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tv   BBC News  BBC News  September 14, 2020 9:00pm-10:00pm BST

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this is bbc news — president trump is in california inspecting damage from wild fires. but don't expect to hear him talk about climate change. as more than 3 million acres have burned, and officials fear mass casualties, the president is focused on forest management instead. you re watching bbc news with me katty kay in washington, christian when you have years of leaves, fraser is in london. our top stories. president trump dismisses climate change concerns on a visit to california — dried leaves on the ground it his democratic opponent joe biden had this to say just sets it up. you give a climate arsonists, four it's just really a fuel for a fire. they have to do something about it. we're told the key to beating covid is test, test, test. more yea rs you give a climate arsonists, four more years in the white house, why but in the uk it's more like no would you be surprised that we would test, no test, no test. have more american blaze? also in the programme... boris johnson is facing the uk parliament is set to vote over controversial a parliamentary rebellion over controversial legislation that would override part of the brexit
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divorce dea.l mp's will be voting in the next hour on the first stages legislation that would over—ride of the bill. the brexit withdrawal agreement — and japan has a new prime we'll hearfrom mp george freeman — minister, yoshihide suga. one of the conservatives vocally and the japanese are opposed to the bill. honouring their new leader also in the programme. with some lookalike cakes. we hear from voters in pennsylvania who backed president trump in 2016, and whether they'll stick with their man this time around. it blows my mind that people are disliking the president because they do not like him as a person. you hello i'm katty kay in washington, christian fraser is in london. have to take a personality and the donald trump believes the fires raging through the west coast person as a whole, especially as the are the result of poor management of forests — in largely representation of your country. democratic states. the elected democratic officials mulan opens in china in those states say the blazes with dissappointing numbers at the box office — are largely caused by climate change a bad week after disney's efforts an issue the president to pander to beijing. prefers to ignore. and so the politicians go round in circles while houses burn. hundreds of thousands of houses. a record three million acres have already burned out west this year. california is on fire — and local politicians, as we heard, mr trump is there today, to see the damage for himself are blaming climate change. still blaming forest management scientists on the whole and not the world's
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changing climate. agree with them. but there's another cause too. with regard to the forest, when new homes. over the last few years california has been adding jobs faster trees fall down after a short period than it's added homes so there's of time about 18 months they become been a real push to very dry. they become really like a build more new housing. indeed, the state's governor gavin newsome, was elected in 2018 on the promise matchstick. and they get up you know of building 3.5 million new homes there's no more water pouring in the state by 2025. through and the become very, very, the problem is alot of those homes have been built in high risk areas — theyjust explode. and all that extra building material is sadly, excellent through and the become very, very, they just explode. they through and the become very, very, theyjust explode. they could explode. leaves, when you have years fuel for wildfires. of leaves, dried leaves on the ground, itjust of leaves, dried leaves on the ground, it just sets of leaves, dried leaves on the ground, itjust sets it up. it's really a fuel for a fire. so they so why do people continue to build, and even rebuild, in areas have to do something about it. where we know fires are a big so they have to do problem?let‘s speak to graham knaus something about it. democratic presidential nomineejoe biden seized ka—naus, he's the director the opportunity to hit of california state association of counties — an advocacy group the president's record on climate representing every local county change saying these ‘hellish events' authority in the state. will continue if mr trump wins a second term. gaddafi with us. i am a little bit detached over in the uk, but from the news, i i see that there are if we have four more years whole towns — — of trumps climate denial. how many suburbs will be the news, i i see that there are whole towns —— good to have you with warned in wildfires? the. are these just new towns that how many suburban neighbourhoodswil of flooded out? how many suburbs will have been have sprung up because we're leaving
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blown away from super storms? if you give a climate arsonist four the cities there is no question that more years in the white house, why would anyone be surprised there is a housing shortage, but the we have more of america ablaze? aleem maqbool reports now from communities that are burning the communities that are burning the communities that are burning the communities that have been in place the fire ravaged state of oregon. for decades. what has changed is our it was like a journey climate. there's no question that into an eerie twilight zone. climate. there's no question that climate change is real, as evidenced by the last few years here in few have been allowed here since the fires swept in with such rage. california and the need for more aggressive action all across the state and at all levels of and though most people had scrambled to get out with whatever they could, government. h sure that california it was in this area that lives had also been lost. there were some we found wandering is refusing to cancel policies in the state but when it comes to and bewildered, like larry. policy, whether it would be better i've lost everything to deny people insurance on new except what's in that bag. everything. bills. so, they are not tempted to settle in these high—risk areas? and i didn't have insurance. out of. all the homes had bills. so, they are not tempted to settle in these high-risk areas? we most certainly have an insurance insurance, except for me. just explain where your cabin was. problem in california. a moratorium
