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tv   Patrick Christys  GB News  September 14, 2023 3:00pm-6:01pm BST

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couple of italy in the last couple of days. and it comes as sir keir starmer, the leader of the labour party, potentially on ex prime minister , is looking to do prime minister, is looking to do a deal with the eu. how many people would that see us take as part of a quota system? some people say it could be 100,000. some people say it could be 180,000. we'll be delving into keir starmer's eu migrant deal very, very shortly. but look much closer to home. i've got an exclusive for you. it is absolutely unbelievable. i've been to ealing, a labour run council. for what it's worth , council. for what it's worth, where we've got brits and legal migrants being forced to live in shipping containers. but infestations, sex workers on the site as well. massive drug deaung site as well. massive drug dealing and drug abuse from people not on that site coming into it. it will absolutely blow the lid of this. i cannot believe that we've got people forced to live in conditions like this. where's the human rights lawyers for them? that's
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what i want to know. i'm also going to be discussing this story you own story as well. if you own a pet, apparently you could be doing on this more damage to the climate than if you owned a private jet. it's not as as it's not quite as simple as that, think we'll a that, but i think we'll have a laugh about it anyway. and i'll be one as well, be discussing this one as well, to certainly. to round us off. yes, certainly. nothing to be laughed at here. jeremy vine got knocked off his bike and there's a video of it. patrick christys . gb news loads patrick christys. gb news loads more on today as well, including i think by far and away the most outrageous is asylum seeker hotel situation that i've ever come across and that really is saying something. so all to play for today . gb views. a for today. gb views. a gbnews.com is that email address? how do you feel about keir starmer's eu migrant deal? what does that mean for you? vaiews@gbnews.com. but right now it's the headlines .
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now it's the headlines. >> good afternoon. it's 3:02. i'm rhiannon jones in the newsroom and we start with some breaking news in the last few minutes . west yorkshire police minutes. west yorkshire police have confirmed an email threatening violence to children and staff have been sent to a number of schools in leeds. the force says an investigation has been launched and officers are providing assurance to schools . providing assurance to schools. it comes after malicious emails were sent to a number of schools in the north—west earlier this week. and we'll bring you more on that story as we get it. week. and we'll bring you more on that story as we get it . the on that story as we get it. the personal details of greater manchester police officers have been hacked in a cyber attack. details like identity badges and warrant cards, including names and photos, are thought to have been stolen . the force says it's been stolen. the force says it's aware of the ransomware attack and are treating it very seriously. it's not believed at this stage that the data breach
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includes financial information . includes financial information. we'll bring you more on that. developing story as we get it as well . around 1 in 7 brits are well. around 1 in 7 brits are waiting for routine treatment from the nhs. new figures show 7.68 million people are currently on the list . there's currently on the list. there's also been a rise in longer waits of a year or more earlier , the of a year or more earlier, the government announced the nhs will receive £200 million to help the service over the winter. but labour says the monies are sticking. plaster the prime minister says the government is trying to improve waiting times . waiting times. >> well winter is always a challenging time for the nhs and this year we've started planning for winter earlier than ever before. today we're announcing £200 million, which will go to the nhs to help build extra capacity and resilience for this winter season , making sure that winter season, making sure that patients can get the care that they need. earlier this year , we they need. earlier this year, we also announced the long term workforce , making sure that workforce plan, making sure that
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for the first time we train more doctors and nurses dentists doctors and nurses and dentists here in the uk, but also the work we're doing to improve nhs performance , which the results performance, which the results today is delivering for today show is delivering for patients big improvements patients with big improvements in ambulance times and a&e times since the winter . since the winter. >> sir keir starmer says he will seek an eu wide returns agreement for those who cross the channel and come to the uk illegally . the labour leader illegally. the labour leader says the deal may involve a quid pro quo of accepting migrants from the bloc. sir keir and shadow home secretary yvette cooper met with the eu's policing body europol in the hague this morning. shadow cabinet minister nick thomas—symonds told gb news labour want to bring net migration down there are countries now where the government could be fast tracking people through the asylum system so that they can be deported. >> they can be doing that now instead , we have a backlog in instead, we have a backlog in the asylum system of over
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170,000 people that that is a lack of control . that's what lack of control. that's what this government is presiding oven this government is presiding over. and frankly, after 13 years, they ought to be sorting it out . it out. >> well, health secretary steve barclay, meanwhile , has accused barclay, meanwhile, has accused sir keir of giving up control. >> we're taking tougher action. we want to also, through our rwanda policy, have a very clear deterrent there. and that's before the courts. and what keir starmer again wants to do is give up control of immigration, sign up to quotas that are decided by the eu. and we the deterrent that rwanda would provide and alongside the return agreements that we put in place , three met police officers will face a misconduct hearing for their role in the strip search of child. >> q the incident took place at a school in hackney in december 2020. it's alleged the three officers didn't follow procedure and that they discriminated against child. q due to her race
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and gender, the met says the incident should never have happened. incident should never have happened . casualties could have happened. casualties could have been avoided in libya if the country had a functional weather service. that's the message from the head of the world meteorological organisation. at least 5300 people are known to have died after storm. daniel hit the coastal city of derna . hit the coastal city of derna. rescue operations have been complicated by political fractures in the country, which has experienced conflict for more than a decade. the uk government says it will provide an initial aid package worth up to £1 million. house prices declined in august at their fastest rate since 2009. that's according to the royal institution of chartered surveyors . it says a majority of surveyors. it says a majority of property professionals are reporting declines, largely due to high mortgage rates. new buyer enquiries also continue to fall. rents, meanwhile, continue to rise and the westminster dog
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of the year award has been presented to mims davis and her dog tj . thank you so much, everybody. >> and rosie duffield and her cavalier king charles spaniel paco has picked up the sir david amess poe public vote. >> it's in memory of the late conservative mp. sir david was a staunch advocate of the competition and a tireless campaigner for dog welfare . the campaigner for dog welfare. the this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car and digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news now it's back over to you, patrick, the cat's out of the bag, sir. >> sir keir starmer the man who could well be our next prime minister is looking to do a deal with eu on illegal migrants. with the eu on illegal migrants. this quota this could see us taking a quota of arriving in the of people arriving in the european he says that
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european union, he says that this may well open the door , if this may well open the door, if you'll excuse the pun, when it comes our borders, to comes to our borders, to a returns agreement with the eu on channel migrants. well, he also says that he dropped the rwanda plan, right? well now, this might mean that we see fewer people crossing the channel. i doubt it, by the way, but it would almost definitely mean taking more people over all the fatal flaw with labour's plan is that because the uk has such a high population largely due to mass immigration anyway, our quota from the eu would almost definitely be higher. so we could end up having to accept between 100,000 and about 182,000 people every single yeah 182,000 people every single year. reportedly now our already crowded little island would be packed to the rafters even more. just look at the latest from italy . and bear in mind that italy. and bear in mind that this may well all be coming our way . the island of lampedusa way. the island of lampedusa received around 8200, mostly african migrants, mostly young men in the last couple of days ,
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men in the last couple of days, 8000. these people arrived in something resembling an old fashioned armada. they were all gathered for processing and they kicked off. there was a fight between and the border between them and the border officials on top of officials. and then on top of all of that as well, we can see here some footage of one of those people washing their genitals in a public fountain, which it's isn't which is. oh, it's nice, isn't it? yeah okay. well, now we imagine about 180,000 people being picked up from lampedusa and other parts of europe and plonked in the uk. do you think that's okay? i certainly don't. now look, people might say, well , i let them work. really do a load of those people. look like highly skilled doctors. people who would be a net benefit to our country's economy. i'm not sure about that. now, where are they going to live? and this is they going to live? and this is the vital , important thing for the vital, important thing for me. where are they going to live? we do not have the housing, okay? we do not have the housing. and later on in this show, i'm doing an
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exclusive from ealing, which demonstrates it's just that the conditions that we are forcing british citizens and legal migrants to live in, it would also end up being another step towards rejoining the european union ever closer ties to europe. what evidence is there to say that this would actually stop the channel migrant crisis? we would end up quite possibly with the worst of both worlds . with the worst of both worlds. what this is, in my view , is what this is, in my view, is a capitulation from a man leading a party that i am convinced will eventually come out in favour of an amnesty on illegal migrants or something very much like it anyway , that does not anyway, that does not ideologically oppose open borders and would be quite happy to see us back in the european union . how on earth could labour union. how on earth could labour ever be trusted not to sell britain ? our culture, our way of britain? our culture, our way of life, our people , our society life, our people, our society completely down the river? what is happening in the channel right now is bad . the tories right now is bad. the tories haven't got a handle on it and it's a shocker, there's no doubt haven't got a handle on it and it's a �*that.ar, there's no doubt haven't got a handle on it and
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it's a �*that. but1ere's no doubt haven't got a handle on it and it's a �*that. but the's no doubt haven't got a handle on it and it's a �*that. but the solution|bt haven't got a handle on it and it's a �*that. but the solution is about that. but the solution is not some kind of quota system with the eu that will see vast swathes of the world know that they are guaranteed a place in britain if they make it to the eu illegally . what about the eu illegally. what about the people we already have here? if starmer goes ahead with this, i think it will be a gift to the tories. how could you vote for that. tories. how could you vote for that . that's what i think. tories. how could you vote for that. that's what i think. and look, like i said a little bit later on in this show, i've gone to ealing in west london and i've done an exclusive a shocker actually british citizens actually about british citizens and legal migrants being forced to live in conditions that frankly, will make your stomach turn and chill you to the core. we are telling them that they can only live there. what happens to people that are just coming across the continent, making to britain illegally? making it to britain illegally? where are the human rights making it to britain illegally? where afor:he human rights making it to britain illegally? where afor peopleian rights making it to britain illegally? where afor people that ghts making it to britain illegally? where afor people that we've brigade for people that we've already got here? that's what i want but views want to know. but gb views are gbnews.com. tuned for all
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gbnews.com. stay tuned for all of that. i'm joined now of that. but i'm joined now by gb editor of that. but i'm joined now by gb white. editor of that. but i'm joined now by gb white. mark, editor of that. but i'm joined now by gb white. mark, what'sditor of that. but i'm joined now by gb white. mark, what's going mark white. mark, what's going on italy? many people think , on in italy? many people think, well, come our way. it well, this will come our way. it all with starmer's eu all ties in with starmer's eu migrant deal, doesn't it? yeah >> as far as italy is concerned, we are seeing record numbers of illegal immigrants who are coming across and end to europe's southern borders. so of course italy , but also in greece course italy, but also in greece and also in spain. a lot of the spanish islands are on the canaries, seeing tens of thousands arriving in recent months. if we look at lampedusa, for instance , 8000 that have for instance, 8000 that have arrived on the island of lampedusa just in the past 48 hours. now, this is the entrance to the main harbour there and dozens of boats there coming . dozens of boats there coming. in, 160 boats. patrick have come in in the past 48 hours and still they're coming . and, of still they're coming. and, of course, what they're doing is trying to deal with them in the
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kind of the main holding areas. but there are tens well , but there are tens well, thousands of them in that area in boiling heat. so tempers have been run ing high and people have been trying to get out of these areas . and, of course, the these areas. and, of course, the island authorities are calling for help from the mainland as well. within time, of course, these people will be moved to greater centres of population in italy. but there's also another issue in an internal row that's broken out amongst some of the countries in the european union, germany and france are refusing to take additional migrants from italy, claiming that italy now, of course, with a right wing government, is not playing its part in the sort of internal processes and to accept the
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migrants that come into the southern borders, they're supposed to be distributed out fairly. the claim is that italy aren't taking them, despite the fact that they've just had 8000 arrivals in the last 48 hours. >> yeah, well, what germany claims is that they're then being and being funnelled north and germany, , he doesn't germany, that italy, he doesn't want to take them back. >> so germany is saying not >> so germany is saying it's not going more migrants >> so germany is saying it's not goingltaly more migrants >> so germany is saying it's not goingltaly at more migrants >> so germany is saying it's not goingltaly at the more migrants >> so germany is saying it's not goingltaly at the moment.grants >> so germany is saying it's not goingltaly at the moment. france from italy at the moment. france is also sending hundreds of additional police and troops to guard its borders with italy around the alpine regions. there so some real tensions within the european union as well . and if european union as well. and if keir starmer's plan does come to fruition, then we could be signing up to an agreement which will mean that we will have to take a quota off the total number of migrants coming to the european union. >> this is what's fascinating , >> this is what's fascinating, right? this is what's really interesting because as it's done about percentage population of europe as a continent, isn't about percentage population of europe as a continent , isn't it? europe as a continent, isn't it? and we, despite being geographic small, have a high population.
