tv BBC News BBC News October 10, 2022 1:30pm-2:01pm BST
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in the open sea. so if you imagine, everybody was dumping their nets, after 6—12 months, you can imagine what would be out there. now nobody is doing it and now we are trawling it all up. it is a massive difference, we are doing, a massive difference we are making. see if it's ok. for the last few years, a scheme has been in place which takes away the fisherman�*s old nets once they have been brought to shore. part of the reason why recycling fishing nets is so complicated is because they are made up of all sorts of different materials. there's metal in here. there's different sorts of plastic. and that all has to be sorted out, and that is what neil is doing here, before the plastic parts, the recyclable bits, can be sent off to be processed. this is the new processing facility in the cotswolds, which means that nets from british trawlers can, for the first time, be recycled here in the uk.
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they are usable in a variety of different applications. for example, our footwear components here contains the fishing nets. so these are in people's shoes? these are in people's shoes, yes, so people walking around with some of our customers' shoes on, they will have some fishing net in them. incredible, so it has gone from being a net to footwear. yeah, absolutely, yes. it is a small step forward in what will be a long journey — cleaning up our polluted oceans. jonah fisher, bbc news, in brixham harbour. 0k, time fora 0k, time for a look at the weather. after incredibly dry summer, we need some rain and we had some across the hills in the north—west of the uk but there wasn't very much rainfall across the southeast last week. looking at the weather picture this week, the rain initially will be falling mostly across the north west of the uk until thursday. that is
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when we will see heavier rain working across england and wales bringing useful falls of rain. working across england and wales bringing usefulfalls of rain. we had some rain this morning, that's exactly the weather front that brought it, clearing out of the way. the straight line of cloud you can see working across east anglia. sunshine follows and for most of you it is an afternoon of increasingly bright weather, lots of sunshine around and just a few showers across the north west. showers, plenty across the north—west of scotland, gusts of wind about 30 mph on land 40 gusts of wind about 30 mph on land a0 in the hebrides. 0ne gusts of wind about 30 mph on land a0 in the hebrides. one or two showers for the north—west of both england and wales, but otherwise it is a largely dry picture. 18 in cardiff, that is three degrees above the seasonal average. a few more showers for the north—west of the uk overnight but it is england and wales where we keep the clearer skies and blokey across parts of the midlands, wales and east anglia, southern england temperatures could get down to zero in one or two spots. i have some plans that would not like it that cold, so gardeners
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take note of that. nice enough start tomorrow in england and wales with sunshine. more cloud for scotland and northern ireland, general outbreaks of rain working into the north—west of the uk towards the end of the afternoon. temperatures 13 to 16 celsius. another weather front moves off the atlantic for wednesday and this bringing fairly decent rain across the north—west but the front tends to weaken as it heads down towards east anglia south—east england. could be a bit of rain but no great amounts. temperatures around 15 to 18 degrees with brighter weather following behind the fronts of scotland and northern ireland. it is on thursday we are likely to see the wettest weather across the south of the country thanks to this area of low pressure. the wettest weather looks set to be across southern parts of england, southern wales as well. if this area of rain just works a little bit further northwards, it could be accompanied by some stronger gusts of wind across the south. still details to be ironed out but it looks like it will turn wet and windy late in the day through thursday night as well across the
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north—west of the country. for friday and that weekend, we will continue with a fairly blustery and westerly winds bringing a mixture of sunny spells and passing showers. temperatures not changing a great deal but where we do see the rain, it will be welcome after such a dry summer. that is all from the bbc news at 0ne. now it is time tojoin that is all from the bbc news at 0ne. now it is time to join the bbc�*s news dreams where you are. britain's cj ujah has been banned from competing for 22 months after he tested positive for two banned substances at the tokyo olympics last summer. it's backdated to the date of his
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failed test in august last year. the british team were stripped of the men's a x 100 metres silver — in light of ujah's positive tests for 0starine and 5—23. he has been cleared of intentionally taking banned drugs though, by the athletics integrity unit. brighton midfielder enock mwepu has been forced to retire from football after the discovery of a heriditary heart condition. the zambian international had recently become ill, on a trip away with his national side — and spent four days in hospital. brighton said mwepu would be at an extremely high risk of suffering a potentially fatal
