for the younger and smaller among us... look at the baby one. ..it‘s a chance to learn be for some parts of eastern and reconnect with all living things scotland, dank, drizzly, and cool. around us. tomos morgan, bbc news, south wales. lengthy spells of sunshine, cloud could bubble up, showers could develop, and it looks like the heaviest ones will across parts of are you going to go outside today, wales and east anglia. the odd one chris? yes, i think so. i think so. for northern ireland and western scotland. as the sunshine materialises, a lot of dry weather still here. just that rather cool helen, is it wildlife spotting? look weather around the east coast, quite at that wall and what's on the other grey. it is thick enough that low side of it. it looks as though you cloud to give some drizzle as well. could pop over it to do the perhaps more rain coming in forecast. overnight as elsewhere the evening you can barely set because of the fog. i think we will have some good thunderstorms tend to die away. storms will be combined with hail outdoor weather today watching and
6:18 am
dodging those thunderstorms as they again and lots of flashes of come along this afternoon. and of lightning as we had yesterday. for many it is drier by morning again. course we have the fog first thing this morning. this is near leeds. low cloud will have come back in. for most of us there will be warm the area of low pressure bringing sunshine on offer. the fog near the those showers that brought the rain late last week is going to stagnate east coast in particular, for across the uk for the next a— five example, here in county durham, it will be quite slow to clear. it is days, potentially. it is picking the detail out of where the showers will sea haar, sea fret often comes in, be. again, quite a lot of low cloud moist air over the cool north sea. as we start the new working week on in contrast, plenty of sunshine in monday and perhaps rather more rain crossing scotland for a time. on the essex this morning. most of the showers break out with sunshine showers are congregating again in elsewhere and it will be warm again. the south and with but there will be they didn't mention the temperatures fewer here than yesterday. they won't be as frequent or as lengthy. today, 13—1a and it is because, up a little bit of rain potentially coming into the north—east of today, 13—1a and it is because, up to 25 inland. perhaps just england but it's already drizzly with the low cloud and across northern and eastern parts of diminishing risk of the low cloud scotland. it has extended quote by being so extensive by tuesday. in across scotland so it will be instead, the low pressure on top of vote by the strong june sunshine. the uk could mean we have more that sunshine will encourage the widespread downpours by that stage. shower clouds to bubble up and into it is picking the detail out, the afternoon, again, heavy, really, over the coming few days. equally, on wednesday, quite a few slow—moving downpours, probably fewer than yesterday in the south—east are not as frequent in
6:19 am
showers and thunderstorms around today. for many today some could the south—west but perhaps have your escape those showers and stay dry. for wales, the midlands, and east sally and chris. the great british anglia. isolated ones across western scotla nd anglia. isolated ones across western summer. we have had it. there was scotland in the northern highlands, near the east coast that contrasted a, 13-1a, 23-2a in the some sunshine in that forecast. there was a bit. in a bit of rain. there was a bit. in a bit of rain. near the east coast that contrasted there was a day last week when it a, 13—1a, 23—2a in the sunshine. was overcast and damp at about 13 degrees at i thought it could be any those showers do is down gradually day of the year, a mild day in as we go through the night time december but it was a mild day in period. we could pick up more rain june. just british, british to the into eastern scotland and again not just eastern but central eastern cool june. just british, british to the cool. hello it did promised us some scotland, eastern england, lots of low cloud rolling in off the north sunshine. we are going to keep talking about the weather. now it is sea. that's because we've got a very slack area of low pressure across time for click. us, very little wind to move the cloud away, very little cloud to move the showers, but if you get lengthier showers you will get lengthier showers you will get lengthier spells of sunshine. it's a very similar set up tomorrow. the devil is really in the detail where the showers will be. mostly western areas seeming to get the have wants welcome to click. lara's here as well. perhaps monday. come tuesday, they
6:20 am
welcome, how are you doing, my friend? i'm good, thanks, although i had are likely to be lighter, and the a bit of an incident filming and i'm covered in glitter, so anyone low 20s, which is where they should with a good tv set may be able be at this amavi if you escape the to see that, and you will showers. chris and sally, back to find out why later. but anyway, how are you, spencer? you. we will have to find the i am fine, thanks. umbrella, i think. thank this week, i've been trying out some stuff that might help you if you are sat around the house you. we will have to find the umbrella, ithink. thank you, helen. we do need it. we still need the using a phone or tablet or laptop more than usual. there is a lot of that rain. we do. going on at the moment, if you hadn't noticed. time now for this so, if you are using a phone week's travel show. this week, a tiny glimmer of hope. or tablet and you are sick europe start to slowly reopen for travellers. of holding it up all but how will they keep us all apart? the time, i am trying this. it is called the slick pillow stand. we are back on the road this week, a modest two—hour drive it is a thick bit of rubber, to the resort town of margate. and you slot your device in there, like that, and then you strap it around a pillow or cushion, so you can rest it on your lap like that. you can even pop it into bed, lie next to it and check your work emails late at night, if that's your thing. if you're using a laptop on a dining table or on your lap or in bed, you will know that that is terrible for your back or your neck. so i finally got around to getting myself one of these, it's an adjustable laptop stand, for more than 250 years, plenty of them on the market. holiday makers have come here, you can see that the legs adjust
6:21 am
rain or shine, to experience in all different ways so you can pop the chipped around the edges glitz of the great british seaside. it on your lap, and you can adjust the height so the keyboard, screen and camera are at the right height. this comes with a usb—powered fan to keep things cool, as well. and if you happen to be working from a really strange place, like your sofa, and you need a completely adjustable work there has been a renaissance here, surface, it turns out new hotels and restaurants i have the perfect solution. and restored vintage attractions have brought cool young london types it is called the ironin board, here by the bucketful. and i have it here. would you like to see it? yeah, i'd love to! 0k, right, so ready? here we go, it's the ironin board. but as resorts throughout europe start to reopen, as you can see, it goes all the way blinking into the summer sunshine, up and all the way down. what kind of future will they face? brilliant, perfect. across the world, we are seeing the first signs of tourism adapting it also comes with this thing, to the new scheme of things. there's lots of talk of borders being lifted and special air bridges i don't know what it is, or corridors being formed within but the processor countries with low infection rates. runs incredibly hot. while in many cities, galleries, well, you've certainly been museums and landmark attractions resourceful at home, but in the outside world, are up and running again. non—essential retail is due to open next week, and spencer, i can't believe i'm talking to you seriously right now. but would you really want to go clothes shopping?
6:22 am
you know i hate clothes shopping at the best of times. yes, that is a very good point, in italy, the first country in europe to enter lockdown, and i think for most people, the coliseum, the leaning tower it's probably not going to be of pisa and the ruins of pompeii a priority right now. have already opened, and in france, but of course, the economy people can once again wander is weeping, so are we going to get the grand halls of the the high street back in fashion? palace of versailles. hotels in europe are also gradually reopening as well. back in april we spoke to javier in spain who had just been forced clearly it is going to be to shut down his hotels. challenging for stores, and for those who do visit, the experience will be different. technology can't replace everything, but it's been doing a decentjob we are going to sell of filling the gap in less capacity than ever, and because we have to keep social over the past months. distance, this will help people to have a more exclusive experience. 0ne platform has taken things if we're talking about profits, we will have less profits to a whole new level — than last year, sure. making you, the customer, the model. ai—powered app zeekit aims to give you a really true—to—life virtual experience of trying on clothes. now it does this by first here in england, in line of all photographing you, with government guidance, you do really have to many hotels are hoping to reopen in earlyjuly. follow the instructions. that includes the cave here in kent. they had only been open for a few and that involved this rather embarrassing attire, months when the virus struck, a combination of shorts, following a £12 million development.
6:23 am
a tank top and my best shoes. it was a huge shock. first i have put on heels no—one would ever want to launch in three months. a brand—new hotel or any business and then four months otherwise the picture may later close it down, not upload very well. and we literally closed i had some difficulty with pictures of my own that i thought would work. so once i got the picture uploaded, it down overnight. and i did feel i was dressed like a 16—year—old, it is really quite incredible because it offered jonathan had already put in place something that no store does. some coronavirus safety measures, offering us a glimpse i'm flicking through the catalogue into what our future hotel stays and i am seeing every single outfit on me, so it means you can actually might look like. pick out the things that suit you, rather than just items that catch your eye. how does it do it? if you could stand in front of the camera please and look into the camera so we can take your temperature. authenticated. its algorithm uses deep learning as you are authenticated, please sanitise your hands and help to scan the picture of the clothing, yourself to mask and gloves dividing it into 80,000 segments. if you would like. and if you go to the reception desks, we have got the screens up so the staff are completely protected as our guests. and you will be saying to guests to take their own luggage? it then does the same we will be not offering that service to the picture of the person, for the time being to minimise and from there can match up the two contact with the guests. to fit the clothes to anyone's unique body shape. something that has always been a big problem for online retailers you have limited access is the issue of so many returns. to the hotel's communal areas. you can book a 20 minute slot and right now, that can at the swimming pool
6:24 am
and the restaurant involve the quarantining delivers to your room. of clothes, as well. plus, for the customer, we have taken the tables out do you really want to be spending of a fire pit restaurant including a long time in a socially the chair that we have set distanced post office queue? them up in all rooms, some of these outfits definitely every room type. look more ridiculous than others, of course there is only any like you are in a restaurant kind point in any of this of dining someone delivers it? if what we are looking at here is actually true to life. your doorbell will bring and outside so i need to order something to see a tray for you to bring an yourself. if you would like you can order if it looks the same in the flesh. via whatsapp and it will be i'm going to go for this dress. delivered pretty instantly it looks nice there, looks 0k. but without any contact whatsoever. are you confident you will get people here? i believe we will see an upsurge of domestic tourism. we have seen bookings forjuly, a booking occupancy so i'm now going to tap is around 30—a0%. at the moment, on the basis through to buy it. ok, the parcel is here. that we are able to open. let's do this. it doesn't feel great, admittedly. let's see how it looks. as an independent boutique resort, tada! cave hotel has been able to be ok, i am actually pretty amazed relatively nimble, incorporating coronavirus safety measures. by how much this looks but what about the larger chain like the virtual image. hotels, with hundreds of rooms and a high turnover of guests? these cleaning specialists have been advising big hotels about how let me just stand in they can keep both customers the right position. so if we get a photo of that, and their staff protected. put in a white background and match it up, then we can really i have taken a look at the large
6:25 am
see the true likeness, number of the big hotel chains and i think that is quite astonishing. and there are a lot of different the only thing that i hadn't variety of things they are doing, bargained for is that there's ranging from what they call room glitter absolutely everywhere. so i may have got a great idea seals, effectively when someone has cleaned a room they completely in advance of how it's seal it with a notice. some hotels have started to remove going to look, but it's not items that you might touch such until you get your hands as tissue boxes, on something you can really tell the quality. although, in fairness to this, it is a £20 dress. the inspiration came actually from a very different world, removing the magazines. from military lidar technologies we used to develop mapping technologies, so you could actually see how maps look on topographies, like intelligence maps look on topographies, and when we developed those technologies, we actually had a kind some of them have been doing of eureka moment — a lot and some of them, that actually the human body is a bit like a topography, interestingly, have been doing and any clothing item's picture, nothing so it is a mixed bag. we can look at it as if it was after months cooped up at home an intelligence map, and apply more or less the same technologies, many of us will be desperate to get and use that to solve away for a few nights. the holy grail of online fashion. but with corporate and international travel still pretty much at a standstill, the future for many hotels, whether they have thorough safety measures or not, remains uncertain. so, while many of us are starting what hotels you think will survive and what kinds will fail in this to be able to go back to the high
6:26 am
