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tv   BBC News  BBC News  August 13, 2020 4:00am-4:31am BST

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this is bbc news — welcome if you're watching here in the uk, on pbs in america or around the globe. i'm mike eembley. our top stories: joe biden appeares in public for the first time with his new election running mate, kamala harris. i have no doubt that i picked the right person tojoin me as the next vice president of the united states of america, and that is kamala harris. i am incredibly honoured by this responsibility and i'm ready to get to work. i am ready to get to work. anger continues over alleged vote rigging in the belarus election. the country's president compares the protestors to criminals and the unemployed.
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beirut‘s children will carry the physical and psychological scars of last week's explosion into adulthood — a stark warning from doctors in the lebanese capital. and the uk economy shrank by a fifth during lockdown — the biggest slump of any major country. the democratic candidate for the us presidential election, joe biden, has officially unveiled his running mate, kamala harris, at a special event in the state of delaware. the california senator — is the first black and asian american woman on a presidential ticket — our north america editor jon sopel was at the press conference and sent this report. please welcome vice—presidentjoe biden and senator kamala harris. in the city wherejoe biden started his career nearly half
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a century ago, he was back today to launch the ticket that he hopes will propel him and kamala harris to election victory in november, to be president and vice—president. kamala, as you all know, is smart, she's tough, she's experienced, she's a proven fighter for the backbone of this country. she's ready to do this job on day one. after the most competitive primary in history, the country received a resounding message that joe was the person to lead us forward. and, joe, i'm so proud to stand with you. hi, hi, hi, hi, sorry to keep you. that's all right. are you ready to go to work? oh, my god, i am so ready to go to work. the moment you find out from the boss you've got thejob. first of all, is the answer yes? the answer is absolutely yes, joe. joe biden‘s call to
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kamala harris ending months of speculation and creating history, the first african—american woman to run for vice—president, all the more surprising given that she gavejoe biden hell during the race to become the democratic nominee. i do not believe you are a racist, but i also believe, and it's personal and i was actually very...it was actually very hurtful. but that is also the attraction. do you solemnly swear to support the constitution... she was sworn in as a senator byjoe biden when he was still the vice—president. i prosecuted banks... the former california attorney—general is tough, she's smart, and brought her prosecutorial skills to the senate, making life uncomfortable for a number of senior administration officials. attorney—general barr, has the president or anyone at the white house ever asked or suggested that you open an investigation of anyone? um, i wouldn't, i wouldn't... yes or no? could you repeat that question? racial justice. .. um, i wouldn't, i wouldn't... yes or no? could you repeat that question?
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racial justice. .. and the hope of party strategists is she will enthuse younger voters, african—americans and progressives. donald trump is already sharpening his knife. i thought she was the meanest, the most horrible, most disrespectful of anybody in the us senate. she is also known, from what i understand, as being just about the most liberal person in the us senate. voiceover: slow joe and phoney kamala — perfect together, wrong for america. the trump campaign has already christened her ‘phoney kamala', a trojan horse for the radical left. but with today's launch and the messaging around it, joe biden and kamala harris are determined to define themselves, without any help from republican opponents. jon sopel, bbc news, wilmington, delaware. julia manchester, from the hill, has been following this first event
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byjoe biden and kamala harris. we saw senator harris very much bring her prosecutorial skills and say the case against mike pence and donald trump was open and closed, we know she is ready to go on the attack line and been attacked dog for vice president biden going forward. additionally looking at the make—up of that, i think what you saw was the vice president and senator really trying to set an example in the year of coronavirus. we know and they both walked into them room before the event started, then espouses and staff were all wearing masks. journalists were socially distanced, it was at a high school gymnasium. any other time, at any other campaign, it's a crowded spectacle of some sort, it's not a half empty high school gymnasium and what they are trying to do is essentially say, we're going approach this camber —— pandemic and campaign in this pandemic with caution and an example and vice president biden was asked about it, saying he would travel more if you got the go—ahead from scientists and public health.
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in practice logistically how do you think this campaign is going to be fought over the next 80 days or so, given the restrictions of the pandemic? it's going to be interesting. you are going to see a lot more of those zoom fundraisers and roundtables, but you will see senator harris driving around. when you look at the trump campaign, you've seen vice president mike pence travelling on business but mixing political business with that in critical swing states like florida, so you will see senator harris doing the same but i think they will put senator harris at the forefront of this campaign. what you saw today was a changing of the guard if you will going from the biden obama coalition to the biden harris coalition. she is 55, he is 77, she represents a new generation of the democrat party and is able to bring new blood into that coalition ahead of november. we are getting a sense of how the republicans are going to attack kamala harris. how much of a problem
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is she for them? i've been talking to sources and experts today and the biggest thing she talked about was her attraction to women across the board, not only women of colour and democratic women which are very much riled up right now but also suburban women and women in the suburbs may be voted forjohn mccain and mitt romney in 2012 but have ship the way from president trump and towards democrats. republicans are worried kamala harris will complete —— we are getting a sense of how the republicans are going to attack kamala harris. how much of a problem is she for them? i've been talking to sources and experts today and the biggest thing she talked about was her attraction to women across the board, not only women of colour and democratic women which are very much riled up right now but also suburban women and women in the suburbs may be voted forjohn mccain and mitt romney in 2012 but have ship the way from president trump and towards democrats.