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cardiac event if he continued playing competitive football. west brom are looking for a new manager after parting company with steve bruce, who was in charge for eight months. he leaves following west brom's 0—0 draw at home with luton on saturday which kept them in the championship�*s relegation zone in 22nd place, their lowest league position for more than 20 years. liverpool bossjurgen klopp has vowed to fight to turn their season around, following their loss to arsenal at the emirates. klopp�*s side went down 3—2 against the league leaders. bukayo saka's penalty in the second half the difference. in the latter stages, of a fractious evening, the referee spoke to both benches after what appeared to be a heated exchange of words involving players of both sides. the defeat leaves liverpool now 1a points off the top of the league, with tough games to come. we have to continue so of course in a situation like ours, playing arsenal, playing rangers and then man city,
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is that perfect opponent forfinding confidence back? probably not. we will go out there and fight, that is what we have to do and what we will do. england'sjodi ewart shadoff says it feels " surreal" — after winning her first lpga tour title in california in the early hours of this morning. the 3a—year—old from north yorkshire finished 15 under par, winning by one shot at the mediheal championship. it was her 2a6th attempt at winning on the tour, and she said she didn't know if this moment would ever come. harry kane is going to read a story on cbeebies bedtime.— on cbeebies bedtime. hello, i am har , on cbeebies bedtime. hello, i am harry, sometimes _ on cbeebies bedtime. hello, i am harry, sometimes when _ on cbeebies bedtime. hello, i am harry, sometimes when i - on cbeebies bedtime. hello, i am harry, sometimes when i am - on cbeebies bedtime. hello, i am i harry, sometimes when i am playing football i have to be brave, lots of people want me to score a goal and win the game but can i tell you a secret? i don't always feel like
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being brave. have you ever wanted to do something but you were worried it might be a bit too scary? bedtime story isjust for you. might be a bit too scary? bedtime story is just for you.— story is just for you. inspirational words from _ story is just for you. inspirational words from harry _ story is just for you. inspirational words from harry kane. - story is just for you. inspirational words from harry kane. you - story is just for you. inspirational words from harry kane. you can | story is just for you. inspirational. words from harry kane. you can get all the sports stories on the bbc website. . let's return to our top story as russia has carried out dozens of missile strikes on cities across ukraine. a spokesman for ukraine's air force said 83 missiles had been fired so far and the attacks were ongoing. at least eight people have been killed injust one district of the capital, kyiv. at least ten people have been killed so far and 60 injured. maria mezentseva is the ukrainian mp for kharkiv and a deputy chairperson of the committee on ukraine's integration into the european union.
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basically, i was about to get my son to school early in the morning when i read on the news about the first blasts. i did not hear the first one because i live a little bit far from the city centre, but about 20 minutes after that, i heard some explosions which seemed closer to my home, so i grabbed my son and we rushed to an underground station. we spent about three hours there. people were gathering very quickly over there. people were rather calm, i would say, given the circumstances. they came very well prepared, with blankets, water, food, power banks for their gadgets and so forth. we spent about three hours there with my son, and a few thousand people probably stationed over there in the underground station. what was the mood like amongst all of you and that underground station? there is a video from another underground station.
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my assistant filmed people singing the national anthem in there. i have seen a kid sitting right next to my son who was drawing a picture with a ukrainian flag saying that ukraine is going to win. he was younger than my son, about seven years old. so, i think that tells you something about the mood. the mood was not panicking, i didn't see anyone crying or being afraid of something. people were just calling their relatives saying they were fine and in the underground station, and they were safe. and i could see fury gathering there because their lives are being disrupted for no good reason other than some crazy guy in moscow saying he could do so. i would say not fear but fury is the general mood there. you are the second person to use that word, i just spoke to a former ukrainian diplomat who said that was very much how she was feeling about it, fury. it is an extraordinary
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resilience that you all have. indeed. for a couple of minutes, i got a bit more concerned when my son started asking questions like "mum, am i going to die?" but then he gathered himself and he asked me another question and he said is it a regular missile or nuclear one? and i didn't know how to respond. isaid i said that is a regular one. he said, well, if it's nuclear, what we need to do is one, two, three and he said something that he learned at school that is part of our reality right now. people and kids learn what to do in case of a nuclear attack. i will never forgive that, i will never forget that but i will never surrender because of that. living under putin is much worse than anything else that he could put in our heads. and you said that your son is seven? no, my son is ten.