new climate? whether you are budget street, it seems coronavirus could have dramatically changed or the top end, the hotels the way we shop long—term. who are proactive in understanding the challenges that are going to come and prepare for them, we think high streets will persist, but we are under no illusion that the number of retail units i hope will flourish through it. will probably decrease. so there's forecasts that said by 2025, we would lose 25% of retail stock. we think that might have been so, once all those perspex accelerated, and we're looking screens are installed, travel should be back at a 1—2 year rise, on the cards, shouldn't it? well, let's find out from the man instead of a five—year one. who has all the answers, our global guru simon calder. so perhaps the new reality 0k simon, i am going to put is that our ever improving online you on the spot because back shopping experience is increasingly in march when we first at odds with the idea of getting talked after covid—19 back to the buzzing high street. hit, you said... we will see injune something like normal travel beginning again but it will be on a smaller scale and even if there is huge amounts around the world, football is slowly returning. albeit to mostly empty stadiums. of pent—up demand from you and i desperate to travel, it won't be anything like the normal summer that we would be looking forward to at this time. in denmark, the season restarted at the end of may. how would you like to revise that? to try and create some sort of atmosphere in what had been
6:27 am
dubbed ghost games, superliga i think i would just a little club aarhus created a a0 metre virtual grandstand. because a underestimated how we knew that we could not have nonnormal it would be. spectators during the first games so we needed to somehow recreate certainly there will be parts this community and i must say it of the mediterranean, north america, asia, worked out very well. where it will at least actually at some points have a reasonable number it was very moving. of tourists showing up, the first game where we had it but it is going to we had a very late equaliser, feel very different. a very important goal and i looked we have already seen the big travel up at this big screen. companies that have got to come up and i saw an elderly couple with new ways of reducing and a woman was standing risk when we are flying, and new ways of working, and cheering and then she turned particularly really big hotels, which are used to effectively around and kissed her husband processing us by the thousands, so there will be a new normal. who was still seated. so those intimate moments, we get the chance to share because we had the opportunity to come straight home to the fans. one thing, though, i absolutely wasn't expecting was the uk's sudden we also had a camera under introduction of quarantine the screen so if players wanted, for all arrivals from the eighth they could run out and cheer ofjune onwards, which of course has had the, i guess, and the fans could see them. double effect of stifling all inbound tourism also in denmark, league leaders fc to the united kingdom midtjylland turned their stadium into a drive—in. for some unspecified period, and together with making it very difficult for any travel firms to sell outbound travel because, fans were able to watch the games it is great to have a weekend on the screens erected in the car
6:28 am
park with commentary on the car radio. in barcelona or rome, they lost 1—0, so it may have but if you are then going to have been a long drive home. elsewhere, one company are taking the concept of virtual fans to spend two weeks stuck one step further. in your flat or your home, oz sports created a solution giving supporters a chance to appear that is going to take inside the stadium as avatars, using mixed reality. the edge off it rather. so we have people where they can sign up from their homes, when can i go on holiday? well, it all depends where you are. they can pick their avatar, they can put on their favourite jersey for their favourite club, at the moment, of course every they can pick a seat in the stadium country and many regions within countries have their own and we bring them into rules, so, for example, a new parallel universe that is mixed with the broadcast. if you happen to be in new york so the director of the broadcast and you think you would love to go is making decisions on switching to florida, you are going to have cameras et cetera, sees an augmented version of the fans. to self isolate for two weeks maybe they can see a great moment when you get there, but in general, with someone in the stadium is doing the european union, 27 member countries, are saying 0k, something fun, maybe a dance we're going to reduce that from the 15th ofjune and that is going to be a soft of their favourite club or cheering opening, followed on the first ofjuly with a much more general opening and certainly the traditional mediterranean destinations all the way and they could zoom into that, from turkey, greece, croatia, italy, cyprus just to bring energy into the game and malta of course, to show that there are people out france and spain, not there that are cheering for the club, et cetera.
6:29 am
forgetting portugal, they looked as though from the first ofjuly they will all be back in action and indeed some countries, sky sports revealed this week that they are going to be in particular portugal and croatia, using crowd noise from the game are already saying, come here, fifa20 for their premier league we are ready for you! but of course the foreign office broadcasts. in the uk is still warning against all but essential travel. the stands might not be full, but they'll sound like they are with sky sports crowds. while bt sport have been experimenting during their bundesliga coverage by playing relevant crowd noise over match events. both broadcasters will be offering what about regions outside europe? for instance the the crowd noise as a choosable middle east or asia? option for the customers. we have seen different degrees of lockdown and we have seen some in spain, la liga have began using a similar solution. really strange things going on. so is using tech to be the 12th man for example, the fourth ofjune a great idea or are they having was when the caribbean island of antigua decided it was opening up a proverbial stinker? but many other islands are very much i generally dislike fakery closed and in general i think we can wherever it happens. see a pattern where small islands however on this occasion i am all for it. with very few cases of covid—19 absolutely 100%. the idea of putting people on zoom are going to be generally quite around, as they do for the english slow and opening.
6:30 am
argentina, which is very much clubs, that for me is fabulous. a southern summer destination, has said no internationalflights in every way imaginable. until the first of september, it is the closest thing you can and it is of course this terrible tension between countries wanting to do what's best for their population in terms of avoiding infection as much as possible, possibly get to the real thing. and the economic reality that more clubs and broadcasters so many places are absolutely are expected to reveal other tech solutions as the restarted season progresses although if you are anything like me, no tech will ever beat the real thing. that was paul and that is it dependent on tourism. for this week's shortcut of click. check out the full thing for you right now on iplayer. simon, a pleasure to speak to you again, thanks very much. gadgets and tech can make travellers you can find us throughout lives a whole lot easier but in a time of covid—19, how can they keep us healthy? the week on youtube, instagram, facebook, and twitter @bbcclick. thank you so much for watching and we will see you soon. bye. good morning welcome to breakfast with chris mason and sally nugent. 0ur headlines today:
6:31 am
more than 100 people are arrested after a day of violent clashes in central london, involving some far—right activists. the individuals who are basically putting the safety of our police officers and the safety of the public at risk will expect to face the full force of the law. disturbances break out overnight in the us city of atlanta, where a black man has been shot hello, this is breakfast, dead by police. with chris mason and sally nugent. boris johnson commissions good morning, here's a summary of today's main a review into the two metre stories from bbc news. protesters have ta ken social distancng rule, to the streets of the us city as nonessential shops across england of atlanta in response to the fatal prepare to reopen tomorrow. shooting by police of a black matt lucas and david walliams man on friday. the restraurant where apologise for the use of blackface the incident happened has been make—up in the comedy series little set on fire by crowds overnight. rayshard brooks, who was 27 years britain. old, was fatally wounded as the pga tour returns, during a struggle with police justin rose and rory mcilroy after he fell asleep in his car. atlanta's police chief has are both in contention in texas. they're three shots off the lead, but has rose blown his chance after two bogeys and a double bogey? resigned over the matter. that good morning, lengthy sunny spells more than 100 people have been
6:32 am
arrested after a number and slow—moving downpours again of protests turned today with some low cloud persisting violent in central london yesterday. groups including some far—right activists had gathered in the capital, again on the east coast. more detail saying they were protecting statues from anti—racism protestors. in15 again on the east coast. more detail police were attacked with bottles, smoke grenades and flares. six officers received in 15 minutes. minor injuries. 0ther protests held in the city it's sunday 1ath june. were largely peaceful. just gone eight. our top story. more than 100 people have been arrested after a number of protests french police have clashed with activists in several cities turned violent in central london yesterday. across the country, protesting groups including some far—right activists had against racism and alleged police gathered in the capital, brutality. around 15,000 people saying they were protecting statues gathered in central paris from anti—racism protestors. but clashes erupted, police officers were attacked with bottles, and police fired tear gas smoke grenades and flares. at protesters who hit threw sean dilley has this report. fireworks and bottles. demonstrators demanded an end to racism as part of the worldwide thousands of people join protests, despite calls black lives matter movement. from police to stay at home. many were peaceful, but violent clashes soon broke out. boris johnson has ordered a review of the two—metre social—distancing rule. police officers were attacked many businesses — and some throughout the day as they attempted of mrjohnson's own mps — to keep distance between anti—racism have warned that large parts of the hospitality industry will not and far—right groups. survive if the rules aren't changed. the review will aim to be a barrage of missiles completed by the ath ofjuly, were launched at them. when pubs and restaurants could open in whitehall, the crowd
6:33 am
pushed their way through and tried at the earliest in england. to attack photographers. the prime minister, borisjohnson, condemned the minority let's take you to portugal now, of protesters on twitter. where the investigation into the disappearance of madeleine mccann is being criticised for its slow pace by residents in praia da luz. some say they were contacted by police about christian b — now a key suspect in the case — the individuals that in the past couple of years. are basically putting the safety 0ur europe correspondent lucy of our police officers williamson has been speaking and the safety of the public to people who remember him at risk will expect to face the full force of the law. from his time in the resort. people from a variety of backgrounds turned out as self—proclaimed protectors of statues new perspectives are hard to spot after winston churchill's monument from the glimpse above praia da luz. was damaged last week. view from has barely changed since this protester told us he felt british history under attack. come on. madeleine mccann disappeared. this i mean, he had some racist views patch of scrubland dotted with but, at the end of the day, crumbling ruins is where the british he led us through our darkest hour. police searched six years ago for clues. we now know thatjust a few hundred metres away, over this small ridge, was the house where christian i mean, i'm from south london, b lived in the years before she i've grown up with black people. we are all working class,
6:34 am
vanished. coincidence, or a live side—by—side. b lived in the years before she vanished. coincidence, ora missed opportunity? when police were nobody here is an issue with blm. searching here six years ago, they'd police are investigating this already been given christian bs incident outside parliament. the memorial is to pc keith palmer, name among hundreds of potential who was killed the 2017 westminster terror attacks. suspect 's, but were they aware that this man, with previous convictions 0utside waterloo station, for child sexual offences, had lived police stepped in to quell scuffles. across the day, six officers were injured, protesters too. for child sexual offences, had lived for yea rs for child sexual offences, had lived for years overlooking this land? a this man, carried to safety neighbour told me the first time police had contacted her was last by another protester. year. christian b had been a difficult tenant, she said, squatting in the house without the violence in part paying rent. after he was no longer of the capital contrast with other areas where protests were largely peaceful. sean dilley, bbc news. there, which was about 2005, a french police have clashed friend and i together with the owner with activists in several cleaned the place out and it was in cities across the country, protesting against racism a terrible state, really. it had and alleged police brutality. been ransacked in the food had been left. it looked like he left in a around 15,000 people hurry but we probably went there gathered in central paris maybe four or five months after he but clashes erupted, and police fired tear gas at protesters who hit threw left, unaware he was no longer there. christian b's name has fireworks and bottles. appeared in force at that requests demonstrators demanded an end to racism as part of the worldwide for international cooperation black lives matter movement. received by the portuguese police.
6:35 am
he already had a record of child sexual offences but he's never been disturbances have broken out a key suspect until now. praia da in the us city of atlanta after the fatal shooting by police of a black man. protestors have set fire luz is 90% english citizens. maybe to the drive—thru restaurant where the incident took place, nobody thought to check german police have responded by firing tear gas. criminal records. 0r french. 0r spanish. 0r anything else. 27—year—old rayshard brooks was shot and killed on friday. the city's police chief madeleine's photo has become a symbol here in praia da luz of has now resigned. the incident follows weeks of protests across the us police failure and press intrusion. and around the world, after the police killing three police forces and one little of george floyd in minneapolis. rich preston reports. girl. could this be the end of their journey to find each other? lucy crowds got angrier through the night williamson, bbc news, praia da luz. here in atlanta after news of the death of another black man the very latest on the chorus ——on at the hands of american police officers. that anger spilt onto the streets. the investigation from across bonded in portugal. very interesting the fast—food restaurant next to the scene of picture at the end of the report the killing was set alight. major highways were blocked. there. good morning, let's get a police say mr brooks failed round—up of sport, what sport there a sobriety test and resisted arrest. is and say good morning to jade. don't worry, there is sport. we they say he was able to get one of the officer's tasers, start with golf. and tried to use it against him.