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asa problem in california. a moratorium as a stopgap to identify real my spot was right over here, solutions, which include parting of and across from what was cabins. homes, which include having greater it's not there any more. defensible space, but it will also what made these fires are so lethal include a workable insurance market and record—breaking is the high winds that came with them. which has collapsed in california. we have homeowners that, even today, accelerating their frightening destructive passage through vast areas of this state. are not at risk of fire, and yet we keep hearing from those who said they felt they were fleeing for their lives and it's only they are close to having the when you are on the ground policies cancelled. that is not a and you see the destruction, as we've been able to and the warped workable solution and we need landscape here, that you start something that keeps the insurers in to get a sense of the nightmare that they were running from. california protected in homeowners while we make improvements to this family is tired of running. we found them in a displacement wildfire. it is a political issue camp miles away. they've now fled fires three too and i have a friend that lost times in three different locations in the past week. my mum had ten minutes to get out her home, she is desperate to of her place and she got the clothes rebuild. but it's got to be a pretty on her back and the cat hard—nosed rebuild. but it's got to be a pretty ha rd—nosed politician that and that was it, and her house rebuild. but it's got to be a pretty hard—nosed politician that says to a voter that's lost everything, you
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is completely annihilated, it wiped out everything should not rebuild here because the she owned and. climate is changing them are going to have more fires here in this is a fire risk. when is the time that and, you know, that's what we heard, the same with ours but we're politician should be tackling this not as of right now. was made because it doesn't seem i think a lot of us are in that that it should be after someone lost position of not knowing. everything. there is much that we it was sumer‘s town that i'd visited earlier. can do to improve the management of the signs aren't good. federal and state forest land, to for all the politics, at the heart of this disaster have stronger policies and local are hundreds of thousands of americans who face fear, displacement, and loss. aleem maqbool, bbc news, levels relative to protecting communities, ensuring that we are in gates in oregon. building smartly, we are rebuilding smartly in those communities. but we should also be very clear that this three states who lost everything. joe biden has had some very strong is not just a should also be very clear that this is notjust a rural and suburban things to say about climate change issue, as you reference, the fires and the presidents attitude towards it. of course he walks a very tight in the county, they burn through the line when he comes to jobs. because urban area onto the beaches of the republicans are saying his green malibu and this is a much bigger policies would cost republican states lots of jobs. issue than building a more
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policies would cost republican states lots ofjobs. he is saying that actually transitioning to this mountainous rural area. climate greener economy could be jobs positive. yeah, that was a message change that is at the root of the from the obama administration, they issue, and the president said that wa nt to from the obama administration, they they have returned to that line that want to invest in new technologies, alternative energy sources and they will bejob it is about forest management and alternative energy sources and they will be job creative. the other the need to clear up under the tree argument that economists and former and what do you say to that? well, administration are out making on social media is if you don't do anything also the cost of the what we say there is issues with the american economy could be high. and there is a former labour secretary management of the forest and our a who is quoting studies that show climate that we have seen over the past several years in terms of fire that billions of dollars, $26 tornadoes that never occurred, that billion annually could be lost to the american economy if it isn't, have resulted in the past couple of climate change is an address. it's weeks of fires free get 2000 acres going to cost you something to perhaps fix it because you even more per hour. that is never happened in if you don't fix it if you carry on our history and that is only ignoring it. that's the argument partially related to the management they're trying to push back with of the forest. there is something today. those pictures by the way, thatis of the forest. there is something that is bigger than that. we do not stunning. those poor people on the think that any of this should be west coast. political in that we should focus on how we can ensure the communities one state where climate policy are how we can ensure the communities a re protected could have a huge impact how we can ensure the communities are protected and went to do that is onjobs is new mexico.