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ironically fuelled by mass migration of the legal variety, not just the illegal kind. and so that would mean what? well it would mean that we would have to take a proportion of those arriving in the european union . arriving in the european union. >> and the problem with that, patrick, is we have no way of knowing just how many people from one year to the next will actually end up in the european union. take italy. they have had so far this year. we end at the end of the year 124,000 thousand migrants that have crossed into italy that compares to 65,000 at this period last year. so a doubung this period last year. so a doubling of the number of migrants going into europe and they're also seeing very significant numbers. as i say, you know , leaving coming across you know, leaving coming across the med going to some of the spanish islands and the greek islands as well, not to mention those who come through the land borders into europe. so some
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real concern , concern at the real concern, concern at the record levels of migration coming into the european union, which will mean that all of the european union countries then have to take a proportion of a share of those numbers under the way in which the european union do we then have to process them here? >> i mean, this is the other thing i don't quite understand. so people just so those people who've just arrived in italy, they're right. do basically do we then just basically conceivably chunk of conceivably pick up a chunk of those bring them those people, bring them here and or not and then decide whether or not they're seekers refugees? >> whether it would >> i'm not sure whether it would be a system in which we would actually have to do the processing , whether they would actually have to do the processi be , whether they would actually have to do the processi be processedthey would actually have to do the processi be processed .|ey would actually have to do the processi be processed . guestuld actually have to do the processi be processed . guest i.d already be processed. guest i would imagine we would probably do the processing. we just take a quarter like we did in the past and we'd have to then assess asylum claims, but assess those asylum claims, but then we'd be up against the age old issue anyway , even if we old issue anyway, even if we denied them asylum , depending on denied them asylum, depending on the countries they've come from , there's no returns agreement. you can't return them. >> and look, mark, just before i let going, i'm going let you get going, i'm going to get some political reaction to
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this a second, way. this in a second, by the way. and also i want to tease ahead, this perfectly with an this ties in perfectly with an exclusive coming exclusive that i've got coming your just half your way just after the half hour on brits and hour mark, which is on brits and legal being forced to legal migrants being forced to live inhumane conditions. live in inhumane conditions. right. inhumane conditions being told that there's no housing for them. and you can imagine, can't you?i them. and you can imagine, can't you? i think some of the people that just seen arrive in that we've just seen arrive in italy, will not struggle that we've just seen arrive in itafind will not struggle that we've just seen arrive in itafind housing not struggle that we've just seen arrive in itafind housing in>t struggle that we've just seen arrive in itafind housing in this'uggle to find housing in this country miraculously. but you're away tonight, you ? you're on tonight, aren't you? you're on farage, you're out the farage, but you're out in the wild. >> w- w with them, that >> and yes, with them, that which is wild with them , which which is wild with them, which is the constituency home of the former home secretary priti patel, who will be a guest of nigel farage at large. this evening. and we will be talking it will be dominated by the issue of immigration and what that means in terms of community. liz in essex, because remember, of course, that the wethersfield base is in essex as well. so they know full well . well. so they know full well. >> yeah, absolutely. so that's
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going to be 7 pm. tonight, isn't it? make sure you keep your peeled for that. it your eyes peeled for that. it will be office. mark, thank will be box office. mark, thank you very much. mark wight there. our gb our home security said yes. gb news, political news, a senior political commentator, joins commentator, nigel nelson, joins me you for me now. nigel, thank you for this. if keir had just me now. nigel, thank you for this. hisieir had just me now. nigel, thank you for this. hisieir shut had just me now. nigel, thank you for this. hisieir shut about st me now. nigel, thank you for this. hisieir shut about his kept his mouth shut about his plans for immigration and the european union, he'd be home and hosed , wouldn't he? now he's hosed, wouldn't he? now he's open them. he's floated this. how could anyone vote for that ? how could anyone vote for that? >> well , larger how could anyone vote for that? >> well, larger was just being, being hugely misrepresented. >> first of all, we're not in the eu, therefore we won't be subject to whatever eu quotas come up year by year to what keir starmer is saying is there's a deal to be done with there's a deal to be done with the eu about returns . now, quite the eu about returns. now, quite clearly , if he was doing that clearly, if he was doing that deal now and he succeeded in getting europe to agree to take all 20,000 migrants who've crossed the channel so far this year , that deal wouldn't include year, that deal wouldn't include
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taking 100,000 migrants from the eu . eu. >> who would be nigel, nigel. nigel the eu aren't going to sign that deal. >> well mean the whole point is it is a negotiation and as it's how as it's a negotiation. how well did that work for us last time? >> is it negotiation? >> is it negotiation? >> ian well , >> is it negotiation? >> ian well, well, we didn't have to negotiate last time when we were in the eu . we had we were in the eu. we had returns agreements anyway , the returns agreements anyway, the point i'm making here, here is, is that you do you have to do a deal ? to do a deal means that deal? to do a deal means that europe has to get something out of it to it doesn't mean it has to be a bad deal. it doesn't mean taking 100,000 migrants from europe or 180,000 or whatever other figure the tories abandoning about what it means is sorting out how you can do the returns. now, you're quite right . if the eu says no , no, we right. if the eu says no, no, we insist you take the full quota that we give to other countries, we're going to say no and no deal will be done .
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deal will be done. >> right. so you're absolutely certain about that, really, are you that keir starmer will not do it? i mean, what's the point of all of this then, if keir starmer is to going come out and say sorry? well, i wanted to do a but can't because say sorry? well, i wanted to do a not it can't because say sorry? well, i wanted to do a not in can't because say sorry? well, i wanted to do a not in the|'t because say sorry? well, i wanted to do a not in the eu,ecause say sorry? well, i wanted to do a not in the eu, then e we're not in the eu, then there's no point even talking about it, is there? >> it's not a question about >> no, it's not a question about not being in the eu. it's a question about doing the question about doing doing the deal question about doing doing the deal. what saying is deal. and so what he's saying is that involve take taking that it will involve take taking some migrants from the eu, some migrants doesn't mean 100,000, doesn't mean 180,000. why would the eu, nigel, why would the eu let us as a nation? >> that's voted to leave the european union, take fewer than what our quota would be if we were still in the european union? because that would be a signal to every single other eu member to leave. and you can take fewer illegal migrants . so take fewer illegal migrants. so that's not going to happen, is it well, mean, there's an >> well, i mean, there's an argument going on in eastern europe that very thing europe about that very thing that poland is holding a referendum hungary referendum on this plan. hungary is against it. so there's a lot of problems within the eu
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itself. point is we are not itself. the point is we are not in the eu under a labour government. we will not be rejoining the eu as a result of that, we can do some kind of agreement with them to get to get returns that works for both sides. that doesn't mean taking in excess of migrants in this country, but it will mean we have to give europe something . have to give europe something. so the question is when keir starmer becomes prime minister and that is the negotiation he will have with his european counterparts , do you not think counterparts, do you not think that it should be deeply concerning to anybody who voted for brexit to see a labour leader, potentially a future prime minister who was absolutely adamant at one stage that we had to rejoin the european union going back to european union going back to europe now, talking to them about a migrants deal that may well, as indeed anyone with eyes and ears suspects mean that we will end up taking more people than right now. will end up taking more people tha whilst right now. will end up taking more people tha whilst almostiht now. will end up taking more people tha whilst almost simultaneously >> whilst almost simultaneously saying going to remove the saying he's going to remove the threat do not threat of rwanda. do you not think concern people? >> well, mean, people might be
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>> well, i mean, people might be concerned about it, but mean, >> well, i mean, people might be conc> well, i mean, people might be conc> well, i mean, people might be conc> well, i mean, people might be conc> well, i mean, people might be conc> well, i mean, people might be conc> point about having >> the whole point about having having to these databases
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having access to these databases is that will that will then supply information to the national crime agency unit that keir starmer wants to set up to actually to tackle the smuggling gangs. the fact that our government haven't done it yet is the fault, is the fault of the tories , not the fault of the tories, not the fault of laboun >> all right, nigel, thank you very, very much. and i do appreciate your valiant attempt to slap the other side of this particular argument up. much appreciated as ever. nigel nelson gb news, senior political commentator and actually a very, very guy now talk to very nice guy, now will talk to you this story again you about this story again a little in the show. little later in the show. but you right now you get more on this right now on website, gbnews.com. it's on our website, gbnews.com. it's the national on our website, gbnews.com. it's the site national on our website, gbnews.com. it's the site in national on our website, gbnews.com. it's the site in the national on our website, gbnews.com. it's the site in the country.nal on our website, gbnews.com. it's the site in the country. it's news site in the country. it's got the best analysis, big opinion the latest opinion and all of the latest breaking wait breaking news. and i can't wait to hear what nigel farage thinks about plan well. about keir starmer plan as well. farage evening farage at large this evening comes live from the essex town of and special guest of witham, and the special guest will local mp, former will be the local mp, former home dame priti home secretary. dame priti patel. set your alarms. that's 7 pm. tonight on gb news. now, p.m. tonight on gb news. now, the father of a ten year old girl who was found dead last month has been arrested on
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suspicion flying month has been arrested on suspito n flying month has been arrested on suspito the flying month has been arrested on suspito the from flying month has been arrested on suspito the from pakistan.g back to the uk from pakistan. i'm christys on gb news. i'm patrick christys on gb news. we are, of course,
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mornings from 930 on gb news as . yes. >> welcome back. look, a couple of major, major topics in town today. we've got keir starmer on a tour of the european union, essentially trying to drum up support for some kind of eu migrant deal that comes off the back, of course, of what we're