6:36 am
england's justin rose and northern ireland's rory mcilroy are in contention as they go into the final day of the charles schwab challenge in texas. they're both three shots behind the leader american xander —— against them. schauffele, as the pga tour gets back under way. they responded with live ammunition. however, rose could have been the killing comes amid a global wave in a far better position. of lack lives matter protest. he had a double bogey the officer involved has been fired. at the fifth and then two bogeys while there may be debate as to on his back nine. whether this was an appropriate use of deadly force, i firmly believe that there both he and mcilroy are on 10—under. is a clear distinction between what you can do after a three month wait, and what you should do. rory says it good but strange to be back. i do not believe that this was a justified use of deadly force. it's funny. i feel for a the city's police chief has it's funny. ifeel for a saturday afternoon, being in contention, pga resigned, but it's unlikely that will placate these people who say racism is built into tour, fl sort of weird out there. american society. the first couple of days it was fine the officers need to be arrested and it's not ok, but definitely today, it's feeling it's not ok that every day i have to wake up and learn strange and i'm sure tomorrow will a new name, new hashtag, feel pretty strange, especially with a new life that was lost so many guys in and around the lead. because of the injustice that norwich city have confirmed one of their players has tested america has for a system positive for corona virus a day after they played that was built in the 1600s. in a friendly against tottenham. i could say we wantjustice out of 1,200 players and staff but i don't even care any more, tested in the premier league two i don't know even what that is,
6:37 am
positive results came back. in a statement the club said: and i've been doing this for 15 years. "norwich city can confirm that one i don't know what of its players has returned justice is anymore. a positive test result is it getting them arrested, following the recent is it getting somebody fired, round of covid—19 testing. is it a chief stepping down? in line with the premier league's i know that this isn't protocols, the player will now justice, what's happening in society right now. self—isolate for a period of seven days before being tested again around a third of people in georgia at a later date." are african—american. despite the black lives matter movement, they see american society movement, they say american society the spanish league as built against them and they fear returned last night, for their future. with barcelona looking anything richard preston, bbc news. but rusty, scoring 66 seconds boris johnson has ordered into their match a review of the two—metre against real mallorca. their star player lionel messi secured the comforable win. social—distancing rule in england. he made it a—0 with his 20th many businesses — and some goal of the season. of mrjohnson's own mps — barca are now five points clear have warned that large parts of their la liga rivals real madrid at the top of the table. of the hospitality industry will not survive if the rules aren't changed. 0ur political correspondent, jessica parkerjoins us now. jessica — how much pressure has boris come under yesterday, we showed you fans to commission this review? returning to rugby stadiums in new zealand for the first time since the coronavirus pandemic. now tennis fans at novak we are forever hearing it is under djokovic's club in belgrade have been allowed in to watch co nsta nt a tournament organised by the world we are forever hearing it is under constant review. i think it is a number one in serbia after almost three months of no competition. little different, the rule is under
6:38 am
it wasn't all serious, though, as the wimbledon champion challenged co nsta nt little different, the rule is under constant review, scientists have a ballboy, who took a point off him. been looking at it. borisjohnson a day he will never forget. has said he is sympathetic to it and trying to reduce it when the conditions are possible. now it is underformal review, conditions are possible. now it is under formal review, the differences the review has to report back by july four, the date hospitality can start to reopen. it will hear from he did well, didn't he? racing and there was a shock 200 to scientists and economists as well. 1winner at newbury yesterday. borisjohnson will hope this goes some way to remove the pressure he intercessor ridden ciaren fallon edged out the favourite naswary to become the joint longest priced winner has been under. not least the hospitality industry who say this is in british flat racing history. a great moment for those a massive dampener to getting their of you who love backing an outsider! industry is growing again. conservative mps have also been unhappy about the two metre rule. many of whom they have pointed to some of the countries who have a one metre rule. —— and many of you will have missed that feeling of celebrating a late ultimately it is a balance of risk winning goalfor your team. and when the prime minister is going
6:39 am
well, take a look at the borussia dortmund manager to have to weigh up. lucien favre. after this headerfrom shops in england can re—open erling haaland in the 95th minute, from tomorrow for the first time which kept their slim hopes since lockdown began of the bundesliga title alive — at the end of march. northern ireland saw the coach appeared to injure himself celebrating! stores open on friday, he might have a sore calf this but scotland and wales are yet to announce dates for re—opening. morning but i'm sure 25 retailers have today backed a call from the british retail it was worth it. consortium for people to shop responsibly and follow instructions when they return to stores. seven poor points between them and some secondary school pupils will return to class in england bayern munich at the top of the tomorrow after months table. —— seven points. of studying at home. bayern munich at the top of the table. -- seven points. brilliant. maybe he's a little bit out of students facing gcse and a—level exams next year will get some face—to—face teaching, shape. one little sporting detail i so they can start catching up. but only a quarter of eligible thought i'd mention, we mentioned pupils will be allowed in school at any one time, by thought i'd mention, we mentioned rugby returning, in the south island and there will be of new zealand, in dunedin and my added safety measures. here's our education brother and sister—in—law live there editor bra nwen jeffreys. and my brother—in—law that was there the marks of change are everywhere, with his young daughter, my niece from social distancing outside and it turns out there was a to taped—off desks in classrooms. strea ker and it turns out there was a streaker which and it turns out there was a strea ker which meant and it turns out there was a streaker which meant a lot of the conversation was about explaining to tomorrow, year ten and 12 a seven—year—old. key question, put will start to come back —
6:40 am
my daughter to father, how many core subject lessons for gcse, a—level seminars for the lower sixth. times have you streaked, daddy? how so on friday, staff many? the answer was? it must've were being briefed. they will need to guide happened, it was just a question about quincy. didn't get an answer, students through. it's making sure that the 25% that's it's a good point. you have the best coming back is safe, so we've done 2—metre distancing in all corridors, with very clear signs, and i think safety measures, lots and lots of banners and posters stories. since the government advised that encouraging children, reminding them face coverings might help stop about the hand washing, reminding them about one way, the spread of coronavirus, people have been getting creative, and making their own so we've put one—way systems in. plans shared with the bbc by hundreds of schools and colleges show mainly 5—30 hours of face—to—face teaching with online back—up. from old t—shirts, scarves struggling pupils are being given priority. and socks.well one woman pastoral support for mental in wiltshire has gone further — she's started sewing face coverings health is on offer. and hanging them on a so—called and some rural schools 'mask tree' outside her home, for passersby to help themselves. are paying for taxis. 0ur correspondent duncan kennedy went to meet her. for those who've spent months (tx) trying to study at home, i've got all sizes available for everyone. the branches are heaving, still challenges ahead, the leaves are full. that's good. with exams next year. it's time to plant the mask tree. when i think about my exams next
6:41 am
laden with home—made ice spec year, i feel quite nervous facemasks, it's the kind of tree because it's still unknown as to what's ahead, and we don't that may help save lives. isjust know how much longer learning will be split between home and school. such a nice, kind, generous thing to i'm worried time will go very quickly, and there will be bigger wa nt to such a nice, kind, generous thing to want to do. the ideas members of the gaps in my knowledge from topics i learn at home, especially public take the mask for free and in comparisons to ones i've learn make the donation they want. we are at school previously. managing social distancing told not to take the surgical masks, at school isn't easy. england hopes to get all pupils back in september, for nhs use, so what a great but the classroom could be mixed alternative. the mask tree is the with home for many months ahead. idea of naomi betts. turning it into something completely different. she branwen jeffreys, bbc news. and her daughter rhiannon create around 90 masks a day. each one the stars of little britain, matt lucas and david walliams, ta kes around 90 masks a day. each one takes about five minutes. more or have apologised for their portrayal of "other races" in their tv series. the shows have been pulled less. and all i made to strict from several streaming services because some sketches used blackface make—up. let's speak to our reporter andy hygiene and safety standards issued by public health england. providing moore, who's in our london newsroom. clock masks for the community in this is the latest in a list now of this fashion takes the pressure of the nhs supplies. they need the programmes that have been pulled from being broadcast. yes, a lot of
6:42 am
medical masks in clinical settings that this provides a suitable alternative. with base coverings programmes being reassessed now in becoming compulsory on public the wake of the global protests of transport in england next week, mask trees and wasn't across the country. 150 sites have now been set up. in black lives matter. made in 2008, naomi's area alone, eight thousand masks have now been taken by the public. i think it's a great initiative to bring to the local little britain pulled from bbc iplayer and other streaming services. and also there are other community. indeed it's a community solution to a collective need whose presence is now nationwide. it's everywhere. it is, yeah. iam hoping sitcom. matt lucas have said david it's going to be declared a national andi sitcom. matt lucas have said david and i have both spoken publicly in forest at some point. mask trees. recent yea rs and i have both spoken publicly in recent years about regrets we have stay safe now, everybody. an idea played characters of other races. 0nce played characters of other races. once again we want to make it clear thatis stay safe now, everybody. an idea that is clearly taking root. duncan it was wrong and we are very sorry. matt lucas spoke at great length kennedy, bbc news, in wiltshire. we about three years ago about how he have to get ahead around those base looked at those shows now. he said they were cruel about some respects, coverings. we could do with one of he would not now black up or make those mask trees. you've got to wash them every day. if you have more
6:43 am
than one, you can wash them all at jokes about transvestites, he said. the end of the week. there was no bad intent, he said, the wildlife trust is encouraging people across the country to re—connect with nature and go wild they just wanted to for the month ofjune. there was no bad intent, he said, theyjust wanted to show there was no bad intent, he said, they just wanted to show the extent of the diversity of characters they could play but now he says it is what does wild look like, chris? i rather lazy for white people to get laughs simply by playing black am the least plausible person to offer an answer to that. lockdown walks have become a routine characters. it is 8:13am. good for many of us in the past few months, and the trust is providing the public with ideas and resources on how to capture some of their favourite moments outdoors. morning. it was the deadliest fire in recent 0ur correspondent british history, killing 72 people, tomos morgan reports. leading to serious questions being asked about the lizards, birds and barges, just some safety of tower blocks. back then, the grenfell community of the wildlife thousands of people pulled together to get across the country have been through the disaster, and now exactly three years on, occurring as part of the wildlife survivors are coming together once more to help nhs workers trust's 30 days of wild campaign. 30 and vulnerable people during the coronavirus pandemic, as our correspondent days wild as the wildlife trust ayesha buksh reports. month long engagement campaign where three years on from we ask for everybody to do one wild the grenfell tower fire, thing every day injune, from this vibrant west london community walking barefoot in the grass listening to glorious birdsong. is much quieter than usual hello, we are from hartford western and the trauma and grief of so many
6:44 am
pembrokeshire. now that there is who lost loved ones, friends and neighbours, more scope for us to enjoy the eye has been deepened by the anxiety outdoors again following devolved and isolation of coronavirus. government easing of restrictions, families like the kings of been using the outdoors is way of balancing working from home and keeping the children engaged. what's this man lost six members of his family in the fire — that? dog food hedgehog food. and his mother, sister, brother—in—law and his three young nieces — and he says he's really even catching hedgehogs hedgehogs on struggled since the lockdown. they're just still trying to cope camera in the process. usually we and deal with it and not being able would have been down here every other day but it's a nice change for to cope and deal with it, because they're having ben as well to go back to the beach, to deal with the inquiry he loves it on the beach. and if a and everything else, you know? and then the covid—19 come in, family another family looking forward to reconnecting with the you know, and it put more strain outdoors are the davis 's. living in on the families and themselves. picturesque cardigan, this is the first time they've gone back to their local beach less than a mile and when you can't get the help that from their home and they are excited you want and you need, because you're not able to spot local life again. dolphin to physically speak to someone spotting. they have quite the directly, you know face to face. harbour here —— they fill half the harbour here —— they fill half the harbour here —— they fill half the harbour here on a daily basis so we're looking forward to seeing them again. the of restrictions has also been a blessing for the more green
6:45 am
many people here are thumb among us. i came down here and already vulnerable and, like so many londoners, are dealing with the extra pressure i was upset to see the state of the brought by coronavirus. plot. i even considered at the time but yet again this community has shown incredible giving it up. malcolm has had an strength and resilience. when lockdown began, this local resident, along with volunteer army cadets started delivering allotment in cardiff for almost a0 supplies to the elderly, as well as local bus drivers, yea rs allotment in cardiff for almost a0 years and at 77, he's been the fire brigade and cleaners. self—isolating at home for 11 weeks. finally his out and about again, he lost a lot of friends in the fire and has recently seen doing what he loves outdoors. relatives die from covid—19. although heartbroken to see the a lot of people are struggling, state of his patch, this place is an because considering that they used important part of his life. part of being on an allotment is the social to be able to go to their face side, mentally as well as physical, to face appointment for therapy, and this is what i think most people a lot of it has stopped and not would agree on. it's the relaxation everybody has access to zoom, down here. the advice from all the or whatsapp or something. i mean, some people can hardly even devolved governments now is that pay their own bills. the mosque has long supported locals everyone, even those who have been who may be struggling shielding and self—isolating, that with their finances, or mental health. soon after the fire, they can go outside the physical it opened its doors to survivors, exercise and meet others at a social offering food and shelter and again, distance but doing so after such a although closed as a place of worship, with the help long period at home may be tricky of aid uk volunteers, for some. do you think those people it's been collecting and distributing supplies to those impacted by the coronavirus. who have been shielding and self—isolating for a number of
6:46 am
weeks, there will be a level of initially, we thought the elderly anxiety going out again? they've would be the most in need been indoors for quite a long time and that's still the case, but then we started to notice people and going outdoors where the virus is still very much present can be who are able—bodied, healthy people, worrying but we do know that being but in temporary casual work, especially within the restaurant outdoors with nature around green sector were laid off without any service or support. spaces has been shown to reduce anxiety and levels of depression.- least in the fortunate position i over at the mosque kitchen, will have next year, as tens of they cook with local volunteers thousands of people who will not for local key workers have next year so i think it's a case of counting your blessings to and nhs hospital staff. some extent. malcolm is a changed she managed to escape from the fifth floor man according to his family since of grenfell tower, where she lived being able to go outside again, with her family. working on his pride and joy with her close friend and two the help of his family at a social children didn't make it out. the kitchen was opened up distance. and for the younger and smaller among us, look at the baby after the fire to give survivors one, isa smaller among us, look at the baby one, is a chance to learn and a place to cook and eat. reconnect with all living things the duchess of sussex, around us. thomas morgan, bbc news, meghan markle, helped the women create a cook book, south wales. the proceeds of which are now helping pay for the ingredients. when they sent me a picture, the first picture i received when receiving the boxing, it's a baby one. it was cute!|j i was in tears. it was happiness tears, but the memory came back again.