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the state is one of the biggest to focus on smart forest management, producers of onshore oil and gas. republicans sayjoe biden's plans smart building and rebuilding and to limit dependence on fossil fuels, could cost the state some 60,000 jobs by 2022. two years ago democrats swept having a federal state and local the board in new mexico level collaborative response. and of in the mid—term elections, but the polls suggest it will be tighter this november. the republicans are making inroads course, around the world, there is over the governor's cautious approach to coronavirus, cities and communities that are even though infection rates rethinking where the bill to respect the climate change, whether that's in new mexico have been far below the climate change, whether that's neighbouring texas and arizona. the deal with fires, flooding, let's speak to the former new mexico congressman steve pierce who's now amsterdam which i was reading about the chairman of the republican party the other day, lots of city councils in new mexico. and authorities him to rethink about where they let people build. steve, good to have you with us on the program. first of all the and authorities him to rethink about where they let people buildm and authorities him to rethink about where they let people build. it is a very brave politician that says you presidents visit to california cannot build here even though you today. i was looking at the records, had money tied up her time dump in six of the ten biggest fires they've your home, it is very tough ever recorded in california have political issue to take on. happened this year. do you really think it's down to the leaves onto the trees? yes, the question of the the poisoned russian opposition leader, alexei navalny, can now get out of bed, according to the berlin hospital treating him. whole west burning has been one that he collapsed on a flight from siberia last month, and tests show he was poisoned
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i studied for my 14 years in with the nerve agent novichok. his supporters say he was congress. took the lead on for eight poisoned on the orders of president vladimir putin — years on the resource committee. at one point we hired their retired the kremlin denies any involvement. federal fire investigator from los russian president angeles, nassau forest not far as vladmir putin has pledged one—point—five billion dollars his agreement was it's actually in loans to belarus. mr putin made the offer mismanagement of the forest that during a sit—down with the president years of allowing fuels to build up of belarus, alexander lukashenka, in the southern russian city of sochi. paired with drought conditions, paired with drought conditions, paired with drought conditions, paired with the high winds are it was their first meeting since mass protests broke what's causing the fires. if you out over last month's began with the idea that the premise disputed prsidential elections. that it's climate change you would mr putin also said he has a russian police force ready to intervene have to explain why the fires, and if the demonstrations get we've had many, hundreds of thousands of acres burned in mexico out of control. exactly like is going on right now. and when the fires would reach the us weather authorities say that areas that were managed by the tropical storm sally has strengthened to a category one indian reservations they would drop hurricane, with sustained winds down and become grass fires. 0k, of 85 miles per hour. it's currently about 135—miles, indian reservations they would drop down and become grass fires. ok, i get that. let me talk about your or 220 kilometres, state. your fire season southeast of the mississippi river. get that. let me talk about your state. yourfire season has lengthened substantially over the sally is due to make landfall either past 40 years from five months to on tuesday or wednesday, seven. and since the 1970s new though officials say it's too early to say exactly where. mandatory evacuations
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mexico's average annual temperature are underway for low—lying areas has increased by 2.7 degrees. what along the gulf coast. do you put that down to? you can put it down to whatever you want to but if we are talking about the fires, the fires are coming because of mismanagement was up you have drought conditions that affect the trees that are already in the five storms in the gulf, not all of forest. new mexico and its history typically has 50 trees per acre. that's about one at the front corner them in the gulf. they may run out of your lot where your house is one of names. how do you teach on the rear corner. very widely politics, history and architecture all in one go? spaced was up the tree reign over well how about this? pennsylvania is known the last hundreds of years would as the keystone state. it has been since the founding show us that every eight years a hot of this nation, when it played a vital role fire would come along, it would burn in america's independence. keystone is an architectural term — down all the small, kindling wood. the central stone in an arch that holds all the other pieces in place. the small trees and would not damage the big trees at all. when the these days, it's also policies change to put out the fires a political metaphor. and we started logging, that took up a candidate likely needs pennsylvania to win —— the difference. but then the idea or hold the presidency. came along that we are not going to log either. that's when the fuse began to build up and then you get president obama won the state twice, these longer fire seasons. simply before president trump eked out a victory in 2016 by fewer because it's hot and dry in the than 50 thousand votes. last. that's how we live. our forest to win again, he'll need to keep
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shouldn't be crowded full of trees those voters in his corner. like they are on the east coast with a lot of rain. like up in washington the bbc has been to speak to some of them in the industrial city state. the west forest were mostly of johnstown pennsylvania. grasslands with very sparse trees. and that's the problem, the 30 year fire —— two investigator working on our staff confirm that. a lot of democrats and republicans are all what's burning our houses first all basically conservative, anti—abortion, normal american the housing issue in california. i people. people in our area, they just want to ask you, last night the president gave a big rally in have not progressed with time. what nevada. he was criticised by the we're believing in the 70s is still governor of nevada who was a the beliefs. i voted for president democrat for behaving in a way that was reckless with people's health. if mrtrump was reckless with people's health. if mr trump wanted to give in indoor big venue rally in new mexico would trump, helping you support that or would you urge people to wear a mask? we would hoping for a change. i'm sorry that support it. i let people make their i was swayed and believed that he choice on whether to wear a mask or not for top you get mixed reading. was saying. it blows my mind that do you think it would be a house grist to them? i think that people people are disliking the president are mature enough to decide what