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republicans are worried kamala harris will complete that shift and bring over those women who were once a very stable source of support for republicans. thank you, we shall see. the president of belarus has dismissed the people protesting against his re—election as ‘criminals and unemployed.‘ violent demonstrations have been held since alexander lu kashenko's victory, which several groups say was rigged. paul hawkins reports. after a third night of protests against the president came protests against the police. the sound of car horns in the capital, minsk, several hundred women wearing white and holding flowers, joined hands against police brutality the night before. demonstrators were beaten. police using stun grenades as they chased peaceful
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protesters through the streets with tear gas and batons. neither were the media spared, this bbc team attacked by the police, who ordered them to stop filming. and in the city of brest, live bullets were used by the authorities. the un has condemned the use of violence. so far, 200 people had been wounded and 6,000 detained. families of some detainees chanting, "heroes, hold on!" translation: i only managed to tell my husband the police are coming our way. they came to us, and they came to my husband, "come with us." he only asked why, and they've already taken him, twisting his arms, taking him to the police van. translation: we just want to know where our children are, that's all we need. they are not giving them food. this morning some police said they would beat them up a bit less if they were quiet. there are up to 40 people in the cell. every half an hour, they'd bring them a litre of water, 1.5 litres for all of them. translation: there is currently a genocide taking place in this country, i am not afraid
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to use that word. the special police forces are brutally beating people and all we can do is protest peacefully. we want peaceful changes and we want to prove that right to change things peacefully. but their president is unrepentant. translation: the core of all these so—called protesters today comprises of people with a criminal history and the unemployed. if you don't have work, then walk the streets and roads, guys. i politely ask everyone to find work, guys, those who are unemployed. the fourth night in a row on wednesday, there were more protests, but these were smaller than previous nights. meanwhile, presidential candidate svetla na ti kha novs kaya remains in lithuania out of fear she will be
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arrested if she comes back, while the eu, which is considering sanctions, says sunday's election were neither free or fair. but lu kashenko disagrees. known by some as the last dictator of europe, he seems determined to hold onto that title. doctors in the lebanese capital are warning that many of beirut‘s children will carry the physical and psychological scars of last week's explosion into as many as 80,000 children have been made homeless, according to unicef. this report from rami ruhayem you may find some of it distressing. this is yara, a quiet li—year—old who likes to play alone. she was at home with her father when the explosion happened. her mother was out. a week has passed since the blast at the port of beirut sent shards of glass flying into her face, and sent her flying down the staircase.
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this is nour. his father carried him and pushed him under a desk as their home shook with the blast. his mother says the kids no longer sleep in their rooms, and keep asking whether this will happen again. she says the blast brought back memories of the civil war that ended three decades ago.
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many behaviours will be part of the healthy processing of the event. separating those symptoms which require therapy is no easy task. the brain does not forget. the brain says, "well, you know, life is not safe." beyond the ptsd, you will have increasing depressions and anxiety, per se, and in kids, you'll have lots of impulsivity and irritability. he says parents should look out for strong symptoms or symptoms that get worse after around a week, or for symptoms that weaken, but linger. but parents will have their hands full, and their nerves stretched. schools were meant to be opening soon, but in beirut, the blast damaged many of them. the past few days have seen record covid infections. on all fronts, the pressure
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keeps building. rami ruhayem, bbc news. stay with us on bbc news, still to come: benin restores former monuments from the slave trade era as it comes to terms with and makes some profit from its colonial history. the big crowds became bigger as the time of the funeral approached. as the lines of fans became longer, the police prepared for a huge job of crowd control. idi amin, uganda's brutal former dictator, has died at the age of 80. he's been buried in saudi arabia, where he lived in exile since being overthrown in 1979. two billion people around
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the world have seen the last total eclipse of the sun to take place in this millennium. it began its journey off the coast of canada, ending three hours later when the sun set over the bay of bengal. this is bbc world news, the latest headlines: joe biden and kamala harris, the democratic candidates for us president and vice president, appear together in public for first time, as running mates. more anger in belarus over the allegations of vote—rigging in sunday's election. the re—elected president has dismissed protesters as "criminals and the unemployed". a newly published scientific study says at least 800 people have died around the world as a result of coronavirus—related misinformation in the first three months of this year. the paper, published in the american journal of tropical medicine