6:47 am
it's a baby one. it was cute! i am not sure i would go that far. no three years ago, i was receiving and the time has come welding for you. it is good to have for me to give back. i wish i could hug them, you know? but then they hug me, tip. there are only so many but i cannot hug them and i'm trying variations on that walk you can do. to hug them through food. we just showing that you know all need new horizons and i think helen can bring us one. good morning. my yorkshire radar is we're here for you. twitching with that image behind you. they cannot be certain where it unlike past anniversaries which have is, but i will has a guess. this is seen hundreds of people take to the streets, this year the community is being encouraged to reflect a library picture, but they can show and remember at home you a couple of whether weather with online virtual gatherings. church bells across london, including st paul's and westminster abbey will be rung watchers pictures this morning —— weather watchers. they have the 72 times to remember each of the victims and many public buildings and homes will be sunny rays coming through the shower illuminated in green. cloud, which is what will have really for most of us today. a little bit grave. this is actually taken little bit grave. this is actually ta ken about half—an—hour little bit grave. this is actually taken about half—an—hour ago in cou nty taken about half—an—hour ago in county durham. we have had the sea that was our correspondent freight come in here, the sea haar, ayesha buksh reporting. contrast that with barely any cloud sky in essex at the moment. beautiful poppies to go with it. at takes ta kes you least they think they are hope they takes you back to that horrendous morning three years ago.
6:48 am
are. another there was low pressure, we're nowjoined by reverend mike sunny spells, and showers stop this long from notting hill methodist church and the chief executive is the latest rainfall chart across of the al—manaar mosque, abdurahman sayed. the south and west. in contrast with yesterday where we have the rain in the north—east it is slightly drier. you are showers for the southend west. this is really quite stubborn, what is the plan for today? very this sea haar and see for it. it little is able to happen because of comes in with the most aeromedical sea. further south, not comes in with the most aeromedical sea. furthersouth, not quite comes in with the most aeromedical sea. further south, not quite an the coronavirus regulations for the issue. fewer showers for the public but we are able to broadcast south—west and south—east. happy events that have been pre—recorded and a live stream is going on. there once again, wales, perhaps east anglia, one or two for northern isa and a live stream is going on. there is a service at 11 o'clock, a bell ireland and western scotland was the subject comes out more readily. near ringing at six o'clock, both being the east coast it has been cool, streamed, and a series of speeches damp, angryforsome the east coast it has been cool, damp, angry for some hours for the next couple of days, facing the and contributions by local campaigners, activists, which are prospect of another cool and damp day. it is that moist air coming in then going to be streamed for the over the cool sea. through the night local community and beyond. as we lose the shower activity that drift, that easily wind will push abdurahman sayed, i would like to the low cloud back inland. again, just take a moment and ask you, how do you reflect this morning on what
6:49 am
for many central and eastern parts happened three years ago? it is so of the uk we will wake up to a grey fresh in many people's mines, isn't morning tomorrow. the reason we have all this humidity is we have been it? absolutely, very fresh indeed. bringing an hour from it was a morning that no one all this humidity is we have been bringing an hourfrom the all this humidity is we have been bringing an hour from the south and the continent. this is low pressure, expected to be the way it was and we a flabby area of low pressure sat across the uk and that is driving suddenly discovered that we had lost they are members of our community, the showers. in between, some places volunteers and it was a very sad escaping the showers altogether and staying dry. you will know about morning. seeing also the tower and them when they come along. like yesterday there will be frequent lightning, quite large hail, and spoke. there was also the positive squally winds near the showers. in side of humanity that was displayed on that very morning, and that is between, if you escape altogether, a warm day with strong sunshine. we the people coming from across the are only a few days away from the different backgrounds, social, longest day of the year when the sun is highest in the sky stop again, professional and so on, coming to help together to support those who because of that energy, the sun without low pressure sitting over us survived. and those in an uncertain through today, monday, tuesday, wednesday, we've got more showers to situation because of the people who come. but again, not forall. chris we re left situation because of the people who were left behind, and for a few and sally, back to you. crepuscular. weeks after the fire they were only considered as missing people so by and sally, back to you. crepuscular. by like that word. relating to there was no confirmation of their situation which added to the anxiety
6:50 am
and pressure in those days. the twilight. is that it? i haven't look community coming together was a at it. they just love unity that was really, for me, twilight. is that it? i haven't look at it. theyjust love the word. the unprecedented at the time. this is rays coming through and the reflection of the clouds in the how i remember it all the time. early morning sun. expanding reverent, i was struck by your reference in a few moments ago to vocabulary for me, which is always good. cheers. thank you, hello. -- the realities of the moment, limiting what you can do today is a commemoration. what have the realities of the last few months been like for the victims' families helander. now it's time for when it is still very fresh in the coronavirus: what next? presented by annita mcveigh. memory, the reality of life for those families is still very different to what it was, the rest of us it has been limiting in the amount of people we have been able to see. one of the difficulties is we are all in close contact with hello, and welcome to the latest each other, it is harder and so many in our special programmes on the coronavirus pandemic. i'm annita mcveigh. 0n today's programme, of us, it is hard to know how the the world health organisation says that up to a0% of coronavirus cases rest of the community views due to could come from people who have no symptoms. this sense of isolation and one of
6:51 am
the difficult things about the anniversary, difficult enough as it is, is the solidarity and strength many people think they need and appreciate at a time like this, it first, there's growing evidence that cannot be demonstrated in the same a second wave of covid—19 has hit way. so although many people know iran, which was one of the earliest epicentres of the virus, that there is so much support, but despite the increase in cases, there is no new lockdown in place thoughts and prayers out there, it is not the same as people being able yet for the 80 million people living there. some cities have already to gather. we are not able to do been announced as red zones for infection. that today and we are just trying to do whatever we can to be able to show that all those who have been so bbc persia has this report. could this be iran's second traumatised by this that they are wave of coronavirus? the country was opened not forgotten and we are determined up from lockdown just about a month ago. that the 72 and all those profoundly and this is how it looks affected will be remembered. like now in one city. buses are being used to transfer covid—19 patients to the capital of the province. abdurahman sayed, has also been a consequence of the wheels ofjustice slowing down and taking longer to get a nswe rs slowing down and taking longer to get answers about what happened on the night? there has been this it's one of at least nine provinces ongoing enquiry but so many things have not been able to happen in the where infections are rising rapidly. according to iran's ministry same way as they could do normally of health, this province in the south—east is now a red zone. because of the coronavirus.