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seeing the moment, seeing in italy at the moment, which 8000 arrivals of mostly seeing in italy at the moment, which men 00 arrivals of mostly seeing in italy at the moment, which men , 0 arrivals of mostly seeing in italy at the moment, which men , mostlyils of mostly seeing in italy at the moment, which men , mostly from mostly seeing in italy at the moment, which men , mostly from africa! seeing in italy at the moment, which men , mostly from africa in young men, mostly from africa in the last two alone . i was the last two days alone. i was asking you whether or not you could vote for party that could vote for a party that decided to take a quota system with the european union. okay. so the eu are not going to accept anything that doesn't advantage so wave advantage them so we can wave goodbye to idea that goodbye to the idea that it's going be massively beneficial goodbye to the idea that it's goi us. be massively beneficial goodbye to the idea that it's goi us. in)e massively beneficial goodbye to the idea that it's goi us. in my1assively beneficial goodbye to the idea that it's goi us. in my view,ely beneficial goodbye to the idea that it's goi us. in my view, i.y beneficial goodbye to the idea that it's goi us. in my view, i was neficial goodbye to the idea that it's goi us. in my view, i was just:ial for us. in my view, i was just wondering whether or not you thought a party thought it was okay for a party to try to say, look, we will accept 100,000, 180,000 people here for processing. where are they going to live, especially when it comes to the fact that we already have brits here living in abominable conditions , as i will show you very, very shortly. but i'm just going to go to the inbox, absolute go to the inbox, tony. absolute sums tony says if sums it up. okay. tony says if homeless brits are putting converted shipping containers to live , why can we not have these live, why can we not have these shipping containers remote shipping containers on remote scottish islands, for example? for people are awaiting for some people who are awaiting deportation? interesting. deportation? yeah interesting. okay there's loads of this coming in as well. and yeah,
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loads of people getting in touch about all of that. i'm going to give you a little tease what give you a little tease of what i've way after give you a little tease of what i've headlines. way after give you a little tease of what i've headlines. right? way after give you a little tease of what i've headlines. right? sor after give you a little tease of what i've headlines. right? so iafter give you a little tease of what i've headlines. right? so i went the headlines. right? so i went to ealing, okay. and i was given a tip off about some converted shipping containers which aren't being used to house people, often with several children, often with several children, often in desperate , desperate often in desperate, desperate need. so let's say that they are fleeing domestic abuse or their flat is burnt down, right? they are a combination of brits and legal migrants. are a combination of brits and legal migrants . okay. and they legal migrants. okay. and they are being forced to live in conditions as i will go on to show you with cockroach infestation is damp. no no hot running water. people forced to use buckets in order to wash themselves . absolutely no safety themselves. absolutely no safety whatsoever. no smoke alarms . whatsoever. no smoke alarms. okay. no fire escapes . there is okay. no fire escapes. there is also a proportion of people living on that site who are drug dealers . so there's crime. dealers. so there's crime. there's no cctv . the a lady was
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there's no cctv. the a lady was pushed or fell off one of the tops of one of the shipping containers in the last few weeks . she was given emergency cpr by paramedics . . she was given emergency cpr by paramedics. children are seeing all of this. okay children are seeing all of this. they're being forced to live in these conditions . the local council, conditions. the local council, from what they tell me, the locals there aren't doing anything to try to help . it's anything to try to help. it's absolutely staggering . what i am absolutely staggering. what i am going to show you in the testimony of people who live there, what i'm going to show you in the next couple of minutes will make the mind boggle and just counter that. where are the human rights bngade where are the human rights brigade for these people? where are our virtue signalling mps? where are the virtue signalling councillors? the outrage councillors? where's the outrage that we've got people in this country living like country already living like that? what? they are that? and guess what? they are told are on band c for told that they are on band c for the housing waiting list. i want to know who's on band a and who's on bambi . i've got my who's on bambi. i've got my suspicions. i don't know about you, but right now i'm going to
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whizz you over for your headunes whizz you over for your headlines with brianna . good afternoon. >> it's 331. i'm rhiannon jones in the newsroom . and we start in the newsroom. and we start with that breaking news story that an email threatened violence to children and staff has been sent to a number of schools in leeds. west yorkshire police has confirmed an investigation has been launched and officers are providing reassurance to schools. and we'll bring you more on that as we'll bring you more on that as we get it . the personal details we get it. the personal details of officers at greater manchester police have been hacked in a cyber attack . hacked in a cyber attack. details like identity badges and warrant cards, including names and photos, are thought to have been stolen. the force says it's treating the ransomware attack as serious . around 1 in 7 brits as serious. around 1 in 7 brits are waiting for routine treatment from the nhs . new
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treatment from the nhs. new figures show 7.68 million people are currently on the list . are currently on the list. earlier, the government announced the nhs will receive £200 million to help the service in the coming winter. £200 million to help the service in the coming winter . but labour in the coming winter. but labour says the money is a sticking plaster and you can get more on all of those stories by visiting our website at gb news.com . our website at gb news.com. >> direct bullion sponsors the finance report on gb news for gold and silver investment . gold and silver investment. >> here's a quick snapshot of today's markets . the pound will today's markets. the pound will buy you $1.2409 and ,1.1638. the price of gold is . £1,532.67 per price of gold is. £1,532.67 per ounce. and the ftse 100 is at 7644 points. direct bullion sponsoi's. >> sponsors. >> the finance report on gb news
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for gold and silver investment looks like things are heating up. >> both boilers proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. of weather on. gb news. >> hello again . as we head >> hello again. as we head through the end of the week, we are going to see the weather front. that's currently across the still lingering whilst by the uk still lingering whilst by the uk still lingering whilst by the some warm, humid air the weekend some warm, humid air bnngs the weekend some warm, humid air brings of thunderstorms brings the risk of thunderstorms . looking at the picture at the moment can that moment you can see that front that mentioned and it's that i mentioned and it's bringing cloud and rain across parts central england parts of central england and wales moment . parts of central england and wales moment. it is wales at the moment. it is gradually to start to push gradually going to start to push its northwards as we go its way northwards as we go through and through this evening and overnight. so by the early hours of wet of friday morning, quite a wet picture across parts of northern england, scotland and england, southern scotland and northern ireland. the low pressure that's brought some windy weather scotland pressure that's brought some windy w isther scotland pressure that's brought some windy w is clearing cotland pressure that's brought some windy w is clearing northwards recently is clearing northwards , but staying windy orkney , but staying windy for orkney and . and temperatures and shetland. and temperatures will drop little bit lower will drop a little bit lower than last night for than they did last night for a few . low single few places. low single figures perhaps scotland and some perhaps in scotland and some single in the south. so single figures in the south. so a wet picture across southern scotland, northern england and
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northern ireland first thing on friday that friday morning. and that front doesn't anywhere, doesn't really go anywhere, particularly fast. as result, particularly fast. as a result, we some rainfall we could see some rainfall totals building particularly totals building up, particularly across parts of southern scotland . towards the north, scotland. towards the north, there will be showers there will be a few showers around. meanwhile, across central england and central southern england and wales, fine sunny wales, lots of fine sunny weather to be had and temperatures touch than temperatures a touch higher than today into the mid today likely to get into the mid 20s we go into saturday. and 20s as we go into saturday. and you can see that front really hasn't much progress. so hasn't made much progress. so still rain building still some further rain building up, particularly across parts of southern and notice as southern scotland. and notice as well, to see well, already starting to see some showers pushing in from the south. that's because we have some some some humid air and some high temperatures. temperatures peaking on saturday high peaking on saturday in the high 20s bringing the risk of some thunderstorms . thunderstorms. >> looks like things are heating up . boxed boilers , proud up. boxed boilers, proud sponsors of weather on gb news as . welcome back. as. welcome back. >> now we have british citizens
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and legal immigrants , tax and legal immigrants, tax payers, law abiding individuals living in conditions that are not fit for human habitation . not fit for human habitation. in. where is the outrage ? in. where is the outrage? where's the human rights bngade? where's the human rights brigade? where's the army of charities and lawyers? where are the virtue signalling? councillors mps ? it's not councillors and mps? it's not just asking these questions , just me asking these questions, but the residents meath court but the residents of meath court a shipping container site in acton, ealing , west london. now, acton, ealing, west london. now, ispoke acton, ealing, west london. now, i spoke to a lady who had to flee violence , a man who she flee violence, a man who she claims is still on the run and poses a very real threat to her and her young children when she claims that ealing council told her that they had secured her a two bedroom flat, which sounds all right, doesn't it? but what she discovered was a shipping container riddled with damp showers and bathroom facilities so poor that some people on that site have to wash using a bucket. there is an infestation of cockroaches and other bugs on one side of the roughly 60
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container facility there is a rampant drug dealing problem which we actually have obtained footage of drug users live in the laundry room and in some cases as well, it appears that sex workers perform sexual acts in and around the bin store . one in and around the bin store. one woman was is allegedly pushed off the top of one of the container blocks recently and had to be resuscitated by paramedics. it is not known whether or not she survived all of this, by the way , what is of this, by the way, what is happening in full view , two of happening in full view, two of the children who are forced to live in this site as well . and live in this site as well. and despite having several young children and in danger from an ex—partner , partner, this lady ex—partner, partner, this lady and others like her were placed on a site without proper security . shockingly, she is not security. shockingly, she is not classed as being on a band a or
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band b housing waiting list, meaning that she and others like her are not deemed to be a priority for social . her are not deemed to be a priority for social. housing. in 2019, the leader of labour run eaung 2019, the leader of labour run ealing council is councillor peter mason welcomed the arrival of shipping containers converted into quote, innovative emergency accommodation in ealing, which provided, they said, stay stable, comfortable environments to house people. the council has been very vocal about the lengths that it goes to accommodate new arrivals from places like afghanistan and ukraine. and the local mp, rupa huq, is even keen and has previously spoke about an amnesty for illegal immigrants. well the reality is, however , well the reality is, however, that vulnerable british citizens and legal migrants are being left behind . and i spoke to one left behind. and i spoke to one lady whose identity we are
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protecting due to the aforementioned family circumstances who said that it's absolute hell to live with at meath court. and she also spoke how she feels about being a brit at the back of the queue . at the back of the queue. >> i came down here in the evening because they gave me the full address, so i said let me go and have a look. when i came here i said, is this a joke? >> i walked around and the gates were open. >> so i walked through and when i looked around, i said, this can't be the same address. this cannot be the same address . then cannot be the same address. then i saw someone, a tenant at the time, and i was like, excuse me, is this the right address? and she said, yes . and i said, is she said, yes. and i said, is this shipping containers? and she said, yes. and i said, is this said,)ing containers? and she said, yes. and i said, is this said, yes containers? and she said, yes. and i said, is this said, yes .ontainers? and she said, yes. and i said, is this said, yes . andiners? and she said, yes. and i said, is this said, yes . and iers? and she said, yes. and i said, is this said, yes . and i saidand she said, yes. and i said, is this said, yes . and i said, oh my she said, yes. and i said, oh my god, they're putting me in containers . it's absolute hell. containers. it's absolute hell. it's your worst nightmare. honestly it's like living in a prison , in a mental hospital.