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because they do not like him as a their risks are. some people are more adverse than others depending person. you have to take a on the health conditions. some are personality and a person as a whole, less at risk. and i think that people are mature enough to make their own decision. if there sick especially as a representation of a they probably shouldn't have. yes we country. arrogant, bombastic, now would support the president, here.|j tell me why he is a bad president. was just can't say, can i talk to you want someone who is in about the jobs? what do you make of leadership that has compassion. i was new was a bit of a bully, but i whatjoe biden said today? i know you've got a big fossil fuel think his ego gets in so much of the industry in new mexico. he says way of what the government needs to look, the transition to a greener economy and the account to eight be. the working guy realises what technologies we need to get to a president trump is done for all of us president trump is done for all of us and itjust seems like the lower back and be job creating.|j economy just started don't think that they're ever going us and itjust seems like the economyjust started blooming a lot better. we were as busy as we have to build up the manufacturing base ever been in 20 years. be made more with this green technology that he's talking about. europe has tried 20 years ago that we make now. the that, they tried the cap and trade deceiving part was when the programme they began to retreat away unemployment was low, which is not from it because they cannot afford now, a lot of those jobs are people electricity. they weren't —— the working two and three jobs. to make world market. if you want to build up working two and three jobs. to make up with the remaking before. now an economy you need to look at the they are affecting every single one manufacturing base. that's where of us, over blowing this covid—19
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prosperity is created. that's where the betterjobs are created. so when pandemic, causing small businesses not to be able to reopen, giving vice president biden talks about more money for unemployment so that people won't go back to work. of that i think he doesn't understand economic principles very well. 0k. hundred 80,000 people dead is ok steve tha n k economic principles very well. 0k. with you and being racially divided steve thank you very much. our country is ok with you, then i guess he is your president. interesting to hear he'd be happy to have that rally. lots of people in that place and it is a risk and tells her spreading virus. our country is ok with you, then i guess he is your presidentlj our country is ok with you, then i guess he is your president. ijust hope that after president trump winds in november, that we forget the uk has a big testing problem. about this in tight trump from the so big that it's now reportedly shipping samples to italy and germany to get them processed. democrats just sit down and work as children return to school, together. and i am so afraid for our and the weather gets cooler bringing seasonal sniffles and coughs, demand for coronavirus country and the future of our tests is growing. butjust as we need them mosts, country and the future of our country with president trump. test are increasingly hard to find. we've all heard the reports country and the future of our country with president trumpm country and the future of our country with president trump. in the end, the president trump wants us to of people driving hundreds of miles be able to just live our lives with to get a test and then the results the freedom that we are entitled to taking too long to arrive. and the opportunity that we have and we attempted to book one online today for a colleague who has not be dependent on the government. coronavirus symptoms, if you would get reelected in the
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and this is the message we received. office for another four years, i think it would be the complete more tests should be available later. if you cannot book a test now, demise of our country. completely. or the location or time are not convenient, try again in a few hours. do not call the helplines ? you will not be able to get a test this way." the shifting ground of the china—us joining us is the chief executive relationship is now of the british in vitro playing out on the big screen. disney has just spent 5 years diagnostic association, and $200 million re—making mulan. doris—ann williams. when the film's director thanks very much forjoining the was speaking with chinese state—run media, niki caro said program. what is the problem here? ‘in many ways, the movie is it lack of material or is it lack is a love letter to china.‘ when disney began the project in 2015 — of personnel to administer the test? tilting this blockbuster good evening. well it won't be it toward the chinese market made perfect sense. lack of material. i think, my in 2020 things are understanding is that the issue is a little different. and it's the scenes filmed in the northwest desert lack of capability to perform the of the silk road — analysis in the laboratories. i as noted at the end think we might have a bit of a of the credits, which has bottleneck with staff and the amount attracted all the criticism. the mulan filmmakers had of equipment that's currently being thanked eight government entities in xinjiang — that's the region in china used. so we are building up for the where uighur muslims have been detained in mass internment camps. winter months. but we haven't
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reached that capacity yet. the chinese market for films presumably as the winter months, people are going to get the sniffles is huge box office revenue and so they're going to need more in 2019 was $9.2 billion. test. if we do believe is a scientist and saying, that the key it has tripled since 2012 — to defeating the coronavirus is when the market was made $2.8 testing and then tracing, shouldn't billion. i'm joined now by issac stone fish — this have been anticipated that there wouldn't be enough people to a senior fellow at the asia administer the test at a time when people would have an increased society's center on us—china demand for tests because of the relations — who has an upcoming winter setting on? i think the spike book on the the nature has come a bit earlier than was of this relationship. expected for the winter months. so as hollywood basically caved to you wouldn't normally see china? yes, hollywood certainly has. respiratory disease kick in until since 1997 when the studios released the middle of november. yet again, two very high—profile films about this virus has taken us by surprise tibet and beijing responded by will stop it seems to come up with defector banning the studios, the something new all the time. there is studios decided that in order to planning going under way to speed up fatten their bottom line into bring their products into the chinese market is that they needed to play and reach a better capacity will stop but at the moment, things are the game the way china wanted. ata studio saviour between a rock and a stop but at the moment, things are at a bit ofa stop but at the moment, things are at a bit of a bottleneck because i ha rd studio saviour between a rock and a hard place because the alienate