6:52 am
absolutely, justice is in fact very important in this case. it is also emotionally very important to have closure to this tragedy. at the same the hospitals are full. their staff are overwhelmed. time, a lot has been going on within last week, iran recorded the highest the community. your report showed daily increase in the number of coronavirus cases since the first were reported four months ago. many local officials say this one of the survivors, three years ago she was at the receiving end of is a second wave of infections. support, to date she is very much but iran's president insists pa rt of support, to date she is very much part of the support mechanism that the term 'second wave' creates available to the community through her initiatives of supplying food to too much fear among people. those in need. there are so many there are no signs of other positive progress that has social distancing here. shoppers and street vendors been made within the community in don't seem too worried. the authorities say this is the reason behind the recent terms of building resilience. now as spike, that people have ignored we go through this covid—19 pandemic public health advice and travelled to other cities. situation, we are providing telephone counselling, available to translation: in last 24 hours, the community seven days a week, we learned that about 60—70% of the new patients in tehran hospitals have travelled to other cities recently. this has happened during eid al—fitr other sessions, the food parcels and
6:53 am
others covered in your report, this has all come together because of the experience we went through at holidays, as we were expecting. grenfell, the tragedy, and the lessons learned from that which made us prepared to face any challenge as and when it comes. iran's official number of confirmed cases is around 176,000 cases, with over 8,000 deaths. but many, including the iranian parliament, a message containing some hope on believe the correct number of infections is 8—10 times more and the deaths are at the third anniversary of that terrible disaster. it is 8:23am. least twice as much. here's helen with a look at this morning's weather. the president has warned that if people don't follow social distancing, the restrictions may be reimposed. but the economy, already badly hit by us sanctions and corruption, is on its knees. good morning. two faces of the weather this morning, this is near many say that iran can't afford another lockdown, leeds, it will not be lasting, we even if the government wants to. should see some warm sunshine coming through here and many places will have a dry day of the sunshine as well. the coastal fog we have had in the who has admitted there is a big unknown about how many coronavirus cou nty well. the coastal fog we have had in county durham is going to be slower infections are caused by people
6:54 am
who don't have symptoms of the disease. to clear away. this is the work further south in essex, the two faces of the weather this morning. one of its scientists had suggested it was rare for the virus to be the sea fog will be burning back to spread this way, but the organisation now says up to a0% the coast but as it does so more of infections could come from people who have no sign of being ill, sunshine coming through, showers developing more wildly. wales, and that could make the virus harder to stop, as our science editor david shukman reports. this is a message from the government's chief medical south—west england already. but the 0fficer about coronavirus. dank and dreary weather, the third if you or anyone in your house... for months, government advice has successive day in some parts of focused on symptoms, scotla nd successive day in some parts of scotland of cool, damp and grey how you must isolate if you get them. weather. further south, for many the you should all stay at home. sunshine coming out, encouraging but what about people who don't look heavier showers, the sun strongest as if they have the disease, at this time of year. some shoppers but are still carrying the virus? like paramedic chelsie mason, who had a test for coronavirus i was coming through across parts of and expected to be clear. scotla nd i was coming through across parts of scotland and northern ireland but fairly isolated. contrast in i felt absolutely fine. temperatures from 12—13 on the north came into work and had the test sea coast to 23—2a in 0ban. the done, and then a couple of days later i got a call back saying it was positive, so really shocked because i had no
6:55 am
symptoms whatsoever. showers and thunderstorms rumble on into this evening, dying away so, how many cases are there without symptoms? through the night, picking up more a study at addenbrooke's hospital in cambridge found that 3% cloud and rain, on and off coming of the staff were positive, into northern ireland, east of but didn't show it. scotland, cloud drifting back in the us, at a care home in washington state, inland. monday morning, another warm the numbers were higher. night and inland. monday morning, another warm nightand a inland. monday morning, another warm night and a great and cool start 56% of people with the virus had no near the north sea coast again. the indication of being ill. fla bby near the north sea coast again. the fla b by area near the north sea coast again. the and on the diamond princess, flabby area of low pressure, repeats a cruise ship offjapan, the performance monday through as many as 72% of positive cases tuesday. sitting to the west of us tomorrow, subtle differences as to where the showers will be in the coming days. the congregation of the showed no symptoms at all. heaviest ones across the western side of the uk tomorrow. we have the low cloud to clear further east. for all of us, again away from those if someone becomes infected, it may take five days before they show any signs of illness, stubborn cloudy grey places it is but for the a8 hours before their symptoms start, one. come tuesday, low pressure they could be passing the virus on. then there's the category of people shifting further eastwards we think, who catch the virus and at no stage showers more widespread, heavy ones have any symptoms at all, further east. the devil is in the maybe for ten days or more — no—one really knows. detail with showers, one in the and scientists are desperate to find out how much they can sunshine between but locally heavy spread the virus. downpours. chris and sally.
6:56 am
one of the first things i thought about really was, "oh, my god, i've done two night shifts, i've come into contact with six or seven patients a real mix. per night, i've been with my crewmate for 12 hours." small clusters of protests that turned violent in central london as much as you minimise the risk, there is still that risk there, yesterday have been condemned by the prime minister and with me being positive and the home secretary. and not knowing about it, 0ur correspondent tom symonds i could've passed it on. was at those demonstrations — which involved some far—right activists. tom joins us now. working out if that's going on now is really difficult. the government's mainly testing people who may have symptoms. tom, what did you see? it was pretty those who don't might slip through the net. violent yesterday, sally. throughout the day, attacks on police. we often so, scientists in norwich want to test the entire say when we covered these protests city, 100,000 people. there were peaceful protests which they say it's the only turned into violent demonstrations. way to discover who's spreading the virus. actually, the peaceful protest were if you don't realise you're ill, just an hour or two... that is what as we come out of lockdown, and people are going to have more contacts than they did previously, the risk from those individuals i saw. before long, the police were is likely to increase. being attacked outside downing street, outside parliament. a team the upshot is that keeping a safe distance still matters, of officers on one occasion pushed and where you can't, governments around the world back and protesters broke through are recommending face coverings in case you've got the virus and started attacking photographers and don't know it. who were covering and photographing
6:57 am
david shukman, bbc news. what was going on. it went on all day really. some particularly bad almost 300,000 children in india could die due to severe malnutrition and lack of access to essential scenes at waterloo station in the evening. mainly this was right wing life—saving services over the next groups attacking the police but there were fights between antiracism six months, according to a study campaigners and those right—wing byjohns hopkins university. groups. it is clear that there was a the rise in hunger has been made much worse by the coronavirus great deal of anger, ill feeling and lockdown, with the country's daily violence on the streets yesterday. wage earners suffering the most. great deal of anger, ill feeling and violence on the streets yesterdaylj am violence on the streets yesterday.” millions have lost theirjobs am guessing your job violence on the streets yesterday.” am guessing yourjob was to be there and gauge what the protesters were and are struggling to saying. did they want to talk to feed theirfamilies. you? where are you able to speak to this report comes from delhi, the protesters and find out who they where malnutrition levels in children were already some were, which groups they were from?” of the highest in the world. was very were, which groups they were from?” too much hunger, too little food. was very keen to speak to the protesters. they a re was very keen to speak to the protesters. they are from a wide variety of groups, traditional far withjobs gone, it's right groups if you like, we saw the a fight for survival. leader of britain first there, hunger was always an issue here, but this desperation is new. people probably we thought from the for these children just outside the capital, national front, in the past the delhi, even one meal a day now british national party, groups of ten or 20 years ago. also a
6:58 am
feels like a triumph. considerable number of men, pretty much all men, from something called the football lads alliance, a shiva is just one—month—old. grouping of men from the football his parents rely on daily wages supporters groups. they are to buy food, and like millions particularly political in some of others, they lost work after the government announced occasions but out in force yesterday. we try to speak to them a lockdown in march. and often i was told in no uncertain terms using words i cannot repeat to translation: we used to cook rice, rotis and vegetables go away. we spoke to one young guy before the lockdown. our children ate well. from who said he didn't see himself now they remain hungry because we have no money as racist, he had no problem with and no work. black lives matter, particularly concerned about what he thought was a threat to the statue of winston children under five are vulnerable churchill. he said he got us through to severe malnutrition. india is the worst in the world, the war and it was wrong for his with one in five children affected, statue to be targeted. he said he and that might have had a lot in common with antiracism become much worse. so, this is almost a perfect storm campaigners, saying he grew up with for malnutrition in this region, black people and we are both working with a very vulnerable population, class and have a lot in common. very a decline in quality and quantity of diet, and without the access difficult to get the idea what the to the essential services that children need to prevent demand was yesterday from these
6:59 am
protesters. that is tom talking and treat malnutrition. about his experience of the protests for children who were already malnourished, these months have yesterday. a complex picture. to been even harder. work out what is motivating people if they are not willing to talk to a reporter. this two—year—old's mother the andrew marr show follows us says she has lost weight here on bbc one this morning. andrew, who will you during the lockdown, and her condition could worsen be talking to today? as now they have very little i will be talking to all my guests government food support. about the scenes yesterday but the for more than a5 years, big story at the moment is the the indian government has run terrifying, frankly, numbers onjobs a child development scheme to provide essential nutrients and vitamins to children being lost in the short—term as a result of covid—19. we are heading under the age of six. for very high unemployment. i am during the lockdown, going to be talking to the chancellor of exchequer about what most of the more than 1 million he proposes to do about it and to centres shut down during lockdown. the shadowjustice he proposes to do about it and to the shadow justice secretary he proposes to do about it and to the shadowjustice secretary and now, some of them are trying to home also about black lives matter. for a deliver a much smaller quantity global picture, i have been talking of food supplements at a time when they're most critical for young child ren's development. to the head of the world trade organisation, very gloomy about the now it's ordinary citizens prospects of world trade in months who have stepped up. ahead. and talking to a wonderful like neelesh singh, who has been distributing one hot meal a day actress about it rather patriotic
7:00 am
to 500 children since the past two months. bbc drama to lift our spirits as but that's hardly enough. well. a busy hour at nine o'clock. stay with us, headlines coming up. translation: i can provide one or two meals, but children need breakfast, lunch, and dinner. despite a surge in coronavirus cases, the lockdown is easing. the government has a huge dilemma — how to stop the deadly spread of the disease and protect the most vulnerable, particularly children, from hunger and even starvation. they haven't yet found all the answers. hello, this is breakfast and that's it for now. a reminder with chris mason and sally nugent. here's a summary of this you can follow me on twitter or head morning's main news. to the bbc news website for the more than 100 people have been latest information. thanks for arrested, after a number of protests turned violent in central london yesterday. groups including some far—right activists had gathered in the capital, saying watching. they were protecting statues from anti—racism protestors.