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prison, in a mental hospital. that's how it feels. it's frightening. it's scary. you can't live a normal life. the children are traumatised . and my children are traumatised. and my son, even you know, says to me, mummy, why is there police here again? why are they here? are they coming in? i'm like, no, they're not coming in. but i have to like, you know, try to cover it. but you can't. cover it. well, but you can't. you walk outside there's you walk outside and there's police on the corner there at someone's door. they're doing police raids . you can't escape police raids. you can't escape it . the drug use as well. and it. the drug use as well. and the sexual acts that are happening on the actual premises, that's traumatising. and children are witnessing this. one of my neighbours witnessed a sexual act being performed in urban area and she had her son with her. that's disgusting. my kids have seen two drug users doing heroin downstairs . anyone can walk in downstairs. anyone can walk in the gates were completely broken
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. i say about two months ago they fixed the gates downstairs and they're broken again . but and they're broken again. but it's quite pointless because people are jumping over the drug dealers, the drug users , and dealers, the drug users, and they're breaking the gates. they're forcing it open and they're putting bricks and stuff to wedge the gate. so anyone can just walk in and on a daily basis, you're seeing people that don't live here and also drug dealers that the council are aware of the building manager is aware of the building manager is aware of the building manager is aware of it . aware of the building manager is aware of it. i'm not aware of the building manager is aware of it . i'm not sure what aware of it. i'm not sure what he's doing, to be honest with you. it's ridiculous . it's just you. it's ridiculous. it'sjust not a nice environment to live in at all. and as you said, there's not a single camera . and there's not a single camera. and as we are in this building, there's not a smoke alarm ehhen there's not a smoke alarm either. there's not a single smoke alarm . i've never had smoke alarm. i've never had a smoke alarm. i've never had a smoke alarm. i've never had a smoke alarm . there's never been smoke alarm. there's never been any inspections . there's no fire any inspections. there's no fire extinguisher . there's no any inspections. there's no fire extinguisher. there's no signs for like a fire exit. there's nothing thing, nothing at all. >> if they were put in places
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like this , there would be like this, there would be outrage, right . how do you feel outrage, right. how do you feel about that? because it doesn't really feel like people are standing up for you as much . standing up for you as much. >> it'sjust standing up for you as much. >> it's just not fair. it's really not fair. like we live here, we are born and bred here. we pay our taxes. here, we are born and bred here. we pay our taxes . you know, we we pay our taxes. you know, we just do what we meant to be doing . do you understand? and doing. do you understand? and then people are coming from other countries . i understand other countries. i understand they're fleeing from , you know, they're fleeing from, you know, trauma and stuff . i do trauma and stuff. i do understand. and they should be entitled to every bit of help . entitled to every bit of help. but when it comes to housing, why are they getting brand new flats, brand new houses on the spot? yeah and they can argue and say, oh, but that's not true. it is true . it is true. true. it is true. it is true. and it's a very harsh reality of this country. a country like this, a whole uk , a rich country this, a whole uk, a rich country like this with a monarchy . like this with a monarchy. >> that was just one lady that i
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spoke to over the course of this show. i will be playing you several of the clips as well and showing even more showing you some even more disturbing footage. but earlier today, the local mp, today, i contacted the local mp, rupa now she was rupa huq. now she was unavailable for an interview. okay. however, her office sent me a letter that she sent to eaung me a letter that she sent to ealing council last month. now, in letter, huq wrote in the letter, rupa huq wrote that of her that a number of her constituents complained constituents have complained about involving use about issues involving drug use and alcohol. she said that and alcohol. she also said that she'd alerted to problems she'd been alerted to problems with cleaning of court with the cleaning of meath court . the . he said that again, the electrics the mould . i also electrics and the mould. i also contacted ealing council. i am still waiting for a reply from them, but it was absolute chaos there. it was absolute chaos and that was emphasised actually by whilst i was there, a lady who was doing the cleaning on the outside of the area tripped over , as you can see, just the debns , as you can see, just the debris and junk that's around some netting. kids run around in this, right? kids are running around in this as well. she tripped over. she busted her knee. they had to get an
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ambulance . she had to go to ambulance. she had to go to hospital in the next hour, i'm going to be showing you some of the insect infestations that these to these poor people are having to live fact that drug live in. the fact that drug addicts are sleeping in their laundry , all of it. this is laundry room, all of it. this is going on right now. we've got people right now in this country living like that. brits and people who've come here legally, people who've come here legally, people who've come here legally, people who pay their taxes, who work who have done work hard, who have done everything and they are everything right and they are not a priority for housing. okay and it appears from what i can see, like the local council , see, like the local council, they're not doing a lot, are they? they've been there for years. some of those people, they're doing a lot. the they're not doing a lot. the local she says , what? she's local mp, she says, what? she's talking the council. talking to the council. right. okay the meantime you've okay well in the meantime you've got people just got vulnerable people just living something else living like that. something else to change. priorities have to change. our priorities have to change. our priorities have to change, don't they? gb views. gbnews.com. get your views coming in. well, gb news has an exclusive interview with a former special branch officer coming your way. who was who shot dead? sorry, an ira
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terrorist in 1991. now he's never been charged with murder , never been charged with murder, but he says that he fears for his life. this ties in to shocking historic prosecutions of people during the troubles . of people during the troubles. patrick christys gb news, britain's news
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news britain's new . channel news britain's new. channel >> now to our exclusive interview with a former special branch officer who shot dead an
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ira terrorist in 1991. the man known as officer b has been the subject of a series of investigations following the death of column marks. and although he's never been charged with murder, he told gb news that his life has been ruined . that his life has been ruined. >> my name is officer b, i joined the royal ulster constab in the late 70s and i served in various stations around the border and west belfast before joining what was called e4 , joining what was called e4, which was a surveillance unit that was part of special branch. now special operations branch . now special operations branch. so i was a covert surveillance operator there for almost 11 years. i was going out to do an operation , a counter—terrorism operation, a counter—terrorism operation, a counter—terrorism operation against a man called colin marks . i wasn't privy to colin marks. i wasn't privy to the full amount of intelligence or who the source was that wasn't for us. that was way above our pay scale. but the information was which came from a source within the ira that he
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was going to come to the playing field to the rear of saint patrick's avenue that night carrying a mark 12 mortar, and then fire it into to a armoured police or army landrover , which police or army landrover, which was passing by colin marks brought this mortar to the driveway of a house on saint patrick's avenue, where he set it up to fire it against a security force vehicle . so total security force vehicle. so total and utter disregard for human life. and so that's what i was facing that night when i took up a position in a hedgerow on saint patrick's avenue to cover a playing field when ever the issue came to arrest him and he bolted out through the hedge and into the field towards me, the republicans have often said, oh, well, he wasn't armed. he was armed , and he was armed with armed, and he was armed with a mark 12 mortar. yes. he didn't have them on him that day, but most times when terrorists were doing like that, they doing things like that, they carried firearms on
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carried additional firearms on them. and when you are involved in a shooting, you have literally you don't even have a second decision . he second to make a decision. he kept running towards me. i dropped the back of the weapon down. so it meant that the rounds would go over the top of his head. a fire, two warning shots and he just kept coming. and he was closing the distance and a five fired five further rounds, three of which had him . rounds, three of which had him. one hit him in the hand , one hit one hit him in the hand, one hit him in the side of the ear on accident. the back of his neck, but actually never penetrated his skull. and the fatal round went through his abdomen . i went went through his abdomen. i went through . four investigations as, through. four investigations as, first of all, a cid investigation . then that file investigation. then that file was passed with no recommendation of conviction . recommendation of conviction. the dpp , the public prosecution, the dpp, the public prosecution, they found that there was no
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case grade with the police . then case grade with the police. then i was then interviewed by what was called complaints and discipline , which is like pony. discipline, which is like pony. the ombudsman nowadays. they find no wrongdoing and what i did that night then in the inquest, so it was justifiable killing that night she roll on 25 years the police ombudsman, northern ireland then decided that they were going to investigate . even it was exactly investigate. even it was exactly the same that was said 25 years ago . and most of my anger is ago. and most of my anger is against the police ombudsman because , as for seven years on because, as for seven years on one month until the pps said there was no case. i've been under this cloud for seven years and one month and it's not pleasant. i live in fear for my life because during that period of time , police ombudsman and
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of time, police ombudsman and for me and the police is that all my details had been given to the solicitor practise who's representing the family a dossier of information that had my picture that had my name. they had my mobile phone number, they had my address, they had my company name. and where i worked . so i've gone through all my details being leaked . to a details being leaked. to a solicitors practise and within that solicitors practise individual keeps referring to me as a murderer. he did itrillionecently on a news program or a media programme. he also owned a bio for the website for himself. he refers to the ruc murder of colin marks in april 1991, and that's completely contrary to what the pps decided it, because the pps
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decided that in may of this year that there was no fresh evidence . but then immediately after was the solicitors practise working for the family are challenging the pps decision . so why is it the pps decision. so why is it a case of they'll not be happy till they get what they want ? or till they get what they want? or do they want truth ? and april of do they want truth? and april of this year that was seven years under the investigation reinvestigation of me. it's now in the september and i'm now facing . my sixth and first facing. my sixth and first occasion if that's not vindictive or infectious, i don't understand . but i can tell don't understand. but i can tell you now and i look in the eyes and say , i did not go out that and say, i did not go out that night to kill anybody . night to kill anybody. >> sir keir starmer has revealed a labour government could strike
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a labour government could strike a deal with the european union that would see the uk accept more more asylum seekers. home secretary suella braverman says that starmer would let the uk quote, become a dumping ground for 100,000 migrants in the eu every single year. i will have all of that and much, much more coming way. patrick coming your way. patrick christys business news christys gb news business news channel outlook with channel a brighter outlook with boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello again as we head through the end of the week, we are going to see the weather front that's currently across the uk still lingering whilst by the uk still lingering whilst by the some warm, humid air the weekend some warm, humid air bnngs the weekend some warm, humid air brings thunderstorms brings the risk of thunderstorms looking at the picture at the moment, you can that front moment, you can see that front that and it's that i mentioned and it's bringing cloud and rain across parts central england and parts of central england and wales at the moment. it is gradually to start to push gradually going to start to push its way northwards we go its way northwards as we go through and through this evening and overnight. so by the early hours of quite a wet of friday morning, quite a wet picture of northern picture across parts of northern england , southern scotland and england, southern scotland and northern ireland. the low pressure that's brought some
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windy scotland windy weather to scotland recently clearing northwards, recently is clearing northwards, but windy for orkney but staying windy for orkney and shetland. will drop shetland. temperatures will drop a little bit lower than they did last night for a few places. low single figures perhaps in scotland single figures perhaps in sc the nd single figures perhaps in scthe south. single figures perhaps in sc the south. so a wet picture in the south. so a wet picture across southern scotland , across southern scotland, northern england and northern ireland. first thing friday ireland. first thing on friday morning. and front doesn't morning. and that front doesn't really particularly really go anywhere particularly fast. really go anywhere particularly fast . as a result, we could see fast. as a result, we could see some totals building some rainfall totals building up, particularly across parts of southern the southern scotland towards the north. there will be a few showers around. meanwhile, north. there will be a few showe|central d. meanwhile, north. there will be a few showe|central southern rhile, north. there will be a few showe|central southern england across central southern england and wales, lots fine sunny and wales, lots of fine sunny weather to had weather to be had and temperatures higher than temperatures a touch higher than today likely to into the mid today likely to get into the mid 20s as into saturday. and 20s as we go into saturday. and you can see that front really hasn't made much progress. so still some further rain building up, particularly across parts of southern . and notice southern scotland. and notice as well, starting to see well, already starting to see some showers pushing in from the south. that's because have south. that's because we have some and some high some humid air and some high temperatures. temperatures peaking saturday in the high peaking on saturday in the high 20s, the of some 20s, bringing the risk of some thunderstorms . a brighter thunderstorms. a brighter outlook with boxt solar
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gb news. >> it's 4 pm. it's patrick christys is gb news now. could this be coming to a town or city near you? yes, that's right. italy, the island of lampedusa , italy, the island of lampedusa, has welcomed 8000 illegal migrants in in the last two
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days. and keir starmer closer to home is very keen , apparently, home is very keen, apparently, to do some kind of deal with the european union that would see us take a quota of illegal migrants. the problem with that, of course, is that due to our population mainly increased due to mass migration, that would mean that we could end up taking around 100,000 to 180,000 people. could you vote for that? that's what i want to know. in other news, i'll be talking about this well . should human about this as well. should human traffickers be classed as terrorists? and if they are, what additional powers would that give to us go after them on foreign soil? can we that give to us go after them on foreign soil ? can we actually foreign soil? can we actually crack the human trafficker gangs?i crack the human trafficker gangs? i will also be discussing this story as well. yes, the absolute state of housing that we are currently putting british taxpayers in right now . i've got taxpayers in right now. i've got an exclusive for this on shipping containers infested with cockroaches, rampant drug crime as well. violent crime, all sorts, and council calls and mps, they are perfectly happy