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think obviously, the transmission rate has increased and its increase china by criticising, for example, second mick mack significantly among the government, than they do not get young people. that's where the all of that revenue and things like milan simply cannot get made. there problem lies. so what you're saying is we don't have enough of the scientist to process the test. one isa milan simply cannot get made. there is a difference between criticising of the issues that the opposition the detainment of people in here in the uk identified today is concentration camps and not taking the extra step of thinking that the system is too fragmented. so the testing centres where we go to have the test, they are run by propaganda departments insecurity one company and then the carry is a burrows of the city that is linked different company and that the lab, to crimes against humanity. so, do is another company. this sort of, you think they can have it both thought is the communication between ways ? them is not what it should be. so you think they can have it both ways? that the studios can make them is not what it should be. so the lab camp say to the testing films that sell in china without centre look, we can only process capitulating to chinese political somebody test today. is that part of demands in this case, the treatment the problem? i can't really comment on that. it was working really well of the group? there are two early on in the summer. i think it's just there's an awful lot of people different sides to what beijing coming forward. it'sjust wa nts different sides to what beijing wants out of hollywood studios and just there's an awful lot of people coming forward. it's just stretching the system. but the logistics have other american companies. there is always been separate. so the samples
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amplified positive information and would always been taken in a suppressing negative information. in separate location and sent in. as disney is suppressing negative you say, there are extra information, it is not criticising laboratories that have been put in beijing for its policies, but it doesn't have to have the same times. place to start with the extra and in this case, thanking the testing that was required at the beginning of the air. and they will department. it is very difficult beginning of the air. and they will be building more laboratories to try mind to walk and perhaps there is no way to walk it perfectly, but disney and meet the prime minister is could done a lot betterjob than ambition. okay. thank you very much they did. cost is going to say, it really is the dilemma that companies for joining ambition. okay. thank you very much face. because we have disney has forjoining us. clearly we need been quite disney which is been those tests to happen more frequently and get results more quite vocal with black lives matter quickly. and we too but on the uighurs, it is you might have noticed we have not had ron christie on the programme lately and that's because ron had tested positive for coronavirus. massive hypocrisy because they do he has been self isolating and recovering this past week, not say anything. and especially on but he is with us tonight — the republican side of the us debate, they're getting a lot of and hopefully ron on the mend? heat for not wanting to film in 0h, oh, looking good. you look very georgia because that states policy spiffy. i'm doing very well. towards abortion and defective stronger by the day. it's great to supporting a policy in xinjiang, have most of this behind me. are which include huge amounts of largely asymptomatic and is just great to go back to work and it's restrictive births, forced iuds, great to go back to work and it's great to go back to work and it's great to see both of you. good to forced abortions in that region.
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see you. i saw you at the beginning that is why they call xinjiang a of the programme through your window we talked over the telephone and you genocide today because the are definitely sounding a little population has dropped, i think it hoarse. i think after we spoke is proper roughly 24% in 2019 which things started to get quite a lot worse. what was it like, those days is proper roughly 24% in 2019 which is the legal definition of genocide, so disney is literally getting raked when it was, i had to ask you to relive this, but a lot of people over the course for that, and don't know somebody that's what it hypocrisy is a big piece of it. do was like for you will stop it was you think of my change because of awful. i was largely asymptomatic. this. we have other studios, with a my problems i would say there were change the way they do business or two things. one the aches in your perhaps treat china because of the muscles were just overwhelming. experience that disk is having? very, very tight achy and secondly, because there has been a huge social was this cloak of fatigue. i'm media backlash against disney because of this. i think the lesson sleeping 13, 14 hours a day and you studios are going to take is not wa ke sleeping 13, 14 hours a day and you wake up the next day and all you that we should not partner with wa nt wake up the next day and all you want to do is roll over and take a xinjiang would do things that are nap. that was really hard for me. intensely problematic with the you're absolutely right and what chinese communist party, which does they viewers around the world don't know is that you both checked in on work a lot harder to make sure other people don't know about it. i think studios are going to continue to me over the course of the wheaties partner with the party and continue and caddy was sweet enough to walk to censor in substance or, but it's over it with homemade sweet pea soup going to try my lot harder so that and homemade jam delivered to my does not become a big story in that doorstep. she is good like that. a we are not here talking by the next
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time it happens. recipe online. we will send a link. she is very good like that. well done, you do. when do you think you are exposed to a? good evening to a lot of pick up on that. i remember you, christian. i have no idea. i'm someone a lot of pick up on that. i remember someone saying to me a while ago, was the last time you saw an washing my hands religiously, i am american hollywood film with the bad quy american hollywood film with the bad using all the proper protocols, guy being chinese was white they do wearing a mask of a social not do chinese bad guys any more. distancing and i still got it. and you do not do chinese bad guys the notion that we are going to have because they need the market too political rallies around the united much. states where people are inside, stay with us on bbc news, still to come: disney has where people aren't wearing the mask spent 20 working on it's relationship with china — is so, so foolish. i look at my students in new york university and (katty)stay with us on bbc news, i think to myself, how can i do still to come: boris johnson is facing a parliamentary rebellion everything i can to make sure that over controversial they are safe? the last thing you legislation that would override part of the brexit divorce deal. wa nt they are safe? the last thing you want to do is not follow what the mp's will be voting soon on the first stages of the bill. ce ntre want to do is not follow what the centre of centre of disease control university students said. which is say apart, wash her are returning to campus for the start of term — and a very different hands and be very, very cautious. kind of freshers week. and i still got it. you talked about our education correspondent elaine dunkley reports from york. the fatigue. ijust and i still got it. you talked about the fatigue. i just wondered about atime of the fatigue. i just wondered about the psychological impact. do you worried about they got long covid, a time of new friendships, freedom and self—discovery. here in new don't they? the sort of tiredness.
