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tv   Breakfast  BBC News  September 17, 2024 6:00am-9:01am BST

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good morning from the university of leeds, where those freshfaced freshers are beginning to arrive. with the average english student graduating owen close to £50,000, we ask how heavy that debt is weighing. in sport, the wait is nearly over. 42 years on from winning the european cup, aston villa return to the competition that produced their most famous night in what will be a poigniant night for the club. meet nazare, the injured turtle washed up in cumbria, now making waves in the warmer waters of the azores. and another dry and sunny day foremost across the uk but a chilly start for some, all of the details here on breakfast. good morning. it's tuesday the 17th of september. junior doctors in england have accepted the government's offer
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of a 22% pay rise over two years ending a dispute which prompted the longest strike in nhs history. health secretary wes steeting said the deal marks the first step health secretary wes streeting said the deal marks the first step in future—proofing the nhs. but the british medical association has warned of further action if pay does not continue to match inflation. our health editor hugh pym has this report. it began in march last year. striking junior doctors on picket lines in england and demanding a pay rise of 35% to be phased in, which they said should compensate for inflation over more than a decade. what do we want? pay restoration! when do we want it? now! some talks took place with the conservative government, but that didn't stop 11 rounds of strikes over a total of 44 days. soon after the election, the labour government made an increased pay offer, which the doctors union, the bma, put to members and they voted to accept. we are bringing this current dispute of two years now to an end.
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it has taken far too long for the government to take any meaningful steps towards pay restoration. we are now in a process of turning that tide, and i hope that we can continue to make thatjourney into the future so that doctors don't have to strike over pay again. the offer included a backdated pay rise for last year of 4%, on top of an existing increase worth an average of 9%, and for this year, an additional 6% increase, topped up with an extra £1,000, which comes to around 9%. it overall adds up to 22%. the government says strike action byjunior doctors cost the nhs in england around £1.7 billion. the health secretary welcomed the vote in favour of the deal. the deal we've reached with junior doctors is fairfor them, but crucially fair for patients and the taxpayer because now we can draw a line under this bitter dispute, cut waiting lists and get our nhs
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notjust back on its feet, but fit for the future. nhs managers and patients will be relieved that further health strikes are off the agenda in england. around 1.5 million appointments and operations were cancelled because of all industrial action by nhs unions since the end of 2022. the bma, though, has argued that there is still a long way to go to compensate for past inflation and their campaign isn't over. the doctors union agreed a pay deal with the scottish government last year and there weren't any strikes. junior doctors in wales have voted in favour of a pay offer. there's an ongoing dispute in northern ireland. hugh pym, bbc news. our chief political correspondent henry zeffman is at the liberal democrats conference where leader sir ed davey is expected to speak about nhs funding later today. morning, funding later today. henry. what can we expect to morning, henry. what can we expect to hearfrom him about this?
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morning, sally. the liberal democrats have been talking about the nhs throughout the four—day conference, really throughout this year. and don't expect today to be any different. that's the main section we are told of their ed davey public speech to the liberal democrat conference today, he will see say that the nhs cannot be easily fixed, the conservative broke it so badly over so many years but they also know it must be done and they also know it must be done and they will of people hope in the word hope is a jab on the labour government, there is a view in the liberal democrat leadership that labour have been too gloomy. but the liberal democrat's main target other conservatives, that's who they won the vast majority of their 72 seats from in the general election. when there ed davey first addressed the liberal democrat conference as leader they only had 11 mp5. what this settlement of the strike
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provides their bad cars is that the liberal democrats have 72 mps and they are delighted with that but labour have a lot more, they are in government are making decisions shaping every issue include the nhs and the question going forward for the liberal democrats is where they fit in. ., ~ the liberal democrats is where they fit in. . ~ ,, , the liberal democrats is where they fit in. . ~ , . fit in. thank you very much indeed. no more of — fit in. thank you very much indeed. no more of the _ fit in. thank you very much indeed. no more of the news _ fit in. thank you very much indeed. no more of the news with - fit in. thank you very much indeed. no more of the news with jon, - no more of the news withjon, including the fact that have now heard from donald trump. donald trump has praised his protection team as he spoke publicly for the first time since being the target of another apparent assassination attempt while playing golf at his resort in florida. a 58—year—old man has appeared in court in connection with the incident. the white house says president biden has spoken to donald trump to tell him he's relieved that he's safe. here's our north america correspondent, peter bowes. keep walking! this is the moment ryan routh was taken into custody. the 58—year—old was arrested shortly after fleeing from donald trump's golf club in west palm beach, florida.
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what's your name? ryan. ryan? less than 2a hours later, he was in court, dressed in a blue prison jumpsuit and facing multiple firearms charges linked to an alleged attempt to assassinate the former president. this is where he was confronted by a secret service agent while donald trump was playing a round of golf. all of a sudden we heard shots being fired in the air. and i guess probably four orfive. and it sounded like bullets but what do i know about that, the secret service told me it was bullets. the secret service knew immediately it was bullets. and they grabbed me, everybody, just, we got into the carts and we moved on, pretty good. i was with an agent and the agent did a fantasticjob. the agent fired at what investigators say appeared to be a rifle poking out of trees
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near the edge of the course. cellular data shows that the subject was in the vicinity of the golf course roughly 12 hours before the engagement with the united states secret service. investigators say they're still working on whether ryan routh was acting alone. kamala harris said violence had no place in america, and she was relieved her election opponent was safe, but mr trump blamed what he called her and the current president's rhetoric for what happened on sunday and two months ago. take a look at what happened... the former president first survived an assassination attempt while speaking at an open air rally in pennsylvania. since then, security around him has been tightened. but the secret service says it needs more resources to do itsjob. president biden says he's looking to see if further measures are needed to ensure the safety of mr trump. i've always condemned political violence, and i always will in america. in america, we resolve our differences peacefully at the ballot box, not at the end of a gun. the white house says mr biden has
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spoken to the former president to convey his relief that he's safe. mr trump later said they had a very nice call about secret service protection. officials say security around donald trump's mar—a—lago home is now as intense as when he was president. there are seven anxious weeks to go until polling day. peter bowes, bbc news, los angeles. the mp diane abbott has told the bbc she was treated like a "nonperson" by sir keir starmer and the labour party, during the row over remarks made about her by the conservative donor and businessman, frank hester, who said she made him "hate all black women" and should be shot. a labour party spokesperson said the prime minister had great respect for diane abbott and that he and the party condemned frank hester�*s comments and had reached out to her at the time to offer support. mr hester later apologised but denied he was racist. diane abbott told the bbc�*s
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newsnight programme that she'd felt frightened. i think initially i was treated as a nonperson which felt very idid i did feel that if somebody was threatening to have you shot, you would have felt that your party would have felt that your party would have felt that your party would have offered you more support, giving you advice, on safety and security, even commiserated with you. at}! security, even commiserated with ou. ., ., , , ., security, even commiserated with ou. . ., , , ., ., you. of that happened. -- and none ofthat you. of that happened. -- and none of that happened. _ you can hear the full interview with diane abbott on newsnight tonight on bbc two and bbc iplayer. 40,000 residents of the city of nysa in south—western poland have been told to head for higher ground as a river threatens to burst its banks. several countries across central and eastern europe are facing severe flooding caused by storm boris. at least 18 people have died. our central europe correspondent nick thorpe is in budapest by the danube.
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how are things looking there, it has it started to subside at all? ida. it started to subside at all? no, here, it started to subside at all? no, here. actually — it started to subside at all? no, here, actually we _ it started to subside at all? no, here, actually we are _ it started to subside at all? iifr, here, actually we are expecting it to arrive, the main wave on the main danube to arrive. the biggest problems so far in poland and the czech republic, and much downriver, i am standing by the danube here in the centre of budapest, on margaret island. here people are bracing themselves for the arrival of the flood from upriver in austria and germany. we don't see floods yet here but very strong preparations, this is a white line of sandbags here on the island, and at the moment the danube at budapest is rising at one metre per day and expected to peak here on thursday. having seen the pictures further upstream, in poland, in parts of germany, how are people there in budapest feeling about the possibility that the same thing might be repeated? here
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possibility that the same thing might be repeated?— possibility that the same thing might be repeated? here in the caital, might be repeated? here in the capital, budapest _ might be repeated? here in the capital, budapest is _ might be repeated? here in the capital, budapest is very - might be repeated? here in the capital, budapest is very well i capital, budapest is very well protected from floods. there was a massive flood in 1838 when half the city was under so budapest is relatively well protected. this is a vulnerable point so there are sandbags here. further west and north and further up the danube, there are low—lying villages, they are used to floods in the past, but every year they seem to get, every ten years, the rather, they seem to get bigger. there are these vulnerable points on the river at these enormous tributaries pour into these enormous tributaries pour into the river, at those points where it meets the danube, that is where the biggest threats lie.— biggest threats lie. thank you, nick. at least two people have died and a dozen firefighters injured as wildfires burn in central and northern portugal. villages have been evacuated, and motorways closed. the portuguese government has requested that the european union send more water—bombing aircraft. the region is experiencing unusually dry conditions with strong winds fanning the fires.
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the union which represents delivery riders has said the pay model used by companies such as deliveroo and just eat encourages some couriers to ride on the pavement and illegally modify electric bikes to travel at dangerous speeds. the city of london police says it has seized more than 300 illegally modified e—bikes since launching a crackdown last year. deliveroo says it would stop a rider working with a modified bike and just eat says it has zero tolerance for criminal behaviour. the kit, the batteries, the rear wheel and the hub, and this throttle that will have been fitted, is a kit he would have bought online. he's turned it into like a moped. we started in july last year. since we started, i can tell you now, this is the 326th illegal e—bike scooter we have ceased.
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we will be talking about that later, do get in touch if you have experiences or opinions. a court battle to determine the future of rupert murdoch's media empire and a £15 billion family trust has begun. the case will put the 93—year—old media mogul in opposition to three of his children, over who will gain the most power to control fox news and news corporation when mr murdoch dies. universities in england say tuition fees need to be increased in line with inflation to help prevent them from "sliding into decline" and are calling for more government support. but students say they are already paying too much. our education reporter vanessa clarke reports. after a quiet summer, university campuses are once again filling up. in manchester, more than 100,000 students are expected to descend on the city this month, and here at the manchester metropolitan, there will be more home students starting than ever before. we're enormously excited to be welcoming 10,000 new undergraduates.
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but in england, vice chancellors are calling for help as tuition fees remain frozen and international student numbers are down. for many institutions, we're now at an inflection point. we can choose as a country what type of higher education system we want. currently, we have some of the best universities in the world. we deliver really great internationally rated teaching and research. if you want to carry on doing that, we've got to find ways of investing. it's not an easy time for universities. more than 40% are expecting to return a budget deficit this year, and they're calling for a decision about how they will be funded long term. see you tonight then. 0h, maybe another bowl of rice! proposals due to be released in the coming days, universities uk will call for a tuition fee rise in england linked to inflation, as well as more investment from the government. they also want to see maintenance grants go up and access to child and adolescent mental health services for students up until 25.
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but the idea of tuition fees going up did not go down well here. such a big chunk of money that i can sort of log in and see that i owe the government at the moment, and the idea of spending more than that... if it weren't for that, i would definitely be annoyed because i'm not, i am getting a lot of teaching, but i'm not getting like 10k worth. i wouldn't want it to go up like past 10k, i think that's... and itjust puts people off going to uni basically, and no—one will go. the department for education in england says it has inherited a challenging set of circumstances and it will create a secure future for universities. but there are no easy options. we know that there really isn't very much public money available, and if there was, i'm not sure it would necessarily go to higher education. the next option is students, but it's politically very difficult to put up tuition fees. although if tuition fees were linked to inflation, arguably the cost isn't going up, the costs are staying the same. but making that argument is quite tricky. for many students, this
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week marks the start of their university experience. but outside of campus, the debate about whether the cost should be on the taxpayer or the student rolls on. vanessa clarke, bbc news, manchester. 17 minutes past six, and matt is promising as the most beautiful start to the morning with this picture, good morning. it morning. gorgeous start for the vast majority, just before the sun comes up on the east coast of scotland, already looking fine, and it should be a dry and sunny day for most of you. warming up after a chilly start, the contrast this morning, temperatures on the outskirts of banbury to celsius, low enough for a touch of frost about 16 degrees in the north—west of scotland. a lot more cloud here and
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a south—westerly wind bringing milder air. a few spots of light rain and drizzle to contend with over the next few hours. the odd fog patch for the morning commute, not as extensive as yesterday morning. the cloud within a break, brightening up for many, cloudy in the breeze in the south—east, gentle light winds foremost and it will feel a little bit warmer than yesterday. 23 degrees in parts of scotland, 21 or 22 to the south—east of england in the west of northern ireland. tonight the cloud will thin and break in northern scotland but a bit more low cloud pushing in across parts of central and eastern england, got a chilly across southern areas tonight with more of a breeze. —— not as chilly in southern areas tonight. a few mist and fog patches in scotland tomorrow morning will clear, the mist and low cloud in england will break up, one or two patches around the coast and
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it will be warm with highs of up to 25 degrees. sca rcely scarcely a cloud in the sky, brilliant. scarcely a cloud in the sky, brilliant-— scarcely a cloud in the sky, i brilliant.— and scarcely a cloud in the sky, - brilliant.— and it brilliant. lovely, isn't it? and it will not last! _ a woman from buckinghamshire has thanked ant and dec after she was reunited with her four siblings in australia following a dna test. ant and debt aren't siblings! that would be a story! after searching for more than 30 years, tina duggan had nearly given up hope of finding her half brothers and sisters but was inspired to keep searching, after watching the duo trace their own genealogies for a tv programme. and thanks to the power of social media, tina was finally able to make the 10,000 mile trip to australia. katharine de costa takes up the story. a nervous wait for older sister janette at melbourne airport. tina, the youngest of six siblings, is about to meet her family for the first time. i've only been waiting 47 years!
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that's ok, all right. 0k? yeah. yeah? oh, i've got a sister. the three sisters and two brothers share the same father but didn't know about each other growing up. abc news captured their emotional reunion. you've made my day, like... day? my birthday, my birthday. you could not have given me anything else in the world than what i have here. i've been searching since i was 14 to find you and from a piece of paper thatjust had, not evenjanette, it had julie on it. i've dreamt about you, i've dreamt about this moment for such a long time, that to have it come true is unreal. it's fantastic, she's real, i touched her and we all had a big sibling hug, which is like mental. tina lived with her mum in the uk. she was told she had three siblings in australia
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but without the internet back then, her search was fruitless. none of us knew. my dad didn't know. years later, it was ant and dec�*s dna journey that inspired tina to continue her search. she took a dna test and waited. but it wasn't until 2020, during the pandemic, that she was contacted by a fourth sibling, lateesha. and it turned out that lateesha's mum was alive and i'm the only one with one photograph of our father so i shared it and her mum confirmed it was the same man. plus, our dna is, you know, half exactly the same. so, um, we're sisters. so at that point i told her that there were more of us. there were three more and they all lived in australia. six weeks later, latisha had tracked down their three other siblings via social media, but it's taken a further four years
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to get sean, tina, lateesha, janette and malcolm together face to face. i have felt very alone in the uk because i am on my own there and now i've got all of these people, that loneliness has gone. i'm not lonely, ijust felt alone that i didn't have my people and now i have my people. you do, you have everybody. you've got so many more thanjust us. tina is spending the next few days meeting 47 members of her family in melbourne, brisbane and perth. but it's not the end of the journey. tina still hopes to find an aunt and uncle in the bristol area, who may hold the key to finding a sixth sibling in america. katharine de costa, bbc news. there is a challenge, in bristol? shall i try and find them? it there is a challenge, in bristol? shall i try and find them? if anyone can, ou shall i try and find them? if anyone can. you can- _ shall i try and find them? if anyone can. you can- 0h. _ shall i try and find them? if anyone can, you can. oh, the _ shall i try and find them? if anyone
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can, you can. oh, the pressure! - shall i try and find them? if anyone l can, you can. oh, the pressure! have ou had a can, you can. oh, the pressure! have you had a similar— can, you can. oh, the pressure! have you had a similar experience? - can, you can. oh, the pressure! have you had a similar experience? have l you had a similar experience? have you had a similar experience? have you done a dna test or a family tree? ,, you done a dna test or a family tree? . ., you done a dna test or a family tree? ,, ., , .,, you done a dna test or a family i tree?_ these you done a dna test or a family tree? . ., , ., , these are tree? she found 47 people! these are my people. — tree? she found 47 people! these are my people. she _ tree? she found 47 people! these are my people, she said, _ tree? she found 47 people! these are my people, she said, love _ tree? she found 47 people! these are my people, she said, love it. - tree? she found 47 people! these are my people, she said, love it. you - my people, she said, love it. you can aet my people, she said, love it. you can get in — my people, she said, love it. you can get in touch _ my people, she said, love it. you can get in touch with _ my people, she said, love it. you can get in touch with us. tell us your stories. can get in touch with us. tell us your stories-_ can get in touch with us. tell us your stories. can get in touch with us. tell us our stories. , , ., ., ., ., your stories. maybe you have got a hoto of your stories. maybe you have got a photo of the _ your stories. maybe you have got a photo of the moment _ your stories. maybe you have got a photo of the moment you - your stories. maybe you have got a photo of the moment you met - your stories. maybe you have got a photo of the moment you met the | photo of the moment you met the half—brothers and sisters or parents, love to see them. let's take a look at today's papers. huw edwards' sentencing features heavily on the front pages. "disgraced, reviled... but not a day in jail" headlines the daily mail. the times reports on junior doctors accepting the government's offer of a 22.3% pay rise, bringing an end to what it calls the "most devastating dispute in nhs history". the daily telegraph leads on sir keir starmer defending accepting gifts including clothes for his wife victoria
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from a millionaire labour donor, who was later given a pass to access no10. yesterday, downing street said the parliamentary standards commissioner would not be investigating the matter. alongside the story, the paperfeatures a photo of victoria attending london fashion week, in an outfit it says was lent to her by a designer. a loggerhead turtle, who was found washed up on a cumbria beach, has been nursed back to health and released back into the wild. it was back in february when nazare was spotted covered in algae, cuts and showed little sign of life. but following a successful rehabilitation programme, she's ready for another chance at life. our reporterjayne mccubbin has been following herjourney. her name is nazare and she is incredibly lucky to be alive. back in february, the loggerhead
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turtle was discovered by a dog walker after being washed up on the cumbrian coast. she was cold and weak and far from the warm waters which should have been home. a team from blackpool sea life centre were called to action. so she was motionless. she was just about making some movements with her eyes, and she was completely covered all over a shell in algaes and seaweeds, like she'd been floating around in the sea for some time. herjourney had taken herfar off track into the cold, stormy waters of the irish sea. her rescuers knew this because of a satellite tracking device found on her back. that revealed nazare's habit of getting lost and being found. which was amazing because we found out that she was released from the coast of france from la rochelle aquarium, where she'd been rehabilitated injune in 2023. so it wasn't the first time she'd been in a facility like ours. and the tag stopped beeping around december time, just off the coast of ireland.
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and that means she probably got stuck in the storms then and disappeared. so she'd had a bit of a rough couple of months, we reckon, from the condition of her. those months had taken their toll. staff removed algae with a toothbrush. by right she should have died, but her dehydration and pneumonia were treated over three weeks of 24 hour care. she was eventually well enough to be driven to scarborough sealife centre. regulating her temperature was so important she made the journey first class. she actually moved in the front of the van with me for the journey overfrom blackpool, and then from there we were able to then move her and transition her into our ocean tank. it means building up those muscles to start diving again properly. when she was finally ready to fend for herself, nazare's final journey took her here. the warm blue waters of the azores. and almost 2500 miles from the irish sea, she was released. and it was simply incredible.
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she kind of went into the water, kind of had a little bit of a look around, and before you know it, she rocketed off into the, you know, the vast blue that you could see kind of before you. we didn't really get a chance to say goodbye, it was that quick. and it was just brilliant in the sense that it was the culmination of lots of different teams coming together to allow this turtle to go back to the wild, and that's what it's all about for us. it's about giving something back and giving an animal a second chance. the team hope this is the last time she ever experiences the skills and tlc of european aquariums. jayne mccubbin, bbc news. what a great story, you look a bit sad. , �* ., ., what a great story, you look a bit sad. , �* . ., . ., . ., sad. they didn't have a chance to sad. they didn't have a chance to say goodbye- _ sad. they didn't have a chance to say goodbye- but _ sad. they didn't have a chance to say goodbye. but she _ sad. they didn't have a chance to say goodbye. but she off - sad. they didn't have a chance to say goodbye. but she off living i sad. they didn't have a chance to l say goodbye. but she off living her best life. say goodbye. but she off living her best life- no _ say goodbye. but she off living her best life. no algae, _ say goodbye. but she off living her best life. no algae, no _ say goodbye. but she off living her best life. no algae, no nothing, i say goodbye. but she off living her. best life. no algae, no nothing, she looks great. and before nine o'clock todd german, the curator at sea life scarborough, will be here to let us know how nazare is getting on. he didn't have time to say goodbye. but he will be saying hello to us,
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he will be telling us how she is getting on. i he will be telling us how she is getting om— he will be telling us how she is getting on-_ he will be telling us how she is caettin on. , , ., getting on. i bet she has not even been in touch. _ getting on. i bet she has not even been in touch. doesn't _ getting on. i bet she has not even been in touch. doesn't write, - been in touch. doesn't write, doesnt been in touch. doesn't write, doesn't call. _ been in touch. doesn't write, doesn't call, doesn't - been in touch. doesn't write, doesn't call, doesn't e-mail. | been in touch. doesn't write, - doesn't call, doesn't e-mail. living her best life. _ doesn't call, doesn't e-mail. living her best life, having _ doesn't call, doesn't e-mail. living her best life, having the _ doesn't call, doesn't e-mail. living her best life, having the best - doesn't call, doesn't e-mail. living her best life, having the best time! time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are. a very good morning. welcome to bbc london. i'm thomas magill. the parents of a group of deaf children have criticised a school in east london for what they say is a failure to support their children's special needs. they attend culloden primary in poplar, which has 28 children who are deaf. but the school doesn't have any fully qualified teachers with specialist training after two members of staff left. it's now trying to recruit, but said there is a national shortage of teachers with these skills. i've been very consistent in terms of getting her the right support. ifeel like now, since she's been
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in the school, it's a huge let down for her because she's not getting the right support. she should have been progressing. she should have had some kind of communication by now. it's really, really delayed. plans to pedestrianise oxford street have again been proposed by london's mayor. previous schemes had been blocked but this time the sadiq khan says he is being backed by the government which will designate a mayor's development area. he hopes the project will make oxford street "the leading retail destination in the world." and there will be more on this story on bbc radio london across the morning. urgent blood samples at a london hospital could soon be delivered by drones. medics at guy's and st thomas' nhs foundation trust will run a pilot scheme where drones will be used to courier blood samples between hospitals. the scheme starts this autumn and is expected to last six months. a 500—year—old knitted hat has been found by a mudlark on the thames foreshore.