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and hygiene says more than 5800 more were hospitalised as a result of false information they had seen on social media. the authors say rumours, conspiracy theories and cultural stigma all contributed to additional deaths and injuries. i've been speaking to dr holly seale, a contributor to the recently published report. the number that we quoted in the paper really comes from those kind of direct reports in the media, in other types of resources, that talk about, as you just said, people drinking bleach, people misusing cleaning products in a way that they thought would protect them from being a covid case. so they were the kind of easy cases to dig out of the media, but the number of hospitalisations, the number of kind of ongoing health conditions, will probably be a lot worse than that. and some of this misinformation
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— it has to be said — coming from the highest levels, some from the president of the united states, the leader of brazil. yeah, and that is when we know misinformation will travel the quickest, when it comes from someone who has a large number of followers around the world and whose words are often then repeated, of course, into newspapers, onto the radio and into other forms of media. it is not likely to get any less, realistically, is it? and could impact, say, on the take—up of any vaccine? yeah, look, this is an ongoing issue. kind of the volume of information out there and this kind of range of myths and conspiracy theories really started from day dot in the pandemic. and this isn't something new. we have seen this with previous outbreaks of infectious diseases, and so to some degree, we saw this coming, but the volume of information out there is unprecedented at the moment, and so we need to work on some
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strategies right now to try and counter this because, when we see a vaccine come along, it is going to surge again. let's get some of the day's other news: there has been a significant fall in both the coronavirus deaths and new cases of covid—i9 recorded in the australian state of victoria over the past 2a hours. eight people have died and 278 new cases were confirmed. it comes a day after the state recorded its highest number of daily virus deaths. victoria is just over one week into a strict six week lockdown put in place to control a resurgence of cases. russia has dismissed mounting international concern over the safety of its locally developed covid—i9 vaccine as "absolutely groundless". on tuesday, it said a vaccine had been given regulatory a pproval after less tha n two months of testing on humans. but a growing list of countries have expressed scepticism.
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almost all the remaining oil on board a stranded cargo ship, which has been leaking fuel into the sea off the coast of mauritius, has now been removed. the prime minister said salvage crews had pumped more than three thousand tonnes of oil from the fuel reservoirs. the uk has fallen into its largest recession on record because of the coronavirus lockdown, it contracted by more than 20% between april and june, the biggest slump of any major global economy. the recession, defined as six months in a row of falling output, is the first since the 2008 financial crash. the uk's finance minister, the chancellor rishi sunak, said the figures confirmed hard times are here and he said he expected many more people to lose theirjobs. here's our economics editor faisal islam. this is a recession like no other, a consequence of having to shut the economy down. the result is an unprecedented hit, the hope that it proves
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to be short—lived. at this somerset outdoor events manufacturer, what remains of dozens of music, sports and cultural events that never occurred. this shed would normally be completely empty at this time of year. recovery here, far from assured. it's heartbreaking a lot of it. the march, april, may time — it was really rough. you try and stay positive, but for some of our staff, they couldn't stay with us longer term, and that's horrible. a fall of over 20% isn't just a record, but it's off all historical scales. the last recession, the great financial crisis of 2008/9, saw a worse three—month fall ofjust over 2%. go back the entire history of official calculations and there's never been a fall bigger than 3%. i said that hard times were coming and what today's numbers show is that hard times are here. hundreds of thousands of people have already lost theirjob and, sadly, many more will. in june, the economy did bounce back a bit,
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making up about a third of the shutdown slump. that can be seen here in bath, where only some of the lost international tourism has been replaced by domestic tourists, tempted out by the chancellor's cheap meals. we are maybe 35% to 40% of normal. in nearly four decades here, the local antique shop has seen nothing like this. there's a shop here that's closed. i don't know when they are reopening. another one there, closed down. i think it has gone under. i don't think they'll be back. in the main street there are several. so people are kind of holding on? yeah. the government said that they had a bridge to the other side, but not everyone is going to make it through? not everyone will to make it through. the official confirmation of a recession is no surprise, but the number reported this morning was simply staggering. a colossal hit to the economy affecting every high street and home, up and down the country, mainly in march and in april. since then, the economy has started to grow a bit again,
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but not all the lights that were switched off, to protect public health, will turn back on. while the recession was inevitable, it doesn't explain why the uk has been amongst the worst hit of major nations, both in terms of health and the economy. this morning's number the worst of the major g7 economies reporting so far, from france to the us, with canada and japan also forecast to confirm smaller hits. are there not some questions about how your government has handled this, that we are bottom of both these tables? social activities — for example, going to have a meal, go shopping, go and see a movie — those kinds of activities comprise a much larger share of our economy than they do for most of our european cousins. the opposition said the recession showed the need to retain the furlough job scheme beyond the autumn. we need to have targeted financial backing. we haven't had that sufficiently yet from the conservative government and we really need it. i think, until we have that, we will continue to see, potentially, a deeper recession in the uk