7:01 am
police were attacked with bottles, smoke grenades and flares. good morning. six officers received welcome to breakfast with chris mason and sally nugent. minor injuries. 0ur headlines today: french police have clashed with activists in several cities across the country, protesting against racism and alleged police brutality. disturbances break out overnight in the us city of atlanta, around 15,000 people gathered where a black man has been in central paris but clashes shot dead by police. erupted, and police fired tear gas the fast food restaurant at protesters who threw where the shooting took fireworks and bottles. place is ablaze. officers have used tear gas to disperse protestors. demonstrators demanded an end to racism as part of the worldwide more than 100 people are arrested black lives matter movement. after a day of violent clashes in central london, protesters have ta ken to the streets of the us city involving some far—right activists. of atlanta in response to the fatal shooting by police of a black man. the individuals who are basically the restaurant where putting the safety of our police the incident happened has been officers and the safety set on fire by crowds overnight. of the public at risk will expect rayshard brooks, who was 27 years old, was fatally wounded to face the full force of the law. during a struggle with police. borisjohnson commissions a review atlanta's police chief has into the two metre social distancng rule, as non—essential shops across england prepare resigned over the matter. to reopen tomorrow boris johnson has ordered a review of the two—metre social—distancing rule. many businesses — and some matt lucas and david walliams apologise of mrjohnson's own mps — for the use of blackface make—up have warned that large parts
7:02 am
in the comedy series little britain. of the hospitality industry will not rory mcilroy and justin rose survive if the rules aren't changed. are three shots off the lead in texas as the pga tour returns. it could have been the review will aim to be very different though. completed by the ath ofjuly, two bogeys and a double bogey when pubs and restaurants in england could open. for rose in his third round. shops in england can re—open from tomorrow for the first time since lockdown began at the end of march. good morning. lengthy sunny spells northern ireland saw stores open on friday, but scotland and wales are yet to announce dates for re—opening. and slow—moving downpours again 25 retailers have today backed a call from the british retail today with a little bit of low cloud consortium for people to shop persisting again on the east coast. responsibly and follow instructions more detail than around for the when they return to stores. minutes. it's sunday 1ath june. our top story. disturbances have broken out secondary school head teachers say in the us city of atlanta they're having to overcome after the fatal shooting an array of challenges, by police of a black man. protestors have set fire as some pupils in england prepare to the drive—thru restaurant to go back to classes tomorrow. where the incident took place, more than 300 schools police have responded by firing tear and colleges have told the bbc gas. 27—year—old rayshard brooks was shot and killed on friday. they will be offering between five the city's police chief and 30 hours of face—to—face has now resigned. teaching each week, but only the incident follows weeks of protests across the us and around a quarter of eligible pupils will be allowed in school at any one the world, after the police killing time, and there will be of george floyd in minneapolis. rich preston reports. added safety measures. the stars of little britain, matt lucas and david walliams,
7:03 am
have apologised for their portrayal of "other races" in their tv series. the shows have been pulled from several streaming services because some sketches used blackface make—up. both comedians have tweeted crowds got angrier through the night to say it was wrong and say they're "very sorry." here in atlanta after news of the death of another black man at the those are the main hands of american police officers. that anger spilt onto the streets. stories this morning. the fast food restaurant next to the scene of the killing was set alight. major highways would block. police time to catch up with jane, who has say mr brooks failed a sobriety test and resisted arrest. they say he was golf news for us. morning jane. good able to get one of the officer's tasers and tried to use it against morning. it'll be a tense final him. they responded with live day in texas as the pga ammunition. the killing comes amid a tour gets underway. global wave of lack lives matter england's justin rose and northern ireland's rory mcilroy are both in connention protest. the officer involved has for the charles schwab challenge. they're three shots behind the leader american xander schauffele, been fired. while there may be going into the fourth round. debate as to whether this was an however, rose could have been in a far better position. appropriate use of deadly force, i he had a double bogey at the fifth and then two bogeys on his back nine. firmly believe that there is a clear both he and mcilroy are on 10 under. distinction between what you can do after a three month wait, rory says and what you should do. i do not
7:04 am
it good but strange to be back. believe that this was a justified use of deadly force. the city's ididn't i didn't feel like i played very police chief has resigned but it's unlikely that will placate these well, but no one else pulled away. people say racism is built into i'm still going to be within american society. the officers need striking distance going into to be arrested and it's not ok, it's not ok that every day i have to wake tomorrow, so yeah, if that's the bad up day out of the way, hopefully i with not ok that every day i have to wake up and learn a new name, new hashtag, a new life that was lost post a good one tomorrow. because of the injustice that america has for something that was norwich city have confirmed one of their players has tested built in the 1600s. i could say we positive for coronavirus a day after they played in a friendly against tottenham. wa nt built in the 1600s. i could say we wantjustice but out of 1,200 players and staff built in the 1600s. i could say we want justice but i built in the 1600s. i could say we wantjustice but i don't even care tested in the premier league, two anymore, i don't know what that is. positive results came back. i've been doing this for 15 years. i in a statement the club said: don't know whatjustice is i've been doing this for 15 years. i don't know what justice is anymore. is it getting them rested, is it getting somebody fired, is that the chief stepping down? i know it's not just as what is happening in society right now. around third of people in they haven't named the player. georgia are african—american despite the spanish league returned last night, with barcelona looking anything the black lives matter movement, but rusty, scoring 66 they see american society is built seconds into their match against them and they fear for their
7:05 am
future. richard preston, bbc news. against real mallorca. their star player lionel messi secured the comforable win. let's ta ke he made it a—0 with his 20th let's take a lie to atlanta. it's just after two o'clock in the goal of the season. morning there. i sense with the barca are now five points clear gathering of police officers, and of their la liga rivals real madrid at the top of the table. blue flashing lights. even in the yesterday, we showed you fans middle of the night. we can see from returning to rugby stadiums in new zealand for the first time since the coronavirus pandemic. this shot, even though it looks now tennis fans at novak djokovic's club in belgrade have been allowed in to watch a tournament organised by the world tense, people are still, more than number one in serbia after almost an hourago tense, people are still, more than an hour ago when we saw protesters three months of no competition. face—to—face. the car being driven at speed through this area. it wasn't all serious though, as the wimbledon champion challenged a ball boy, 0bviously at speed through this area. obviously this whole area has now been completely closed. this is the who took a point off him! a day he will never forget! petrol station in the drive—through restau ra nt petrol station in the drive—through restaurant where the incident happened. we will keep an eye on these pictures for you and bring you an update of little later. more than one hundred people have been arrested after a number let's see this cheeky return again. of protests turned violent in central london yesterday. groups including some far—right activists had totally out of reach for djokovic. gathered in the capital, saying they were protecting statues from anti—racism protestors.
7:06 am
police officers were racing and there was attacked with bottles, smoke grenades and flares. a shock 200/1winner sean dilley has this report. at newbury yesterday. intercessor ridden by ciaren fallon edged out the favourite naswaary to become the joint longest—priced winner in british flat racing history. thousands of people join protests, a great moment for those despite calls from police to stay at home. of you who love backing an outsider! many were peaceful, but violent clashes soon broke out. and finally, many of you will have police officers were attacked throughout missed that feeling the day as they attempted to keep distance between anti—racism and of celebrating a late winning goal far—right groups. for your team. a barrage of missiles were launched at them. well, take a look at in whitehall, the crowd the borussia dortmund manager lucien favre. pushed their way through and tried to attack photographers. after this headerfrom erling haaland in the 95th minute, which kept their slim hopes of the bundesliga title alive, the coach appeared to injure himself celebrating! the prime minister, borisjohnson, condemned the minority of protesters on twitter. he might have a sore calf this morning but i'm sure it was worth it. he said: the individuals that are basically quite an embarrassing injury to go putting the safety of our police officers and the safety to the physio with isn't it? the of the public at risk will expect gaffer flat out. if there is one to face the full force of the law.
7:07 am
people from a variety of backgrounds turned place to injure yourself, it is out as self—proclaimed protectors of statues after winston churchill's there. on the sideline it is not monument was damaged last week. this protester told us he felt actually taking part in the match british history under attack. action. thank you jane. come on. i mean, he had some racist views from tomorrow, anyone in england travelling on public transport — but, at the end of the day, including buses, trains, ferries and planes — he led us through our darkest hour. will have to wear a face covering i mean, i'm from south london, to help stop the spread i've grown up with black people. of coronavirus. in all other parts of the uk, we are all working class, face coverings are advised when social—distancing isn't possible, but they're not compulsory. live side—by—side. there are guidelines around how they should be used — here's a little explainer. nobody here is an issue with blm. here is how to wear a face covering. first, wash your hands before police are investigating this incident outside parliament. the memorial is to pc keith palmer, putting it on, using open or gel. who was killed the 2017 without touching the front, cover westminster terror attacks. your mouth and nose, it should go up 0utside waterloo station, police stepped in to quell scuffles. to the bridge of your nose and under across the day, six officers were injured, protesters too. your chin. hook the straps around this man, carried to safety by another protester. sean dilley, bbc news. your chin. hook the straps around your ea rs your chin. hook the straps around your ears or around the back of your head. you don't want gaps. avoid touching your nose, eyes or mouth at
7:08 am
all times. take it off from behind, the violence and part of the capital contrast with other areas where store nit a plastic bag until you protests were largely peaceful. can wash it. and then wash your hands. and wash it regularly with your other laundry. but remember a face covering isn't a substitute for french police have clashed hand washing or social distancing. with activists in several cities across the country, protesting against racism and alleged police brutality. around 15,000 people so what about travelling in a taxi? gathered in central paris but clashes erupted, technically, you don't have and police fired tear gas to wear a face covering, at protesters who hit threw fireworks and bottles. but many companies, including uber, demonstrators demanded an end are saying no mask means no ride. to racism as part of the worldwide let's speak to waqas hussain, black lives matter movement. boris johnson has ordered a review of the two—metre a minicab owner in essex. social—distancing rule in england. many businesses — and some of mrjohnson's own mps — have warned that large parts morning to you. how are you going to of the hospitality industry will not manage this? because it looks like survive if the rules aren't changed. 0ur political correspondent, jessica parkerjoins us now. you guys have been forgotten a bit, jessica — how much pressure has boris come under to commission this review? as far as the rules are concerned. good morning. yes, it is a bit disappointing really. we do the same 0ften often that means not a lot will duties as buses, trains, tubes trams happen but this seems different. and planes, but just
7:09 am
borisjohnson has duties as buses, trains, tubes trams and planes, butjust in a smaller happen but this seems different. boris johnson has been happen but this seems different. borisjohnson has been talking recently about how the two metres capacity. 0ur drivers do interact rule is under constant review, scientists have been looking at it. with approximately a hundred he is expected —— expect —— passengers a week and i feel that expressed sympathy and now we hear it's under a formal review. what's there is a safety issue for our the difference? there is a date by drivers. i really do not know why we which the report has to report back, have been excluded from this. so the fourth ofjuly happens to be the time when the hospitality industry what in practical terms are you doing, you can choose to manage your in england could start to reopen and is well we are told scientists and businesses as you see fit. have you put those screens up between the two economists as well are going to be front seats and where the passenger consulted. as you guys mentioned, is in the back? yes, so we have this follows some serious pressure from the hospitality industry who taken a number of measures, so are very worried that when they do reopen, the two metre rule will mean a struggle to recover after an first, ppe with drivers are provided incredibly difficult few months but has also been pressure from with ppe, so they're wearing masks conservative mps who are worried and gloves and they have hand about the economy as well and they point to other countries in europe sanitisers available and the where there is a one metre rule, the passengers compartment is divided fa ct where there is a one metre rule, the fact the world health organization with a pvc screen. we have gone has said the one metre rule is about 0k in terms of a safe distance.