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experts say the tudor hat has been preserved because of the mud in the river. it's due to go on display as part of a new exhibition opening at london museum docklands next year. let's take a look at the tubes now. the overground is partly suspended. now, on to the weather with kat. hello there. good morning to you. another very settled day out there today. a lot of dry weather around with lengthy spells of sunshine. high pressure centred over the uk, which start to drift northeastwards out into the north sea but still dominating our weather through much of this week. plenty more sunshine on the way. so any early mist and fog will lift this morning. as the day progresses, there will be good spells of sunshine around. it stays largely dry but a little bit breezier. those winds will pick up through this afternoon and i'm looking at highs of around 21 degrees. so through this evening we'll start off with clear spells.
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but, by the end of the night, quite a bit of cloud starting to drift in from the east. temperatures under that cloud will fall away to around 12 to 13 degrees, actually a milder night than the night we just had. into wednesday, it's going to be a breezy day widely, but still good spells of sunshine once that cloud clears early on and temperatures wednesday, thursday up to around 24 degrees. that's it from me. there's more on the bbc news app and bbc radio london. i'll be back in half in hour but for now let's cross back to sally and jon. hello, this is breakfast withjon kay and sally nugent. let's return to one of our main stories, as the suspect arrested after a second assassination attempt on the life of donald trump has been charged with two firearms offences in a court in florida. secret service agents spotted
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58—year—old ryan routh holding a rifle close to where the former president was playing golf. let's speak to american pollster, frank luntz. hello. good to talk to you, as ever. we will talk about the political implications of this in a moment. just immediately, what did you think when you heard there had been a second apparent attempted assassination of republican candidate and former president? in a word, candidate and former president? in a word. again- — candidate and former president? i�*i —. word, again. there just seems to be... that feels like there is something wrong in this country. i know these are individual incidents, isolated incidents. again it is too much. it is in a political time. i am afraid that we are saying and how we are saying it is contributing to a sense of exasperation and extremism which leads to events like
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this. it is frightening that this has happened twice now and eventually i am afraid that something really awful could happen to one of these candidates, notjust for president but sell it for the house. ifeel like there is for president but sell it for the house. i feel like there is a sickness going on in america that is very chilling at the moment. that must lead to _ very chilling at the moment. that must lead to a _ very chilling at the moment. that must lead to a great _ very chilling at the moment. that must lead to a great sense of anxiety across the population. anxiety, frustration, bitterness. the idea that even a president is not safe and secure at this point. a feeling like we have gone too far. the decibel level of anger is too loud and we need to chill out the full something really bad happens. here we are less than 50 days now until the presidential election, how do you expect this apparent assassination attempt again on donald trump to affect things, if at
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all? i donald trump to affect things, if at all? ., �* ~' all? i don't think it well. in the end, the _ all? i don't think it well. in the end, the first _ all? i don't think it well. in the end, the first attempt - all? i don't think it well. in the end, the first attempt which i end, the first attempt which actually wounded him... i have got to be candid with your viewers. that photograph of him, donald trump defiant behind nei nfs, bleeding on the side of his head, the american flag behind him and the secret service around him, i thought that would be enough to elect him. we did not know thatjoe biden would drop out of the race and kamala harris would replace him. the fact this has happened again makes people wonder what is wrong and what donald trump has been talking about, that there is a lawlessness, a lack of respect from people who are tasked with keeping us safe. i don't think it will have any impact but it still suggests that the anger is there, the frustration is there, the
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anxiety is still there, and the threat of violence is still there. we have heard comments overnight from donald trump where he says he has had a conversation with president biden and they have had a reassuring chat with one another. donald trump has made it very clear before that statement he points the finger in the direction of president biden, kamala harris, for stoking up an atmosphere which puts him at risk. if he doesn't get any benefit from this electorally, is there any disadvantage to him electorally from a second attempt? does it make him look weaker, more vulnerable in the eyes of the american public? ilat eyes of the american public? not title. it eyes of the american public? not title. it does— eyes of the american public? iirrt title. it does suggest that something needs to happen, something needs to be done. in the end, voters tend to have sympathy for candidates and attack like this. trump is a
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little bit different. let me be candid with you. i think both sides have played a role in this. both sides, the intensity of the rhetoric is so strong. i am not willing to use as an excuse for the behaviour of a single individual and that is something we need to be careful of, condemning a whole society or whole process because of two individuals. that said, we all need to take a step back and what we are saying and how we are saying it. we need to do it now before it is too late.— it now before it is too late. thank ou. you can tell what time of year it is as to whether or not there is champions league football. there is right now, isn't there? it is champions league football. there is right now, isn't there?— right now, isn't there? it is back. liverool right now, isn't there? it is back. liverpool against _ right now, isn't there? it is back. liverpool against ac _ right now, isn't there? it is back. liverpool against ac milan - right now, isn't there? it is back. i liverpool against ac milan tonight. also aston villa against young boys in the competition they in 40 years
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ago. an extra significance this week with the death of gary shaw, who was playing essential part in that. i think they will be out there playing for him tonight, as they get back to that competition they had been away from for some time. good morning. 1983 was the last time aston villa played in the european cup, the season after they won the competition. and their return after more than 40 years away will be especially poignant following the death this week of their former striker, gary shaw, at the age of 63, who played a big part in that success. asjoe lynskey reports. the european cup looked different in the �*80s, but through the mud and through the bodies came the breakthrough of a star. commentator: and still shaw. oh, he's done so well here. and it's in. gary shaw, a superb goal. gary shaw was 21, and one half of a strikeforce that made aston villa champions. shaw scored three goals in their run to the final. the super cup that followed brought a tie with barcelona.
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commentator: back it comes to shaw. villa won over two legs by 3—1. it made 1982 this club's greatest year. for gary shaw, it was the bonus. his aim at the start was just to play for his club. well, it's tremendous. for me, just being a villa supporter as well. i think i'vejust... by playing for villa, it's. . .fulfilled the lifetime ambition. you know, it's been a tremendous season for me. in the week aston villa returned to this competition, the club announced gary shaw had passed away, aged 63. he'd suffered injuries in a fall. in a statement, villa said they were deeply shocked and saddened. gary shaw was one of our own. chanting: shaw, shaw, gary, gary shaw. - my condolences for all the supporters, all the family. we are remembering always. we have in ourtraining ground a picture — the 1982, the champions league — and he was one of the of
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the protagonists there. my condolences. unai emery took charge here with villa facing relegation. less than two years since his appointment, it's now the end of a long wait. villa's last match in europe's top competition was as defending champions in 1983. their first champions league fixture is in switzerland against young boys. we have to try to enjoy each match, each moment. i want to be competitive. i want to face each team being competitive like we are in premier league. how far we can get? i don't know, but of course i am going to... i am not going to refuse any objective in this competition. the chance to honour shaw will come at villa park. theirfirst champions league home match is against bayern munich. commentator: oh, it must be. and it is! they're the team villa beat that famous night in rotterdam. this european cup return will be proud and will be poignant. commentator: shaw takes the congratulations - for a marvellous goal.
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joe lynskey, bbc news. a special and significant night ahead. if you thought the champions league was the star attraction, you're very much mistaken. it is in fact a game in england's third tier, where the stars were out in force for the hollywood derby. that is birmingham city minority owner and bona fide sporting legend nfl star tom brady watching there alongside david beckham, as his side beat wrexham in a top of the table clash in league one, who are of course owned by american actors ryan reynolds and rob mcelhenny, who were outclassed in a 3—1 defeat. football taking a backseat here with the stars out at st andrews. now, can he, will he return to the top of boxing. it's fight week for anthonyjoshua and a chance to become a three—time
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world heavyweight champion as he takes on fellow brit daniel dubois at wembley stadium on saturday. nearly two years on from losing to oleksandr usyk, joshua says he's a better fighter now. i think i'm gifted with an ability to fight, and compete. in boxing, you're able to read certain tendencies, you're able to read your opponent, so i've always had an eye for that. but there is a supreme level that you can take it to, and it's happened over the last maybe ten months, eight months, i've really honed in on those skills. england's all—time leading test wicket—takerjames anderson could be heading to america to continue his career. anderson is a surprise target for major league cricket with senior figures at at least one team understood to be interested in signing the bowler, who said last month that he wouldn't rule out a return to white—ball cricket.
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the head of world athletics lord coe the head of world athletics lord coe has been named as one has been named as one of the confirmed candidates of the confirmed candidates to become the next president to become the next president of the international olympic committee. of the international olympic committee. he's one of seven people he's one of seven people under consideration to succeed thomas bach, under consideration to succeed thomas bach, who will step down next year. who will step down next year. coe, a two—time olympic champion, coe, a two—time olympic champion, is up against the likes is up against the likes ofjuan antonio samaranchjunior, ofjuan antonio samaranchjunior, whose father was the ioc whose father was the ioc president for 21 years. president for 21 years. the election will take making his catwalk debut. place in march next year. and he may not have been and he may not have been available for arsenal available for arsenal in their north london derby win in their north london derby win at the weekend but there was no at the weekend but there was no stopping england midfielder stopping england midfielder declan rice at the emirates stadium declan rice at the emirates stadium yesterday. yesterday. in one of the more in one of the more unexpected casting moments unexpected casting moments fashion week this is rice fashion week this is rice
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making his catwalk debut. he is often called a model professional and now he is a professional and now he is a professional model. can i ask a technical question? what did you make of it? would you wear that? i wasn't sure what the trailing bit was. looks like there are no buttons, he has tied together with a scar. is it not tied like a football boot? maybe football laces. maybe the white laces theme. just didn't look much like laces. i thought it was very stylish and i liked it a lot. i bet he was very glad there were no fans there. i will be intrigued to hear what they say. i think you are being unfair. i think he owned that. pull your hanky three
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orjacket. see you in a bit. here's matt with the weather. a beautiful start in leeds ahead of what would be a dry and sunny day for the vast majority. a bit chilly under the clear skies. temperatures in oxfordshire down to two celsius. we still have areas of low pressure in europe. starting to deteriorate across italy. for as high pressure firmly in charge. that is keeping us nice and dry. there is a little bit of fog around at the moment which was gradually clear. some patchy light rain across the north and west of scotland where there is thick cloud. that will thin out. sunny conditions for the vast majority.
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cloud. that will thir of it. sunny cloud. that will thir of the unny cloud. that will thir of the thinking about i wonder how many of the thinking about that this week. it's something nina has been looking into, who's in leeds this morning. good morning from the university of leeds student union. come round here. we asked the students to come. morning. how are we feeling? tip top. working hard studying a variety of degrees but knowing they will be graduating statistically with close to £50,000 of debt as english students. little wonder that close to four bits of students a worrying about money has an impact on their mental health. there are loans available, maintenance loans. and it is. they only go up to around £10,200 for students outside of london. many of them say it doesn't go far enough and there is endless worry about how and when to pay it
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back. let's talk to a representative for leeds student union. good to speak to you. how heavy our students telling you this debt is weighing on them? it telling you this debt is weighing on them? , . ~ , telling you this debt is weighing on them? , ., ~ , ., ., them? it is taking its toll on students- — them? it is taking its toll on students. we _ them? it is taking its toll on students. we have - them? it is taking its toll on students. we have noticed l them? it is taking its toll on | students. we have noticed in them? it is taking its toll on - students. we have noticed in the union, _ students. we have noticed in the union, last— students. we have noticed in the union, last month we did a survey and 70% _ union, last month we did a survey and 70% of— union, last month we did a survey and 70% of students are having to work _ and 70% of students are having to work alongside their studies which is proving — work alongside their studies which is proving really difficult for them to balance a job alongside a degree and a _ to balance a job alongside a degree and a social life. a to balance a job alongside a degree and a social life.— and a social life. a lot of people watchin: and a social life. a lot of people watching will — and a social life. a lot of people watching will say _ and a social life. a lot of people watching will say they _ and a social life. a lot of people watching will say they worked i and a social life. a lot of people | watching will say they worked all through university and the students will have tojoin through university and the students will have to join the real world and study. will have to 'oin the real world and stud . . , will have to 'oin the real world and stud. . , ,., study. that is understandable. there is a wider aura _ study. that is understandable. there is a wider aura and _ study. that is understandable. there is a wider aura and a _ study. that is understandable. there is a wider aura and a wider— study. that is understandable. there is a wider aura and a wider thing - is a wider aura and a wider thing that people come to university for and that_ that people come to university for and that is— that people come to university for and that is for the experience, to build _ and that is for the experience, to build the — and that is for the experience, to build the career, experience to do societies, — build the career, experience to do societies, get involved with society that also _ societies, get involved with society that also billed as a person. if
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they— that also billed as a person. if they are — that also billed as a person. if they are having to balance this well with a _ they are having to balance this well with a part—time job, they are having to balance this well with a part—timejob, it they are having to balance this well with a part—time job, it is proving reatiy— with a part—time job, it is proving really difficult for them. said with a part-time job, it is proving really difficult for them.— really difficult for them. said it is the first _ really difficult for them. said it is the first in _ really difficult for them. said it is the first in his _ really difficult for them. said it is the first in his family - really difficult for them. said it is the first in his family to - really difficult for them. said it is the first in his family to go l really difficult for them. said it| is the first in his family to go to university. congratulations. always a big moment. how much is the shadow looming about paying back the debt? i am constantly thinking about if i will even — i am constantly thinking about if i will even get _ i am constantly thinking about if i will even get a _ i am constantly thinking about if i will even get a job _ i am constantly thinking about if i will even get a job in _ i am constantly thinking about if i will even get a job in my- i am constantly thinking about if i will even get a job in my chosen i will even get a job in my chosen field _ will even get a job in my chosen field will— will even get a job in my chosen field. wiu all— will even get a job in my chosen field. will all these _ will even get a job in my chosen field. will all these years - will even get a job in my chosen field. will all these years of - will even get a job in my chosen i field. will all these years of study be worth— field. will all these years of study be worth it? — field. will all these years of study be worth it?— be worth it? you are studying nuclear science, _ be worth it? you are studying nuclear science, that - be worth it? you are studying nuclear science, that is - be worth it? you are studying nuclear science, that is way i be worth it? you are studying - nuclear science, that is way beyond anything i can imagine. i would imagine there arejobs anything i can imagine. i would imagine there are jobs in that field. imagine there are “obs in that field. , , ., , imagine there are “obs in that field. , , . , ., , imagine there are “obs in that field. ,, . , ., field. every year they always try to cut “obs in field. every year they always try to cut jobs in nuclear _ field. every year they always try to cut jobs in nuclear engineering. ii cutjobs in nuclear engineering. i am not _ cutjobs in nuclear engineering. i am not sure _ cutjobs in nuclear engineering. i am not sure when— cutjobs in nuclear engineering. i am not sure when i— cutjobs in nuclear engineering. i am not sure when i finish- cutjobs in nuclear engineering. i am not sure when i finish my. cutjobs in nuclear engineering. i. am not sure when i finish my course there _ am not sure when i finish my course there will— am not sure when i finish my course there will he — am not sure when i finish my course there will be anything _ am not sure when i finish my course there will be anything left. - am not sure when i finish my course there will be anything left. your. there will be anything left. your relatives are _ there will be anything left. your relatives are saying _ there will be anything left. your relatives are saying is _ there will be anything left. your relatives are saying is it - there will be anything left. relatives are saying is it worth there will be anything leftm relatives are saying is it worth it? they don't know. you relatives are saying is it worth it? they don't know.— relatives are saying is it worth it? they don't know. relatives are saying is it worth it? the don't know. ., ., ., , ., they don't know. you have maxed your loans and borrow— they don't know. you have maxed your loans and borrow as _ they don't know. you have maxed your loans and borrow as much _ they don't know. you have maxed your loans and borrow as much as _ they don't know. you have maxed your loans and borrow as much as you - they don't know. you have maxed your loans and borrow as much as you can. l loans and borrow as much as you can. the threshold of student loan i
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receive — the threshold of student loan i receive meant i received around £4000 — receive meant i received around £4000 at — receive meant i received around £4000 at the start of the academic year~ _ £4000 at the start of the academic year~ my— £4000 at the start of the academic year. my rent on average costs six grams — year. my rent on average costs six grams of— year. my rent on average costs six grams of it— year. my rent on average costs six grams of it losing the too grand to supplement myself, which is insane. i supplement myself, which is insane. i worked _ supplement myself, which is insane. i worked throughout my whole time at university— i worked throughout my whole time at university and took a whole year out to save _ university and took a whole year out to save in _ university and took a whole year out to save in advance to pre—empt it. it to save in advance to pre—empt it. it has _ to save in advance to pre—empt it. it has been — to save in advance to pre—empt it. it has been rough. it took a year out not to party but to say that. i took the time to work full—time in mcdonald's and say that money so i could _ mcdonald's and say that money so i could enjoy— mcdonald's and say that money so i could enjoy my first year. do mcdonald's and say that money so i could enjoy my first year.— could en'oy my first year. do you feel could enjoy my first year. do you feel ou could enjoy my first year. do you feel you can _ could enjoy my first year. do you feel you can enjoy _ could enjoy my first year. do you feel you can enjoy it _ could enjoy my first year. do you feel you can enjoy it all- could enjoy my first year. do you feel you can enjoy it all the - could enjoy my first year. do you | feel you can enjoy it all the worry is endless? feel you can en'oy it all the worry is endless?— feel you can en'oy it all the worry is endless? ., ., , ., , is endless? part of being a student is endless? part of being a student is to learn to _ is endless? part of being a student is to learn to budget _ is endless? part of being a student is to learn to budget and _ is endless? part of being a student is to learn to budget and manage i is to learn to budget and manage your finances. you have to hold back and miss— your finances. you have to hold back and miss out— your finances. you have to hold back and miss out on a lot of things. what _ and miss out on a lot of things. what are — and miss out on a lot of things. what are your tips for budgeting? you've found it tricky, especially this year with food inflation going up. this year with food inflation going u -. , , . . ., , up. definitely. when i compare my food shop to _
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up. definitely. when i compare my food shop to my — up. definitely. when i compare my food shop to my first _ up. definitely. when i compare my food shop to my first year - up. definitely. when i compare my food shop to my first year at - up. definitely. when i compare my food shop to my first year at uni, i | food shop to my first year at uni, i did one _ food shop to my first year at uni, i did one yesterday _ food shop to my first year at uni, i did one yesterday and _ food shop to my first year at uni, i did one yesterday and it _ food shop to my first year at uni, i did one yesterday and it has- food shop to my first year at uni, i | did one yesterday and it has nearly doubled _ did one yesterday and it has nearly doubled in — did one yesterday and it has nearly doubled in price _ did one yesterday and it has nearly doubled in price but— did one yesterday and it has nearly doubled in price but you _ did one yesterday and it has nearly doubled in price but you have - did one yesterday and it has nearly doubled in price but you have to i did one yesterday and it has nearlyj doubled in price but you have to be so cautious— doubled in price but you have to be so cautious with _ doubled in price but you have to be so cautious with what _ doubled in price but you have to be so cautious with what you - doubled in price but you have to be so cautious with what you buy. - doubled in price but you have to be so cautious with what you buy. is i doubled in price but you have to be so cautious with what you buy. is itj so cautious with what you buy. is it worth _ so cautious with what you buy. is it worth it? _ so cautious with what you buy. is it worth it? is— so cautious with what you buy. is it worth it? is it — so cautious with what you buy. is it worth it? is it not _ so cautious with what you buy. is it worth it? is it not worth— so cautious with what you buy. is it worth it? is it not worth it? - so cautious with what you buy. is it worth it? is it not worth it? one i worth it? is it not worth it? one week— worth it? is it not worth it? one week you — worth it? is it not worth it? one week you might— worth it? is it not worth it? one week you might have _ worth it? is it not worth it? one week you might have to- worth it? is it not worth it? one week you might have to pay- worth it? is it not worth it? one week you might have to pay £9| worth it? is it not worth it? one . week you might have to pay £9 for worth it? is it not worth it? one - week you might have to pay £9 for a subscription— week you might have to pay £9 for a subscription or — week you might have to pay £9 for a subscription or extra _ week you might have to pay £9 for a subscription or extra food _ week you might have to pay £9 for a subscription or extra food shop. - week you might have to pay £9 for a subscription or extra food shop. you might— subscription or extra food shop. you might need — subscription or extra food shop. you might need an — subscription or extra food shop. you might need an item _ subscription or extra food shop. you might need an item of— subscription or extra food shop. you might need an item of clothing - subscription or extra food shop. you| might need an item of clothing being replaced _ might need an item of clothing being replaced but — might need an item of clothing being replaced but i — might need an item of clothing being replaced but i have _ might need an item of clothing being replaced but i have a _ might need an item of clothing being replaced but i have a part—time - might need an item of clothing being replaced but i have a part—time job i replaced but i have a part—time job and that— replaced but i have a part—time job and that definitely— replaced but i have a part—time job and that definitely helps _ replaced but i have a part—time job and that definitely helps to - replaced but i have a part—time job and that definitely helps to pay - replaced but i have a part—time job and that definitely helps to pay for| and that definitely helps to pay for some _ and that definitely helps to pay for some things — and that definitely helps to pay for some things. you _ and that definitely helps to pay for some things. you have _ and that definitely helps to pay for some things. you have to- and that definitely helps to pay for some things. you have to be - and that definitely helps to pay for| some things. you have to be really careful~ _ some things. you have to be really careful. ,, , some things. you have to be really careful. . , some things. you have to be really careful. ,, , ., , , ., careful. seems part time “obs are unavoidable * careful. seems part time “obs are unavoidable really. h careful. seems part time jobs are unavoidable really. there - careful. seems part time jobs are unavoidable really. there is - unavoidable really. there is pressure because loans have not gone up pressure because loans have not gone up with the rates of inflation. should that come from student loans or government support? statistically great you are more likely to be a high earner of the future if you complete a degree. there is a worried as a man of debt is putting up worried as a man of debt is putting up people from certain socioeconomic backgrounds. up people from certain socioeconomic backgrounds-— backgrounds. thank you. we will talk to ou backgrounds. thank you. we will talk to you soon- —
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the former bbc news presenter, huw edwards, has been given a suspended jail sentence, after admitting receiving 41 indecent images of children from a convicted paedophile. he was given a six—month sentence, suspended for two years. the internet watch foundation is calling for end to end encrypted apps, including whatsapp, to do more to protect children online. let's speak to dan sexton from the iwf. morning to you. we saw the sentencing of huw edwards yesterday. in your experience, how unusual is sentencing like this, a crime like this, how widespread is it? i know we a lot on it because of his profile but how widespread the problem? it profile but how widespread the roblem? , ., ., ., problem? it is hard to say how widespread — problem? it is hard to say how widespread it _ problem? it is hard to say how widespread it is. _ problem? it is hard to say how widespread it is. part - problem? it is hard to say how widespread it is. part of - problem? it is hard to say how widespread it is. part of the i widespread it is. part of the particular crime when edwards met my understanding, it happened