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do you think you might suffer some york, campuses are usually packed of that, are you still suffering from students all over the world, some of that? i've gone from but things are different. they come sleeping 14 hours a night down to about ten. i wake up feeling much in groups and they are only allowed stronger everyday. i feel great to come in groups of six or less, so right now. obviously, i'm here with you. i'm not too much worried about we will be directing them where to go and what to do. following those the long—term implications of this. i think they caught it early enough rules, new housemates olivia, annie, several weeks back that we were able to test. this again underscores the rachel and ethan. is like lot availability of tests available. and different than what we expect, going to be evidence south isolate full stop as well as be able to contact to school, we expect it to be really trace. that is, who with the people good, going out a lot but it is hard he been around, associated with and how are they doing, how they feel with social distancing because otherwise, we can trouble for being in? fortunately, going back no one close to people. we can only have who i had come into contact with has one additional person. so, it limits since developed coronavirus. good. we can socialise with rather than and wrong you did tell me the individual groups. if you do test university where you teach were very positive for coronavirus, you have good at full ofjoy to stay here. how do you feel about university where you teach were very good at full of joy my following protocols and they contacted your that? if we did it, where young so stu d e nts protocols and they contacted your students and disaffected everything in your student had to what i say as we probably going to be fine, but if well. the great thing there is that
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the universities in the united states are really looking at ways you go home, we can take to our that we can come back in person and parents who might not be fine, so i be there. instructors with their think, staying here is a good students in the classroom. yes, they did disinfect that classroom. my option. going to university as a new students are now declared to be able to come back with me on wednesday. beginning, but it can also be daunting and even more so in these in person. and so it's really been a times. universities face a remarkable turn of events and i'm challenge, will they be able to thankful to them. and remarkable turn of events and i'm welcome students without causing a thankfulto them. and i'm remarkable turn of events and i'm thankful to them. and i'm thankful to the dc department of public rise in coronavirus cases? it is health for calling, checking in on me and to make sure that i had everything i needed. this is one of those times where when you have quite a big deal coming to someone those times where when you have someone from the government who's university and we have given them a calling, they were actually there to lot of information up front. help. says ron. the stall wart coronavirus is change the terms of going to university from getting the republican. thank you, ron. thank grades to graduating, the students like most, have felt every twist and you for sharing that with us is a bit grim to come on. it's so helpful turn of the pandemic. for you to come on and explain to remind people wash her hands, social you are watching bbc news. distance, follow the protocols. so glad to see you back so glad to see you looking so well. great to here in the uk, parliament see you both. interesting isn't it? is debating tonight the internal market bill. this is the controversial legislation that has thrust brexit back into the headlines.
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the bill proposed by the government there is ron who is taking this very would override parts of the brexit withdrawal agreement, seriously and clearly very london signed with the european interested. and actually if you look union in january. there is a super new study that came john major, tony blair, out just the other day that really surprised me. ithink out just the other day that really surprised me. i think we've got a david cameron and theresa may have graph that can show this of the amount of interest amongst americans all expressed their opposition to the bill which they fear will damage britain's international reputation. in stories about covid. look how it borisjohnson says the bill peaked somewhere around march, april i think that kind of big mountain will "provide the legal certainty" for sub i think that kind of big mountain forsubi i think that kind of big mountain for sub i can't read graph. it british businesses trading across the irish sea will need disappears. it's sort of bumbling on in the event of no deal. he has accused the eu of threatening the bottom. well for someone like ron it's very interesting and are paying a lot of attention to it. a the uk's internal market. lot of people sort of fatigue by it. that sort of, clicks and shares of they are threatening to carve tariff borders across her own country and covid stories. let me show you this. we have a thing in the bbc news room u psta i rs we have a thing in the bbc news room upstairs which tells us what people divider on land. changing the are looking at. this is a feed of economic geography of the united the top stories that people are clicking on on the bbc news website. kingdom and egregiously to ride roughshod over their own commitment look at that. for of the top five are covid related stories. so quite in article four of the protocol which they will say northern ireland different here in the uk. i wonder if that's because we are starting to is part of the customs territory of