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the kid drawing the picture was seven. that is an extraordinary response that you describe there from a young child, such awareness of what is going on. going forward, are you concerned that this may become a more regular occurrence, because obviously, to an extent, life in kyiv has been able to get to normal? indeed. and i am also reading the russian social media and they have claimed that they have hit their strategic targets and so on with their high precision missiles. the thing is they have missed and have not hit many targets that they were trying to hit. they missed by a couple of metres here and there because they are high precision missiles don't actually work. so we expect they will continue targeting infrastructure, that is something they will definitely continue to be doing. whether they will miss or hit that is a big question. one issue i need to reiterate
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here speaking to you is that itjust shows ukrainian is systems, anyone who can provide any system right now that would be very much appreciated. i think that will be reiterated by a in his talks. i think that will be reiterated by our president in his talks with our partners. and that conversation that was being had previously and went away to an extent because the fighting was focused on the battlefield, that may change now. yes, indeed. for a while, particularly after the russians left the kyiv region in the talks about helping us ensure the no—fly zone kind of went away, but it is still a danger. it is still taking place. and they did not only hit kyiv. they hit lviv, kharkiv and many more regions. dnipro was particularly badly hit.
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we are 2pm right now. as of ten in the morning, there were missiles hitting dnipro. and that is a city of1 million people. so, we need an air defence system, and everybody can just see how much. earlier, i spoke to yevhen petrov who lives in kyiv and witnessed the strikes this morning. he's also part of the ngo the public diplomacy platform. the first explosion was about 8am in kyiv. the target was not military or civic infrastructure, it was children in a playground in the centre of kyiv. at 8am, when a huge amount of people are trying to reach their workplaces and so on. it's about ten people killed and more than 20 injured. in the centre of kyiv at 8am. also other places that were targeted, like a bridge in the business centre,
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all those places, civil infrastructure where a huge amount of people, especially at this time, just getting from one place and trying to reach their final destination. did you actually see the moment when those strikes hit? at about 9am, i was trying to reach my work place and i heard two very loud explosions on the west side, and also when i came to the centre of kyiv, i saw big smoke coming from the first place which was targeted. and you are saying there were lots of people around. volodymyr zelensky said the timing of these attacks was public particularly aimed at trying to attack people. yes, definitely. because in this place, it has nothing especially historical or cultural. a huge amount of roads which are connection to one part of the city from another one.
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and they linked to important business centres and places of work and so on. places where especially in the morning there are parks where people can walk their dogs, especially in the morning. 0ne one more act of terrorism where they can show us, we can reach you everywhere in the places you are travelling to. a fight not against military people but against civilian people. you mentioned a playground. were there children in the playground? i cannot tell you this information right now. but it is 8am and the centre of kyiv and most likely some people can just be passing through this place. but we can see a huge result where these missiles and a huge place where this playground was struck. in front of the university and buildings for the people. how are you feeling about this and
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how are others responding to this? a huge amount of people right now can say that today it is almost the same that we had on the 21st of february, but the big difference right now is, especially right now, we understand what we know what we should do as a response, all these acts and all this terrorism from russia. every day, more and more. the main thing a huge amount of people in ukraine are saying is that missiles will end one day but we will be standing as we were before. it doesn't matter how many missiles they have but nothing will change in our attitude because we are fighting for our freedom, our attitude because we are fighting for ourfreedom, for our our attitude because we are fighting for our freedom, for our country, and for ourfuture.