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accidentally, it wasn't detected. it happened years ago and it was only by chance due to an arrest of the person sending images to edwards that it was discovered. the applications used are designed around privacy. they are not detecting and preventing these crimes. we do not know how much this is happening. in our work there are millions and millions of unique images of children being sexually abused that we found and we think there are many more out there in these applications. can there are many more out there in these applications.— there are many more out there in these applications. can you explain to us, the end-to-end _ these applications. can you explain to us, the end-to-end encryption i these applications. can you explain l to us, the end-to-end encryption as to us, the end—to—end encryption as a problem. can you explain how the problem has got so big? end-to-end enc tion problem has got so big? end-to-end encryption is — problem has got so big? end-to-end encryption is not _ problem has got so big? end-to-end encryption is not the _ problem has got so big? end-to-end encryption is not the problem. - encryption is not the problem. sometimes we get hung up on technical discussions and arguments about use of encryption. the problem for us is the lack of proactive
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detection of child sexual abuse content. this is what we would expect for any tech platform, just like a virus or something like that. you should not be allowed to upload a known image of a child being sexually abused. organisations and platforms are aware of these images, we help them find them and you should not be able to upload them on the first place. it is about content moderation, expected content moderation, expected content moderation on any online platform which is missing and has enabled this crime. actually, if that had been present when this might never have occurred in the first place. if that person tried to upload these images and it said no, blocked, edwards would never have received the images and maybe none of this would have happened in the first place. would have happened in the first lace. ~ , , ., would have happened in the first lace, . , , ., ., 4' would have happened in the first lace. . , , ., ., ~ ., would have happened in the first lace. _ ., m .,, place. why is that work not being done? it place. why is that work not being done? it is _ place. why is that work not being done? it is a _ place. why is that work not being done? it is a really _ place. why is that work not being done? it is a really difficult - done? it is a really difficult question- _ done? it is a really difficult question- i _ done? it is a really difficult question. i don't _ done? it is a really difficult question. i don't know- done? it is a really difficult question. i don't know whyj done? it is a really difficult i question. i don't know why it done? it is a really difficult - question. i don't know why it is not being done. it seems difficult to
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understand. if we find imagery or in many cases at the i wfp had children who report their own imagery to us and they are reporting to us to say, can you stop this from being distributed? can you get out of the internet? particularly in private messaging services and social media. this is the solution to stopping that happening. i don't understand and i pushed that question back to online companies running these services, why are you not doing this? many other incidents do not make the news in the same way, what are they doing to make platform save and prevent this from happening to other children in the future? what other children in the future? what messa . e other children in the future? what message does _ other children in the future? what message does the _ other children in the future? what message does the sentence for huw edwards send out?— message does the sentence for huw edwards send out? sentencing for us, as anything. — edwards send out? sentencing for us, as anything. it — edwards send out? sentencing for us, as anything. it is _ edwards send out? sentencing for us, as anything. it is a — edwards send out? sentencing for us, as anything, it is a part _ edwards send out? sentencing for us, as anything, it is a part of— edwards send out? sentencing for us, as anything, it is a part of a _ as anything, it is a part of a deterrent. we should be sending a message saying you cannot do this. part of that is sentencing and part
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of it is also the risk of getting caught in the first place. there is an issue of a perfect storm of high availability, there is a lot of imagery out there. people are not doing enough to stop it. it is easy to get to. low risk because people sending and receiving the content, it is from the dark web, messaging services with the low risk of being caught. other sentences are enough of a deterrent? at the moment i do not think we are doing well enough on any of those things. i5 not think we are doing well enough on any of those things.— on any of those things. is this sentence _ on any of those things. is this sentence good _ on any of those things. is this sentence good enough? - on any of those things. is this sentence good enough? i - on any of those things. is this | sentence good enough? i don't on any of those things. is this - sentence good enough? i don't know if doini sentence good enough? i don't know if doing time — sentence good enough? i don't know if doing time is _ sentence good enough? i don't know if doing time is the _ sentence good enough? i don't know if doing time is the right _ sentence good enough? i don't know if doing time is the right sentence i if doing time is the right sentence for this crime. for someone like edwards to also be seeking help and looking to charities, which is part of the prevention. the nca and police and had told us this is not a
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crime you can arrest your way out of. we had to develop a safe ecosystem on the internet, safe for children and prevent this crime from happening. that is the only way to stop it. you cannot arrest our way out of it. i do think we need to make sure we are sending a clear message and hopefullyjust the publicity around this and discussion about what will happen with edwards will hopefully deter others going down this route.— will hopefully deter others going down this route. ., ,, , ., , . down this route. thank you very much indeed. down this route. thank you very much indeed- chief— down this route. thank you very much indeed. chief technology _ down this route. thank you very much indeed. chief technology officer i down this route. thank you very much indeed. chief technology officer of i indeed. chief technology officer of the internet watch foundation. you can watch more on huw edwards' case in a documentary, huw edwards: fall from grace, which is available on bbc iplayer now. time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are. a very good morning. welcome to bbc london. i'm thomas magill.
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the parents of a group of deaf children have criticised a school in east london for what they say is a failure to support their children's special needs. they attend culloden primary in poplar, which has 28 children who are deaf. but the school doesn't have any fully qualified teachers with specialist training after two members of staff left. it's now trying to recruit, but said there is a national shortage of teachers with these skills. i've been very consistent in terms of getting her the right support. ifeel like now, since she's been in the school, it's a huge let down for her because she's not getting the right support. she should have been progressing. she should have had some kind of communication by now. it's really, really delayed. plans to pedestrianise oxford street have again been proposed by london's mayor. previous schemes had been blocked but this time the sadiq khan says he is being backed by the government which will designate a mayor's development area. he hopes the project will make oxford street "the leading retail destination in the world."
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and there will be more on this story on bbc radio london across the morning. blood samples at a london hospital could soon be delivered by drones. medics at guy's and st thomas' nhs foundation trust will run a pilot scheme where drones will be used to courier blood samples between hospitals. the scheme starts this autumn and is expected to last six months. a 500—year—old knitted hat has been found by a mudlark on the thames foreshore. experts say the tudor hat has been preserved because of the mud in the river. it's due to go on display as part of a new exhibition opening at london museum docklands next year. let's take a look at the tubes now. the overground is partly suspended. now, on to the weather with kat.
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hello there. good morning to you. another very settled day out there today. a lot of dry weather around with lengthy spells of sunshine. high pressure centred over the uk, which start to drift northeastwards out into the north sea but still dominating our weather through much of this week. plenty more sunshine on the way. so any early mist and fog will lift this morning. as the day progresses, there will be good spells of sunshine around. it stays largely dry but a little bit breezier. those winds will pick up through this afternoon and i'm looking at highs of around 21 degrees. so through this evening we'll start off with clear spells. but, by the end of the night, quite a bit of cloud starting to drift in from the east. temperatures under that cloud will fall away to around 12 to 13 degrees, actually a milder night than the night we just had. into wednesday, it's going to be a breezy day widely, but still good spells of sunshine once that cloud clears early on and temperatures wednesday, thursday up to around 24 degrees.
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that's it from me. there's more on the bbc news app and bbc radio london. good morning, welcome to breakfast withjon kay and sally nugent. our headlines today. a 22% pay rise forjunior doctors. the government says the deal is key for the nhs, but medics warn of further action if wages don't keep up with inflation. donald trump describes hearing shots ring out during a suspected assassination attempt as police footage reveals the moment a gunman is arrested. 40,000 people in an entire polish city are told to leave their homes, as flooding overwhelms parts of central europe. not so fast. police crack down on electric bikes modified to travel
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at dangerous speeds, as delivery riders say they deserve better pay and conditions. the kits, the batteries, the rear wheel on the harbour, and this throttle that have been fitted, is a kit that he would have bought online and it has turned it into a mopeds. in sport. the wait is nearly over. 42 years on from winning the european cup, aston villa return to the competition that produced their most famous night, in what will be a poignant night for the club. and another lovely day out there for the vast majority, dry, reasonably sunny, but a few mist and fog patches around this morning and for one or two a noticeable chill in the air. all of the details on breakfast. good morning. it's tuesday the 17th of september. junior doctors in england have accepted the government's offer of a 22% pay rise over two years, ending a dispute which prompted the longest strike in nhs history. health secretary wes streeting said the deal marks the first step
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in future—proofing the nhs. but the doctors union, the british medical association has warned of further action warned of further action if pay does not continue if pay does not continue to match inflation. our health editor, to match inflation. our health editor, hugh pym has this report. hugh pym has this report. it began in march last year. it began in march last year. striking junior doctors on picket striking junior doctors on picket lines in england and demanding a pay lines in england and demanding a pay rise of 35% to be phased in, rise of 35% to be phased in, which they said should which they said should compensate for inflation compensate for inflation over more than a decade. over more than a decade. what do we want? what do we want? pay restoration! pay restoration! when do we want it? when do we want it? now! now! some talks took place some talks took place with the conservative government, with the conservative government, but that didn't stop 11 rounds but that didn't stop 11 rounds of turning that tide, of strikes over a total of 44 days. of strikes over a total of 44 days. soon after the election, soon after the election, the labour government made the labour government made an increased pay offer, an increased pay offer, which the doctors union, which the doctors union, the bma, put to members the bma, put to members and they voted to accept. and they voted to accept. we are bringing this current dispute we are bringing this current dispute of two years now to an end. of two years now to an end. it has taken far too long it has taken far too long for the government to take for the government to take any meaningful steps towards pay restoration. any meaningful steps towards pay restoration.
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we are now in a process we are now in a process of turning that tide,
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because of all industrial action by nhs unions since the end of 2022. the bma, though, has argued that there is still a long way to go to compensate for past inflation and their campaign isn't over. the doctors union agreed a pay deal with the scottish government last year and there weren't any strikes. junior doctors in wales have voted in favour of a pay offer. there's an ongoing dispute in northern ireland. hugh pym, bbc news. our chief political correspondent henry zeffman is at the liberal democrats conference where leader sir ed davey is expected to speak about nhs funding later today. henry, we have heard a lot from the lib dems about the nhs and health, haven't we?— haven't we? morning, sally, yes, that's right. _ haven't we? morning, sally, yes, that's right, it's _ haven't we? morning, sally, yes, that's right, it's been _ haven't we? morning, sally, yes, that's right, it's been their i haven't we? morning, sally, yes, that's right, it's been their focus| that's right, it's been theirfocus right through the four days of this party conference. and in fact right through the general election that took place earlier this year. so
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it's going to run through sir ed davey�*s speech as liberal democrat leader today as well. we are told he is going to say that we know that fixing the nhs will not be easy, the conservative government broke it so badly over so many years, but we also know that it must be done. we will offer people on health. that word hope, i'm told, its a bit of a jab at this new labour government, who the liberal democrats believe have been a little too gloomy so far. so that is where they are differentiating themselves from the labour party. but mostly it is going to be an attack on the conservatives from whom the liberal democrats won so many seats at the general election and ed davey is going to say that over the coming years when it comes to the conservative party, he wants to finish the job. when it comes to health, this is a reminder, this deal with the nhs and junior doctors, that the labour party did win 444 mps compared to liberal
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democrat's 72 so when it comes to health and other issues, the labour government is going to decide what happens and what the liberal democrats do in response is a question for them for the coming years. question for them for the coming ears. . ~' question for them for the coming ears. . ~ , ., y question for them for the coming ears. . ~' ,. y ., question for them for the coming ears. ., ~' i., , ., ., question for them for the coming ears. . ~ , ., ., ., years. thank you, henry. no more of the news today _ years. thank you, henry. no more of the news today and _ years. thank you, henry. no more of the news today and we _ years. thank you, henry. no more of the news today and we have - years. thank you, henry. no more of the news today and we have heard i the news today and we have heard from donald trump overnight. —— now, more of the news today. donald trump has praised his protection team as he spoke publicly for the first time since being the target of another apparent assassination attempt while playing golf at his resort in florida. a 58—year—old man has appeared in court in connection with the incident. the white house says president biden has spoken to donald trump to tell him he's relieved that he's safe. here's our north america correspondent, peter bowes. keep walking! this is the moment ryan routh was taken into custody. the 58—year—old was arrested shortly after fleeing from donald trump's golf club in west palm beach, florida. what's your name, boss?
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ryan. ryan? less than 24 hours later, he was in court, dressed in a blue prison jumpsuit and facing multiple firearms charges linked to an alleged attempt to assassinate the former president. this is where he was confronted by a secret service agent while donald trump was playing a round of golf. all of a sudden we heard shots being fired in the air. and i guess probably four orfive. and it sounded like bullets but what do i know about that, the secret service knew immediately it was bullets. and they grabbed me, everybody, just, we got into the carts and we moved on, pretty good. i was with an agent and the agent did a fantasticjob. the agent fired at what investigators say appeared to be a rifle poking out of trees near the edge of the course. cellular data shows that the subject was in the vicinity of the golf course roughly 12 hours before the engagement with
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the united states secret service. investigators say they're still working on whether ryan routh was acting alone. kamala harris said violence had no place in america, and she was relieved her election opponent was safe, but mr trump blamed what he called her and the current president's rhetoric for what happened on sunday and two months ago. take a look at what happened... the former president first survived an assassination attempt while speaking at an open air rally in pennsylvania. since then, security around him has been tightened. but the secret service says it needs more resources to do itsjob. president biden says he's looking to see if further measures are needed to ensure the safety of mr trump. i've always condemned political violence, and i always will in america. in america, we resolve our differences peacefully at the ballot box, not at the end of a gun. the white house says mr biden has spoken to the former president
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to convey his relief that he's safe. mr trump later said they had a very nice call about secret service protection. officials say security around donald trump's mar—a—lago home is now as intense as when he was president. there are seven anxious weeks to go until polling day. peter bowes, bbc news, los angeles. the labour mp diane abbott has accused sir keir starmer of treating her like a "non person" during the row over racist remarks made about her by the conservative donor and businessman, frank hester. a labour party spokesperson said the prime minister had great respect for diane abbott and that he had condemned frank hester�*s comments and reached out to her to offer support. mr hester later apologised but denied he was racist. diane abbott told the bbc�*s newsnight programme that she'd felt frightened.
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you'd feel that if somebody was threatening to have you shot, you would have felt that your party would have offered you more support, given you advice, on safety and security, even commiserated with you. and none of that happened. you can see the full interview with diane abbott on newsnight tonight on bbc two and bbc iplayer. universities are calling for a rise in tuition fees in england linked with inflation along with more government support so the sector does not slide into decline. students have been warned they may see cuts to staffing and courses, as uk tuition fees are worth less than they used to be. the government says that it will create a secure future for the sector. traffic could be banned from oxford street under plans set out by the mayor of london, sadiq khan. the road is one of the world's busiest shopping areas, with about half a million visitors on average each day. westminster council, which had previously proposed
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a £90 million redevelopment of oxford street, said the mayor had only recently shared his plans. the american rapper, sean "diddy" combs has been arrested in new york city on charges, according to authorities speaking to the bbc�*s us partner cbs. it follows raids on two of his properties in los angeles and miami in march as part of an "ongoing investigation" into sex trafficking by authorities. diddy has faced a series of allegations from sexual assault to abuse. he denies all the claims against him. several countries across central and eastern europe are dealing with more severe flooding caused by storm boris. at least 18 people have died. in a moment, we'll speak to our central europe correspondent nick thorpe, who is in the hungarian capital, budapest. but first, our eastern europe correspondent sarah rainsford is in the city of nysa in south—western poland,
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where 40,000 residents have been told to evacuate. sarah, what is the latest today? quite a dramatic night last night here in nysa where i am, people volunteered, came out and worked through the night to fill the sandbags that you can see here all around me. they were stuffing these bags of sand and forming human chains to bring them down to the embankment. this section of the embankment. this section of the embankment where the mayor had warned where there was a danger that because the river bank had collapsed essentially and was under such pressure from the water, there were worries that there would be less flooding in the town of nysa could be completely flooded. —— there would be massive flooding in the town of nysa. the river is still moving very quickly and is very swollen but the level has fallen back quite significantly over the last day or so. there is a lot of
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pressure, there is a dam upstream which has burst its banks and there is a lot more water in the system, putting pressure on the rivers and embankments like this right across this region. here in nysa we saw people evacuating and heading over the bridge to higher ground, taking little suitcases, dogs and cats with them, their pets, to go to safety. it doesn't see this morning the sun has come out of the rain has stopped and there is a bit of optimism that perhaps the worst here in nysa has passed. when the flood waters in other places have receded we have seen over the past couple of days absolute devastation, people have lost everything and what they have left is covered in filth and mud and is in ruin and destruction. {lilia left is covered in filth and mud and is in ruin and destruction.— is in ruin and destruction. 0k, stay safe, is in ruin and destruction. 0k, stay safe. sarah- _ is in ruin and destruction. 0k, stay safe, sarah. we _ is in ruin and destruction. 0k, stay safe, sarah. we can _ is in ruin and destruction. 0k, stay safe, sarah. we can also _ is in ruin and destruction. 0k, stay safe, sarah. we can also speak i is in ruin and destruction. 0k, stay safe, sarah. we can also speak to| safe, sarah. we can also speak to another correspondence. our central europe correspondent nick thorpe is in budapest by the river danube. more sandbags as they prepare in
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hungary? more sandbags as they prepare in hunia ? ., �* , more sandbags as they prepare in hunia ? . �*, ., hungary? that's right, good morning. as ou can hungary? that's right, good morning. as you can see _ hungary? that's right, good morning. as you can see i— hungary? that's right, good morning. as you can see i am _ hungary? that's right, good morning. as you can see i am on _ hungary? that's right, good morning. as you can see i am on an _ hungary? that's right, good morning. as you can see i am on an island i hungary? that's right, good morning. as you can see i am on an island at i as you can see i am on an island at the middle of the danube in the centre of budapest, the parliament is just over my right shoulder, the sandbags are now eight thick. the river has not peaked here, we are expecting it to be on thursday at 8.5 metres. it already 9.5 metres further upstream in bratislava via the capital slovakia —— which is the capital of slovakia. these floods are already affecting western hungary and the lower danube in austria and slovakia this morning. thank you, clearly a crucial few hours and days ahead across that region in europe.— hours and days ahead across that region in europe. really challenging times for those _ region in europe. really challenging times for those people _ region in europe. really challenging times for those people in _ region in europe. really challenging times for those people in those i times for those people in those places that have been flooded. let's think about the weather closer to home, here is matt you can tell us
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what it is going to look like, it is beautiful here?— what it is going to look like, it is beautiful here? , beautiful here? very quiet compared to euroe. all this karma here in north—west wales, beautiful symmetry here in the sky. —— it is almost calmer. it is drive the vast majority today, but clear skies through the night means it will be chilly as you go out in this morning. temperature is low enough for a touch of frost in some areas, but 17 in some areas of northern ireland and western scotland where there is more cloud and milderair scotland where there is more cloud and milder air pushing up on south—westerly winds. that is producing the odd spot of light rain and drizzle. away from that, fog patches, high cloud in the fog cleared by mid—morning. we will see cloud feeding across east anglia and the south—east. the vast majority
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have a dry day, gentle winds across the country and it will feel warm than yesterday. height of 23 in northern scotland and 22 to the west of northern ireland. the cloud will clean a break in scotland overnight, lighter winds here and across northern england needed more chances of mist and fog. a lot more cloud in central and eastern england from the north seek mean temperatures will be higher. but the best of the sunshine will be at the northern isles tomorrow. the cloud will thin and break in england and sunny spells in the afternoon, and a little bit warmer. 25 celsius possible. the union which represents delivery riders has said the pay model used by companies such as deliveroo and just eat, encourages some couriers to ride on the pavement, and illegally modify electric bikes
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to travel at dangerous speeds. our reporter tim muffett has been out with city of london police who says it has seized more than 300 illegally modified e—bikes since launching a crackdown last year. it's ridiculous, they don't care. as long as they're getting their delivery done, they don't care. sometimes they got things in their ears. they've got earplugs in their ears. so they don't always hear you when you say, "excuse me, be careful, because there's pedestrians and elderly people. " when you're paid perjob, it pays to be quick. but breaking the rules can be dangerous. i was walking along _ the pavement and somebody came on the pavement with a bike. they caused quite a lot i of disturbance, you know. it's like the bikes have taken over. i received an order. dior is a delivery rider. so, yeah, £3.21, so then i have to accept it. he does not condone riding on the pavement
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or riding too fast right. but he does think delivery riders are underpaid... that was five minutes. under appreciated... the hourly rate that we get paid. and often under pressure. if we're not quick we can lose ourjobs. we need to do four deliveries an hour to get the minimum wage. and how possible is that? it's not, it's not that easy. sometimes you get paid less than £1 a mile. dior used to use an electric bike for his deliveries, but now uses a moped. he can travel further and hopefully earn more money. sometimes, then i get to the customer, the customer doesn't pick up the phone and then i have to wait ten minutes. the customers think we earn enough, but we don't earn enough. we get shouted at, and i've heard of people that got spat on. we want to continue to do ourjobs, but we also want to be treated with respect. at the moment we're making like six or £7 an hour, max. lewis delivers using
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his electric bike. sometimes i spend more money out than i'm making at the moment. there's never an excuse, is there, for riding on a pavement orfor going too fast. for my safety and for the safety of the people, do not ride on the pavements, no. do you think they're giving everyone a bad name? for sure, yeah, they shouldn't go on the pavement. to be ridden legally on a public road the motor on an electric bike must cut out when the speed reaches 15.5mph. you can travel faster, but the rider then needs to provide all the power. it is, though, pretty easy to buy conversion kits that will transform an electric bike. it's going up to 72.5mph. this is what we're dealing with. it's very, very dangerous. the city of london police is cracking down on e—bikes that break the law. so if i lift the back wheel up, turn the throttle, this will go up to probably 25, 30 miles an hour. that gives us the power, then to seize it, take it off the road.