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for british citizens and legal migrants to live in places like this where there are the human rights brigade. when it comes to brits, they're always at the back of the queue, aren't they? and i'll also be talking about this well. yes, right. this as well. yes, that's right. have mexico have aliens landed? well, mexico certainly thinks so. they well, there you go. apart gently. they unveiled some alien bodies yesterday. this got me very excited . i am an unashamed ufo excited. i am an unashamed ufo fanatic. okay. i will be talking to a ufo extraterrestrial expert at the end of this hour. what do you think ? do they walk amongst you think? do they walk amongst us? patrick christys . gb news? us? patrick christys. gb news? yes. okay i got your emails coming in thick and fast. gb views rgv news.com . could you views rgv news.com. could you vote for a politician in a party leader that wants to do a deal with the eu when it comes to migrant quotas ? gb views and
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migrant quotas? gb views and gbnews.com but right now it's your headlines with polly . patrick >> thank you. good afternoon to you. will. the top story is a breaking news story we brought you about an hour ago, but it's still developing there is an email violence email threatening violence we understand, and understand, to children and staff, and it has been sent to a number schools leeds . number of schools in leeds. >> in west yorkshire. police are aware and they've confirmed the investigation that their conduct ing has been launched. >> police are providing reassurance to schools as well, but it is a developing story. details coming to all the details coming to us all the time. more that as we get time. more on that as we get clearer news and in another email related piece of news, the personal details of greater manchester police officers have been hacked in a cyber attack. details like identity badges, warrant cards, including names and photographs, are thought to have been stolen. the force says it's aware of the attack and is treating it seriously. but it's
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not believed the data breach includes financial information. at this stage . age. well, the at this stage. age. well, the other main story today is that around 1 in 7 brits are waiting for routine treatment from nhs in england. new figures show 7.68 million people are now currently on the waiting list. there's also been a rise in longer waits of a year or more. in some cases , as earlier the in some cases, as earlier the government announced the nhs will receive £200 million to help with the coming winter . but help with the coming winter. but labour says the money's a sticking plaster. the prime minister has hit back, saying the government is trying to improve times . improve waiting times. >> well winter is always a challenging time for the nhs and this year we started planning for winter earlier than ever before. announcing before. today we're announcing £200 million, which will go to the nhs to help build extra capacity and resilience for this winter season, making sure that patients can get the care that they need . earlier this year, we they need. earlier this year, we also announced the long term workforce plan, making that workforce plan, making sure that for the first we more for the first time we train more doctors dentists
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doctors and nurses and dentists here in the uk, but also the work we're doing to improve nhs performance, which the results today show is delivering for patients with big improvements in ambulance times and a&e times since the winter . sir keir since the winter. sir keir starmer says he'll seek an eu wide returns agreement for those who cross the english channel illegally. >> the labour leader says the deal may involve a quid pro quo of accepting migrants from the bloc . sir keir and the shadow bloc. sir keir and the shadow home secretary, yvette cooper met with the eu's policing body europol in the hague this morning. shadow cabinet minister nick thomas—symonds told gb news labour does want to bring net migration . down migration. down >> there are countries now where the government could be fast tracking people through the asylum system so that they can be deported and they can be doing that now instead , said we doing that now instead, said we have a backlog in the asylum system of over 170,000 people
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that it system of over 170,000 people thatitis system of over 170,000 people that it is a lack of control . that it is a lack of control. that's what this government is presiding over. and frankly, after 13 years, they ought to be sorting it out. but the health secretary, steve barclay, has accused the keir starmer of giving up control . giving up control. >> we're taking tougher action. we want to also through our rwanda policy, have a very clear deterrent there, and that's before the courts. and what keir starmer again wants to do is give up control of immigration, sign up to quotas that are decided by the eu and we move the deterrent that rwanda would provide . and alongside the provide. and alongside the return agreements that we put in place , three met police officers place, three met police officers will face a misconduct hearing for their role in the strip search of a miner. >> the incident took place at a school in hackney in december of 2020. it's alleged that three officers didn't follow procedure and that they discriminated against the child on her race and gender. the met says the incident shouldn't have happened
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. casualties could have been avoided in libya if the country had a functional weather service. that's the message from the head of the world meteorological organisation. at least 5300 people are known to have died after storm daniel hit the coastal city of derna. rescue operations have been complicated by political fractures within the country, which is experienced conflict for more than a decade . the uk for more than a decade. the uk government says it will provide an initial aid package worth up to £1 million here. house prices declined in august at their fastest rate since 2009. that's according to the royal institution of chartered surveyors . it says a majority of surveyors. it says a majority of property property professionals are reporting declines, largely due to high mortgage rates. new buyer enquiries also began to fall rents, though , continue to fall rents, though, continue to rise . and just lastly , the rise. and just lastly, the westminster dog of the year award has been presented to mims davis and her dog tj. if you're
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watching on tv , take a look at watching on tv, take a look at rosie duffield and her cavalier king charles spaniel. paco picking up the sir david amess pubuc picking up the sir david amess public vote award. it's in memory of the late conservative mp sir david was a staunch advocate of the competition and advocate of the competition and a tireless campaigner for dog welfare with gb news across the uk on tv in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. back now to . patrick to. patrick >> well , we start with sir to. patrick >> well, we start with sir keir starmer who said that a labour government could strike a deal with the european union that would see the uk accept a quota of asylum seekers. i am wondering whether or not he has just signed is political suicide now here because the labour leader and the shadow home secretary, cooper , are in secretary, yvette cooper, are in the today for talks the netherlands today for talks with the eu's europol law enforcement agency. starmer says that closer cooperation with the
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eu shock would help the uk take control of the situation , that control of the situation, that the government has totally lost control of. that is fascinating, isn't it ? by giving more control isn't it? by giving more control to brussels , we get more control to brussels, we get more control . all okay, but homosexual suella braverman claimed that starmer would let the uk become, quote a dumping ground for around 100,000 migrants from the eu each year . around 100,000 migrants from the eu each year. well, it comes, doesn't it? as well. hot off the press of news of italy, lampedusa , the island of except lampedusa, the island of except 1000, mostly african, mostly male asylum seekers , illegal male asylum seekers, illegal migrants, whatever you want to call them in the last two days. and we're going to be having a close look at that very, very shortly. to shortly. but let's speak now to gb political correspondent shortly. but let's speak now to gb rutley.tical correspondent shortly. but let's speak now to gb rutley.tical co thank1dent shortly. but let's speak now to gb rutley. tical co thank you t olivia rutley. olivia, thank you . has keir starmer just signed . has keir starmerjust signed his political suicide his own political suicide note here saying that here by basically saying that under a labour government they would try to do a deal with the european union, that as far as i can , could see us take can gather, could see us take around 180,000 odd illegal
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migrants, asylum seekers, refugees, whatever people want to call them. every single year i >> -- >> well, yes, patrick, i think it's quite possible that keir starmer has made a colossal mistake here on immigration. we've been waiting. westminster has been waiting with bated breath for a long time for keir starmer to announce what labour's policy on immigration posts a labour election victory would be. in february, he laid out his five missions for a better britain and very conspicuously there was no mention whatsoever of the small boats today. keir starmer has finally put some flesh on that skeleton , if you like, and what skeleton, if you like, and what his plan comes down to is this returns agreement with the eu . returns agreement with the eu. so essentially britain would accept a quota of migrants who had arrived in the eu and in exchange we would be able to send migrants back to france or another safe country who had come across the channel illegally . now the eu already illegally. now the eu already has an agreement of this kind in the works among the 27 member
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states . and what that that states. and what that that agreement, when it comes into effect, will mean is that every eu member state has to take around 30,000 migrants or pay an enormous fine to the eu for refusing to accept their quota. so it sounds as though keir starmer would like to sign up to something like that. now it's hard to imagine that he'll endear himself to labour minded brexiteers. one of the main reasons why people voted to leave the eu was to take back control of immigration. and as you say, patrick signing up to an eu wide returns agreement with the eu whereby the eu dictates how many migrants britain takes in. doesn't really sound like taking back control. >> absolutely not. there is no getting around the fact that what we've got right now is a disaster right? so i'm not trying sit and say, oh, trying to sit here and say, oh, look, the conservative party have this have got this, all right? this guy is going to in a guy is going to come in with a wrecking ruin it. no, wrecking ball and ruin it. no, we're through absolute we're living through an absolute shocker. struggle shocker. i struggle to get my head that head around the idea that the solution shocker solution to that shocker is to try go to europe, which we try to go to europe, which we voted to leave and ask them how
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many migrants would us many migrants they would like us to idea that we to take. and the idea that we are going to say, okay, are then going to say, okay, we'll a deal that will be we'll get a deal that will be a net benefit britain . the net benefit to britain. the european union is not happy that we not going to we left it. they're not going to give us a deal that is advantageous compared to their member states, surely, because why would they do that? and so is this not maybe a sign of people's fears that keir starmer and a labour government with blair in the background could well be dragging us back into europe ? europe? >> well, i think that's definitely what people will start whispering and certainly that's what conservative ministers would like you to think . suella braverman today think. suella braverman today said that keir starmer plan risks britain becoming a dumping ground for migrants and steve barclay said something quite similar that said the conservatives are on pretty shaky ground when they try and criticise labour and keir starmer in particular for this policy because just a few months ago rishi sunak said that he would like to agree a eu returns
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agreed agent, which sounds really quite similar. he didn't get into specifics , but get into specifics, but everybody knows that the eu would never accept an agreement whereby why britain sends migrants back over to the eu and in exchange. well, what we don't do anything. so it sounds as though rishi sunak was, at least at some point hoping to strike the sort of deal which keir starmer is talking about today. so if the conservatives hope to sort of batter keir starmer with this rod, it might prove more difficult than they imagine. >> absolutely . olivia thank you >> absolutely. olivia thank you very, much . olivia utley very, very much. olivia utley there political there are political correspondent outside westminster and i think that final point that she's made westminster and i think that final sumsthat she's made westminster and i think that final sums upt she's made westminster and i think that final sums up why's made westminster and i think that final sums up why loadsie there sums up why loads of people the moment are so people at the moment are so angry with politics. you could fit a rizla paper between the two major parties. certainly when it comes to immigration, illegal immigration is the big issue of the day. it's been the big for generations , big issue for generations, arguably, the big issue arguably, but it's the big issue of now. and what of the day right now. and what is solution ? i just want to is the solution? i just want to refresh our memories here or if you're just joining us, you see
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this is the first time, which is why is such an important why this is such an important issue. been going on in issue. what's been going on in lampedusa, is a little lampedusa, which is a little island which island off italy, which has taken in taken an absolute pummelling in the migrant the face of the migrant crisis. so these are arrivals so these are the arrivals yesterday and the day before, 160 boats. and there was about 8000 people total, mostly 8000 people in total, mostly men, mostly from parts of africa , arrived on lampedusa . they , arrived on lampedusa. they were then kind of settled in for processing, as you can see there, in the searing heat. clearly, that's island of obviously very few places could swallow up 8000 people in the course of 24 hours. it's not happening. there are then fights between them and local police and then there are people trying to get out and escape and jump over fences and jump over walls. and all of this stuff. worth noting that if we had a quota system with the european union, there's every chance that our percentage of these people will be picked up from there , brought be picked up from there, brought to britain for processing, and they will be ours if we decide
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obviously, to keep them. and i think it's fair to suggest that we might decide to keep all of them because that seems to be what we do. so that would be our problem. we would take our quota of people . they would also then of people. they would also then not have to find the money and stump the cash to pay human stump up the cash to pay human traffickers to get right traffickers to get them right across continent get across the continent and get them a and then take them in a dinghy and then take them in a dinghy and then take them channel so if them across the channel so if anything, i would argue is more of incentive come. isn't of an incentive to come. isn't there end up there are we going to end up with even more people? then with even more people? and then there also issues, of there are also issues, of course, some the course, of some of the individuals it individuals that do make it doing rather unsavoury things at times in the street, which i think we do have some footage of as well, which will play for you in second. that a in just a second. that is a man washing his genitals in a fountain in a town square. so yeah, not great, is it? it it really. yeah. they really need that. okay, look, i'm joined now by doctor paul moreland , who is by doctor paul moreland, who is an expert in demographics . an expert in demographics. there's a lot for us to talk about here. doctor paul , what do about here. doctor paul, what do you think the trajectory would