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11 people killed and 6a people injured according to ukrainian state emergency services, those are the figures, 11 dead and 6a injured and probably that casualty figure will rise but we will see as the day progresses. in the meantime, let's speak to a ukrainian member of parliament, deputy chairperson of the committee of integration into the committee of integration into the european union. shejoins us from strasbourg where she has been meeting european politicians. thank you for being with as. i meeting european politicians. thank you for being with as.— you for being with as. i suppose after the attack _ you for being with as. i suppose after the attack on _ you for being with as. i suppose after the attack on the - you for being with as. i suppose after the attack on the bridge i you for being with as. i suppose after the attack on the bridge in j after the attack on the bridge in crimea, this was not entirely unexpected, this wave of missile strikes we have seen today, this response we have seen from russia. well, we couldn't say that can be considered as a response because a successful military operation of liberating the temporary occupied
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parts of ukraine are ongoing every day, and we know that every success can be linked to something. that is why we would like, as the ukrainian side, to point out that the bridge could be a coincidence. we have one question to the russian authorities, the big claim that this bridge was, you know, under their control, moreover they used it for military purposes to supply petrol and missiles to the peninsula of crimea from where the mainland of ukraine was targeted, why this case scenario actually happened, if they are under total control? so, rather than actually happened, if they are under total control? so, ratherthan that, i would like to inform everyone who is watching us, the casualties and numbers you have just announced, unfortunately might grow, the partial absence of electricity in some regions are causing difficulties for people to get in
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touch with each other, with their relatives, even though emergency services are operating well. in that region, in the city of kharkiv, a2 kilometres for the russian border, electricity supply was recently regained. as of where i am right now, in the heart of defending the human rights, we would insist during the next four working days passing the next four working days passing the resolution on the political effect of russian aggression against ukraine, the tribunal for putin and his counterparts, the reparations so that we would not spend the taxpayers of other countries but through the frozen assets of russia, we would press for liability, because these war crimes have a mother crime which is an act of aggression on russia. can mother crime which is an act of aggression on russia.— mother crime which is an act of aggression on russia. can i ask you, we have seen _ aggression on russia. can i ask you, we have seen this _
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aggression on russia. can i ask you, we have seen this counteroffensive i we have seen this counteroffensive by your country, by ukrainian forces, taking back a lot of territory, and president putin has been under pressure, we are told, from hardliners in moscow, do you feel that he is now trying to escalate this war, that he is under pressure from hardliners? he is definitely under _ pressure from hardliners? he is definitely under pressure - pressure from hardliners? he: 3 definitely under pressure which is why these attacks on infrastructure, universities, kindergartners, hospitals, residential buildings and at least 12 cities and towns of ukraine are proving that he is desperate. we know some information that his security council doesn't support his tactic in dealing with his brutal war. however, we have an instrument to follow the offence, we can announce, as the civilised world, as the world united against putin, that he is a terrorist and russia is a sponsor of terrorism. depending on every member state of the un, this definition might vary,
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but what we are witnessing today throughout the whole day and the previous eight months and the previous eight months and the previous eight months and the previous eight years of war and from even the 1990s, talking about afghanistan, moldova, when the russian stepped on the soil of foreign states, this is a very clear sign of terrorism and we have to speak out loud about it. bier? sign of terrorism and we have to speak out loud about it. very good to talk to you. _ speak out loud about it. very good to talk to you, thank _ speak out loud about it. very good to talk to you, thank you _ speak out loud about it. very good to talk to you, thank you for - speak out loud about it. very good to talk to you, thank you for your | to talk to you, thank you for your time. the ukrainian member of parliament for kharkiv talking to us from strasbourg, thank you. let's take a look now at what's making the news across the uk. the cost of living has hit many of us hard. but perhaps none harder than families who are raising children who are seriously ill, or with disabilities. new research from the charity family fund has shown that families with disabilities now face serious financial jeopardy. more than half of parents
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and carers, 5a%, report skipping, or cutting the size of, their meals because there wasn't enough money for food. and four in five families, 83%, raising a disabled child are in debt. sean killick has been to meetjo, a motherfrom littlehampton, in west sussex. for the spear family life was difficult before the pandemic and the current cost of living problems. sons archie and max are both autistic. max also has adhd and when archie suffered brain damagejo had to give up her teaching career to care for them. with the price of energy and specialist necessities is increasing, their limited budget is stretched more than ever. we don't have things that we can cut back on any more. my son is doubly incontinent so he needs a bath, he needs a shower, we need to run that washing machine, we need to change the sheets, we need to change his clothes,
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then we have the running cost of heating. my son has an immune deficiency, my husband has an immune deficiency. we don't have the luxury of saying, "0k, we will keep the heating off "all winter," because actually that just means hospital all winter and then you're putting pressure on another service as well. the national charity family fund says its survey of families with a disabled child shows almost all are struggling, falling behind on bills, cutting back on meals, or heating. it is alarmed that suggestions benefits might not rise in line with inflation. we are not even in the winter months yet and families are telling us at this current time that they are cutting back on food, on energy, to be able to support their disabled children. so even the smallest of difference could make a huge impact for families with disabled children. the government told us 6 million disabled people are getting an extra payment of £150 a year as part of a £37 billion support package which will see low—income households receive at least £1200 of direct payments this year. butjo says it is hard not to feel pessimistic about the coming winter. we are already on the bare minimum, you know. it's great to say, well, if you live on benefits you get... it's really not the case.