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we started in july last year. since we started it, i can tell you now, this is the 326th illegal e—bike scooter that we've seized. and we changed the category. i think people are doing this because it's easy. the kit, the batteries, the rear wheel on the hub, and this throttle that has been fitted is a kit he would have bought online. it's turned it into like a moped. modifying an e—bike to go very fast isn't itself illegal, as long as it's ridden on private land, not on a road. we're finding a lot of the food delivery guys, we're starting, they're starting to get the message. in a statement to the bbc, just eat said it does not incentivise couriers to speed or take risks.
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a spokesperson for uber eats told us... a deliveroo spokesperson said... dior�*s back from his delivery. basically, i earned £3.21 and it took me like, i think 30 minutes. he's a member of the iwgb union, which represents delivery riders and is calling for better pay and conditions. we were the key workers in the pandemic. so we risked our lives so people would receive their groceries and everything, and now we get treated like dogs.
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dior is convinced that better pay would reduce the need for speed, and remove the temptation felt by some riders to be risky and reckless. tim muffett, bbc news. we're joined now by monica scigliano from cycling uk. they scigliano from cycling uk. represent cyclists and w ta ctless they represent cyclists and would be tactless for the future. can you would—be cyclists. can you understand why some people choosing to soup up their bikes? i understand why some people choosing to soup up their bikes?— to soup up their bikes? i think there are _ to soup up their bikes? i think there are different _ to soup up their bikes? i think there are different factors i to soup up their bikes? i think there are different factors at i to soup up their bikes? i think- there are different factors at play, but they are generally paid per delivery and pretty low wages so the faster they go the more you can deliver, so perhaps they are incentivised to ride faster or perhaps on the pavement. that's not acceptable and i acknowledge that if you are passed to fast by a cyclist
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as a pedestrian that is startling especially if you are disabled. but i can understand why it is happening. i can understand why it is happening-— i can understand why it is hauenini. . . ., happening. what are the dangers? there are dangers _ happening. what are the dangers? there are dangers to _ happening. what are the dangers? there are dangers to the _ happening. what are the dangers? there are dangers to the riders, i there are dangers to the riders, pedestrians, to other cyclists, and the bikes that are modified to go faster and be more powerful also present more of a fire risk. illegal e—bikes are less safe. we have partners with other associations to launch up campaign which explains the public what a legal and safe e—bike is and how it is used safely. so the law has not caught up with this boom in e—bikes, it has happened and we don't know how to deal with it or regulate? the regulations _ deal with it or regulate? the regulations are _ deal with it or regulate? tie: regulations are there, it's deal with it or regulate? ii2 regulations are there, it's more the enforcement which is not there. lots of people tend to buy either a kit
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to convert their e—bike or chip which makes it go faster. it's not legal but it's not enforced so there needs to be more enforcement particularly on the people who are selling these e—bike kits knowing they are not legal. for selling these e-bike kits knowing they are not legal.— they are not legal. for delivery drivers feeling _ they are not legal. for delivery drivers feeling the _ they are not legal. for delivery drivers feeling the pressure i they are not legal. for delivery drivers feeling the pressure to | they are not legal. for delivery i drivers feeling the pressure to make more deliveries, trying to earn more money, what message would you give to them? ., , ., money, what message would you give to them? ., y., ., . to them? one thing that you notice is that when _ to them? one thing that you notice is that when a _ to them? one thing that you notice is that when a company _ to them? one thing that you notice is that when a company provides i is that when a company provides bikes, e—bikes to their careers, or provide them with trading and pays them a good wage, you don't see this as much though taking responsibility for the riders is key. brute as much though taking responsibility for the riders is key.— for the riders is key. we have seen --eole for the riders is key. we have seen people talking _ for the riders is key. we have seen people talking about _ for the riders is key. we have seen people talking about courier- for the riders is key. we have seen | people talking about courier drivers being on the pavement, no lights, not obvious enough, there are bigger safety concerns.— safety concerns. there are another key solution _ safety concerns. there are another key solution to _ safety concerns. there are another key solution to this _ safety concerns. there are another key solution to this issue _ safety concerns. there are another key solution to this issue is - safety concerns. there are another key solution to this issue is better| key solution to this issue is better street design. many times cyclists
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in the uk have to share traffic with very heavy and fast, share space with heavy and fast moving traffic or share space with pedestrian mixed—use paths. that's not ideal either way. when cyclists have cycle lanes, they are much less likely to use the pavement. but lanes, they are much less likely to use the pavement.— use the pavement. but that's not realistic, there's _ use the pavement. but that's not realistic, there's not _ use the pavement. but that's not realistic, there's not much i use the pavement. but that's not realistic, there's not much room| use the pavement. but that's not. realistic, there's not much room in our old clap to cities and the council does not have much funding. —— there is not much room in our old clap to cities. it -- there is not much room in our old clap to cities-— clap to cities. it has to come from nationally. _ clap to cities. it has to come from nationally. we _ clap to cities. it has to come from nationally, we have _ clap to cities. it has to come from nationally, we have seen - clap to cities. it has to come from nationally, we have seen amazingj nationally, we have seen amazing things in london. then you see people from more diverse community cycling because they are more likely to if they are protected from traffic. ., ~' , ., to if they are protected from traffic. ., ,, , ., .,
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time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are. a very good morning. welcome to bbc london. i'm thomas magill. plans to pedestrianise oxford street have again been proposed by london's mayor. previous schemes had been blocked but this time sadiq khan says he has the backing of the government, which will designate a mayor's development area. he hopes the project will make oxford street "the leading retail destination in the world. and there will be more on this story on bbc radio london across the morning. in other news, parents of a group of deaf children have criticised a school in east london claiming it's failing to support their children's special needs. they attend culloden primary in poplar which has 28 children, who are deaf. but the school doesn't have any fully qualified specialist teachers after two members of staff left. it's now trying to recruit, but said there is a national
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shortage of teachers with the right skills. i've been very consistent in terms of getting her the right support. ifeel like now, since she's been in the school, it's a huge let down for her because she's not getting the right support. she should have been progressing. she should have had some kind of communication by now. it's really, really delayed. urgent blood samples at a london hospital could soon be delivered by drones. medics at guy's and st thomas' nhs foundation trust will run a pilot scheme where drones will be used to courier blood samples between hospitals. the scheme starts this autumn and is expected to last six months. a 500—year—old knitted hat has been found by a mudlarker on the thames foreshore. on the thames foreshore. experts say the tudor experts say the tudor hat has been preserved hat has been preserved because of the mud in the river. because of the mud in the river. it's due to go on display as part it's due to go on display as part of a new exhibition opening of a new exhibition opening at london museum docklands next year. at london museum docklands next year.
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i wonder if they're i wonder if they're going to wash it first? going to wash it first? anyway, let's take a look at how anyway, let's take a look at how the tube is running. the tube is running. the overground is partly suspended the overground is partly suspended and there's minor delays on the dlr, and there's minor delays on the dlr, but otherwise a good service. but otherwise a good service. now onto the weather with kat. now onto the weather with kat. hello there. hello there. good morning to you. good morning to you. another very settled day out there today. another very settled day out there today. a lot of dry weather around a lot of dry weather around with lengthy spells of sunshine. with lengthy spells of sunshine. high pressure centred over the uk, high pressure centred over the uk, which start to drift northeastwards which start to drift northeastwards out into the north sea out into the north sea but still dominating our weather but still dominating our weather through much of this week. through much of this week. plenty more sunshine on the way. plenty more sunshine on the way. as the day progresses, there will be as the day progresses, there will be good spells of sunshine around. good spells of sunshine around. it stays largely dry it stays largely dry but a little bit breezier. but a little bit breezier. those winds will pick up those winds will pick up through this afternoon through this afternoon and i'm looking at highs and i'm looking at highs of around 21 degrees. of around 21 degrees. so through this evening we'll start so through this evening we'll start off with clear spells. off with clear spells. but, by the end of the night, but, by the end of the night, quite a bit of cloud starting quite a bit of cloud starting to drift in from the east. to drift in from the east. temperatures under that temperatures under that cloud will fall away cloud will fall away to around 12 to 13 degrees, to around 12 to 13 degrees, actually a milder night actually a milder night than the night we just had. than the night we just had.
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into wednesday, it's going to be a breezy day widely, but still good spells of sunshine once that cloud clears early on and temperatures wednesday, thursday up to around 24 degrees. that's it from me. there's more on the bbc news app and bbc radio london. i'll be back in half in hour but for now let's cross back to sally and jon. hello, this is breakfast withjon kay and sally nugent. returning now to our main story. junior doctors in england have accepted the government's offer
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restoring the value, which is all doctors have wanted since the beginning of this campaign. we have had huge pay cuts since 2008. doctors who were being paid just over £15 an hour before their supper
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�*be paid will now be paid a little over £17 �* be paid a little over will now be paid a little over £17 an hour. it marks an improvement but an hour. it marks an improvement but thejourney is thejourney is an hour. it marks an improvement but the journey is not over. what an hour. it marks an improvement but the journey is not over. what an hour. it marks an improvement but the journey is not over.— the journey is not over. what does that mean? _ an hour. it marks an improvement but the journey is not over.— the journey is not over. what does that mean? _ the journey is not over. what does that mean? we _ the journey is not over. what does that mean? we had _ the journey is not over. what does the journey is not over. what does that mean? we _ the journey is not over. what does that mean? we had _ the journey is not over. what does that mean? we had talked - the journey is not over. what does that mean? we had talked about i that mean? we had talked - the journey is not over. what does that mean? we had talked about i that mean? we had talked about medicine not _ that mean? we had talked about medicine not _ that mean? we had talked about medicine not being _ that mean? we had talked about medicine not being an _ that mean? we had talked about medicine not being an attractive| medicine not being an attractive that mean? we had talked about medicine not being _ that mean? we had talked about medicine not being an _ that mean? we had talked about medicine not being an attractive| medicine not being an attractive career. that is part of the wording career. that is part of the wording that will be put to the independent that will be put to the independent pay review body when they reward our pay review body when they reward our successive outlets. we want to hold successive outlets. we want to hold on to doctors medicine and an on to doctors medicine and an attractive profession so they don't attractive profession so they don't escape to places like canada, escape to places like canada, australia and new zealand. this australia and new zealand. this doesn't do everything in one go. as doesn't do everything in one go. as long as long as we continue on the long as long as we continue on the journey we can inspire confidence journey we can inspire confidence for doctors to stay and build back for doctors to stay and build back up for doctors to stay and build back up for doctors to stay and build back up our workforce so we can bring up our workforce so we can bring health care back to a high quality health care back to a high quality system that it used to be. i am system that it used to be. i am interested _ system that it used to be. i am interested to _ system that it used to be. i am interested to hear _ system that it used to be. i am interested to hear you - system that it used to be. i am interested to hear you say i interested _ system that it used to be. i am interested to _ system that it used to be. i am interested to hear _ system that it used to be. i am interested to hear you - system that it used to be. i am interested to hear you say i system that it used to be. i am interested to hear you say this is the first step. will you now system that it used to be. i am interested to hear you say this is the first step. will you now
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continue to negotiate for continue to negotiate for further pay increases will you steadied the ship and see where it lands? there are many other _ ship and see where it lands? there are many other things _ ship and see where it lands? there are many other things to _ ship and see where it lands? there are many other things to talk i ship and see where it lands? ii22 are many other things to talk about with regard to doctors. reforms in the nhs and huge other issues affecting working lives of doctors. we will expect to pay out less every year. if they do not occur in a timely fashion, and at the pace that our members have asked for to restore pay that is when we will go to the government and say he wanted to the government and say he wanted to inspire confidence in this process, this hasn't inspired confidence in this process. what can we do to alleviate that? if there is a communications breakdown, we will be thinking about striking again if we need to. that is always a last case was ill and something we don't want to have to do.— case was ill and something we don't want to have to do. some people this mornin: want to have to do. some people this
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morning had — want to have to do. some people this morning had delays _ want to have to do. some people this morning had delays to _ want to have to do. some people this morning had delays to treatment i want to have to do. some people this morning had delays to treatment in i morning had delays to treatment in the last year or so of strikes who will hear you are getting a 22% pay rise and you are still talking about strikes in the future and that will make them really angry. i appreciate that. all doctors — make them really angry. i appreciate that. all doctors were _ make them really angry. i appreciate that. all doctors were baiting - make them really angry. i appreciate that. all doctors were baiting on i that. all doctors were baiting on was an additional 4.05%. the other uplifts have already been awarded. those people who have been waiting such a long time and had care disrupted because of strike action, which i always apologise about, the disruption to care outside of strikes won't change until we can get enough of a workforce to bring down our waiting list. as that is still rising we haven't tackled the problem. this payoff is a step towards tackling that problem but the problem still needs to be resolved. i5 the problem still needs to be resolved. , ., .., . resolved. is there a concern the pay rise forjunior _ resolved. is there a concern the pay rise forjunior doctors _ resolved. is there a concern the pay rise forjunior doctors may - resolved. is there a concern the pay rise forjunior doctors may affect i rise for junior doctors may affect potential pay rises for other nhs staff? ii potential pay rises for other nhs
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staff? , ., ., ., ., ~' ,
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m that. i know you have been negotiating _ that. i know you have been negotiating for _ that. i know you have been negotiating for a _ that. i know you have been negotiating for a long i that. i know you have been| negotiating for a long time. that. i know you have been i negotiating for a long time. in that. i know you have been - negotiating for a long time. in your work with the government, in those discussions, is this increase fully funded or is there a possibility there might be cuts in services in order to fund it? to there might be cuts in services in order to fund it?— order to fund it? to my understanding - order to fund it? to my understanding it - order to fund it? to my understanding it is i order to fund it? to my| understanding it is fully order to fund it? to my - understanding it is fully funded. that is a political choice they had to make. i don't see a reason why it can't be fully funded. ultimately, we have to think about where we see the best use of resources. we have seen there is a huge potential economic loss because of the increasing number of people who are off sick because of a rise in waiting lists. and similar period of time where 4 million people might be off sick in 2029, we have had other report saying it could lead to a possible £70 billion of lost economic revenue. we know investing in health as a fiscal multiplier. we
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need to invest in our workforce so we can start to build back the country again. we can start to build back the country again-— we can start to build back the country again. we can start to build back the count atain. . , ,, ., country again. wes streeting and the prime minister _ country again. wes streeting and the prime minister had _ country again. wes streeting and the prime minister had been _ country again. wes streeting and the prime minister had been talking i prime minister had been talking about reform of the nhs as well. are they going to say, you have had your money, a lot of the money you wanted, now you are going to have to do more to help us working longer hours, weekends, that kind of thing? is it payback time? i do hours, weekends, that kind of thing? is it payback time?— is it payback time? i do not think there had been _ is it payback time? i do not think there had been conversations i is it payback time? i do not think i there had been conversations about working hours. we are open to discuss anything. we have always been open to discuss reforms. we are keen on that. we work with deep systems. the nhs has 10% of the world's pager systems. outdated systems every day to make as inefficient. we are happy to bring inefficient. we are happy to bring in advancements to help us be more effective. ., , effective. one thing that is changing — effective. one thing that is changing as _ effective. one thing that is changing as a _ effective. one thing that is changing as a change i effective. one thing that is changing as a change from| effective. one thing that is i changing as a change from being called junior doctors to resident
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doctors. why is that so important? junior denotes many things. people get the wrong impression and think we are students and not fully qualified. junior can represent any doctorfrom year1 of qualified. junior can represent any doctor from year1 of graduating, after five to six years of university got all the way up to ten years in a specialty. these people might be doing cardiac surgery, brain surgery, seeing patients in complex cancer clinics, for example. the work they do is anything but junior. resident doctor helps to denote expertise. thank you for coming in. time now for the sport. good morning. champions league is back tonight, liverpool face ac milan while aston villa make their return to the competition for the first time in more than 40 years as they face swiss side young boys. it'll be a poignant night, following the death of former striker gary shaw, who's died at the age of 63. he played a big part in helping villa lift
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the european cup back in 1982 — whilst also helping villa to win the league title a year before. tributes have come from former aston villa striker stan collymore, who said: fellow former villa striker paul merson — who of course is donning the sequins on strictly said: having won it 1982 with this famous peter withe goal against bayern munich who they will play in their next match, villa were the defending champions the following season,
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but that would be their last appearance in the competition until now. and they're determined they're not just there this time to make up the numbers. we've got some experience from europe last year, and it's going to be even tougher this year, being in the biggest european competition — club competition. um, yeah, we're going to have to do even better than what we did last year. and missing out on the final last year was a tough experience, but i think a good one for the group to understand what we have to do better this year and hopefully we can learn from that. the stars were out in force last night, not for a champions league game, or a premier league game, but a game in the third tier — one they're calling the hollywood derby. birmingham city, co—owned by nfl star tom brady, watching with david beckham taking on wrexham, owned by rob mclhenny and ryan gosling, in league one. it was a top of the table clash, one won by city 3—1, to leave brady the happier of the stars.
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an amazing mix of famous faces in this corner of birmingham. england's all—time leading test wicket—takerjames anderson could be heading to america to continue his career. anderson is a surprise target for major league cricket with senior figures at at least one team understood to be interested in signing the bowler, who said last month that he wouldn't rule out a return to white—ball cricket. the head of world athletics lord coe has been named as one of the confirmed candidates to become the next president of the international olympic committee. he's one of seven people under consideration to succeed thomas bach, who will step down next year. coe, a two—time olympic champion, is up against the likes ofjuan antonio samaranchjunior, whose father was the ioc president for 21 years. the election will take place in march next year. we were expecting it yesterday but today we're expecting glasgow
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to be announced as the hosts of the commonwealth games in 2026. the scottish government are understood to be on the verge of agreeing a deal to host the event, which was supposed to take place in victoria in australia, but the state pulled out last year because of rising costs. and footballers stepping into the world of fashion. this is decland rice, the arsenal midfielder and one of the most expensive players on the planet. and now wearing the clothes to match that price tag you imagine, as he stepped out for london fashion week at his home ground the emirates stadium, as the pitch was turned into a catwalk come runway. what do you make of the outfit? an eye—catching navy suit. with an interesting tie or scarf to knit it all together. i think he is enjoying it. he looks
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confident. that is good. i like it. do it with purpose and meaning. where what you want. do it with boots on. not red though! it promised the trip of a lifetime — to see the wreck of the titanic on the seabed. but last year, a dive by oceangate 5 titan submersible went tragically wrong, killing all five people on board. now, the us coastguard's investigation into the disaster is under way — and it's being watched closely by one man from merseyside. graham padden had booked a place on the ill—fated trip — but he missed out at the last minute. our reporter phil cunliffe has been to meet him. rescue teams are entering another critical day of searching for the tourists submarine that went missing near the wreck of the titanic.