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head into another peak. which of the united kingdom. mrspeaker, we course get that testing problem cannot have a situation with the which we've been talking about. and very boundaries of our country can of course the rule of six comes into be dictated by a foreign power or rule today. six people, a lot of international organisation. people suddenly interested in covid—19 again. people suddenly interested in covid-19 again. yes, for those we would not get the all—important watching on bbc world news we will be right vote on the team ended tonight, but what we're looking for for the first back. vote is how many extensions there are, because i will tell us the he s known as the don to pupils at his school in shropshire size. it's of a dip into this and teacher donald fears certainly earned their respect. because michael gove is closing the he s won a million pounds on the itv debate in the house of commons. we show who wants to be a millionaire — only the sixth person ever to do it. giles latcham s been to meet him. are investing hundreds of millions you just won £1 billion! of pounds in helping businesses be he's become the first contestant ready for the new processes that come with the protocol. if you not in 14 years to walk away serious about admitting the from who wants to be critical, then we would not be a millionaire with the top prize. everybody is so positive incurring the inevitable resistance in nice about it all. from some, as we see those orders i am blown away. being directed in trade prepared for the 57—year—old history and politics the implementation of the protocol. teacher motored through the first 14 the idea that we are adding is
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questions then faced the big one for 8 million about the death of a pirate. simply for the boat. and what this the date it's, 1718 it's bill is not a threat to the going to be blackbird. evolution. here, i must turn to my what's the question, north carolina it's black beard. or friend, the member for the options are coming up it's blackbeard it's still black bear. black beard, final answer. . harbour, he gave the longest speech in this debate and his speech, like all of his speeches are true to the well done to him. he's going to guarantee, note argument was share his winnings with his for children and is going to travel the undersold. michael gove closing the debate ahead of its second reading world. andi debate ahead of its second reading and i will give you the result of that vote on bbc news, interesting it's an extraordinary possibility — the idea that living organisms are floating in the clouds of venus that vote on bbc news, interesting that neither michael gove or boris johnson said that they're going to — the closest planet to earth. break international law. it is only this is what astronomers are now considering after detecting a gas brandon lewis that is actually said in the atmosphere that that specifically and a lot of could indicate signs of life. our science correspondent, people questioning whether that was pallab ghosh reports. smart politics. i do not think you will hear that tonight knife michael venus. gove. no, though we have spoken could it be home to extra terrestrial life? there's new evidence about lots of attention on the story in the america too. the people in that it might be. congress think that they are
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breaking international law and that isa breaking international law and that is a problem for them. astronomers have discovered a gas called phosphine in the planet's atmosphere. japan's governing party has elected yoshihide suga as its new leader to succeed shinzo they think it could have been abe. produced by tiny microbes it means mr suga is almost certain to become living in the clouds. the country's new prime minister i was really surprised, when parliament meets on wednesday — i was pretty shocked as well, and, given his party has a majority. for some it's cause at first, i didn't quite believe for early celebration. the detection, ijust couldn't one twitter user shared this comparison — believe that we'd found it but then saying "big news out ofjapan — new cakes to celebrate once we'd set out and independently suga yoshihide being elected as japan s new prime minister detected it through another are already available." telescope, that's when i knew we really had a solid detection of phosphine through two telescopes and that it was real. the discovery was confirmed by the alma telescope i think very very good likeness, in the mountains of the atacoma which made me think that look, if desert in chile. it is one of the most the prime minister of japan powerful arrays on earth. which made me think that look, if the prime minister ofjapan can have his face and a cake, why can't i? i the discovery of life on another am going to miss him the first of world would be one of the greatest scientific discoveries ever made, but the researchers aren't making that claim. all, you've got a cake. you've got a at least, not yet. the gas could have been produced cake. mine is a chocolate cake, by some other means, but its presence on venus yours is a carrot cake. obviously, because mine, you have carrot is still a sensational finding.