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be for europe as a whole? but britain specifically , if we can britain specifically, if we can if we have some kind of policy like what keir starmer is, is floating at the minute , which is floating at the minute, which is a quota system with the eu on illegal migration. >> well, there are huge forces at work which perhaps we will discuss in a minute, which are demographic as well as economic driving. people to europe and within europe, the uk . within europe, the uk. >> the most effective way to disincentivize them coming , disincentivize them coming, which would choke this problem off and also save thousands of lives by preventing people putting their lives at risk to cross both the med and the channel be something like channel would be something like the rwanda scheme. >> we know from australia >> now we know from australia that's been effective . that's been very effective. >> if actually want to hit >> if you actually want to hit the traffickers hitting the people traffickers hitting the people traffickers hitting the is the most effective the demand is the most effective way of doing that . and once way of doing that. and once a few people had actually few hundred people had actually been to rwanda, unpleasant been sent to rwanda, unpleasant though it be, you'd find though it may be, you'd find there would be a big drop off in there would be a big drop off in the number people wanting to come. >> now, admittedly, it's the lawyers, the opposition ,
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lawyers, not the opposition, which stopped which has stopped rwanda happening , but keir and happening, but keir starmer and the labour party have blocked it at every possible turn. >> he's pledged to overturn it, yes. and hasn't happened yet. >> how soon, anyway? >> how soon, anyway? >> before the human rights lawyers say we can't send them back to europe because we don't like the regime in hungary or poland? perhaps they'll go to poland? or perhaps they'll go to romania. mean, itself romania. so i mean, that itself is questionable. >> other thing if you do >> the other thing is, if you do send people to somewhere like rwanda, disincentivizes rwanda, it disincentivizes others and it means in rwanda their process will claim their process will their claim will be processed in a fair way. >> but if they're coming over here, being sent back to europe , who's actually stopping them coming backwards and forwards? >> i mean, it's more business for the traffickers, not for the people traffickers, not less, and lumping them as terrorists . terrorists. >> i mean, it's a bit of a gimmick really. the why do you call people terrorists? the more you the more it you use that label, the more it gets diluted. >> well, it actually know. >> well, it does actually know. that's on that's a very good point. on that. look at the that. and if we look at the population of britain at the moment, it's something like 13% of the continent of europe's
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population, despite us obviously having nowhere near 13% of the land mass. we are a densely populated country and a lot of thatis populated country and a lot of that is down to, you know, mass migration. the way that we've gone about about things there. okay. that would mean okay. so that would mean possibly that we would end up having to take a higher quota of people than most other european countries. what would that do? >> it all depends on >> well, it all depends on exactly the sort of deal that starmer struck. >> it depends on how big the forces of migration into europe are over time. but if we kind of helicopter up a little and look at the bigger picture, what's happening is that almost every country in europe has been having too few children for a couple of generations . so we're couple of generations. so we're rapidly ageing, we're short of labour here. we are in the uk with a pretty sickly economy . a with a pretty sickly economy. a million gross immigrants a year and yet we have terrible labour shortages. we desperately need people. at the same time, the continent of africa has a baby boom . it has a large number of
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boom. it has a large number of young people looking for work. so fix the fundamental so until we fix the fundamental demographic problem in the uk and europe, which is that the families are too small and that will take a long time to come through, are going to need through, we are going to need workers, think need workers, but i think we need a fairand on that, on that one for >> and on that, on that one for me anyway , i think of the me anyway, i think one of the barriers for people having young children and enough children are very often is housing okay. a little bit later on in this houn little bit later on in this hour, i'm going to be doing another expose of some shudders to call it social housing. in this country is it's people who are either who either came here legally or were born here being forced to live in shipping containers . very often, you containers. very often, you know, on the run from from somebody who's been violent towards them or in one case, a lady whose flat burnt down. there's been no burden on the taxpayer for their entire time in the united kingdom. i've been working paying taxes. working hard, been paying taxes. the down, they get the flat burns down, they get shoved so so they've shoved here. so so they've already got children, right? for already got children, right? for a a lot of a lot a lot of people, a lot of a lot
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of brits. the barrier to them having children is that they think, well, i can't get on the housing ladder. i don't get anywhere i rent anywhere to live or i rent a room in a flat somewhere room in a in a flat somewhere here. and introducing a load here. and so introducing a load more of is more people on top of that is probably not the solution. probably not the best solution. i would argue housing is an enormous and there's no enormous issue and there's no doubt that lot of the doubt that a lot of the additional housing we've put in has effectively been taken up by the mass immigration we've received, particularly in london. >> so i think housing is one enormous issue. child care is one enormous issue . but i would one enormous issue. but i would warn that if you think fixing those two problems, fixing those problems is enormous. but if you think that fixing those problems will fix your fertility rate and mean people have more children, go to parts of the uk and elsewhere in europe where housing is quite cheap or go to those places in europe where they massively subsidise childcare like germany , and childcare like germany, and they're still not having large families . so they're still not having large families. so i think those are important issues. families. so i think those are important issues . but once we important issues. but once we resolve them , i'm not sure we're resolve them, i'm not sure we're then going to be having an average of 2 to 3 children,
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which think what we need to which i think is what we need to solve problem. solve this problem. >> just just one more with >> well, just just one more with you. the you. i mean, people look at the kind places where a lot of kind of places where a lot of these people are coming illegally certainly these people are coming illgetting certainly these people are coming illgetting a certainly these people are coming illgetting a lot certainly these people are coming illgetting a lot of certainly these people are coming illgetting a lot of people nly these people are coming illgetting a lot of people from is getting a lot of people from parts of africa. evidence parts of africa. we can evidence that that you're that by the people that you're seeing there, what is that going to think, to to do, do you think, to i suppose, the racial demography of europe going forward ? of europe going forward? >> well, it is going to be completely trans formed. and i think the choice that countries like italy and ultimately the uk have is to the japanese have is to go the japanese route, if you like, to be very tough on immigration, on to keep your fertility rates and your low fertility rates and have your economy shrink and sink and effectively become a minor player on the world stage, that's one option. another opfion that's one option. another option is to accept massive immigration because you want to keep your economy ticking over, but you don't want to have large families. only families. the only way ultimately of this problem ultimately out of this problem because the immigration you'd need to supporting need to keep supporting our growing population would growing elder population would just grow and grow. the just grow and grow and grow. the only of it. and i'm only way out of it. and i'm sorry about but sorry to bang on about this, but nobody really talking about
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nobody is really talking about it. in government, the it. certainly in government, the only term way to resolve it only long term way to resolve it and allow britain to have a and to allow britain to have a more ethnic balance. more stable ethnic balance. we're a very multiracial we're already a very multiracial country. is to encourage all communities in this country who are who are fully british, are here, who are fully british, to have 2 to 3 children. >> on average, we should be actively encouraging then people who are already britain to actively encouraging then people who imoreready britain to actively encouraging then people who more babies britain to actively encouraging then people who more babies .britain to have more babies. >> absolutely no government has done that today. >> i have you got . >> i ask, have you got. >> i ask, have you got. >> i ask, have you got. >> i have three. >> i have three. >> yeah. okay i had to ask. i felt awful that in case you were going to say no. and then there were grandchildren. okay. were some grandchildren. okay. no enough for no you're not old enough for grandchildren. go. grandchildren. there you go. finish it. thank grandchildren. there you go. finizvery it. thank grandchildren. there you go. finizvery much. it. thank grandchildren. there you go. finizvery much. great it. thank you very much. great >> very much. >> thank you very much. >> thank you very much. >> have you on the >> great to have you on the show. as dr. pall mall in there, who's in demographics. show. as dr. pall mall in there, who'sdo in demographics. show. as dr. pall mall in there, who's do make demographics. show. as dr. pall mall in there, who'sdo make ofmographics. show. as dr. pall mall in there, who's do make of that aphics. show. as dr. pall mall in there, who's do make of that then?. what do you make of that then? gb .com? no, gb views or gb views .com? no, sure. just to get stuck into you there. about there. i'll talk about this story a bit later story again a little bit later on show. can on in the show. you can get loads on our loads more right now on our website. gbnews.com it's the fastest news fastest growing national news site it's got site in the country. it's got the analysis, big opinion site in the country. it's got the all analysis, big opinion site in the country. it's got the all a|thesis, big opinion site in the country. it's got the all a|the latest] opinion site in the country. it's got the all a|the latest breaking and all of the latest breaking news. and i can't wait to hear what farage thinks about
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what nigel farage thinks about keir starmers plan . farage large keir starmers plan. farage large this live from this evening comes live from essex witham and essex, the town of witham and a special guest will be the local mp and former home secretary. dame priti patel. and apologies for the people of witham for me pronouncing it witham in the last hour. you stop your last hour. you can stop your angry emails now. that's from 7:00 right here on gb news. as i've already told you about sir keir starmer plans to tackle the migrant crisis involving closer cooperation with the cooperation cooperation with the eu . he's said that eu. he's also said today that labour government would treat people smugglers as terrorists. okay but what exactly would that mean ? what does that mean in mean? what does that mean in terms of us being able to go and knock the park? is knock them out of the park? is this the solution? patrick christys gb news britain's
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online gb news. britain's news. channelis online gb news. britain's news. channel is 426. >> you're watching and listening to me patrick christys on gb news on your tv, online and radio. now, in a few moments time, as the government spends £6 million day on hotels for £6 million a day on hotels for channel migrants, we'll bring you into the you a shocking report into the squalid conditions that british citizens and legal migrants are being forced to live in. it is an absolute disgrace. the local council doesn't seem to care. local mps don't seem to care. it is staggering . and this is all is staggering. and this is all going on right under our noses. where are the human rights bngade where are the human rights brigade when you need them? but we've already talked about sir keir starmer's closer keir starmer's plans for closer cooperation with the european union in a bid to tackle the migrant crisis. also migrant crisis. he also said that smugglers will be that people smugglers will be treated as terrorists . what does
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treated as terrorists. what does that really mean, though? more than 23,000 migrants have arrived this arrived in small boats this yeah arrived in small boats this year. says labour would year. starmer says labour would target people smugglers with serious crime prevention orders. oh which are already used against offenders such as terrorists and drug traffickers . let's get the view now with human rights lawyer shoaib khan. shoaib, thank you very much. what will this really mean then? so if we look at a human trafficker who already doesn't really care about human life and we say , right, you, i'm going to we say, right, you, i'm going to give you a serious crime prevention order, what does it mean ? mean? >> hi . >> hi. >> hi. >> yeah, i mean, to be honest, i wish i knew. >> i think it's keir starmer just saying what you thought you needed to say , but i mean, i needed to say, but i mean, i think it's disappointing because, you know, because you said in the same breath, we criticising the tories for the gimmicks and for their rhetoric and i think that's the whole thing from all parties on immigration, on, on human trafficking, human smuggling, all of these, you know , very
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all of these, you know, very important issues. >> that's all we get. and that's the thing. i mean, i'm not sure why do we need to treat them as terrorists? >> i mean, you know, human trafficking, human smuggling is a crime as it is. we a serious crime as it is. we should be able to arrest them, punish them, and punish them, prosecute them, and prison according to the prison them. according to the law. as strict as this government has made the law. so i don't really think, know , i don't really think, you know, as you said, i mean, i don't understand what difference it would make if we say, well, you know, until last month we only prosecuted you as smugglers, but now we're going to. >> well, i think it's important. yeah. and i think i think this is really important for people. right. because the pill is really important for people. righ keir because the pill is really important for people. righ keir starmerecause the pill is really important for people. righ keir starmereca potentially. that keir starmer is potentially asking british to asking the british public to swallow if becomes prime swallow if he becomes prime minister is to do some kind of deal the european union deal with the european union that take a quota, that would see us take a quota, which i mean almost definitely will be above 100,000. i see no reason whatsoever why the european union would allow us to sign a deal with them. that would mean that we took fewer as a percentage of a quota of people than eu member states. it
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would sense for the eu would make no sense for the eu to do that. so it's going to be around 100,000. the pill is asking to swallow. asking us to swallow. and the reason on is reason the sweetener on that is right. i will do is i will right. what i will do is i will treat human traffickers as terrorists, and makes it terrorists, and that makes it sound like we we can smash sound like we can we can smash human trafficking gangs, people smugglers , people doing the smugglers, people doing the smuggling. it's actually smuggling. but it's actually going to make no difference, is it don't. i mean, to be >> i don't. i mean, to be honest, yes. looking at the labelling changing the labelling isn't going to make difference isn't going to make a difference and i think it's falling into the he's the same trap that he's criticising for criticising the tories for falling into. it's all just rhetoric. it's all just, you know, hyperbolic statements. we don't really any actions , don't really have any actions, any policy i think any real policy and i think that's thing. and that's the exact same thing. and in terms of the numbers, personally i don't think it would or anything would be 100,000 or anything near . that's the near that. that's just the numbers tories have numbers that the tories have come with. so i don't think come up with. so i don't think it's be that. but it's to going be that. but whatever the is going to whatever the number is going to be, , you know, i mean, be, i think, you know, i mean, again, like, like we know and we say we're in eu say that whether we're in the eu , we're not we're part , whether we're not we're part of we're part of the of europe, we're part of the continent. you continent. so we have to, you know, internationally, know, even internationally, globally have fulfil our