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i followed the story around the clock, virtually. you know, i was constantly looking at my phone, constantly looking for pieces, but i kind of knew myself from understanding the situation that they were in, there wasn't much hope. graham paddon's interest in the fate of the stricken titan sub ran deeper than most. had events taken a different turn, he would have been among the passengers being searched for in the icy waters of the north atlantic. checked out, checked the dates, yeah, everything added up. that was the voyage that i was meant to be on. graham had secured his place following phone conversations with oceangate's mission director kyle bingham. he liked the fact that graham was liverpudlian and had spent lots of time at sea. so, yeah, i first got interested in the titanic story because i went to work on a famous cunard called the qe2, which used to sail from southampton to new york, so we regularly passed over the spot just off the coast of newfoundland where titanic went down. and if you look at the people that died on the titanic, you know, a huge majority of them were sailors from liverpool. so we had that link. i never had any safety concerns, no, because i knew that the sub
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titan had done many, many voyages before, and i was used to working inside a diving bell which worked under, you know, nowhere near the same type of pressure. but i was aware that these vessels were tested impeccably, and every time it done a voyage, it was tested again. the sticking point was money. customers had to raise £250,000. and when it became apparent that he was only able to raise half that, graham lost his place to tourists with deeper pockets. among the final crew list, the billionaire businessman shahzada dawood and his son suleman. good morning. it's friday, the 23rd ofjune. tributes are being paid to five men who died on board the titan submersible after it imploded near the wreck of the titanic. so i checked my messages. there it was from my son, "dad, dad, you'll never guess. have you seen this? look what happened to that sub, dad, that could have been you on there, don't you realise? you know, that could have been you." the us coast guard has now begun a two week inquiry into the events
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ofjune 2023 and what went wrong? for the first time, this image of the sub on the seabed after it had imploded has been shown to the hearing. it hasn't put me off at all going back on if i got the opportunity again. i'm still spiritually drawn to the titanic, to the wreck, to all the liverpool sailors that are down there, because it is a grave. coming down out of the murky depths, seeing the masts, seeing the forecastle, seeing the fo'castle. not many people have done that, so i wouldn't want to pass up that moment. phil cunliffe, bbc news. an incredible story. whatever of emotions. here's matt with the weather.
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—— what a mixture of emotions. a lovely start for most. a similar start for many areas with a little bit of cloud overhead. a the mist and fog patches. for the vast majority a try and reasonably sunny day once again. it will warm up nicely after a chilly start. the rain pushes down towards italy over the next few days. on the fringes of this in the north and west of scotland, northern ireland, a cloud. some patchy rain and drizzle. cloud will then hand brake. a bit of a breeze. east anglia and the south—east will feed on more cloud than yesterday. elsewhere sunny and warmer than yesterday. temperatures up warmer than yesterday. temperatures up by a couple of degrees, maybe 23 in the north of scotland, 22 in the
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north and west of ireland. this evening and overnight the crowd in northern scotland continues to bend and break. we will see low cloud develop more widely in eastern wales tomorrow. stopping temperatures dropping as much as they did this morning. the cellist whether in scotland and wales. temperatures around four to five. on wednesday a lot more cloud. a lot of the cloud would then and break. sunny spells developing widely. some could still latch on to the coasts. with more sunshine further north, even warmer still. 24, 25 possible across parts of northern scotland in particular. as we go into thursday, we have no cloud again drifting its way into begin with. the greater chance of lingering cloud along the north sea
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coasts. temperatures highest in the south—east corner. dropping across scotland and northern ireland. we could still hit 22 in the far north—west. they start to see changes on friday and into the weekend. low pressure developing from the south. slow progress as things go through the end of the week. friday a lot of dry weather with increased cloud and the odd rumble of thunder. a greater chance will widely have some showers and thunderstorms developing as we go into saturday and sunday. temperatures dropping a little bit but in the sunnier moments it will still feel warm. that is what is happening in the uk. we have been talking about the flooding in europe. in portugal, let's take it or what has been happening there. as you can see, we have this. this is smoke from wildfires burning across parts of portugal. they all fired up yesterday and the strong winds for
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that this is what it looked like from the ground. terrifying scenes for some is the fire is expanded and blown along by strong winds across parts of western portugal in particular. two have already been killed, many firefighters have been injured. the country has asked the european union for extra help in water fighting aircraft to come out and dampen some of those fires. the strong winds continuing and the risk will still remain over the next few days. will still remain over the next few da s. ., will still remain over the next few da s. . , , will still remain over the next few das. . , , , days. that smoke is unbelievable! ve sca days. that smoke is unbelievable! very scary indeed. _ sandi toksvig is one of britain's most loved and probably hardest working writers and comedians. from hosting long running radio shows, and tv hits like q! and the bake off — to her campaign work and writing over 20 books. now, sandi is preparing to get back on the road to celebrate the publication of her latest novel friends of dorothy, and she's here to tell us all about it.
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good morning. is so nice to be here. the sofa has — good morning. is so nice to be here. the sofa has got _ good morning. is so nice to be here. the sofa has got no _ good morning. is so nice to be here. the sofa has got no more _ the sofa has got no more comfortable, has it? it the sofa has got no more comfortable, has it?- the sofa has got no more comfortable, has it? , ., ., comfortable, has it? it is not meant to be pleasant! _ comfortable, has it? it is not meant to be pleasant! tell— comfortable, has it? it is not meant to be pleasant! tell us _ comfortable, has it? it is not meant to be pleasant! tell us about - to be pleasant! tell us about dorothy. i to be pleasant! tell us about doroth . ., to be pleasant! tell us about doroth . . ., ., dorothy. i wanted to write a book with no research _ dorothy. i wanted to write a book with no research to _ dorothy. i wanted to write a book with no research to make - dorothy. i wanted to write a book with no research to make you i dorothy. i wanted to write a book. with no research to make you laugh out loud. a friend said it needed to come with a volume control. it is the story of a woman called dorothy, who is a cantankerous old so—and—so, foul—mouthed and full of energy. she says how has to a young lesbian couple. on the day they me then she fails to move out. turns out legally it is very difficult to get rid of somebody if they decide not to leave when they sell your house. i am slithtl when they sell your house. i am slightly worried _ when they sell your house. i am slightly worried because - when they sell your house. i am slightly worried because you said you did no research. i am
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slightly worried because you said you did no research.— you did no research. i am a squatter! — you did no research. i am a squatter! it— you did no research. i am a squatter! it is _ you did no research. i am a squatter! it is about - you did no research. i am a squatter! it is about family| you did no research. i am a i squatter! it is about family she you did no research. i am a - squatter! it is about family she met with friends and colleagues. what i refer to as the logical family and not the biological family. refer to as the logical family and not the biologicalfamily. hopefully it is funny and touching at the same time. , ., .. , it is funny and touching at the same time. ,., , ., it is funny and touching at the same time. , ., ., time. historically based on anyone in particular? _ time. historically based on anyone in particular? truth _ time. historically based on anyone in particular? truth is, _ time. historically based on anyone in particular? truth is, i— time. historically based on anyone in particular? truth is, i know- time. historically based on anyone in particular? truth is, i know a i in particular? truth is, i know a lot of feisty _ in particular? truth is, i know a lot of feisty old _ in particular? truth is, i know a lot of feisty old women. - in particular? truth is, i know a lot of feisty old women. i i in particular? truth is, i know a lot of feisty old women. i have | lot of feisty old women. i have known sheila hancock since i was 18. a very long standing friendship. do not mess with her. it is not her because she is not foul—mouthed in any way but i know many women who you think you are fantastic and you continue to be fantastic in your 80s and 905. for continue to be fantastic in your 80s and 90s. ., , .,, ., . ., and 90s. for people watching at home, and 90s. for people watching at home. this _ and 90s. for people watching at home, this sofa _ and 90s. for people watching at home, this sofa might _ and 90s. for people watching at home, this sofa might not i and 90s. for people watching at home, this sofa might not be i and 90s. for people watching at i home, this sofa might not be very comfortable but the sector behind us is dorothy's sofa. three pairs of shoes. , ., , ., ,
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shoes. the three people who end up shafint shoes. the three people who end up sharint a shoes. the three people who end up sharing a house _ shoes. the three people who end up sharing a house together. _ shoes. the three people who end up sharing a house together. you i shoes. the three people who end up sharing a house together. you talk i sharing a house together. you talk about your — sharing a house together. you talk about your logical _ sharing a house together. you talk about your logical family _ sharing a house together. you talk about your logical family that i sharing a house together. you talk about your logical family that you | about your logical family that you go into rather than your biological family. it is a reality that many people are living with these days. about 5% of people live in that situation. most people have divorced families or single parents were many different types of families. particularly after lockdown, i missed my friends so much. since lockdown, ifind when i missed my friends so much. since lockdown, i find when i say i love you to each other in a way you would to a family member. we didn't used to a family member. we didn't used to say that to each other. i want to value those relationships because they are the thing that keeps us going really in many instances. talked week about the medical response to the covid inquiry. lots of people got in touch to say those she has affected my mindset and lifestyle in a way i can never
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replace. i lifestyle in a way i can never relace. ., ., . , ., ., replace. i want to celebrate our neighbours _ replace. i want to celebrate our neighbours and _ replace. i want to celebrate our neighbours and our— replace. i want to celebrate our| neighbours and our community. replace. i want to celebrate our. neighbours and our community. i replace. i want to celebrate our- neighbours and our community. i am lucky to live in a small village in the country. the people in the community and the people i work with, we are busy together restoring 40 with, we are busy together restoring a0 acres of ancient woodland. those moments when we are together on a sunday, laughing and drinking coffee in the words, they are important to me. they have become family to me in the same way i am delighted when my blood family gets together. you the same way i am delighted when my blood family gets together.— blood family gets together. you talk about bein: blood family gets together. you talk about being out _ blood family gets together. you talk about being out with _ blood family gets together. you talk about being out with a _ blood family gets together. you talk about being out with a chainsaw - blood family gets together. you talk about being out with a chainsaw at l about being out with a chainsaw at the weekend. d0 about being out with a chainsaw at the weekend-— about being out with a chainsaw at the weekend. ., , , the weekend. do not mess with me. i am that feisty — the weekend. do not mess with me. i am that feisty old _ the weekend. do not mess with me. i am that feisty old lady _ the weekend. do not mess with me. i am that feisty old lady that _ am that feisty old lady that everybody i called some out with a chainsaw, it was £500. it can't be that difficult. boys can do it! i love it in a slightly worrying way. one of the problems with ancient woodland as it has not been
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particularly looked after. it is choking with holly. it can grow to the size of a large tree trunk. we are the size of a large tree trunk. , are clearing it. when you watch the sunlight coming down on the forest floor for the first time in a hundred years but it is fantastic. we had doubled the number of native bluebells in the woods in two years. it makes you feel thrilled. it is one of the best things i do. you miaht one of the best things i do. you might get _ one of the best things i do. you might get overzealous with the chainsaw and cut down to match. h0. chainsaw and cut down to match. no, no. there chainsaw and cut down to match. no, he there is — chainsaw and cut down to match. no, he there is a — chainsaw and cut down to match. iifr, no. there is a plan. we have failed to look after our woodlands for a long time. they were always managed. we have 2.5% of ancient woodland left. of that we have 2.5% of ancient woodland left. of that 7% we have 2.5% of ancient woodland left. of that 7% is in a good condition. when i think, we must saveit condition. when i think, we must save it because it is good for the self is that you still work incredibly hard working, touring, writing. incredibly hard working, touring, writina. ., ~' writing. you sound like you might have found _ writing. you sound like you might have found a _ writing. you sound like you might
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have found a balance. _ writing. you sound like you might have found a balance. i _ writing. you sound like you might have found a balance. ithink- writing. you sound like you might have found a balance. i think that is probably _ have found a balance. i think that is probably true. _ have found a balance. i think that is probably true. my _ have found a balance. i think that is probably true. my beautiful - have found a balance. i think that| is probably true. my beautiful wife and i happily married for 18 years. i am crazy about her. last night i was in manchester. we can't wait to have dinner tonight. slightly pathetic. moving into the woods and listening to the owls in the dark and watching the bats flying, it is good for you. the wonderful thing is, it is available to anybody in the country. we have some amazing open spaces and anyone can volunteer to work with the woodland trust. there are lots of things you can do and i recommend it to everybody being grounded is good for you. makes you feel good. doers being grounded is good for you. makes you feel good.— being grounded is good for you. makes you feel good. does it make ou feel makes you feel good. does it make you feel good _ makes you feel good. does it make you feel good to — makes you feel good. does it make you feel good to be _ makes you feel good. does it make you feel good to be out _ makes you feel good. does it make you feel good to be out with - you feel good to be out with audiences face—to—face as well? is it something else he wanted to do? absolutely. everyone who comes to buy a ticket gets a free copy of the book so you can be entertained. with a live audience, a strange thing
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happens. your heart rate starts to synchronise with everyone in the building and you become calmer. you are 30 times more likely to laugh if you are in an audience with other people. come and relax and have a laugh. the other thing is i do half and the audience can ask me anything and the audience can ask me anything and believe me, they do. i women in bradford asked my bra size. i couldn't remember so she had to come up couldn't remember so she had to come up and have a look. you couldn't remember so she had to come up and have a look.— couldn't remember so she had to come up and have a look._ why i up and have a look. you let her? why not? i am not — up and have a look. you let her? why not? i am not shy. _ up and have a look. you let her? why not? i am not shy. i _ up and have a look. you let her? why not? i am not shy. i still— up and have a look. you let her? why not? i am not shy. i still cannot- not? i am not shy. i still cannot remember. i don't know if they do that on this show. there is a thing looking each other in the face and saying, talk to me. an old guy said, has anybody got an unusualjob? he said i am the last pan bicycle maker in britain. he came to the stage and banged on it and said, i haven't finished. i got a cup of tea and a
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chat and he did another ten minutes. how marvellous is that! it is great. we have a lovely story we will play later about a lady who has found her long lost family in australia and she has finally been reunited with her siblings. she has finally been reunited with hersiblings. it she has finally been reunited with her siblings. it is a reminder it is notjust genetics as well with family, it is that logical as well as biologicalfamily as family, it is that logical as well as biological family as well. it matters and we should celebrate it. it is nice to all be together based on a not very comfortable sofa. maybe if you used your chainsaw on the south of... d0 maybe if you used your chainsaw on the south of. . .— sandi's new book, friends of dorothy, is released next week. time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are. a very good morning, welcome to bbc london, i'm thomas magill. plans to pedestrianise oxford street have again been proposed by london's mayor. previous schemes had been blocked but this time sadiq khan says he has
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the backing of the government which will designate a mayor's development area. he hopes the project will make oxford street "the leading retail destination in the world." and there will be more on this across the morning on bbc radio london. urgent blood samples at a london hospital could soon be delivered by drones. medics at guy's and st thomas' nhs foundation trust will run a pilot scheme where drones will be used to courier blood samples between hospitals. the scheme starts this autumn and is expected to last six months. let's take a look at how the tube is running. the overground is partly suspended between new cross gate and crystal palace and west croydon and there's minor delays on the elizabeth line and dlr, but otherwise a good service. now onto the weather. a dry day ahead for all of us with some patchy cloud but mostly sunny with a top temperature as you can
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see of 21 degrees. that's it from me, there's more on the bbc news app and on bbc radio london across the morning where we have regular bulletins.
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good morning, welcome to breakfast withjon kay and sally nugent. 0ur headlines today. a 22% pay rise forjunior doctors. the government says the deal is key for the nhs, but medics warn of further action if wages don't keep up with inflation. donald trump describes hearing shots ring out during a suspected assassination attempt as police footage reveals the moment a gunman is arrested. a0,000 people in an entire polish city are told to leave their homes, as flooding overwhelms parts of central europe. the surgeon at the centre of an urgent review at great 0rmond street hospital and the families who say he caused serious harm to their children. good morning from leeds university union where the students can expect to graduate with debts of close to
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£50,000. we look at the impact that is having on mental health and student life. meet nazare, the injured turtle washed up in cumbria, now making waves in the warmer waters of the azores. and it might be a little bit fresh for those of us above water this morning but another try and reasonably sunny day to come, i will have the full forecast on breakfast. good morning. it's tuesday the 17th of september. junior doctors in england have accepted the government's offer of a 22% pay rise over two years ending a dispute which prompted the longest strike in nhs history. health secretary wes streeting said the deal marks the first step in future—proofing the nhs. the deal marks the first step but the doctors' union the british medical association has warned of further action if pay doesn't keep track with inflation. 0ur health editor, hugh pym has this report. it began in march last year.
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striking junior doctors on picket lines in england and demanding a pay rise of 35% to be phased in, which they said should compensate for inflation over more than a decade. what do we want? pay restoration! when do we want it? now! some talks took place with the conservative government, but that didn't stop 11 rounds of strikes over a total of aa days. soon after the election, the labour government made an increased pay offer, which the doctors union, the bma, put to members and they voted to accept. this is the first step towards restoring pay, towards restoring the value, which is all that doctors have wanted since the beginning of this campaign. as you will know we have had a huge pay cuts since 2008 but this marks a change in that trajectory. and if there is a change in that trajectory. and if this communications breakdown, then we will be thinking about going back into dispute and striking again if we need to, but that is always a last case resort and something we
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don't want to have to do. the offer included a backdated pay rise for last year of a%, on top of an existing increase worth an average of 9%, and for this year, an additional 6% increase, topped up with an extra £1,000, which comes to around 9%. it overall adds up to 22%. the government says strike action byjunior doctors cost the nhs in england around £1.7 billion. the health secretary welcomed the vote in favour of the deal. the deal we've reached with junior doctors is fairfor them, but crucially fair for patients and the taxpayer because now we can draw a line under this bitter dispute, cut waiting lists and get our nhs notjust back on its feet, but fit for the future. nhs managers and patients will be relieved that further health strikes are off the agenda in england. around 1.5 million appointments and operations were cancelled because of all industrial action by nhs unions since the end of 2022. the bma, though, has argued
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that there is still a long way to go to compensate for past inflation and their campaign isn't over. the doctors union agreed a pay deal with the scottish government last year and there weren't any strikes. junior doctors in wales have voted in favour of a pay offer. there's an ongoing dispute in northern ireland. hugh pym, bbc news. 0ur chief political correspondent henry zeffman is at the liberal democrats conference where leader sir ed davey is expected to speak about nhs funding later today. morning, henry. what's he going to say following this deal for the junior doctors?— say following this deal for the junior doctors? say following this deal for the 'unior doctors? a, , junior doctors? morning, sally. the liberal democrats _ junior doctors? morning, sally. the liberal democrats have _ junior doctors? morning, sally. the liberal democrats have talked - junior doctors? morning, sally. the | liberal democrats have talked about health throughout this conference andindeed health throughout this conference and indeed throughout this year, so it's not exactly shocking that today in his big speech sir ed davey the liberal democrat leader is going to be talking about health. he is going to talk about the nhs, saying that there is hope that the nhs can be reformed. he says the conservative government broke it so badly over so many years but we also know it must
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be done, we will offer people hope on health. that use of the word hope i am told is a bit of a jab at the new labour government to the liberal democrat leadership believe have been overly gloomy about britain and the prospect of reforming the state. but make no mistake the liberal democrats have won dozens of seats from the conservatives at the general election a couple of months ago and the conservatives remain their main targets. in his speech today sir ed davey will urge party members to finish the job of essentially supplanting the essentially suppla nting the conservatives essentially supplanting the conservatives as the main party of opposition. but when it comes to health, the liberal democrats are buoyant here that they have got 72 mps but that deal with the nhs and junior doctors today from the government is a reminder that the labour party has aoa mps, they are a government, they make decisions about health and social, and every other issue besides. the question for the lib dems once the buoyancy
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of having so many mps begins to fade is how they fit into that new political landscape.- is how they fit into that new political landscape. thank you, hen . political landscape. thank you, henry- now. — political landscape. thank you, henry- now. jon _ political landscape. thank you, henry. now, jon has— political landscape. thank you, henry. now, jon has more - political landscape. thank you, l henry. now, jon has more news. donald trump has praised his protection team as he spoke publicly for the first time since being the target of another apparent assassination attempt while playing golf at his resort in florida. a 58—year—old man has appeared in court in connection with the incident. the white house says president biden has spoken to donald trump to tell him he's relieved that he's safe. here's our north america correspondent, peter bowes. keep walking! this is the moment ryan routh was taken into custody. the 58—year—old was arrested shortly after fleeing from donald trump's golf club in west palm beach, florida. what's your name, boss? ryan. ryan? less than 2a hours later, he was in court, dressed in a blue
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prison jumpsuit and facing multiple firearms charges linked to an alleged attempt to assassinate the former president. this is where he was confronted by a secret service agent while donald trump was playing a round of golf. all of a sudden we heard shots being fired in the air. and i guess probably four orfive. and it sounded like bullets but what do i know about that, the secret service knew immediately it was bullets. and they grabbed me, everybody, just, we got into the carts and we moved on, pretty good. i was with an agent and the agent did a fantasticjob. the agent fired at what investigators say appeared to be a rifle poking out of trees near the edge of the course. cellular data shows that the subject was in the vicinity of the golf course roughly 12 hours before the engagement with the united states secret service. investigators say they're still working on whether ryan routh was acting alone. kamala harris said violence had
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no place in america, and she was relieved her election opponent was safe, but mr trump blamed what he called her and the current president's rhetoric for what happened on sunday and two months ago. take a look at what happened... the former president first survived an assassination attempt while speaking at an open air rally in pennsylvania. since then, security around him has been tightened. but the secret service says it needs more resources to do itsjob. president biden says he's looking to see if further measures are needed to ensure the safety of mr trump. i've always condemned political violence, and i always will in america. in america, we resolve our differences peacefully at the ballot box, not at the end of a gun. the white house says mr biden has spoken to the former president to convey his relief that he's safe. mr trump later said they had a very nice call about secret service protection.