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flavour. i am going to miss shinzo it's the strongest evidence that astronomers have ever had for the existence of alien life. abe, i'm sure he has done a lot to but the big problem is that venus is hostile to life. reform japanese trade and diplomacy, but this is what i will remember him a soviet spacecraft landing in 1982 for. this is the board back from confirmed scorching temperatures, canada. oh, my goodness. that was so up to 460 degrees celsius, and clouds of concentrated sulphuric much fun in the bank it in and there acid, able to disintegrate any has never been a greater move towards diplomacy with canada than living thing in seconds. but some think that, even here, that from shinzo abe. see you life could be possible. tomorrow. there is a habitable zone, a range of altitudes, hello. on venus where it is not too hot high is set to stay in control and and not too acidic, that life that we understand here on earth, that means it will remain so called extremophile life, predominantly dry, but there will be extremely hardy survival a change in the feel of things, superhero type cells, tuesdayis a change in the feel of things, tuesday is another warm day with could survive that environment high pressure across the near in the venusian clouds. continent and with the winds of high many scientists still think pressure in a clockwise direction, that the conditions on the planet that will continue very warm air from the south and by wednesday, a are too harsh to support life and that there is another explanation for the presence different area of high—pressure muscles and and this one from the of the gas, but, at this stage, it's hard to completely rule out northwest and remember, the ones
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the possibility that alien flowing in a clockwise direction and life might exist on one of our nearest planets. i will introduce a very different pallab ghosh, bbc news. feel and some very chilly northerly wind. for the next few days, not a lot of rain and the forecast and amazing. stay with us we will have you'll stay largely dry, but it will more. return quite a lot cooler. so, this hello. is tuesday's forecast and many fall clearing across england and wales we had the warmest september day and the decent amount of sunshine since 2016. for many a case of blues for the southwestern parts of wales may be northern england, brightening sky and sunshine. a beautiful up september that why my show new may be northern england, brightening upfor may be northern england, brightening up for northern ireland, shower rain jersey? it was a top spot with 31 in scotland and become confined to the far north in a bit warmer on degrees. not far behind was charles monday for the likes of glasgow and belfast, higher temperatures likely boyd in surrey. the highest to be found in east anglia where we temperature with mainland in london. could find up to 30 degrees. as you hot on it sealed with 29 celsius was move through tuesday night into up hot on it sealed with 29 celsius was up the reason being, this pressure wednesday, a frontal system moves in centred across europe that's from the north and introduce some spots of rain, also likely to turn allowing the southerly flow to dragon some very warm air quite murky for some of the north allowing the southerly flow to dragon some very warm air all the way from africa. we see temperatures sea coast, but this band of clouds unusually high for this time of year and the odd spot of rain is a core but things will change subtly as we front and it is behind that that we go into tuesday with weak weather start to see the effects of that fronts bringing shari outbreaks of much cooler air and even down to the
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rain to start the day for some south, temperatures are a little bit relatively mild start double digits lower around 2425 degrees. as quite widely across the country. temperatures will continue to drop there will be some rain, not heavy persistent rain that we have seen through the wednesday and the court and it will weaken as we go through front which will continue to make the afternoon a little. more into their way southwards, which southwest england may be south wales introduces the cooler air into all areas. thursday can bring in some in northwest england, can't rule out an odd, isolated chow as we go into further patches of mist and fog on the north sea coast it will be quite the afternoon. but we keep for many a breezy day down to the south which of us, dry, sunny settled will essential wait a cooler filled conditions, light winds and plenty of work to go with it. temperatures with temperatures close to 20 degrees at the very best, most again quite widely mid to high 20s was that we might see 30 degrees places will not. cloud into northern ireland in northwest scotland with perhaps near east anglia through an approaching frontal system in the tuesday afternoon for stopped things cloud will continue to build in here changing again as we go through the as this front to purchase into the middle part of the week. it stays friday where the high—pressure largely dried there is no significant rain in the forecast but builds towards the south, under clear skies with light winds, it is it will turn noticeably cooler. that going to be a rather chilly start to is because high pressure will stay with us. but it's going to be friday, but we'll see some spots of centred across the north of scotland sunshine into the day in the week and as the winds swing around in a frontal system to the north bringing clockwise direction that means more cloud in some spots of rain and ofa clockwise direction that means more of a northern northeasterly overly temperatures of 17 to 22 degrees. the next couple days. and that means a noticeable difference to the feel into the weekend, the high—pressure of the weather in scotland, northern sta rts into the weekend, the high—pressure starts toward firm but this area of
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ireland, northern england and in low pressure has different ideas, it particular, along those north sea is going to attempt to spend its way facing coast. that could drag in a few isolated showers and maybe even up is going to attempt to spend its way up from iberia, some showers into some mist and fog. temperatures 13 southern counties and it will be a to 17 degrees here and further south we might see those temperatures eastern win. across southern parts peaking at 25 c. that's 77 f. high of the uk, the icons for a city for cash are mostly dry conditions, i pressure is not going too far away would not be at all surprised if we at all. another high moves in such just the odd shower. more keeping things very quiet indeed. reliably dry weather for the north, but noticeably cooler as we go some spousal sunshine, not as windy through the week. no significant rain in the forecast. temperatures but still, very cool. high—pressure perhaps falling down to where they once again wants to be in charge, should be for this time of year. 00:28:35,795 --> 4294966103:13:29,430 take care. but is going to be a road from two directions, showers try to push up from the south and eventually the frontal system strained work and from the atlantic, there is uncertainty about how quickly that area of high pressure will loosen its grip, but it does look as if after a dry and fairly warm starts next week, not as warm as it is right now, it was it will turn a bit
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u nsettled right now, it was it will turn a bit unsettled later.
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tonight at ten, borisjohnson asks mps to back his controversial plans to override parts of the brexit deal. as he made his way to the commons today, the prime minister knew that opposition to the plan extended to some of his own mps. now call the prime minister. prime minister. under pressure from labour the prime minister tried to justify the plans which break international law according to his own colleagues.
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we cannot have a situation where the very boundaries of our country could be dictated by a foreign power. it's his deal, his mess, his failure.
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