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i studied for a career, i went to have a teaching career. nobody goes into parenthood planning to have a disabled child. at the moment, with the energy and the gas, itjust feels like there is no end in sight. it doesn't feel like there is an end now, and that's really, really daunting. meanwhile, the charity family fund, says it can provide financial grants for basic essentials such as clothing, bedding or washing machines forfamilies with disabled children. sean killick, bbc south today, littlehampton. bosses of eurovision are in liverpool holding their first meeting as they land for next year eurovision song contest. the city was chosen ahead of glasgow on friday night to host 2023's event in place of ukraine which cannot stage the event because of russia's
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invasion. but now there is a row over accommodation with some being accused of cashing in on the song contest, asjulie hobson reports. eurovision 2023, all eyes are unlivable. what about those wanting to stay in the city for the grant? you might expect the cost of accommodation to shoot up but by how much? the cheapest price is just above £1500 for one night. the organisers are telling people not to pay inflated prices.— pay inflated prices. don't book those prices. _ pay inflated prices. don't book those prices. we _ pay inflated prices. don't book those prices. we have - pay inflated prices. don't book those prices. we have a - pay inflated prices. don't book those prices. we have a plan | pay inflated prices. don't book| those prices. we have a plan to pay inflated prices. don't book- those prices. we have a plan to show we have a range of accommodations of people coming to liverpool.
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that won't help connor. on twitter he said his accomodation was cancelled. he'd paid £200. others say they simply cant afford to go. obscene is the only word, it's ridiculous, they have tripled five, six, seven times. you are talking a minimum of £1000 per night. we were watching the prices inflate before our eyes. one hotel was £230 per night, 0k fine, when you came to check out, that had changed to £1000 per night. that out prices it for most people, including _ that out prices it for most people, including us. some eurovision fans say inflated prices are the norm and it happens every year. rebecca will be here from two o'clock with all the after news ——
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afternoon news. our weather is cheering up through the afternoon, for most of us there will be a lot of dry weather and sunshine as well, that satellite picture show this band of cloud, the weather fronts that brought early morning rain clearing out of the way. they will be showers around for scotland, northern ireland and the north west of england and wales but otherwise even here there will be sunny spells with the rest of the sunshine across the midlands, eastern areas of england, eastern scotland and the south as well. temperatures up to 18 in cardiff. overnight tonight, showers will continue to come and go across the north but with clearer skies for england and wales, locally it could get cold enough for a nip of frost and that is something gardeners might want to pay attention to, given you might have plants outside that might not like temperatures that low. tuesday, plenty of sunshine for england and wales, further north, pick a cloud and rain coming through during the
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this is bbc news. i'm rebecca jones. the headlines... a wave of russian attacks hits cities across ukraine — 80 missile have been launched — with capital kyiv targeted for the first time in several months. our correspondent there was reporting live this morning when one of the missiles struck nearby. ukraine's president zelensky says russia is trying to wipe his country off the face of the earth.
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