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officials say security around donald trump's mar—a—lago home is now as intense as when he was president. there are seven anxious weeks to go until polling day. peter bowes, bbc news, los angeles. internet safety campaigners are calling for end to end encrypted messaging, like whatsapp, to do more to protect children online after the sentencing of the disgraced former bbc news presenter huw edwards. he was given a six month jail term, suspended for two years, after admitting possesion of indecent images of children. the internet watch foundation's dan sexton said the way in which edward's crimes were discovered demonstrated the need for better protection. it happened years ago and it was onlyjust by chance because of an arrest of the person sending imagery to edwards that it was discovered. the nature of the applications
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they are using, the platforms, is they're designed around privacy, and that means it's actually, the platforms are not detecting and preventing these crimes. we just don't know how much this is happening. what we do know is that certainly our work at the iwf, there are millions and millions of unique images of children being sexually abused that we have found, and we think that there's many, many more out there in these encrypted applications. traffic could be banned from oxford street under plans set out by the mayor of london, sadiq khan. the road is one of the world's busiest shopping areas, with about half a million visitors on average each day. westminster council, which had previously proposed a £90 million redevelopment of oxford street, said the mayor had only recently shared his plans. the american rapper sean "diddy" combs has been arrested in new york city on unspecified charges. it follows raids on two of his properties in los angeles and miami in march as part of an "ongoing investigation" into sex trafficking by authorities. diddy has faced a series of allegations from
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sexual assault to abuse. he denies all the claims against him. several countries across central and eastern europe are dealing with more severe flooding caused by storm boris. a0,000 residents of the city of nysa in south—western poland have been told to head for higher ground as a river threatens to burst its banks. our eastern europe correspondent sarah rainsford, is there. quite a dramatic night last night here in nysa where i am, people volunteered, came out and worked through the night to fill the sandbags that you can see here all around me. they were stuffing these bags of sand and forming human chains to bring them down to the embankment. this section of the embankment where the mayor had warned where there was a danger that because the river bank had collapsed essentially and was under such pressure from the water, there were worries that there would be mass flooding and the town
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of nysa could be completely flooded. the river is still moving very quickly and is very swollen but the level has fallen back quite significantly over the last day or so. there is a lot of pressure, there is a dam upstream which has burst its banks and there is a lot more water in the system, putting pressure on the rivers and embankments like this right across this region. here in nysa we saw people evacuating and heading over the bridge to higher ground, taking little suitcases, dogs and cats with them, their pets, to go to safety. it does seem this morning the sun has come out of the rain has stopped and there is a bit of optimism that perhaps the worst here in nysa has passed. when the flood waters in other places have receded we have seen over the past couple of days absolute devastation, people have lost everything and what they have left is covered in filth and mud and is in
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ruin and destruction. universities in england say tuition fees need to be increased in line with inflation to help prevent them from "sliding into decline" as they call for more government support. but students say they are already paying too much. our education reporter, vanessa clarke, has the story. after a quiet summer, university campuses are once again filling up. in manchester, more than 100,000 students are expected to descend on the city this month, and here at the manchester metropolitan, there will be more home students starting than ever before. we're enormously excited to be welcoming 10,000 new undergraduates. but in england, vice chancellors are calling for help as tuition fees remain frozen and international student numbers are down. for many institutions, we're now at an inflection point. we can choose as a country what type of higher education system we want. currently, we have some of the best universities in the world.
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we deliver really great internationally rated teaching and research. if you want to carry on doing that, we've got to find ways of investing. it's not an easy time for universities. more than a0% are expecting to return a budget deficit this year, and they're calling for a decision about how they will be funded long term. see you tonight then. 0h, maybe another bowl of rice! proposals due to be released in the coming days, universities uk will call for a tuition fee rise in england linked to inflation, as well as more investment from the government. they also want to see maintenance grants go up and access to child and adolescent mental health services for students up until 25. but the idea of tuition fees going up did not go down well here. such a big chunk of money that i can sort of log in and see that i owe the government at the moment, and the idea of spending more than that... if it weren't for that, i would definitely be annoyed because i'm not,
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i am getting a lot of teaching, but i'm not getting like 10k worth. i wouldn't want it to go up like past 10k, i think that's... and itjust puts people off going to uni basically, and no—one will go. the department for education in england says it has inherited a challenging set of circumstances and it will create a secure future for universities. but there are no easy options. we know that there really isn't very much public money available, and if there was, i'm not sure it would necessarily go to higher education. the next option is students, but it's politically very difficult to put up tuition fees. although if tuition fees were linked to inflation, arguably the cost isn't going up, the costs are staying the same. but making that argument is quite tricky. for many students, this week marks the start of their university experience. but outside of campus, the debate about whether the cost should be on the taxpayer or the student rolls on. vanessa clarke, bbc news, manchester.
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we will be back with lena who is at leeds university this morning speaking to students during freshers' week. some breaking news now. a man has been charged with murdering the wife and two daughters of the bbc racing commentator, john hunt. carol hunt, and her daughters hannah and louise, were killed in their home in bushey in hertfordshire injuly this year. 26 year—old kyle clifford has been charged with their murder. more on that on the bbc news website, we will bring you more information when we get it here in the next hour. here's matt with the weather. good morning. we can see behind me in cumbria right now, the general story is it will be a dry day with some sunny spells but with one or two exceptions, temperatures at the
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moment are 16 in north—west scotland and northern ireland, compared to cold enough for frost in parts of oxfordshire. here we have clear skies, and here we have thick cloud. that is producing a few spots of light rain in the far north and west of scotland but that will thin through the morning and afternoon. more sunshine breaking through. the mist and fog will clear by mid—morning, a breeze coming from the north east and the southerly breeze in the west of scotland but elsewhere gentle winds today and under those winds and the sunshine this afternoon it will feel warm, woman and yesterday, 23 degrees in the north of scotland, —— warm than yesterday. tonight the cloud will break up in the far north but we will see cloud becoming more extensive in central and eastern england and eastern wales, four or
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five celsius for the central part of the uk. we have the lion's share of the uk. we have the lion's share of the sunshine from dawn to dusk in the sunshine from dawn to dusk in the south. it will be a warmer day than today, tomorrow. it's known across the country and throughout the world as one of the leading children's hospitals, but now great 0rmond street in central london is carrying out an urgent review into one of its former surgeons. let's take a look at the details we know so far. the hospital is looking into the cases of hundreds of its patients, over allegations of negligence by one of its former doctors. yaserjabbar worked as an orthopaedic surgeon at the london hospital, for five years, between 2017 and 2022. two years ago, following concerns raised by staff and patient families, great 0rmond street asked the royal college of surgeons to conduct a wider review into its orthopaedic practices.
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that led to concerns about mrjabbar, with the hospital writing to all of his 721 patients and their families. it now says 22 children in 39 cases it had looked at so far, had come to "some degree of harm" with 13 classified as serious. we can speak now to former patient 16—year—old george, alongside mum samantha, dad mark and the family's solicitor, georgina wade. morning to all of you. money, george. could you just tell us your experience at the hospital, what you went there for, and what procedures you had? in went there for, and what procedures ou had? :: :: ., you had? in 2020, i went to the hosital you had? in 2020, i went to the hospital to _ you had? in 2020, i went to the hospital to have _ you had? in 2020, i went to the hospital to have a _ you had? in 2020, i went to the hospital to have a limb - you had? in 2020, i went to the i hospital to have a limb lengthening surgery on my left hand. it was a good experience, there was amazing
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hospitality, and you were told many great things about what would happen. and we met drjabbar, he introduced us to what he would do, he acted with extreme confidence as to what he was going to do but it was not. 50 to what he was going to do but it was not. ., to what he was going to do but it i was not._ when to what he was going to do but it. was not._ when i was not. so what did he do? when i was not. so what did he do? when i was under. — was not. so what did he do? when i was under, instead _ was not. so what did he do? when i was under, instead of— was not. so what did he do? when i was under, instead of doing - was not. so what did he do? when i was under, instead of doing what i was not. so what did he do? when i | was under, instead of doing what he stated he would do which was a leg lengthening and strengthening, he had some reason shortened the limb. and due to that, i have come under moderate harmer at the lease. so what —— i have come under moderate harm at the lease. so what has it done to your body? mr; harm at the lease. so what has it done to your body?— harm at the lease. so what has it done to your body? my left hand is shorter and — done to your body? my left hand is shorter and definitely _ done to your body? my left hand is shorter and definitely more - done to your body? my left hand is shorter and definitely more curved | shorter and definitely more curved thanit shorter and definitely more curved than it was before. the fingers are not a flexible and come under pain when i put them under any sort of stress. which is not very funny. mum
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and dad, listen _ stress. which is not very funny. mum and dad, listen to _ stress. which is not very funny. mum and dad, listen to george, _ stress. which is not very funny. mum and dad, listen to george, it is listen, isn't it? it’s and dad, listen to george, it is listen, isn't it?— listen, isn't it? it's very difficult. _ listen, isn't it? it's very difficult. we _ listen, isn't it? it's very difficult. we went - listen, isn't it? it's very difficult. we went to . listen, isn't it? it's very i difficult. we went to great listen, isn't it? it's very _ difficult. we went to great tillman street _ difficult. we went to great tillman street was great trust, george has been _ street was great trust, george has been seen _ street was great trust, george has been seen since it was two years old at great _ been seen since it was two years old at great aubin street —— great all the _ at great aubin street —— great all the dr_ at great aubin street —— great all the. drjabbarwas at great aubin street —— great all the. drjabbar was a at great aubin street —— great all the. drjabbarwas a new at great aubin street —— great all the. drjabbar was a new surgeon and heat consent —— did an operation which _ heat consent —— did an operation which we — heat consent —— did an operation which we did not consent to. and georgia _ which we did not consent to. and georgia has a shorter arm than he had before — georgia has a shorter arm than he had before. we are devastated and mortified _ had before. we are devastated and mortified that our trust has been broken _ mortified that our trust has been broken by— mortified that our trust has been broken by the place that we trusted our son— broken by the place that we trusted our son to — broken by the place that we trusted our son to. �* ,., broken by the place that we trusted our son to. �* y., , ., ., our son to. and when you start going to great 0rmond _ our son to. and when you start going to great 0rmond street _ our son to. and when you start going to great 0rmond street hospital, - to great 0rmond street hospital, famous hospital around the world thatis famous hospital around the world that is a lot of things for young people you must have thought it was the best. , , ., ., , the best. yes, george had been under their care since _ the best. yes, george had been under their care since he _ the best. yes, george had been under their care since he was _ the best. yes, george had been under their care since he was two _ the best. yes, george had been under their care since he was two and -
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the best. yes, george had been under their care since he was two and he - their care since he was two and he we had _ their care since he was two and he we had had — their care since he was two and he we had had the pet care and you do io we had had the pet care and you do go in _ we had had the pet care and you do go in with— we had had the pet care and you do go in with blind trust because it is great _ go in with blind trust because it is great 0rmond street, that trusted namef _ great ormond street, that trusted name. it— great ormond street, that trusted name. it is— great 0rmond street, that trusted name, it is supposed to be the best children's— name, it is supposed to be the best children's surgeons in the world and we are _ children's surgeons in the world and we are devastated this has happened. drjabbar— we are devastated this has happened. drjabbar was so overconfident. he made _ drjabbar was so overconfident. he made us _ drjabbar was so overconfident. he made us believe that he could lengthen the arm, strength and the rest, _ lengthen the arm, strength and the rest, that— lengthen the arm, strength and the rest, that george would have a much better— rest, that george would have a much better use _ rest, that george would have a much better use of his hand. and none of this has— better use of his hand. and none of this has happened. what george has now is— this has happened. what george has now is less _ this has happened. what george has now is less than what he has had before _ now is less than what he has had before dr— now is less than what he has had before. , , now is less than what he has had before. , g. , .,, , ., before. dr jabbar has left great 0rmond street, _ before. dr jabbar has left great 0rmond street, we _ before. dr jabbar has left great 0rmond street, we have - before. dr jabbar has left great 0rmond street, we have tried i before. dr jabbar has left greatl 0rmond street, we have tried to contact him and we have not got anything from him. we have a statement this morning from great 0rmond street which we can read. "to george and his family, and all the families impacted, we wish to say we are deeply sorry.
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dad, mark, what was it like, what was he like, drjabbar, when you met him and you had dealings with him, when you are talking with george? i called him the del boy of doctors. he made you feel very confident in what he was doing. he made you feel, he made us feel very special because he made us feel very special because he would come to see is quite often. and it turns out now maybe it was just to cover up some of the mistakes that had been made. we put a lot of trust in him, a lot of trust in the hospital. and we feel very let down.
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trust in the hospital. and we feel very let down-— very let down. how are you now, georue, very let down. how are you now, george. how _ very let down. how are you now, george, how has _ very let down. how are you now, george, how has this _ very let down. how are you now, george, how has this impacted l very let down. how are you now, i george, how has this impacted you very let down. how are you now, - george, how has this impacted you in your everyday life now? as a teenager? i your everyday life now? as a teenager?— your everyday life now? as a teenager? your everyday life now? as a teenauer? ., , teenager? i have lost trust in the hos - ital i teenager? i have lost trust in the hospital i put _ teenager? i have lost trust in the hospital i put my _ teenager? i have lost trust in the hospital i put my faith _ teenager? i have lost trust in the hospital i put my faith in - teenager? i have lost trust in the hospital i put my faith in for - teenager? i have lost trust in the hospital i put my faith in for all . hospital i put my faith in for all of my life. and it has shaken me, most of all. because i don't know what will happen next. i could go for another surgery to try to fix it in some sort of way, but that's also putting my faith and another doctor. how do you feel about that now? just confused. when _ how do you feel about that now? just confused. when you _ how do you feel about that now? just confused. when you are _ how do you feel about that now? just confused. when you are feeling - confused. when you are feeling anxious and _ confused. when you are feeling anxious and confused, - confused. when you are feeling anxious and confused, i - confused. when you are feeling | anxious and confused, i imagine confused. when you are feeling - anxious and confused, i imagine the last thing you want to do is go and sit in front of cameras on the television, with your mum and dad, but why is it so important for you to go public and speak about this and make people aware at home? it’s and make people aware at home? it's not and make people aware at home? it�*s notjust about drjabbar. in my notjust about drjabbar. in my opinion, something is definitely happening behind the scenes. to make sure that this did not come to light. because if it was so, it
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would have been found years ago. 720 cases with what has been found so far, in my opinion, it would be a majority. far, in my opinion, it would be a ma'ori . �* far, in my opinion, it would be a ma'ori . . , ., , majority. and it should be looked at. it is majority. and it should be looked at- it is being _ majority. and it should be looked at. it is being looked _ majority. and it should be looked at. it is being looked out - majority. and it should be looked at. it is being looked out at - majority. and it should be looked at. it is being looked out at the i at. it is being looked out at the moment. there is a big investigation under way and we will get the results of that in time. what is the legal situation here? we results of that in time. what is the legal situation here?— legal situation here? we are fairly earl on legal situation here? we are fairly early on in — legal situation here? we are fairly early on in these _ legal situation here? we are fairly early on in these investigations, l legal situation here? we are fairly. early on in these investigations, we were _ early on in these investigations, we were only— early on in these investigations, we were only made _ early on in these investigations, we were only made aware _ early on in these investigations, we were only made aware of _ early on in these investigations, we were only made aware of the - were only made aware of the investigation _ were only made aware of the investigation earlier- were only made aware of the investigation earlier this - were only made aware of the j investigation earlier this year were only made aware of the i investigation earlier this year so we have — investigation earlier this year so we have to _ investigation earlier this year so we have to conduct _ investigation earlier this year so we have to conduct our - investigation earlier this year so we have to conduct our own - we have to conduct our own investigations— we have to conduct our own investigations with - we have to conduct our own investigations with the - we have to conduct our own i investigations with the medical records — investigations with the medical records my— investigations with the medical records. my role _ investigations with the medical records. my role will— investigations with the medical records. my role will be - investigations with the medical records. my role will be to - investigations with the medicall records. my role will be to work investigations with the medical- records. my role will be to work out how george — records. my role will be to work out how george came _ records. my role will be to work out how george came to _ records. my role will be to work out how george came to be _ records. my role will be to work out how george came to be the - records. my role will be to work out| how george came to be the position he is now. _ how george came to be the position he is now. how— how george came to be the position he is now, how did _ how george came to be the position he is now, how did this _ how george came to be the position he is now, how did this come - how george came to be the position he is now, how did this come to- he is now, how did this come to happen, — he is now, how did this come to happen. and _ he is now, how did this come to happen. and to— he is now, how did this come to happen, and to see _ he is now, how did this come to happen, and to see what- he is now, how did this come to happen, and to see what can i he is now, how did this come toj happen, and to see what can be he is now, how did this come to- happen, and to see what can be done to hopefully_ happen, and to see what can be done to hopefully put — happen, and to see what can be done to hopefully put george _ happen, and to see what can be done to hopefully put george back - happen, and to see what can be done to hopefully put george back in - happen, and to see what can be done to hopefully put george back in a i to hopefully put george back in a position— to hopefully put george back in a position he — to hopefully put george back in a position he would _ to hopefully put george back in a position he would have _ to hopefully put george back in a position he would have been, i to hopefully put george back in a | position he would have been, had to hopefully put george back in a i position he would have been, had the agreed-upon— position he would have been, had the agreed-upon surgery _ position he would have been, had the agreed—upon surgery taken _ position he would have been, had the agreed—upon surgery taken place. i
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position he would have been, had the agreed—upon surgery taken place. to| agreed—upon surgery taken place. to see if— agreed—upon surgery taken place. to see if he _ agreed—upon surgery taken place. to see if he can — agreed—upon surgery taken place. to see if he can be — agreed—upon surgery taken place. to see if he can be helped _ agreed—upon surgery taken place. to see if he can be helped into - agreed—upon surgery taken place. to see if he can be helped into a - see if he can be helped into a better— see if he can be helped into a better position. _ see if he can be helped into a better position.— see if he can be helped into a better position. how easy is it for ou as a better position. how easy is it for you as a lawyer. _ better position. how easy is it for you as a lawyer, the _ better position. how easy is it for you as a lawyer, the family, i better position. how easy is it for you as a lawyer, the family, to i better position. how easy is it for| you as a lawyer, the family, to get medical records, to see the paperwork of what has happened? there is an awful lot of paperwork involved _ there is an awful lot of paperwork involved in — there is an awful lot of paperwork involved in this _ there is an awful lot of paperwork involved in this thing. _ there is an awful lot of paperwork involved in this thing. sometimesj there is an awful lot of paperworkl involved in this thing. sometimes i find that— involved in this thing. sometimes i find that families _ involved in this thing. sometimes i find that families don't _ involved in this thing. sometimes i find that families don't always i involved in this thing. sometimes ll find that families don't always know what their— find that families don't always know what their rights _ find that families don't always know what their rights are _ find that families don't always know what their rights are to _ find that families don't always know what their rights are to obtain - find that families don't always know what their rights are to obtain this i what their rights are to obtain this information, — what their rights are to obtain this information, and _ what their rights are to obtain this information, and families - what their rights are to obtain this information, and families need i what their rights are to obtain this information, and families need to| information, and families need to come _ information, and families need to come to— information, and families need to come to us— information, and families need to come to us to _ information, and families need to come to us to be _ information, and families need to come to us to be able _ information, and families need to come to us to be able to- information, and families need to come to us to be able to get- information, and families need to come to us to be able to get that| come to us to be able to get that help _ come to us to be able to get that help so — come to us to be able to get that help. so there _ come to us to be able to get that help. so there will— come to us to be able to get that help. so there will be _ come to us to be able to get that help. so there will be an - come to us to be able to get that help. so there will be an awful. come to us to be able to get that| help. so there will be an awful lot of information— help. so there will be an awful lot of information to _ help. so there will be an awful lot of information to go _ help. so there will be an awful lot of information to go through, i help. so there will be an awful lot of information to go through, the| of information to go through, the royal— of information to go through, the royal college _ of information to go through, the royal college of— of information to go through, the royal college of surgeons - of information to go through, the royal college of surgeons review| royal college of surgeons review which _ royal college of surgeons review which will — royal college of surgeons review which will be _ royal college of surgeons review which will be extensive _ royal college of surgeons review which will be extensive and - royal college of surgeons review which will be extensive and i'm l which will be extensive and i'm hoping — which will be extensive and i'm hoping we _ which will be extensive and i'm hoping we can— which will be extensive and i'm hoping we can get— which will be extensive and i'm hoping we can get access - which will be extensive and i'm hoping we can get access to i which will be extensive and i'm i hoping we can get access to that from _ hoping we can get access to that from great — hoping we can get access to that from great 0rmond _ hoping we can get access to that from great 0rmond street- hoping we can get access to that from great 0rmond street at i hoping we can get access to that i from great 0rmond street at some point _ from great 0rmond street at some point to— from great 0rmond street at some point to see — from great 0rmond street at some point to see how— from great 0rmond street at some point to see how this _ from great 0rmond street at some point to see how this came - from great 0rmond street at some point to see how this came about. i from great 0rmond street at some . point to see how this came about. so point to see how this came about. fl: this point to see how this came about. this might not be a quick process? absolutely not, unfortunately the wheels _ absolutely not, unfortunately the wheels of— absolutely not, unfortunately the wheels ofjustice _ absolutely not, unfortunately the wheels ofjustice turn _ absolutely not, unfortunately the wheels ofjustice turn slowly i absolutely not, unfortunately the wheels ofjustice turn slowly and i wheels ofjustice turn slowly and there _ wheels ofjustice turn slowly and there is— wheels ofjustice turn slowly and there is a — wheels ofjustice turn slowly and there is a lot _ wheels ofjustice turn slowly and there is a lot of— wheels ofjustice turn slowly and there is a lot of information i wheels ofjustice turn slowly and there is a lot of information that| there is a lot of information that needs— there is a lot of information that needs to — there is a lot of information that needs to be _ there is a lot of information that needs to be gone _ there is a lot of information that needs to be gone through- there is a lot of information that needs to be gone through to i there is a lot of information that i needs to be gone through to make sure we _ needs to be gone through to make sure we do— needs to be gone through to make sure we do everything _ needs to be gone through to make sure we do everything properly i needs to be gone through to makel sure we do everything properly and in the _ sure we do everything properly and in the correct — sure we do everything properly and in the correct manner. _ sure we do everything properly and i in the correct manner. unfortunately i think— in the correct manner. unfortunately i think this _ in the correct manner. unfortunately i think this will — in the correct manner. unfortunately i think this will be — in the correct manner. unfortunately i think this will be years _ in the correct manner. unfortunately i think this will be years before - i think this will be years before there _ i think this will be years before there is— i think this will be years before there is a — i think this will be years before there is a resolution _ i think this will be years before there is a resolution certainly i i think this will be years before i there is a resolution certainly for george _ there is a resolution certainly for george or— there is a resolution certainly for george or other— there is a resolution certainly for george or other families - there is a resolution certainly for. george or other families involved.