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globally, we have to fulfil our obugafions. globally, we have to fulfil our obligations . and i think obligations. and i think obviously we're an island just just down in that just just to drill down in that just just to drill down in that just just of interest, just out just out of interest, just out of what do you think of interest, what do you think our obligations are to provide a safe haven to people who are fleeing persecution like we did ? >> 7- >> can i 7_ >> can i ask 7— >> can i ask you 7 >> can i ask you something? i actually i genuinely hadn't planned on doing this. i genuinely, um, plan on doing so. i it's interesting i just think it's interesting because my next segment, right, i just think it's interesting beabout my next segment, right, i just think it's interesting beabout my that segment, right, i just think it's interesting be about my that segmegot right, i just think it's interesting beabout my that segmegot inht, is about brit that we've got in this shipping this country living in shipping containers at moment. containers at the moment. i don't might be able containers at the moment. i dojust might be able containers at the moment. i dojust pull might be able containers at the moment. i dojust pull up might be able containers at the moment. i dojust pull up a might be able containers at the moment. i dojust pull up a couple be able containers at the moment. i dojust pull up a couple of able to just pull up a couple of clips that got or videos or clips that i've got or videos or whatever shipping whatever of, of the shipping containers, but i've often wondered, shoaib, you you wondered, shoaib, you know, you human right? why human rights lawyer, right? why where are the human rights lawyers when comes to british lawyers when it comes to british citizens living in shipping containers with cockroach infestations and no fire alarms and all of that stuff? i mean, what what are you are you all over that as much as you're all over that as much as you're all over people coming into this country illegally ? country illegally? >> yeah, well, we are the point is, no one's interested in that because that doesn't make
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headlines. so no one calls headlines. so no one ever calls us the media. no one ever us on the media. no one ever talks to us about that. but the cases we do, the clients we have, course, we have more have, of course, we have more british clients who help. british clients who try to help. then foreigners. so of course that's course, that's the case. and of course, anyone who comes to me looking that's the case. and of course, anthee who comes to me looking that's the case. and of course, anthe conditionses to me looking that's the case. and of course, anthe conditionses to me litell1g in the conditions and i can tell you horrific stories you more horrific stories and i could have this even could have told you this even before seeing the scenes you're showing is, showing now. but the thing is, that attract headlines. showing now. but the thing is, that doesn't attract headlines. showing now. but the thing is, that doesn't really headlines. showing now. but the thing is, that doesn't really matter1es. showing now. but the thing is, that doesn't really matter to. that doesn't really matter to the government. government's the government. the government's not about them. so the government. the government's not saw about them. so the government. the government's not saw what about them. so the government. the government's notsaw what happened them. so the government. the government's notsaw what happened atam. so the government. the government's notsaw what happened at grenfell we saw what happened at grenfell . people are already . again, people are already raising similar raising the alarm on similar buildings . raising the alarm on similar buildings. they're raising the alarm on similar buildings . they're the raising the alarm on similar buildings. they're the ones raising the alarm on similar buildings . they're the ones who buildings. they're the ones who get exaggerating are get accused of exaggerating are they're the ones oh well, you know, loony liberals. know, lefty, loony liberals. what you you think the what do you you think is the point is you think you could make a case? >> yeah , but you think. you >> yeah, but you think. you think. can make think. you think you can make a case you think you case show. do you think you could a case for fact could make a case for the fact that like the ones i'm that buildings like the ones i'm showing you there are not fit for and no for human habitation and no human being should be put in there ? there? >> mean, don'tthinki there? >> mean, don't think i mean, >> i mean, i don't think i mean, is that something we really have to say? point than to say? the point is, other than the tories , would anyone the tories, would anyone even try defend or just you know, try to defend or just you know, it's interesting because how do
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you want how do you want about the know, i only want >> you know, i only want about the barge. i've had you the migrant barge. i've had you on about raf bases and you were adamant unfit for adamant that they were unfit for human habitation. couldn't human habitation. we couldn't possibly put asylum seekers in there. were there. i mean, you were you were you pumped up about you were really pumped up about that, and just that, you know, and i just it's interesting to see there seems that, you know, and i just it's intbe sting to see there seems that, you know, and i just it's intbe aing to see there seems that, you know, and i just it's intbe a bit to see there seems that, you know, and i just it's intbe a bit of see there seems that, you know, and i just it's intbe a bit of aze there seems that, you know, and i just it's intbe a bit of a difference ems to be a bit of a difference between the you approach between the way you approach that then that. that and then that. >> there was >> i'm not sure there was a difference. i said exactly the same thing . of course not same thing. of course it's not fit habitation . that fit for human habitation. that is actually what i'm saying. so only a could now try to only a tory could now try to defend that. this is what people i care the i don't care what the nationality, passport i don't care what the nationalitholds. passport i don't care what the nationalitholds. nonssport i don't care what the nationalitholds. no human should someone holds. no human should ever living in ever be living in those conditions absolutely conditions and it's absolutely terrible. whatever. six, seven, eight the eight richest country in the world. millions billions world. the millions and billions that government just that our government just squandered, just squandered, you know, just throws away, waste our money and this is what our fellow residents of this country are living in. i think that's absolutely appalling because, look, sheriff, thank you very much. >> it's been great to get you on. like i said, i hadn't really initially planned on doing that, but i thought, why not? because we're that the show. but i thought, why not? because we're you that the show. but i thought, why not? because we're you veryt the show.
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but i thought, why not? because we're you veryt sheriff)w. thank you very much, sheriff khan, a human rights khan, who's a human rights lawyer. there are loads more still now and still to come between now and five. can tell, i was five. as you can tell, i was talking to british and talking to british citizens and legal forced talking to british citizens and leglive forced talking to british citizens and leglive those forced talking to british citizens and leglive those appalling rced to live in those appalling conditions west london. and containers in west london. and while the as while just down the road as well, migrants in well, migrants have put up in plush hotels. first, it is plush hotels. but first, it is time now for your latest headunes time now for your latest headlines polly middlehurst headlines with polly middlehurst . patrick thank you. >> will the top stories this houn >> will the top stories this hour, the personal details of officers at greater manchester police have been stolen in a cyber attack. depher details like identity badges and warrant cards include names and photographs are thought to have been hacked. the force says it's treating the attack very seriously. also in the news, around 1 in 7 brits are waiting for routine treatment from the nhs. new figures show 7.68 million people are currently on the waiting list in england. earlier the government announced the nhs will receive £200
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million to help the service in the coming winter. but labour says it's just a sticking plaster and sir keir starmer says he'll seek an eu wide returns agreement for those who try to cross the english channel illegally . the labour leader illegally. the labour leader says the deal may involve a quid pro quo of accepting migrants from the eu bloc. sir keir and the shadow home secretary , the shadow home secretary, yvette cooper met with the eu's policing body europol in the hague. this morning. those are the top stories as more detail on all of them by heading to our website gbnews.com . a brighter website gbnews.com. a brighter outlook with boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> hello again . as we head >> hello again. as we head through the end of the week, we are going to see the weather front. that's currently across the still linger whilst by the uk still linger whilst by the uk still linger whilst by the some warm , humid air
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the weekend some warm, humid air bnngs the weekend some warm, humid air brings risk of thunderstorms brings the risk of thunderstorms . looking at the at the . looking at the picture at the moment see front moment you can see that front that mentioned and it's that i mentioned and it's bringing cloud and rain across parts central and parts of central england and wales moment . parts of central england and wales moment. it is wales at the moment. it is gradually to start to push gradually going to start to push its northwards as we go its way northwards as we go through this evening and overnight. the early hours overnight. so by the early hours of friday morning, quite a wet picture across parts of northern england, southern scotland and northern ireland. low northern ireland. the low pressure brought some pressure that's brought some windy scotland windy weather to scotland recently clearing northwards, recently is clearing northwards, but for orkney and but staying windy for orkney and shetland. temperatures will drop a bit lower than they did a little bit lower than they did last night for a few places. low single perhaps single figures perhaps in scotland single figures scotland and some single figures in south. so a wet picture in the south. so a wet picture across southern scotland , across southern scotland, northern england and northern ireland. friday ireland. first thing on friday morning. front doesn't morning. and that front doesn't really anywhere particularly really go anywhere particularly fast result, could see fast. as a result, we could see some rainfall totals building fast. as a result, we could see sonparticularly»tals building fast. as a result, we could see sonparticularly acrossrilding fast. as a result, we could see sonparticularly across parts] fast. as a result, we could see sonparticularly across parts of up, particularly across parts of southern scotland . towards the southern scotland. towards the north. there will be a few showers around . meanwhile, showers around. meanwhile, across england across central southern england and wales, fine sunny and wales, lots of fine sunny weather to be and weather to be had and temperatures higher than temperatures a touch higher than today into the mid today likely to get into the mid 20s into saturday. and
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20s as we go into saturday. and you can see that front really hasn't made much progress. so still some further rain building up, parts of up, particularly across parts of southern scotland. and notice as well, starting see well, already starting to see some pushing in from the some showers pushing in from the south. because have south. that's because we have some and some high some humid air and some high temperatures . temperatures temperatures. temperatures peaking saturday high peaking on saturday in the high 20s, bringing the risk of some thunderstorms . a brighter thunderstorms. a brighter outlook with boxt solar >> proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> i don't know about you, but i'm sick and tired of hearing what our obligations on the international stage are. i'm sick and tired of hearing about what obligations people sick and tired of hearing about wh.aroundbligations people sick and tired of hearing about wh.around the ations people sick and tired of hearing about wh.around the world people sick and tired of hearing about wh.around the world are ieople sick and tired of hearing about wh.around the world are .ople sick and tired of hearing about wh.around the world are . when all around the world are. when we living in this we have people living in this country legal country right now, either legal immigrants or brits who are being forced into destitution an and poverty living in dire circumstances as a result of a housing crisis. and they are
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bottom of the queue. okay they are back of the queue when it comes to local councils. priority his mps standing up for them in parliament. charities, human rights groups, the media, they are absolutely back of the pile when it comes to getting things done for them. so i went to have a look at something i couldn't really believe was happening in this country, which is that people are being forced to live in shipping containers that are not fit for human habitation. okay they are not at all rising damp, no hot and cold water at all. bug infestation means no security . so local drug means no security. so local drug addicts just wander in and in some cases perform sex acts in the laundry area in front of kids. you have rampant crime there , no fire safety. what's so there, no fire safety. what's so ever absolutely disgusting environment that people are being forced to live it . and being forced to live it. and those people remarkably , despite
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those people remarkably, despite the fact that very often they have young kids , very often they have young kids, very often they are fleeing domestic abuse and terrible situations. these people are vulnerable . okay. people are vulnerable. okay. despite the fact they're in that situation, they are on band c of a social housing waiting list . i a social housing waiting list. i want to know who's on band a and who's on band b, although i think we can all hazard a guess . i went and caught up at a shipping container centre, if you want to call it that. in acton, in ealing, in west london, which is for what it's worth, under a labour council, which we are yet to get a response from , and spoke to response from, and spoke to a lady who was originally from the congo who had come to britain years ago and been living in a completely normal life paying tax , working, etcetera, tax, working, etcetera, etcetera, etcetera . has a few etcetera, etcetera. has a few kids. unfortunately her flat burnt down due to no fault of her own flat, burnt down and was forced into this supposedly temporary accommodation and temporary accommodation and temporary accommodation and temporary accommodation was a year ago now. i went and caught
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up with her and this is this is what she had to say. and just a warning for some as well, warning for some people as well, that some of the images and everything that i'm about to see are way that are are about the way that we are forcing citizens law forcing british citizens and law abiding already this abiding citizens already in this country with might country to live with might distress . live here is a distress you. live here is a nightmare, to be honest . nightmare, to be honest. >> as a parent, a mother of three, a single mother of three, just live here is as bad as you can think. anything bad happened here, anything bad. so i moved here, anything bad. so i moved here like last year. my house caught fire. july july 12th, 2022. so i was sent to a b&b. theni 2022. so i was sent to a b&b. then i couldn't cope with the state, so i moved here in september . so since i moved september. so since i moved here, i was actually moved to room three because the condition of room three was so bad. my son got asthma and then i had a newborn in there. they mould the condensation, everything . condensation, everything. everything was just bad, really , really bad. i have to cry out
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really loud to call the council, to call the building manager. g'day i have to call his manager , derek. i call my housing officer, mubeen . i call everyone officer, mubeen. i call everyone you can think of to get help to move from that room because it was so bad the floor was so swollen. water everywhere. the mould was everywhere. i have the video , i have the pictures. video, i have the pictures. i cried . i call healing repair. cried. i call healing repair. i just i was just crying in that every day a couple of weeks ago , i wrote to the mp . rupa, i , i wrote to the mp. rupa, i tell the situation of me seeing that has a mother living here. i explained my situation and she said to me, okay, good . and said to me, okay, good. and send, you know, send the evidence, the picture of your situation. sent everything situation. i sent everything i witnessed dealing the drug dealer that comes here every day, every night there are people are coming here. they always hide. they are crackhead that sleep in the laundry area.