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than in other countries. but the chancellor, adamant today, that the scheme will not be extended, that the economy and people will have to adapt, that somejobs will not return after this record pandemic recession. faisal islam, bbc news, in bath. as western cities see statues of slaveholders and colonialists toppled as part of the black lives matter movement, benin, the west african country known for its mangroves and beautiful landscapes, is bucking that trend. the coastal town of 0uidah is embracing its slave past for two reasons. firstly to educate people today on the significance of what happened but also to bring in tourist revenue. clarisse fortune reports. for benin it is a time for remembrance. the country, which has just celebrated its 60th year of independence, is also remembering a past marked slavery and, while across the world statues of former slavers are being debunked, the small coastal town
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of 0uidah has decided to restore its monuments, to tell its painful story, from the slave trade to colonisation. a story to which visitors pay tribute to in an exhibition. carts, drafting guns, chains, but also the possible alters used for the ceremonies of the kings of ancient dahomey. translation: this emotion that i have every time i see those chains that were used to chain the slaves, ourgrandparents, our ancestors, who were deported by the colonisers, and every time it makes me relive things that i don't like to relive. it hurts a bit but it is our story and i have to accept it. translation: these are not things we are usually taught at school or in everyday life. i think that, if it continues like this, we will have some very beautiful things
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and we will be able to properly represent our country because we have to. brazilian architecture, beautiful beaches, the city of 0uidah is today at the heart of a billion—dollar tourist development project. translation: 0uidah is the most remarkable city in the history of slavery. that's way beyond the movements claiming the cause of black people, we want the sites of that to have known history to be restored so that the history does not die. but the expansion ofjihadism in the region has put a break on this project in recent years, a situation made even worse by the covid—i9 pandemic. until then, the renovation of these places will serve to better illustrate the fabric of history, to pass it on to future generations. clarisse fortune, bbc news. there is more on all the news anytime on the bbc website and
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twitter feed. thank you for watching. hello. wednesday brought a real mishmash of weather across the british isles. a lot of heat and humidity again and yet, into saint ives and a number of coastal areas, were plagued with low cloud and fog, and then, as the day wore on, so the thunderstorms popped off, and that prospect is there again, through thursday. hot and humid weather with that risk of thunderstorms, especially so, although not exclusively, across the southern half of the british isles, because this overall set up of the low pressure, with the heat from the continent and the moisture from the surrounding seas, is still the dominant feature. and we start with the temperature somewhere in the teens for many, if not twenty degrees in one or two spots in the southeast. and from the word go,
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there could well be some thunderstorms for central and southern parts of england, getting across the border into wales. quite a bit of murk there to the eastern side of the pennines, effecting some of the east and northern counties of scotland. best of the sunshine out west, later on in the day, pushing the temperatures to 22. similar sort of prospect in parts of northern ireland and somewhere again across central and southern parts of england will be pushing close to 30 degrees and the thunderstorms continue apace. there are warnings from the met office already about the potential for disruption from those storms. in fact, that continues right on into friday as well. another murky, muggy night to come, widely across the british isles. friday, a really cloudy start with a shield of cloud coming in from the north sea to affect many areas. 0nly beginning to break as we get on into the afternoon. and still that prospect, particularly across southern britain, of some really quite sharp thunderstorms. the temperatures beginning to fall back a touch, but it will still feel very close, very oppressive, simply because that overall situation really not changing, even as we move
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towards the weekend, southern britain still at risk from these thunderstorms. further north, it should be dry, thanks to the influence of the high pressure. but again, some of these northern and eastern—facing coast could well be affected by some low level mist and murk, which will temper the feel of the day, but with some sunshine in the north, you'll be looking at 22, possibly 23 degrees. and we don't really change things even as you push right through the weekend and into the start of the forthcoming week. take care, bye—bye.
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this is bbc news. the headlines: joe biden and kamala harris have been setting out their vision for the us in their first joint appearance since he chose her as his vice—presidential candidate. mr biden said he had no doubt he had picked the right person. senator harris said the country is crying out for leadership. in belarus, people have come out in the capital, minsk, for a fourth night of protests against sunday's election result. the re—elected president, alexander lu kashenko, has dismissed the protesters as "criminals and the unemployed". the european union has said the vote was neither free nor fair. doctors in the lebanese capital are warning that many of beirut‘s children will carry the physical and psychological scars of last week's explosion into adulthood unless they receive proper support. a unicef report is also highligting that there are now as many as 80,000 children who have been made homeless.

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