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and there — george or other families involved. and there are _ george or other families involved. and there are a _ george or other families involved. and there are a lot _ george or other families involved. and there are a lot of— george or other families involved. and there are a lot of other- and there are a lot of other families and patients out there. absolutely, i was quite shocked to see the _ absolutely, i was quite shocked to see the number— absolutely, i was quite shocked to see the number of— absolutely, i was quite shocked to see the number of individuals i absolutely, i was quite shocked to see the number of individuals whoj see the number of individuals who were _ see the number of individuals who were affected _ see the number of individuals who were affected by _ see the number of individuals who were affected by this _ see the number of individuals who were affected by this potentially. i were affected by this potentially. and as _ were affected by this potentially. and as investigations _ were affected by this potentially. and as investigations are - were affected by this potentially. and as investigations are still- and as investigations are still ongoing. _ and as investigations are still ongoing. we _ and as investigations are still ongoing, we would _ and as investigations are still| ongoing, we would encourage and as investigations are still- ongoing, we would encourage any families— ongoing, we would encourage any families you — ongoing, we would encourage any families you have _ ongoing, we would encourage any families you have any— ongoing, we would encourage any families you have any concerns i ongoing, we would encourage any families you have any concerns to| families you have any concerns to seek— families you have any concerns to seek legal— families you have any concerns to seek legal advice _ families you have any concerns to seek legal advice if— families you have any concerns to seek legal advice if they - families you have any concerns to seek legal advice if they feel- families you have any concerns to seek legal advice if they feel the i seek legal advice if they feel the need _ seek legal advice if they feel the need to — seek legal advice if they feel the need to. ~ . ., seek legal advice if they feel the needto. . ., , ,, ., need to. what are your hopes, i know he is riiht need to. what are your hopes, i know he is right here. _ need to. what are your hopes, i know he is right here, but _ need to. what are your hopes, i know he is right here, but what _ need to. what are your hopes, i know he is right here, but what are - need to. what are your hopes, i know he is right here, but what are your i he is right here, but what are your hopes for george there? it’s he is right here, but what are your hopes for george there?— hopes for george there? it's very difficult for _ hopes for george there? it's very difficult for george _ hopes for george there? it's very difficult for george because i hopes for george there? it's very difficult for george because this i difficult for george because this surgery— difficult for george because this surgery is notjust a one—off, it's nine _ surgery is notjust a one—off, it's nine months _ surgery is notjust a one—off, it's nine months of having a frame on your— nine months of having a frame on your arm — nine months of having a frame on your arm which affect to education, affect— your arm which affect to education, affect future earnings, effects of social— affect future earnings, effects of social life. we would love for george — social life. we would love for george to be have given the first operation — george to be have given the first operation that he wanted. the decision— operation that he wanted. the decision is now up to george if he has a _ decision is now up to george if he has a further surgery but we just wanted — has a further surgery but we just wanted to— has a further surgery but we just wanted to be happy and confident moving _ wanted to be happy and confident moving forward in life. so that we can move — moving forward in life. so that we can move forward from this and georgina — can move forward from this and georgina is helping us to gain some
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justice _ georgina is helping us to gain some 'ustice. ~ ., ., , ., ,, georgina is helping us to gain some 'ustice. ~ ., ., ~ ., georgina is helping us to gain some 'ustice. ., ., ~ ., ., justice. what would you like to do, georie, justice. what would you like to do, george. let's _ justice. what would you like to do, george, let's give _ justice. what would you like to do, george, let's give you _ justice. what would you like to do, george, let's give you the - justice. what would you like to do, george, let's give you the last i george, let's give you the last word, how do you see life going? you strike me as a super bright young man. i strike me as a super bright young man. . . strike me as a super bright young man. , ., ., ., man. i 'ust want to live a happy life man. ijust want to live a happy life above _ man. ijust want to live a happy life above all _ man. ijust want to live a happy life above all else. _ man. ijust want to live a happy life above all else. what - man. ijust want to live a happy life above all else. what would| man. i just want to live a happy i life above all else. what would you like to do, college _ life above all else. what would you like to do, college coming - life above all else. what would you like to do, college coming up? i'm| like to do, college coming up? i'm doini like to do, college coming up? in doing hospitality in college. so maybe just work at a nice place and serve good food. that maybe just work at a nice place and serve good food.— maybe just work at a nice place and serve good food. that sounds good. do we have — serve good food. that sounds good. do we have anything _ serve good food. that sounds good. do we have anything we _ serve good food. that sounds good. do we have anything we can - serve good food. that sounds good. do we have anything we can give i serve good food. that sounds good. i do we have anything we can give him here? ~ , do we have anything we can give him here?- lovely _ do we have anything we can give him here?- lovely meeting i do we have anything we can give him here?- lovely meeting you, | here? unlikely! lovely meeting you, all the best. — here? unlikely! lovely meeting you, all the best, and _ here? unlikely! lovely meeting you, all the best, and nicky _ here? unlikely! lovely meeting you, all the best, and nicky all— here? unlikely! lovely meeting you, all the best, and nicky all for- all the best, and nicky all for coming in, a story an issue which is really important and we will keep across it in the weeks and months ahead. , ., ., across it in the weeks and months ahead. ,., ., a across it in the weeks and months ahead. , ., morning live follows breakfast on bbc one this morning. let's find out what they have in store with gethin and helen. back outside, look at that! the sun is shinini , back outside, look at that! the sun is shining. we _ back outside, look at that! the sun is shining, we thought _ back outside, look at that! the sun is shining, we thought we - back outside, look at that! the sun is shining, we thought we would i back outside, look at that! the sun i is shining, we thought we would take a trip to new york! no, we are
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salford! coming up — snatch thefts, the devious crime that happens right before your eyes. new figures show that they've soared by more than 150% in the last year. with over 200 people falling victim every single day, rav wilding is here to help. the theft happens in seconds, but the danger doesn't always stop there. after stealing your phone, thieves can call you up and hold you to ransom for your personal details. so i'll explain the one thing you need to get from your mobile today in case the worst happens tomorrow. plus, with around 90% of us struggling to get a good night's rest, presenter katie thistleton is getting wired up to investigate the science behind sleep trackers. and with online sales of second—hand goods set to double over the next five years, crafting queen zoe pocock tells us why deliberately misspelling something that you're shopping we will see how we can get a little
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mishap like this one! —— avoid a little mishap like this one! also today, we're helping a viewer with a dinner dilemma. they want to know how to make mince more exciting, so chefjohn gregory—smith will share a delicious one—pan recipe for a korean—inspired stir fry. and actor and comedianjason manford is calling us all in for assembly at 9:30 as the new headteacher at waterloo road. don't miss it. don't be late, class! sit up straight. — don't be late, class! sit up straight, thank _ don't be late, class! sit up straight, thank you, i don't be late, class! sit up. straight, thank you, looking don't be late, class! sit up - straight, thank you, looking forward to it! mr mountford is in the house! time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are. a very good morning. welcome to bbc london. i'm thomas magill. plans to pedestrianise oxford street have again been proposed by london's mayor. previous schemes had been blocked but this time sadiq khan says he has the backing of the government, which will designate a mayor's development area. he hopes the project will make
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oxford street "the leading retail destination in the world." and there will be more on this story on bbc radio london across the morning. in other news, parents of a group of deaf children have criticised a school in east london claiming it's failing to support their children's special needs. they attend culloden primary in poplar, which has 28 children who are deaf. but the school doesn't have any fully qualified specialist teachers — after two members of staff left. it's now trying to recruit, but said there is a national shortage of teachers with the right skills. i've been very consistent in terms of getting her the right support. ifeel like now, since she's been in the school, it's a huge let down for her because she's not getting the right support. she should have been progressing. she should have had some kind of communication by now. it's really, really delayed. urgent blood samples at a london hospital could soon be delivered by drones.
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medics at guy's and st thomas' nhs foundation trust will run a pilot scheme where drones will be used to courier blood samples between hospitals. the scheme starts this autumn and is expected to last six months. a 500—year—old knitted hat has been found by a mudlarker on the thames foreshore. experts say the tudor hat has been preserved because of the mud in the river. it's due to go on display as part of a new exhibition opening at london museum docklands next year. let's take a look at how the tube is running. the overground is partly suspended between new cross gate and crystal palace and west croydon and there's minor delays on the elizabeth line. now on to the weather with kat. hello there. good morning to you. another very settled day out there today. a lot of dry weather around with lengthy spells of sunshine. high pressure centred over the uk, which start to drift northeastwards out into the north sea but still dominating our weather through much of this week. plenty more sunshine on the way.
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so any early mist and fog will lift this morning. as the day progresses, there will be good spells of sunshine around. it stays largely dry but a little bit breezier. those winds will pick up through this afternoon and i'm looking at highs of around 21 degrees. so through this evening we'll start off with clear spells. but, by the end of the night, quite a bit of cloud starting to drift in from the east. temperatures under that cloud will fall away to around 12 to 13 degrees, actually a milder night than the night we just had. into wednesday, it's going to be a breezy day widely, but still good spells of sunshine once that cloud clears early on and temperatures wednesday, thursday up to around 2a degrees. that's it from me. there's more on the bbc news app and bbc radio london. i'll be back around 9.15am with one last look at what's happening here in london. but for now, let's cross back to sally and jon.
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hello. this is breakfast with jon kay and sally nugent. it's an exciting month for many as thousands of students across the uk head off to university — but it can also be a daunting time with many graduates finishing with thousands of pounds worth of debt. you might have a qualification that you really need to find work to pay off those loans. it's something nina has been looking into, who's in leeds this morning. have you found anyone awake yet? lots of students are awake. i am having a nosy in the student union. i saw the artists performing in the 70s. full mccartney led zeppelin, leonard cohen, bale played here. that was at a time when lots of
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students had a reputation of being long had had a nest hippies who didn't get up. things have changed partly because of the financial pressure students have been under. students are graduating with debts close to £50,000. little wonder the full effects of than safe financial worries are contributing to mental health issues and anxiety. there are student loans you can take out, up to £10,200 annually if you are not studying in london. many students will tell you it doesn't stretch far enough and there is endless worry about how and when to pay it back. it is seriously affecting student life. i'm going to enter up to catching up, amy, to talk about the fact he decided to drop your placement year, which some would say is integral to your degree. i
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decided the amount of debt i would be in for— decided the amount of debt i would be in for an— decided the amount of debt i would be in for an extra year would not be worth— be in for an extra year would not be worth it _ be in for an extra year would not be worth it. they need student radio is giving _ worth it. they need student radio is giving me _ worth it. they need student radio is giving me enough opportunities anyway— giving me enough opportunities anyway and it seems it would not be worth— anyway and it seems it would not be worth it _ anyway and it seems it would not be worth it for— anyway and it seems it would not be worth it for the extra debt. we have all agreed _ worth it for the extra debt. we have all agreed thatjust for worth it for the extra debt. we have all agreed that just for me worth it for the extra debt. we have all agreed thatjust for me it worth it for the extra debt. we have all agreed that just for me it would be better— all agreed that just for me it would be better not to be in that debt. you are — be better not to be in that debt. you are already in debt studying for your a—levels, saving up. i had you are already in debt studying for your a-levels, saving up.— your a-levels, saving up. i had a part-time _ your a-levels, saving up. i had a part-time job — your a-levels, saving up. i had a part-time job alongside - your a-levels, saving up. i had a part-time job alongside my i your a-levels, saving up. i had a part-time job alongside my a - your a-levels, saving up. i had a i part-time job alongside my a levels part—time job alongside my a levels and i_ part—time job alongside my a levels and i did _ part—time job alongside my a levels and i did that for year 12 and year 13 so_ and i did that for year 12 and year 13 so i_ and i did that for year 12 and year 13 so i could _ and i did that for year 12 and year 13 so i could save up for first year so i was — 13 so i could save up for first year so i was not — 13 so i could save up for first year so i was not missing out on anything _ so i was not missing out on anything-— so i was not missing out on an him. a, , t, anything. you can see how the ressure anything. you can see how the pressure builds _ anything. you can see how the pressure builds from _ anything. you can see how the pressure builds from a - anything. you can see how the pressure builds from a very . anything. you can see how the i pressure builds from a very young age. emma works seven day weeks because you have a full on course monday to friday and then you work saturday and sunday in a shop. in the holidays you come up from sheffield to make sure you can keep thatjob. it
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sheffield to make sure you can keep that 'ob. ., , , sheffield to make sure you can keep that 'ob. . , , ., that job. it has been isolating, definitely- _ that job. it has been isolating, definitely- i— that job. it has been isolating, definitely. i have _ that job. it has been isolating, definitely. i have bad - that job. it has been isolating, definitely. i have bad working| that job. it has been isolating, - definitely. i have bad working days on saturday— definitely. i have bad working days on saturday and _ definitely. i have bad working days on saturday and sunday _ definitely. i have bad working days on saturday and sunday and - definitely. i have bad working days on saturday and sunday and have i definitely. i have bad working days i on saturday and sunday and have had to made _ on saturday and sunday and have had to made up— on saturday and sunday and have had to made up already _ on saturday and sunday and have had to made up already in _ on saturday and sunday and have had to made up already in the _ on saturday and sunday and have had to made up already in the house - on saturday and sunday and have had to made up already in the house by. to made up already in the house by myself— to made up already in the house by myself and — to made up already in the house by myself and live _ to made up already in the house by myself and live in _ to made up already in the house by myself and live in student - myself and live in student accommodation _ myself and live in student accommodation which - myself and live in student accommodation which is i myself and live in student - accommodation which is supposed myself and live in student _ accommodation which is supposed to be for— accommodation which is supposed to be for six _ accommodation which is supposed to be for six pe0ple~ _ accommodation which is supposed to be for six people. it _ accommodation which is supposed to be for six people. it is _ accommodation which is supposed to be for six people. it is quite - accommodation which is supposed to be for six people. it is quite a - accommodation which is supposed to be for six people. it is quite a big - be for six people. it is quite a big house~ _ be for six people. it is quite a big house~ being— be for six people. it is quite a big house. being able _ be for six people. it is quite a big house. being able to _ be for six people. it is quite a big house. being able to afford - be for six people. it is quite a big house. being able to afford to . be for six people. it is quite a bigl house. being able to afford to live there _ house. being able to afford to live there and — house. being able to afford to live there and experience _ house. being able to afford to live there and experience the - house. being able to afford to live there and experience the full - there and experience the full student— there and experience the full student life. _ there and experience the full student life. you _ there and experience the full student life. you still- there and experience the full student life. you still have i there and experience the full - student life. you still have worries about _ student life. you still have worries about whether _ student life. you still have worries about whether you _ student life. you still have worries about whether you know _ student life. you still have worries about whether you know you - student life. you still have worries about whether you know you can l student life. you still have worries - about whether you know you can keep theirioh _ about whether you know you can keep theirioh and — about whether you know you can keep theirioh and be — about whether you know you can keep theirjob and be manageable, - about whether you know you can keep theirjob and be manageable, going . theirjob and be manageable, going into a _ theirjob and be manageable, going into a new— theirjob and be manageable, going into a new course _ theirjob and be manageable, going into a new course and _ theirjob and be manageable, going into a new course and going - theirjob and be manageable, going into a new course and going into . theirjob and be manageable, going| into a new course and going into my second _ into a new course and going into my second year— into a new course and going into my second year of— into a new course and going into my second year of studies, _ into a new course and going into my second year of studies, which - into a new course and going into my second year of studies, which is - second year of studies, which is supposed — second year of studies, which is supposed to— second year of studies, which is supposed to be _ second year of studies, which is supposed to be a _ second year of studies, which is supposed to be a lot _ second year of studies, which is supposed to be a lot harder- second year of studies, which isi supposed to be a lot harder than second year of studies, which is - supposed to be a lot harder than the first year _ supposed to be a lot harder than the first ear. ., ., ., ,, supposed to be a lot harder than the first ear. ., ., ., “ , first year. you are working every da of first year. you are working every day of the _ first year. you are working every day of the week. _ first year. you are working every day of the week. saturday - first year. you are working every day of the week. saturday is - day of the week. saturday is normally _ day of the week. saturday is normally like _ day of the week. saturday is normally like a _ day of the week. saturday is normally like a 12 _ day of the week. saturday is normally like a 12 to - day of the week. saturday is normally like a 12 to ten - day of the week. saturday is i normally like a 12 to ten shift. through— normally like a 12 to ten shift. through the _ normally like a 12 to ten shift. through the week _ normally like a 12 to ten shift. through the week i _ normally like a 12 to ten shift. through the week i am - normally like a 12 to ten shift. i through the week i am obviously doing _ through the week i am obviously doing my— through the week i am obviously doing my degree _ through the week i am obviously doing my degree. it _ through the week i am obviously doing my degree. it is _ through the week i am obviously doing my degree. it is really- doing my degree. it is really stressful, _ doing my degree. it is really stressful, i— doing my degree. it is really stressful, i would _ doing my degree. it is really stressful, i would say. - doing my degree. it is really stressful, i would say.- doing my degree. it is really stressful, i would say. one of your main concerns _ stressful, i would say. one of your main concerns is _ stressful, i would say. one of your main concerns is the _ stressful, i would say. one of your main concerns is the amount - stressful, i would say. one of your main concerns is the amount of i stressful, i would say. one of your- main concerns is the amount of money or maintenance loan you spend almost entirely on accommodation. timer;r entirely on accommodation. they
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share my maintenance _ entirely on accommodation. they share my maintenance loan doesn't cover— share my maintenance loan doesn't cover student housing. i had to pay my first _ cover student housing. i had to pay my first chunk of rent myself, which is about— my first chunk of rent myself, which is about £1500 for a house i wasn't living _ is about £1500 for a house i wasn't living irr— is about £1500 for a house i wasn't living in yet — is about £1500 for a house i wasn't living in yet. when i moved in i realised — living in yet. when i moved in i realised there was a lot of maintenance issues that needed to be fixed, _ maintenance issues that needed to be fixed, a _ maintenance issues that needed to be fixed, a lot— maintenance issues that needed to be fixed, a lot of issues with cleanliness. forthe fixed, a lot of issues with cleanliness. for the amount of money i am paying _ cleanliness. for the amount of money i am paying to live here, the standard _ i am paying to live here, the standard of living isn't up to what i would _ standard of living isn't up to what i would expect. we standard of living isn't up to what i would expect.— standard of living isn't up to what i would expect. we won't talk about the mattress _ i would expect. we won't talk about the mattress. without _ i would expect. we won't talk about the mattress. without support i i would expect. we won't talk about the mattress. without support from parents students are saying it would not be possible. louise is trying to engage students so they have a conversation about financial concerns before it is too late. it is important to do that up front. we have worked — is important to do that up front. we have worked with _ is important to do that up front. we have worked with students - is important to do that up front. we have worked with students and i is important to do that up front. we have worked with students and the i have worked with students and the students _ have worked with students and the students union _ have worked with students and the students union on _ have worked with students and the students union on communicationl students union on communication campaigns. — students union on communication campaigns, financial— students union on communication campaigns, financial support- students union on communication campaigns, financial support up. campaigns, financial support up front— campaigns, financial support up front trut— campaigns, financial support up front but also _ campaigns, financial support up front but also more _ campaigns, financial support up front but also more flexible i front but also more flexible opportunity— front but also more flexible opportunity so _ front but also more flexible opportunity so students i front but also more flexible i opportunity so students can gain experience — opportunity so students can gain experience without _ opportunity so students can gain
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experience without having - opportunity so students can gain experience without having to i opportunity so students can gainl experience without having to take long. _ experience without having to take long. extended— experience without having to take long, extended period _ experience without having to take long, extended period away. i experience without having to take long, extended period away. to l experience without having to take long, extended period away. to what extent do you — long, extended period away. to what extent do you think— long, extended period away. to what extent do you think financial - extent do you think financial worries are having an impact on how they are studying, how they are learning? this is supposed to be a time of life for free thinking. for us it is about _ time of life for free thinking. for us it is about ensuring we can focus on financial— us it is about ensuring we can focus on financial well—being, _ us it is about ensuring we can focus on financial well—being, ensuring i on financial well— being, ensuring students — on financial well—being, ensuring students understand _ on financial well—being, ensuring students understand about - on financial well—being, ensuring students understand about how. on financial well—being, ensuring i students understand about how to trudget, _ students understand about how to trudget, had — students understand about how to trudget, had to _ students understand about how to budget, had to make _ students understand about how to budget, had to make the - students understand about how to budget, had to make the money. students understand about how toi budget, had to make the money go further, _ budget, had to make the money go further, supporting _ budget, had to make the money go further, supporting with _ budget, had to make the money go further, supporting with extra i budget, had to make the money go further, supporting with extra work�* further, supporting with extra work if they— further, supporting with extra work if they need — further, supporting with extra work if they need it _ further, supporting with extra work if they need it and _ further, supporting with extra work if they need it and really _ further, supporting with extra work if they need it and really being i if they need it and really being supportive _ if they need it and really being supportive through— if they need it and really being supportive through it. - if they need it and really being supportive through it. we i if they need it and really beingl supportive through it. we know if they need it and really being i supportive through it. we know it is difficult _ supportive through it. we know it is difficult. ., ., difficult. having the conversation before it is _ difficult. having the conversation before it is too _ difficult. having the conversation before it is too late. _ difficult. having the conversation before it is too late. most - before it is too late. most universities will have a bursary available if you find yourself in dire straits as a student. the concern is going forward things will get more difficult. i know you had the report from vanessa talking about how universities are in a lot of debt and they had to increase fees in order to keep their heads above water. at the moment loans are not keeping pace with inflation and
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thatis not keeping pace with inflation and that is having an impact on young people. people from poorer socioeconomic backgrounds deciding not to do it, which is not the way further education as supposed to look. ., , ., . ., look. no, it is a challenging time. you proved _ look. no, it is a challenging time. you proved me — look. no, it is a challenging time. you proved me wrong, _ look. no, it is a challenging time. you proved me wrong, everyone l look. no, it is a challenging time. | you proved me wrong, everyone is look. no, it is a challenging time. i you proved me wrong, everyone is up bright and early. good to see. if you are going to face 50 grand object you would be turning up early, wouldn't you?— object you would be turning up early, wouldn't you? thank you very much indeed- _ anyone who has been intrigued by their own family history will love this one. a woman from buckinghamshire has thanked ant and dec after she was reunited with her four siblings in australia following a dna test. after searching for more than 30 years, tina duggan had nearly given up hope of finding her half brothers and sisters but was inspired to keep searching, after watching the duo trace their own genealogies for a tv programme. and thanks to the power of social
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media, tina was finally able to make the 10,000 mile trip to australia. katharine de costa takes up the story. a nervous wait for older sister janette at melbourne airport. tina, the youngest of six siblings, is about to meet her family for the first time. i've only been waiting 47 years! that's ok, all right. 0k? yeah. yeah? oh, i've got a sister. the three sisters and two brothers share the same father but didn't know about each other growing up. abc news captured their emotional reunion. you've made my day, like... day? my birthday, my birthday. you could not have given me anything else in the world than what i have here. i've been searching since i was 14 to find you and from a piece of paper thatjust had, not evenjanette, it had julie on it. i've dreamt about you, i've dreamt about this moment for such a long time, that to have it come true is unreal.