7:10 am
further, by disinfecting the scientists in england have said the vehicles after every journey and further away you are, the reduced risk of transmission but ultimately we're using anti—viral technology to this is a balance of risk and won the prime minister will have to wake disinfect our cars every a8—hours to up. secondary school head teachers say enhance the protection on our they're having to overcome an array of challenges, vehicles. only every ab-hours? i as some pupils in england prepare to go back to classes tomorrow. more than 300 schools thought it might be more frequent. and colleges have told the bbc they will be offering between five and 30 hours of face—to—face it is every a8—hours we are doing. teaching each week, but only a quarter of eligible pupils will be we have loads of vehicles, so it allowed in school at any one time, and there will be gives us, we are taking measures in added safety measures. between as well, so like i said, drivers are disinfecting the today marks three years vehicles between journeys, start since the grenfell tower fire, and to mark the anniversary, drivers are disinfecting the vehicles betweenjourneys, start and end of their shift as well. but the people are being urged to illuminate their homes with green anti—viralfogging is lights to remember the 72 people who died.church bells will also end of their shift as well. but the anti—viral fogging is more end of their shift as well. but the anti—viralfogging is more of an enhanced protection. how is business? are people willing to sound across london. the grenfell united campaign group venture out and get into your taxis? says the fight for safe homes and justice continues, as our correspondent rajini vaidya nathan reports. because some people may feel it is safer than the bus or train, because they're encountering fewer people,
7:11 am
the faces of those who died in a but ina they're encountering fewer people, but in a car you're close to the tragedy which exposed some of the driver. you are closer to the deep inequalities in our society. each story of loss is as painful driver, but we have got a large number of vehicles which are larger today as it was three years ago. this man lived alone on the 20th than the standard car and we have floor. his family say marking this reduced our seating capacity, to increase social distancing. i do anniversary during a pandemic is especially top. we're still going feel that taxis and cabs are safer the grieving process and the rest of the grieving process and the rest of than public transport, because the the grieving process and the rest of the grieving because of the pandemic and people have lost family and customer books a car and that is friends ahead of our time and we are grieving with them in the pandemic theirs for the entire journey and at theirs for the entire journey and at brought a lot of bad emotions for the end of the journey it is us, especially for how things were disinfected ready for the next passenger. i feel that is a much after the fire because there were a lot of similarities, glued to the tv, listening to the number of safer option and, yeah... thank you deaths rising every day. fire began for talking us to. we appreciate on the fourth floor after a ridge your time. thank you. caught fire. a public enquiry blamed since the government advised that cheap combustible cladding on the face coverings might help stop building for its rapid spread. later the spread of coronavirus, people have been getting creative, and making their own the prime minister will deliver a from old t—shirts, scarves and socks. message at a virtual memorial service where he will pledge to ensure a tragedy like grenfell tower
7:12 am
well one woman in wiltshire never happens again. but the has gone further — government target to remove flammable cladding on high—rises by she's started sewing face coverings this month is yet to be met. about and hanging them on a so—called 2000 tower blocks in england alone "mask tree" outside her home, are still potentially at risk. three for passers by to help themselves. 0ur correspondent duncan yea rs are still potentially at risk. three years later, it's really frustrating kennedy went to meet her. that we are still talking about i've got all sizes available for everyone. removing this cladding. the the branches are heaving, government keep making this the leaves are full. that's good. it's time to plant the mask tree. announcement, but materialising actually happening is a completely laden with home—made different story? in one of london's high—spec facemasks, wealthiest areas, some of its it's the kind of tree that poorest won't protected. grenfell tower has been described as a may help save lives. monument to inequality. what happened here three years ago is as it'sjust such a nice, kind, releva nt happened here three years ago is as relevant today as it was then. generous thing to want to do. the idea is members of the public rajini vaidyanathan, bbc news. take the mask for free, and make the donation they want. the stars of little britain, we are told not to take matt lucas and david walliams, the surgical masks, for nhs use, so what have apologised for their portrayal a great alternative. of 'other races' in their tv the mask tree is the series. the shows have been pulled from several streaming services because some sketches idea of naomi betts. used blackface make—up. let's speak to our reporter andy moore, who's in our turning it into something completely different. london newsroom. she and her daughter rhiannon create
7:13 am
around 90 masks a day. this the latest in a growing number each one takes about five minutes. of shows taken off the air. recessed more or less. in the way of the black lives matter global protest. so little britain which ran from 2003— 2008, taken of and all are made to strict hygiene and safety standards issued many streaming services, also the by public health england. providing cloth masks for the community in this fashion takes the pressure of the nhs supplies. they need the medical masks in clinical settings that this provides a suitable alternative. with face coverings becoming 2010 programme come fly with me and the stars matt lucas and david compulsory on public walliams apologised again last night in identical tweets: transport in england next week, mask trees and wasn't across the country. 150 sites have now been set up. in naomi's area alone, 8,000 masks have now been taken by the public. matt lucas spoke at great length i think it's a great initiative about it. he said that society has to bring to the local community. indeed it's a community solution to a collective need whose evolved since then and said the presence is now nationwide. programme was cruel in some ways, that he wouldn't make jokes about
7:14 am
it's everywhere. tra nsvestites that he wouldn't make jokes about transvestites these days nor would it is, yeah. i am hoping it's going to be they black up to play characters of declared a national other races. he said there was no forest at some point. mask trees... bad intent, they wanting to show that variety of characters they stay safe now, everybody. ..an idea that is could play but he said that in light clearly taking root. duncan kennedy, bbc of circumstances now, it was lazy news, in wiltshire. for white actors to black up and play characters from other races. let's speak now to dr helen davison, andy, thank you very much. that is founder of the campaign group masksaall uk, and patrick grant, andy, thank you very much. that is a judge on the great british sewing andy moore in our london newsroom. bee, who's launched a nation—wide back to one of our main project to provide everyone stories this morning — the small number of violent protests in central london yesterday have been condemned as "racist thuggery" with face coverings. by the prime minister. some of the demonstrators — including far—right activists — said they were there helen, how pleased are you to see these rules coming in? i'm to protect historical statues. absolutely delighted. masks for all have been campaigning for people to with us from northumberland wear face coverings since probably is sue sim, a former chief about easter time, so they have constable, who was also responsible for public order for the national police chief's council. finally been mandated on public and we can speak to aristotle kallis, professor of modern history transport is brilliant. we would say at keele university. though that actually we really want
7:15 am
to see people wearing masks in all aristotle kallis, if they can come here first of all. how do we internal spaces when they're in describe the groups of people will contact with other people. i would who came together yesterday, and with all those small bursts of reiterate what the taxi drivers were violent clashes? good morning. well, saying, it is key that people who we have to make some distinction. wear a mask saying, it is key that people who weara mask in saying, it is key that people who wear a mask in a taxi, who go in a taxi wear a mask, the reason very there are places in the uk, as your much for wearing a mask, it is about own report highlighted. i think that protecting other people, so what we focuses on the london... inaudible. breathe, cough, talk and sneeze doesn't sort of head towards the it is unlike other similar row —— other person, but is stopped from rallies in the last month... shall doing that. patrick it is a chance we have a word with sue? it seems for your pep talk to the country increasingly innovative —— about this business of making a face inevitable that line would be a little sticky. sue, we will bring covering. and also for us glasses you in, if we may. take us through wearers one that doesn't steam you your thoughts as you are watching the protests in central london up. yes, we launched the big yesterday, it's so tricky for the police, trying to police a very community sew a few weeks ago and there was a huge amount of volunteer political events, the extent to which they should be intervening or sewing going on and we were there to not. when you look at the inaudible
7:16 am
provide more information and they have got involved in their hundreds of thousands, mask trees, you have protests, the very central tenant is talked about those, that is a great initiative, but people are looking that inaudible... after their friends and neighbours and community, volunteering their i think, you know what.|j time, giving something incredibly special that will save lives and i that inaudible... i think, you know what. i think we have sunday morning wi—fi, haven't think a lot of the volunteers have a we? we have. i think it is an unplugged and plugged back in great deal of comfort and pride out of doing it. you could heard the moment. bear with us both. we will try to establish the lines to both of you again in the hope we can hear pride in the voices, family have got you a little more reliably in a together, elderly relatives have couple of minutes. we will fix this. been sewing at home, it has given we go straight to helen who inu is them comfort and purpose. it has definitely there this morning's beena them comfort and purpose. it has been a phenomenonal effort and weather. —— who i know. probably wen over a million face covering have been sown in the past few weeks. we will need more than definitely there this morning's weather. -- who i know. chris was asking earlier, pictures of yorkshire behind me, i have found one, it is important that they're you one. this is... you see, ask and clea n one, it is important that they're clean so they're going through a the wash a lot. if you're getting on the bus and train, it will be a slog to i'd deliver. this is in leeds. it is be washing it every night? yes, i quite grey and misty. how far inland
7:17 am
that misty, low cloud is from the would recommend people probably have north sea. it will take a few hours to get rid of some of that from the north—east of england and eastern two at minimum, probably three, if scotland, could be the third day for you go out in the day and you wear some places where it is cool and it on yourjourney and wear it damp. here is that low cloud that has come in. it doesn't look like much but if you are sat under that around the office, you may have to it is giving nuisance value drizzle as well. it will be quite a dank ta ke around the office, you may have to take it off and if you have taken it off, the thing would be to put a sort of day. further south, plenty clean mask on. what i'm doing when i'm going out is i, rather than of sunshine, early morning mist and putting it on and off, going in and fog is clearing. probably not as out of shops or on to a bus, i would widely in the south—west is yesterday. some of the heaviest for just put it on before i go out of the door, just leave it on, until i wales, the midlands, and east anglia. 0nce wales, the midlands, and east anglia. once that cloud is back to then eventually come back again and the coast you will have quite a decent spell of dry and sunny ta ke then eventually come back again and take it off there carefully, as was weather. 23 or 2a in the north—west suggested in the little video that island, 2a—25 perhaps in southern you showed earlier. patrick for and eastern areas, i'd widely warm. those of us who are not talented with a needle and thread, how easy a strong june sunshine, not too far is it just to with a needle and thread, how easy is itjust to have a go and try and make your own face covering? from the longest day. this evening the showers carry on and will is away overnight. we will become more is itjust to have a go and try and make your own face covering ?m really is incredibly simple. there
7:18 am
rain and cloud coming in across is almost nothing you could sew that central and eastern parts. it is a is almost nothing you could sew that is simplerthan is almost nothing you could sew that is simpler than this. essentially we tea m central and eastern parts. it is a team and has been a thing for a are talking of a couple, one piece couple of days. it is because we of fabric, you fold it in half, turn have a very flabby area of low pressure, by that i mean we have it inside out and sew up the side. very few isobars and very little it is that easy. you can make one in wind to move any of this low cloud away and to move those showers, less time than it takes to polyan because when the showers come along egg. " less time than it takes to polyan egg. —— boil an egg. today, tomorrow, tuesday, wednesday less time than it takes to polyan egg. -- boil an egg. it can't be that easy! it is that simple. we they will be slow—moving. frequent have seen kids of five and six lightning with them, large—scale, sewing these. it has been a lot of and localism very squally winds. that is the set up again tomorrow. fun for people and it has a lot of people sewing. sewing machines are it will be pinpointing whether sold out across the uk now. we know showers will be. the devil in the detail. the low cloud will be with us on the east coast both today and partly sewing bee is on the again tomorrow. it may be that by television, and people want to do something good for their communities tuesday we start to see high and it has been heart—warming to see pressure shifting a little bit further in, shifting and from the the stories with the hashtag big community sew. a last point helen, atla ntic further in, shifting and from the atlantic and sitting across a small. by atlantic and sitting across a small. by that stage it will have drifted just to the left of us and give us about the business for us glasses wearers and those who are not potentially more widespread showers. tuesday, perhaps not quite as much conventional glasses wearers, but low cloud because the low pressure may be wearing sun glasses, it is centre will have moved a little bit. tricky, because they steam up. this
7:19 am
that will allow more widespread a solution to that? i mean haven't, showers. again, in between the showers. again, in between the showers there will be spells of sunshine, lengthy spells of i'm no good with a needle and sunshine, lengthy spells of sunshine, because they are slow—moving the areas of sunny thread, i could show you how to spells should be lengthier as well. just like today. just like today, make, use a mask from something that quite warm as well, low 20s for many not even sewing. ijust put a neck of us, except if you're caught in one of those showers. today, in tube, i don't know if you can seeshs particular, the north sea coast it could stay quite grey and damp and fold it in two, mutt it over my face misty and cool for much of the time. and pull it up a and there you have little real movement with the got a mask. but i would get masks weather. there will be some large downpours. we have some fantastic that have good nose pieces. i've got weather what your pictures are sent masks that i bought, or been given in. 0bviously weather what your pictures are sent in. obviously if it is safe to do so with the big thunderstorms around. and the mask itself has a nose piece just here that keeps it tighter. so thank you. we will see you later on. it is, what i do as well is wear a it's a big day for many shops smaller pair of glasses. they are at in england tomorrow — those deemed non—essential will be risk of steaming up. but there is a able to re—open their doors for the first time since lockdown began. lot of things that people can do but retailers have had to make big preparations to keep people safe, with wearing a scarf around their and shopping is going to be a very face, so you don't even need to be different experience for all of us.