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it's fantastic, she's real, i touched her and we all had a big sibling hug, which is like mental. tina lived with her mum in the uk. she was told she had three siblings in australia but without the internet back then, her search was fruitless. none of us knew. my dad didn't know. years later, it was ant and dec�*s dna journey that inspired tina to continue her search. she took a dna test and waited. but it wasn't until 2020, during the pandemic, that she was contacted by a fourth sibling, lateesha. and it turned out that lateesha's mum was alive and i'm the only one with one photograph of our father so i shared it and her mum confirmed it was the same man. plus, our dna is, you know, half exactly the same. so, um, we're sisters. so at that point i told her that there were more of us.
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there were three more and they all lived in australia. six weeks later, lateesha had tracked down their three other siblings via social media, but it's taken a further four years to get sean, tina, lateesha, janette and malcolm together face to face. i have felt very alone in the uk because i am on my own there and now i've got all of these people, that loneliness has gone. i'm not lonely, ijust felt alone that i didn't have my people and now i have my people. you do, you have everybody. you've got so many more thanjust us. tina is spending the next few days meeting 47 members of her family in melbourne, brisbane and perth. but it's not the end of the journey. tina still hopes to find an aunt and uncle in the bristol area, who may hold the key to finding a sixth sibling in america. katharine de costa, bbc news.
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there might be a sequel to that story. last week, coronation street viewers watched as paul foreman s emotionaljourney facing the challenges that come with living with motor neurone disease came to an end. his character died on the programme. now, the programme is tackling another tough subject and raising awareness of what it is like living with a stoma. in a new storyline, lucy fallon 5 character bethany platt contracts sepsis as a result of botched cosmetic surgery abroad, leaving her with a permanent stoma. we're joined now by gill castle, who had to have a colostomy after suffering a fourth—degree tear during the birth of her son in 2011.
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yes. lovely to see you. what do you think of the — yes. lovely to see you. what do you think of the fact _ yes. lovely to see you. what do you think of the fact that _ yes. lovely to see you. what do you think of the fact that corrie - yes. lovely to see you. what do you think of the fact that corrie is i think of the fact that corrie is turning its attention to stoners? reaction on social media has gone bin. coronation street is huge. audience figures are massive. colostomy uk has done an excellent job in getting involved with the storyline. job in getting involved with the sto line. ., ., ., , storyline. how can a soap opera help --eole storyline. how can a soap opera help people living — storyline. how can a soap opera help people living with — storyline. how can a soap opera help people living with this _ storyline. how can a soap opera help people living with this in _ storyline. how can a soap opera help people living with this in their- storyline. how can a soap opera help people living with this in their own i people living with this in their own reality? people living with this in their own reali ? , ., , , reality? the first thing it does is normalise it _ reality? the first thing it does is normalise it straightaway. i reality? the first thing it does is normalise it straightaway. we . reality? the first thing it does is i normalise it straightaway. we don't want it something to be ashamed of, a stigma, you want to see it on national television as part of a storyline. it enables people may be living at home with a stoma to maybe
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contact friends and family about it if they are struggling with it. it takes a bit of mystery away from having a stoma.— takes a bit of mystery away from having a stoma. there are so many different reasons _ having a stoma. there are so many different reasons for _ having a stoma. there are so many different reasons for having - having a stoma. there are so many different reasons for having a i different reasons for having a stoma. we talked about an incident during birth. we talked about adele robertson had incident with bowel cancer. bethany platt and her story is about cosmetic surgery going wrong. i is about cosmetic surgery going wronu. ~ ., ., ., , is about cosmetic surgery going wronu. ~ ., ., wrong. i know a lady whose bowel erforated wrong. i know a lady whose bowel perforated on _ wrong. i know a lady whose bowel perforated on the _ wrong. i know a lady whose bowel perforated on the fast _ wrong. i know a lady whose bowel perforated on the fast lane - wrong. i know a lady whose bowel perforated on the fast lane of i wrong. i know a lady whose bowel perforated on the fast lane of the | perforated on the fast lane of the m4. these kind of things happen to people and they end up with eight stoma as a result. i don't know how much she must have had a bowel perky —— perforation. people have car accidents. colostomy uk had done research to show every 39 minutes in
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the uk someone has stoma surgery. i am more surprised that people do not know someone with a stoma. it is very common. know someone with a stoma. it is very common-— very common. what do you hope chances? very common. what do you hope changes? what _ very common. what do you hope changes? what is _ very common. what do you hope changes? what is the _ very common. what do you hope changes? what is the one i very common. what do you hope l changes? what is the one practical difference that would really help? removing loneliness is the most important thing of all when you go through this. it won't necessarily make your problems disappear because when you have a stoma it is not like a magic wand. for example this morning i had to think about what to eat when i came on the sofa. there are adjustments you had to continue to make. knowing someone living with something like you are living with, thatis something like you are living with, that is a big boost to your personal health. ~ , ., , . ., that is a big boost to your personal health. ~ , ., . ., .«r , health. why loneliness? what makes eo - le health. why loneliness? what makes people lonely — health. why loneliness? what makes people lonely when _ health. why loneliness? what makes people lonely when going _ health. why loneliness? what makes people lonely when going through i people lonely when going through this process? it is people lonely when going through this process?— people lonely when going through this rocess? , , ., , this process? it is something people don't want to — this process? it is something people don't want to talk _ this process? it is something people don't want to talk about. _ this process? it is something people don't want to talk about. you - this process? it is something people don't want to talk about. you are i don't want to talk about. you are
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talking about bowel movements. he wants to talk about bowel movements? here i am talking about bowel movements. it is not something the british do, is it? this is the reality that so many others worldwide are living with. it is really important for human nature to be part of the community. if you don't feel part of your community because you have a stoma it has such an enormous impact on mental health and well—being. you an enormous impact on mental health and well-being— and well-being. you have been very much a part — and well-being. you have been very much a part of— and well-being. you have been very much a part of that _ and well-being. you have been very much a part of that community i and well-being. you have been very much a part of that community and | much a part of that community and trying to forge links. we saw you this time last year swimming across the channel, the first person with a stoma to achieve that. he wanted to show what is possible. these pictures celebrating on the beach when you've finished. that was a year ago. we noticed on your arm as you came this morning that you have an update. what would you like to show us? l
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an update. what would you like to show us? . , ., ., ., an update. what would you like to show us? . , ., ., show us? i have my tattoo. i have not a show us? i have my tattoo. i have got a tattoo _ show us? i have my tattoo. i have got a tattoo with _ show us? i have my tattoo. i have got a tattoo with a _ show us? i have my tattoo. i have got a tattoo with a stoma - show us? i have my tattoo. i have got a tattoo with a stoma bag - show us? i have my tattoo. i have got a tattoo with a stoma bag and| got a tattoo with a stoma bag and the date of the swim as well. bring it on. ., the date of the swim as well. bring iton. . , ., ., it on. that says it all that you want to be — it on. that says it all that you want to be out _ it on. that says it all that you want to be out there. - it on. that says it all that you want to be out there. your. it on. that says it all that you | want to be out there. your life isn't over _ want to be out there. your life isn't over when _ want to be out there. your life isn't over when you _ want to be out there. your life isn't over when you have - want to be out there. your life isn't over when you have a - want to be out there. your life i isn't over when you have a temp stoma. —— stoma. you can still get out there and enjoy your life. i hope this is brought into coronation street as well but they show these adaptations butjust embracing it, really. adaptations but 'ust embracing it, reall . , ., adaptations but 'ust embracing it, reall. , ., ., adaptations but 'ust embracing it, reall. , ., adaptations but 'ust embracing it, reall. ., ., , adaptations but 'ust embracing it, reall. ., ., really. great to see you, lovely to see ou. really. great to see you, lovely to see you- thank— really. great to see you, lovely to see you. thank you _ really. great to see you, lovely to see you. thank you for _ really. great to see you, lovely to see you. thank you for coming i really. great to see you, lovely toj see you. thank you for coming in. here's matt with the weather. another cheery forecast across most of the uk. this is the scene outside wolverhampton. it will be a scene for many. a bit of cloud in the sky,
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dry and sunny for the vast majority. the picture across europe shows that the focus for the heavy rainfall will shift towards italy. areas like bologna and rimini will be badly affected. we have seen around the edge of it overnight and this morning northern ireland, the north west of scotland a lot of cloud. that was then and break through the day. cloud across east anglia and the south—east. early next and fog will disappear. try and very sunny for the vast majority. well man as well with temperatures up to 23. 22 in the west of northern ireland. into tonight, the cloud in northern scotland continues to then and break. more extensive mist and low cloud through parts of wales, central and eastern england keeping things not as cold as the nightjust gone but it will be chili further north with clear skies. as he mist
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and fog patches vertically across central scotland. that will take till mid morning to clear. whether this misty low cloud across england and wales got most of it will be gone by the afternoon with a little bit lingering around the coast. if anything tomorrow will be warmer still, 2a, anything tomorrow will be warmer still, 24, 25 anything tomorrow will be warmer still, 2a, 25 in parts of northern scotland and north—east england. properly warm. thank you. a loggerhead turtle, who was found washed up on a cumbria beach, has been nursed back to health and released back into the wild. it was back in february when nazare was spotted covered in algae, cuts and barely alive. but following a successful rehabilitation programme, she's ready for another chance at life. our reporterjayne mccubbin has been following herjourney. her name is nazare and she is incredibly lucky to be alive. back in february, the loggerhead turtle was discovered by a dog walker after being washed up on the cumbrian coast.
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she was cold and weak and far from the warm waters which should have been home. a team from blackpool sea life centre were called to action. so she was motionless. she was just about making some movements with her eyes, and she was completely covered all over her shell in algaes and seaweeds, like she'd been floating around in the sea for some time. herjourney had taken herfar off track into the cold, stormy waters of the irish sea. her rescuers knew this because of a satellite tracking device found on her back. that revealed nazare�*s habit of getting lost...and being found. which was amazing because we found out that she was released from the coast of france, from la rochelle aquarium, where she'd been rehabilitated injune in 2023. so it wasn't the first time she'd been in a facility like ours. and the tag stopped beeping around december time, just off the coast of ireland. and that means she probably got stuck in the storms then and disappeared. so she'd had a bit of a rough couple of months, we reckon,
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from the condition of her. those months had taken their toll. staff removed algae with a toothbrush. by right, she should have died, but her dehydration and pneumonia were treated over three weeks of 24—hour care. when she was eventually ready to fend for herself, to scarborough sealife centre. the warm blue waters of the azores. and almost 2,500 miles from the irish sea, she was released. and it was simply incredible. she kind of went into the water, kind of had a little bit of a look around, and before you know it, she rocketed off into the, you know, the vast blue that you could see kind of before you. we didn't really get a chance to say goodbye, it was that quick. and it was just brilliant in the sense that it was
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the culmination of lots of different teams coming together to allow this turtle to go back to the wild, and that's what it's all about for us. it's about giving something back and giving an animal a second chance. the team hope this is the last time she ever experiences the skills and tlc of european aquariums. jayne mccubbin, bbc news. isn't that gorgeous to see? we'rejoined by todd german, a curator at sea life scarborough who helped with nazare�*s rehabilitation. morning. what an incredible glow up? transformation. when you first saw the condition she was then, did you expect she would survive? ho. the condition she was then, did you expect she would survive?- expect she would survive? no. the team at blackpool, _ expect she would survive? no. the team at blackpool, when _ expect she would survive? no. the team at blackpool, when they - expect she would survive? no. the l team at blackpool, when they picked her up, i was sent some pictures and it was unreal, really. the only movement she was making were eye twitches. it took about an hour to get her from the beach over to blackpool and it was days, weeks of workjust blackpool and it was days, weeks of work just to blackpool and it was days, weeks of workjust to get
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blackpool and it was days, weeks of work just to get to the blackpool and it was days, weeks of workjust to get to the point blackpool and it was days, weeks of work just to get to the point where she was reanimated and showing real signs of life. they were such a dedicated team can care. everything they could do for that title they did. that release was the result of all of that hard work. it did. that release was the result of all of that hard work.— all of that hard work. it was so important _ all of that hard work. it was so important here _ all of that hard work. it was so important here to _ all of that hard work. it was so important here to take - all of that hard work. it was so important here to take such i all of that hard work. it was so i important here to take such good care of her and bring her back health. , ., care of her and bring her back health. , . . ., , _, care of her and bring her back health. , . . ., , ., ., health. the small changes you had to make so she — health. the small changes you had to make so she was _ health. the small changes you had to make so she was being _ health. the small changes you had to make so she was being slowly - health. the small changes you had to | make so she was being slowly warmed up make so she was being slowly warmed up every day. her body had shut down. she was drifting in the irish sea for months. we had a good idea of the back story. to make her way in the irish sea, float around and have that long road to recovery a second time around, she is one lucky animal. , , ,, ., , animal. definitely. she was dehydrated _ animal. definitely. she was dehydrated and _ animal. definitely. she was dehydrated and some - animal. definitely. she was dehydrated and some type| animal. definitely. she was. dehydrated and some type of infection as well? she dehydrated and some type of infection as well? ,, ,
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infection as well? she needed x-rays to show she — infection as well? she needed x-rays to show she had _ infection as well? she needed x-rays to show she had pneumonia. - infection as well? she needed x-rays to show she had pneumonia. she - infection as well? she needed x-raysl to show she had pneumonia. she went straight on antibiotics. rehydration was a lengthy process as well. the latter pair from specialist bats and animal care teams in blackpool. —— specialist vets. lots of learning. it was all about kind of doing the best we can buy those animals. we were reaching out to anybody and everybody to try to get the knowledge to give her the best chance. ., ., ., ~ chance. the total hotline. are we seeinu chance. the total hotline. are we seeing more _ chance. the total hotline. are we seeing more titles _ chance. the total hotline. are we seeing more titles getting - chance. the total hotline. are we seeing more titles getting into i seeing more titles getting into distress or are we getting better finding them? == distress or are we getting better finding them?— distress or are we getting better findin: them? , ., finding them? -- turtles. there are more frequent _ finding them? -- turtles. there are more frequent storms _ finding them? -- turtles. there are more frequent storms and - finding them? -- turtles. there are more frequent storms and that i finding them? -- turtles. there are i more frequent storms and that seems to be key as to why we are seeing more. british divers do a fantastic job. there are a network of
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volunteers across the uk attending different creatures. that means they are being found casino with people who know what they are doing. nazare has been released _ who know what they are doing. nazare has been released back _ who know what they are doing. nazare has been released back into _ who know what they are doing. nazare has been released back into the i who know what they are doing. nazare has been released back into the warm | has been released back into the warm waters in the azores. great technique, the diving. is waters in the azores. great technique, the diving. is the azores are the best — technique, the diving. is the azores are the best place, _ technique, the diving. is the azores are the best place, exactly - technique, the diving. is the azores are the best place, exactly where l are the best place, exactly where she needs to be to give her the best chance we can. i like to hope we will never see her again. she may come ashore when she wants to lay some eggs and hopefully bring about the next generation of loggerhead turtles. ., �* ., ., turtles. you didn't get to say a ro er turtles. you didn't get to say a proper goodbye- _ turtles. you didn't get to say a proper goodbye. she - turtles. you didn't get to say a proper goodbye. she rocketed| turtles. you didn't get to say a i proper goodbye. she rocketed off. she was gone _ proper goodbye. she rocketed off. she was gone she _ proper goodbye. she rocketed off. she was gone she disappeared. i l proper goodbye. she rocketed off. i she was gone she disappeared. i was quite dumbfounded at that time. it
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really was that name and of, that is aired, that is all i can do, the combination of so many teams hard work. that was it. i didn't know what to say. i looked across the bow and she had already disappeared. can ou and she had already disappeared. can you track her? we _ and she had already disappeared. can you track her? we didn't _ and she had already disappeared. can you track her? we didn't have - and she had already disappeared. can you track her? we didn't have a i you track her? we didn't have a satellite tracker _ you track her? we didn't have a satellite tracker this _ you track her? we didn't have a satellite tracker this time. i you track her? we didn't have a satellite tracker this time. the | satellite tracker this time. the university to amazing work, looking at the last years of these sea turtles. they have been satellite tagging a lot of them. they had done tagging a lot of them. they had done tagging in the weeks before. thea;r tagging in the weeks before. they ran out. tagging in the weeks before. they ran out- are _ tagging in the weeks before. they ran out. are you _ tagging in the weeks before. they ran out. are you missing her? i. tagging in the weeks before. they | ran out. are you missing her? i am tagging in the weeks before. they i ran out. are you missing her? i am a bit. she ran out. are you missing her? i am a bit- she is — ran out. are you missing her? i am a bit. she is with — ran out. are you missing her? i am a bit. she is with us _ ran out. are you missing her? i am a bit. she is with us for— ran out. are you missing her? i am a bit. she is with us for some - ran out. are you missing her? i am a bit. she is with us for some time i bit. she is with us for some time and they are such amazing creatures. yes, it is strange. i and they are such amazing creatures. yes, it is strange.— yes, it is strange. i suppose it is ossible yes, it is strange. i suppose it is possible she _ yes, it is strange. i suppose it is possible she might _ yes, it is strange. i suppose it is possible she might come - yes, it is strange. i suppose it is possible she might come back i yes, it is strange. i suppose it isj possible she might come back to yes, it is strange. i suppose it is i possible she might come back to find you. i possible she might come back to find ou. ., ., ., , , you. i am going with the optimism that she won't. _
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you. i am going with the optimism that she won't. lovely _ you. i am going with the optimism that she won't. lovely to - you. i am going with the optimism that she won't. lovely to meet i you. i am going with the optimism. that she won't. lovely to meet you. saviour of nazare. _ that she won't. lovely to meet you. saviour of nazare. thank _ that she won't. lovely to meet you. saviour of nazare. thank you i that she won't. lovely to meet you. saviour of nazare. thank you for i saviour of nazare. thank you for coming in. are you missing her? that is the best question. she might come back. stay with us, headlines coming up.
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live from london. this is bbc news. floods in central europe killed 18 and leave thousands of this i8 and leave thousands of this was not a man has been charged with the murders of does make people in that crossbow attack at their home in the uk. donald trump has praised the security team after agents for an apparent assassination attempt. the rapper sean combs has been arrested.
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hello, welcome to the programme. a desperate operation to shore up flood defences is taking place in poland, as catastrophic flooding threatens to engulf a city. the mayor of nysa has asked all lili,000 residents to leave — with the military now being drafted in. at least 16 people are now thought to have died in the flooding, caused by a powerful storm moving across central europe. thousands have been left homeless and yet more bad weather is forecast in some areas. slovakia and hungary are bracing for floodwater moving down the river danube and its tributaries. these are the latest pictures from nysa in poland where the river threatens to burst its banks. sarah rainsford reports, from the czech—polish border. in the flood zone of poland, there is an urgent call to evacuate. fears that a stretch of embankment could collapse after days battered by a river swollen by torrential rain. not farfrom here, a dam has burst.

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