7:20 am
here's our business having a made mask. a couple of correspondent katy austin. loudspeaker: shop safely by keeping layers of fabric are key. so that 2m apart at all times. the new shopping experience. you're stopping the stuff that is coming out from your mouth getting safety measures first used in supermarkets are now towards other people. thank you both a familiar sight. marks & spencer has already been for your team. we have learned a lot selling clothing basics from food hall stores like this thatis one in reading. for your team. we have learned a lot that is very vital with us all from tomorrow, all shops in england having to wear them from tomorrow. we appreciate your time and your selling non—essential goods, mask orface we appreciate your time and your mask or face covering expertise. i'm including clothes, can welcome customers back in. it's been a really big challenge for all of the staff to move going to have a go at making one.” the store around several times like the snood. i can see you in a over the past few weeks, but we're really of the effort they have put in and we're looking forward to monday and welcoming snood chris. it's time to say goodbye to chris — all our clothing customers back in. he's off to read the news on the andrew marr show. numbers of people in store and helen is with us to give here will be limited and there are one—way systems. us her final weather bulletin of the morning. i with ill leave you with one story, different shops will have slightly different processes. at marks & spencer, there are hand lockdown provides a boom time for rats. it reassures me, because the sanitiser stations around the store. you can touch the clothes other night i was having a glass of and browse the rails, but the fitting rooms are closed. it's one of 25 retailers urging wine and the outside light comes on customers to queue considerately, follow instructions and respect and the creature had a tail about staff after shops had gone to the effort of making the length of this news article, let their premises safe. lockdown has been tough financially
7:21 am
for many non—food retailers, and the move to more online me tell you. it pretty much asked shopping has sped up. big questions are how many people return to shop in person and how for a glass of wine. the rat man is profitable will stores be coming on wednesday, not a minute too soon. oh, chris good luck with that. in the meantime i will read the news. now helen with our final with social distancing? forecast. rescue me from the rats! good morning, thank you, some great katy austin, bbc news. sunshine out this morning if you enjoy it. it strong june sunshine, wish us luck. we are having another to be aware if you're out for a go at video calls, speaking to different guests. all things retail. longer walk perhaps. but in we can now talk to mark allsop, contrast, this is north yorkshire, a senior manager at retail group dixons carphone, which owns currys because we still have an eastly pc world and carphone warehouse. and with us also is diane jarvis, from sheffield's business drift that will be with us for four improvement district. good morning to you both. market, to or five days. you drift that will be with us for four orfive days. you can drift that will be with us for four or five days. you can see where we have that low cloud here on the first, talk us through what it will satellite, but this is the low be like if we roll up at one of your pressure where the showers are shops tomorrow morning. first of moving around. compare with yesterday, i think we will see less all, good morning. ithink the shops tomorrow morning. first of all, good morning. i think the first thing to say is we are excited to be shower activity in the south—west
7:22 am
opening tomorrow and we look forward and wales. but we have some showers to welcoming our customers and our in south wales at the moment. fewer big showers in the south—east. collea g u es to welcoming our customers and our colleagues back into our 131 stores they're more likely in east anglia, across the uk. now, is obviously the midlands and north wales. they going to be a very different can't be ruled out anywhere. but experience and we are taking it very some places, a lot of places will slowly and very safely. so we are stay dry and warm. isolated showers only opening about 50% of our estate, and what you will see is a in northern ireland and scotland and it will take a while for the cloud limited number of customers allowed to move back to the north sea coast. in the store at any one point. and but it could stay here. another day, you will see the fact that we're starting something called storefront the third one for some parts cool, trading, which is essentially a limited part of our store, so we can support our customers in a safe and grey and damp. and the cool weather controlled manner. diane jarvis, if comes back in the evening. another warm night for most of us. you may i could come to you, you are in charge of business improvement, the well have noticed it is close. the business improvement district in humidity is high. that is why we are sheffield, so when people come into seeing the sea fog. the moist air sheffield, so when people come into sheffield tomorrow, perhaps to do coming over a cool sea. that will be some shopping, what will the experience be like? well, first of a similar problem with high pressure all, good morning, and they tomorrow. again a grey, cool start, with some mist and fog. a lot of emphasise what mark has said, we are sunshine first thing and then the
7:23 am
quite excited to be welcoming people showers brew up and then the back, but it will be a very different experience. when you come complication we are picking up into the city centre tomorrow there pulses of rain coming into north are lots of clear messages about east england and eastern scotland and we could see another pulse being smart and staying apart. we tonight and tomorrow. in the sunshine it is warm. temperatures have things which will allow people ranging from 12 on the coast to 23 to move freely, but also move safely or 2a ranging from 12 on the coast to 23 or2a in ranging from 12 on the coast to 23 while maintaining social distancing or 2a in london. similar on mondays and tuesday. the difference on and we expect people to use common tuesdayis and tuesday. the difference on tuesday is the low pressure may be sense and act responsibly and we above the uk and we are cutting off that easterly feed, so perhaps not as much sea fog. but more showers, have had three months of shopping with essential retailers, so it is more widely. some heavy ones in pretty much the norm in terms of doing things differently and having eastern areas by that stage. as it a lwa ys eastern areas by that stage. as it always the case for showers, the a slightly different shopping experience. but we have things like devil is in the detail, pin pointing where they will be, they will be road closures in place, pedestrian changing from day—to—day and there will be a will the lot of dry and walk ways where we had rose last week they now pedestrian walkways, bright weather. thank you. raise the buses have been re— routed. great to see you. there is lots of space in the city ce ntre there is lots of space in the city centre for people to move around. if the wildlife trust is encouraging people across the country to re—connect they are coming in, there is plenty with nature and go wild for the month ofjune. of space for them to queue. there is lockdown walks have become a routine
7:24 am
also plenty of space for them to for many of us in the past few move around the city centre freely months, and the trust is providing and safely as well. mark, how tricky the public with ideas and resources on how to capture some has locked down been for your of their favourite moments outdoors. we're now joined business? an unprecedented moment by leanne manchester from the wildlife trust, and one of the participants with all the stores up until now in the campaign, closed. indeed. so 12 weeks ago we veronica johansson poultney. had to close all of our stores and good morning to you both. leanne, furloughed the majority of our store first of all, why is it so important colleagues. so it has been to reconnect with nature and difficult, but we have been looking particularly at this difficult time? at the fact we have a healthy online business and we have seen growth of good morning, thank you for having me on. we know if you go outdoors in the online business through the process. we have also been lucky nature, you will feel happier, enoughin process. we have also been lucky enough in the fact that we have an healthier and your well being will be improved. at the moment, we know international business, so we have stores in the nordic 's and in it isa ireland, so we have been able to be improved. at the moment, we know it is a difficult time for people watch customer behaviour in those and this 30 days wild, we want regions and we have been able to eve ryo ne and this 30 days wild, we want everyone to get involved. 0ver ta ke regions and we have been able to take the learnings around safety and 600,000 people are involved.” around customer behaviour into a uk everyone to get involved. 0ver 600,000 people are involved. i know stores. talk me through the you love the outdoors, can you give practicalities for someone coming into a store tomorrow. i was talking us some inspiration and some tips to the boss of waterstones the other for getting the whole family day he was saying when people go
7:25 am
outside? yes, obviously, i love into his bookshops, if they handled a book the books can be put on a being outside and i think this whole trolley and wheeled out the back to timel being outside and i think this whole allow a ny trolley and wheeled out the back to allow any virus on it to die off. time i have been out for a walk what will be your policy as far as every day. i'm lucky to live quite people touching stuff is concerned? close... oops! oh, veronica! i live for the first three days we are wanting to focus on customer service. we are aware that lots of people have pent—up issues in terms of not getting the technology to close... oops! oh, veronica! i live close to a country park in work stop they might have questions cambridgeshire where i live, it is around how to use their tech. so we on our doorstep and it is a are kicking off with a tech helper beautiful river, it runs through which is our commitment to customer there, and for us it isjust has service. if you have questions or been such immense to stop and root bring them into store and one notice. i have learned so much about of our people will help you. we are bird life during this time and captured on camera a lot of asking customers to engage with our different types. i saw a kestrel the other day. that was really cool. i collea g u es asking customers to engage with our colleagues who can do a demonstration of product 's. then we think it isjust to notice and will make sure our colleagues wipe learn, as well asjust down that product after the think it isjust to notice and learn, as well as just walking and
7:26 am
demonstration. we will be asking you being and stopping and just filling to ask a colleague if you want to the senses is important. i love the season rises. at the moment they're touch and have a demonstration of product in store. diane, listening a bit early, but it is such a... to what mark is saying about the level of detail stores are having to energising time of day and it go into and also the challenges that he stores are facing, what has this boosts, you can feel how your whole time been like for the high streets soul vibe rates with the —— vibrates you look after? well, it has been a with nature. that helps your well very challenging time. it was being. veronica, we seeing some of already a challenging time before covid—19, but for what the the pictures you have been taking, they're stunning. how can you help government team now is nonessential retail it has been three months and to inspire people, i know everyone's we really do need to kickstart the finding it difficult, but perhaps economy but we have to balance that with public health as well. so it is people go outside for one or two a challenging time. we expect a chunks of exercise or a walk each return to the high street to be day, what advice would you give to quite gradual. and we really must people about noticing more and maybe taking a bit more time to see what is around them? absolutely. as encourage people to shop locally and support local businesses as well. mark, i wonder humm is the last few veronica said, it is about taking months has turbocharged a trend that time and bearing barefoot on already seeing which is the
7:27 am
the grass if you have a lawn or migration towards online shopping. maybe you don't have a garden, how they wonder how much of that will stick around and, therefore, whether about standing on your doorstep in all of the stores you currently have the morning and listen to the bird will have a viable future. so, first song. it is not about having big flashy adventures, but noticing the of all, i think the high streets and small things that perhaps we don't notice every day. so like the our stores have a very important role to play in our business and in bumblebees visiting the flowers in your garden for example. what i the health of the high street in would advise everyone to do is take general. so we are excited to be those five minutes in the morning or opening and we do look forward to an evening. what are the health welcoming our customers into our benefits? so for the last five years stores. as i've said before, we have of 30 days wild we have been sur a very healthy online business and vague people with the university of we have seen our customers during lockdown use our online business. so derby and the results show that people who take part recognise they our website has performed during feel happier, they feel healthier that period of luck down very more connected to nature, notjust healthily, so that is good. and essentially we have become digital throughout 30 days wild, but for two months after. the results speak for nature —— natives in the last 12 themselves. what are the health weeks. there has been a bunch of innovation in our services. we have benefits you have felt? well, i have also been able to do zero contact
7:28 am
order and collect. 0ur also been able to do zero contact been on furlough since 24th march, order and collect. our customers could order online, select their being outside and having that time local store and pick up from that with nature is so nurturing. the store and a colleague would deliver the product to your boot in a safe benefits from nature isjust beyond and zero contact way. we have also i think what we all even can imagine. ithink just demonstrated a piece of radical i think what we all even can imagine. i think it is, it isjust innovation which is our shop from about opening up to it and embrace home shop live solution. that is it for what it is and it is all essentially a personal video service free. that is the main thing. it is which allows you to speak to one of free. that is the main thing. it is free to be out there. walking in the our colleagues from the comfort of grass, sitting on the grass with your own sofa and buy the right your bare feet or smelling the product for you and your family. flowers in your garden, or in the diane, just really briefly, what park close by, it isjust, the about people who have to drive into the city centre who don't want to immense energy you will get from use public transport, what is your thatis advice to them? i was a plan your immense energy you will get from that is more than we can comprehend i think. we have to leave it there. journey into the city centre before you travel. make sure you know which thank you both very much. let's all shops you are going to and that they go out and stand on the grass in our are actually open and check the car bare feet! parking as well. most are operating that's all from us for this normally but some are still closed morning, join us again tomorrow from 6 o'clock. good bye. so normally but some are still closed so you must plan in advance, please.
7:29 am
thank you diane and thank you, mark. we appreciate your time. and the quality of your broadband as well. enjoy your sunday. thanks for your time. thank you. goodbye. coming up on the programme: how community spirit is growing — mask trees, containing free face coverings — have taken root in some neighbourhoods. we'll meet the people making and giving them away to stop the spread of coronavirus. stay with us. 01:29:25,303 --> 4294966103:13:29,430 headlines coming up. this is bbc news, the headlines. disturbances broke out overnight in the us city of atlanta after a black
7:30 am
man is shot dead by white police officers. his family's lawyer spoke officers. his family's lawyer spoke of his frustration. i don't even know what justice of his frustration. i don't even know whatjustice is any more and i have been doing this for 15 years. more than 100 people are arrested after a day of violent clashes in central london involving some far right activists. the uk prime minister, borisjohnson, right activists. the uk prime minister, boris johnson, orders right activists. the uk prime minister, borisjohnson, orders a review of the two metre social distancing role in england after calls to scrap
170 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
BBC News Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on