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ihave that sleep in the laundry area. i have a 15 year old i came for. send him in the laundry area. it doesn't go there. i live here for like a year and my son only go that room twice . i go to that room twice. i witnessed myself. people making out in the room and they don't even care. you are there. >> sex activity? >> sex activity? >> yes, they don't care if you are there or not. they're just going to carry on with what they are doing. if they're doing drugs, will on doing drugs, they will carry on doing drugs. they making drugs. if they are making out, they keep making out. so they will keep making out. so you pretend they you just pretend like they are not they are not there. >> bathroom situation? >> you open my bathroom now you see the situation. there's some flies there. i don't know where they're coming from . i just they're coming from. i just don't they're coming don't know where they're coming from. some flies there , from. there's some flies there, a lot of flies . oh, gosh. a lot of flies. oh, gosh. >> okay . >> okay. >> okay. >> i don't have hot water at the moment as i'm talking to you right . so hot water. no hot for right. so hot water. no hot for water like four weeks now. it's just very disappointing waiting for them to treat the citizen like this. living like like this. we just living like illegal immigrants. we are not illegal. no one illegal here. illegal. no one is illegal here. we have kids that go to school .
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we have kids that go to school. >> you make a good point. you have come to this country legally. people born here, whatever . and legally. people born here, whatever. and you're being forced to live like this. when some people who , let's be some people who, let's be honest, do come here illegally , honest, do come here illegally, we are being given more. i am i am not illegal. >> i'm legal and i have kids in here. so i'm from congo. if i'm telling you i never see anything like this. me actually , i never like this. me actually, i never witnessed anything like this in congo. witnessed anything like this in congo . what's going on outside congo. what's going on outside this place is just is ridiculous for ealing council to treat the citizen like this is. is it huns citizen like this is. is it hurts sometimes you just feel like what is going on? why do you have to treat people like this? and you go to your home, to your kids, sleeping at night and dreaming when all the parents and kids are sleeping in the containers and they're calling it flat. this is no flat. this is two, three containers. they divided by three or something. and they're calling it flat. this is no flat . and you have to hide from your
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loved one, your friend, loved one, from your friend, from family , because it's from your family, because it's embarrassing people you embarrassing to tell people you live here. i live in ealing. for 15 years i didn't know this place existed . i didn't know 15 years i didn't know this placelzxisted . i didn't know 15 years i didn't know this placei wased . i didn't know 15 years i didn't know this placei was sent didn't know 15 years i didn't know this placei was sent here.t know 15 years i didn't know this placei was sent here. thenrv until i was sent here. then i found out what? what? what is this ? this is not okay. this this? this is not okay. this this needs to be shut down. this place is not fit for human. >> it isn't . i when i spent >> it isn't. i when i spent quite a long time there, it's not my heart bleeds for the people there . it is absolutely people there. it is absolutely unacceptable that human beings should be put in a situation like that. now, obviously , in like that. now, obviously, in that interview, the woman said that interview, the woman said that she'd written to labour mp rupa haq. now she's the local mp. i contacted rupa huq earlier today. now she was unavailable for interview, but a member of her staff did get back to us very quickly to be fair. and she said her has said that her office has sent a letter to ealing council. last month you sent me a copy of that letter. in the letter, rupa huq wrote of wrote that a number of her constituents had complained
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about involving drug and about issues involving drug and alcohol . she also said alcohol abuse. she also said that she'd been alerted to problems with the cleaning of meath court, which what that meath court, which is what that centre, if you want to call it that, called electrics that, is called with electrics and with mould. i also contacted eaung and with mould. i also contacted ealing council. now i want to be very clear about the questions that i've asked ealing council because i fully intend get because i fully intend to get answers to these will answers to these and i will continue order continue to be pushing in order to them . so i contacted to get them. so i contacted eaung , to get them. so i contacted ealing , okay, and i ealing council, okay, and i asked them pretty straightforwardly whether or not they felt that these conditions were fit for human habitation. so straightforward question there. i wanted to know what specific characteristics somebody has to be classed on band a and band b of a social housing waiting list because those people are on band c, which means that they're not getting housed anywhere any time soon. unfortunately for them, thatis soon. unfortunately for them, that is the way that they are going to have to continue to live for long as live their lives for as long as it for us to build it takes for us to build more houses, we're not doing. i houses, which we're not doing. i want to know why the council
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hasn't cctv or hasn't fitted proper cctv or secured gates to stop people getting in there. and i want to know how much available housing stock there is in ealing and these are questions that i think will be worthwhile being asked to every single council right across . at the across the country. at the moment we have of ordinary people, taxpayer was living in those situations and i think that that is absolutely bang out of order. tell me more about our obugafions of order. tell me more about our obligations to the rest of the world, please. gb views gb news.com . in other news, yes, news.com. in other news, yes, this is very much a shift in tone . could it be true that tone. could it be true that there are aliens? yes, that's right. viewers can see pictures of what is being claimed to be two alien corpses are 1000 two alien corpses that are 1000 years these were unveiled years old. these were unveiled in mexico yesterday as the truth out there, it's in a little box in mexico. patrick christys gb news, britain's
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sunday mornings from 930 on. gb news. welcome back. >> now this is my favourite topic and i make no excuses for it. i will be talking about ufos shortly. a little tease, by the way, at 5 pm. obviously i will be talking more about keir starmer's latest plans regarding the and the eu and the quotas and the migrants that stuff. migrants and all of that stuff. right. more right. but this is more important. okay could life be out alien life in mexico out there? alien life in mexico to non—human alien to alleged non—human alien corpses have been shown to mexican politicians. they were found peru . they're estimated found in peru. they're estimated to be a thousand years old now, a enthusiast testified under
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a ufo enthusiast testified under oath, almost a third of oath, saying almost a third of the mummified specimens was the mummified specimens dna was unknown they not part unknown and they were not part of terrestrial evolution . of our terrestrial evolution. right. | of our terrestrial evolution. right. i don't actually really care about those little things in boxes that much. maybe the care about those little things in bimaybeat much. maybe the care about those little things in bimaybe they're. maybe the care about those little things in bimaybe they're not. ybe the care about those little things in bimaybe they're not. ire the care about those little things in bimaybe they're not. i don't real maybe they're not. i don't know what i think is now know. but what i think is now happening and human beings , for happening and human beings, for some bizarre reason, don't seem to being to care, is that we are being told by a variety of different governments that aliens exist. so author of ufo and the extraterrestrial message amongst other things, is richard laurence. and richard joins me now. richard, in last few now. richard, in the last few moments , nasa releasing moments, nasa is releasing information , isn't it, about information, isn't it, about ufos, etcetera, that finished like half an hour ago? >> washington report that's >> washington a report that's been worked on. >> i mean , it's always a little >> i mean, it's always a little disappointing if you have expectations, but but in terms of government releases , this has of government releases, this has been a spectacular year because their bar is so low. i mean, they lied for so long and they've covered it up and that's not a theory. now, it's known . not a theory. now, it's known. yeah. so nasa have come out and i understand someone who is monitoring it for me just told
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me they end by saying the extraterrestrial theory is plausible, which for them is right. >> let's just have this right. you are utterly convinced , you are utterly convinced, aren't you, that extraterrestrial life has visited earth and communicated with human beings? >> definitely. and it's not new. i mean, it goes right the way back.i i mean, it goes right the way back. i mean, some of the best documents on some of the religious scripts because they're the ones that have lasted. has lasted. the ramayana has fantastic descriptions. i mean , fantastic descriptions. i mean, much better than flying saucer tic tac and the bible and so on. it's nothing new about it. nothing strange about it. it's what's great, though, patrick, is the stigma is going around. people can now talk about it without being ridiculed. the worst you get as you said, is boredom. >> where do you think extraterrestrials come from? >> i believe they come from throughout the galaxies , but throughout the galaxies, but also from this solar system. so i know that's extremely radical. and what they're always looking for is life as we know it . you for is life as we know it. you know, is there sustainable
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conditions? there aren't on mars. venus, jupiter for life as we know it. but then i'm also, as you might know , a believer in as you might know, a believer in multi dimensional existence , multi dimensional existence, which is where science is going now . how. >> now. >> just go on and explain that a little bit. well so that you could forms. could have life forms. >> astronomer helen >> in fact, the astronomer helen sharman know, the sharman said, you know, the auens sharman said, you know, the aliens could be invisible to us. right? and some of the uap, as they now call them, the ufos that have detected , could that they have detected, could disappear reappear. that they have detected, could disappear reappear . they disappear and reappear. they have powers over matter that and also gravity that we don't understand. so multi dimensional existence would be higher life forms, you might say a higher frequency of existence . frequency of existence. >> and do you think that governments are hiding this from us? >> i know they've hidden it for us. i mean, that's i've brought documents over 40 years ago. believe it or not, in my 20s, which which were absolutely clear cut evidence that governments like what, quickly? well okay. there's one paper from the 70s where which showed
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something that came up in the congress hearing last month actually that they they were chased by a jet. it was actually over tehran. this is a cia document. it's in my book. people read it. it's but you people can read it. it's but you find it elsewhere. you don't have to buy book, but have to buy my book, but i probably shouldn't but have to buy my book, but i prshows shouldn't but have to buy my book, but i prshows thatrldn't but have to buy my book, but i prshows that they but have to buy my book, but i prshows that they not but have to buy my book, but i prshows that they not only but have to buy my book, but i prshows that they not only were it shows that they not only were they not only chased a ufo , they they not only chased a ufo, they sorry , were chased by a ufo, but sorry, were chased by a ufo, but as soon as the plane came within five airing distance of that craft, their weapons control panel went dead. and then when they were out of range, it was reactive, ated. again, this is cia documents showing and there's a lot of this stuff out there. >> oh, yes, there is a lot of this. and we are now starting to get disclosure, aren't we? we are. >> and what's important i think, isn't just the craft. it's who's in them. what is their message? what are they saying ? why are what are they saying? why are they doing this? why are they giving clear evidence? but going no further? and will they and we'll have to wait and see what that message officially is.
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yeah, well, there are people who claim to know and i don't by the way, i'm quite sceptical. i think you have to be very careful. i don't necessarily believe a lot of claims, but there are genuine ones and the ones i've written about, they are genuine. are absolutely genuine. >> talk you again >> i want to talk to you again very, quickly. patrick very, very quickly. patrick christys gb to come back christys gb news to come back more starmers migrant christys gb news to come back more but starmers migrant christys gb news to come back more but i starmers migrant christys gb news to come back more but i find armers migrant deal, but i find that fascinating. xenotech >> the temperature's rising boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news hello again solar proud sponsors of weather on. gb news hello again. >> as we head through the end of the week, we are going to see the week, we are going to see the weather front. that's currently across the uk still lingering by weekend lingering whilst by the weekend some humid air brings the some warm, humid air brings the risk thunderstorms . looking risk of thunderstorms. looking at picture at the moment at the picture at the moment you can that can see that front that i mentioned and it's bringing cloud rain across parts of cloud and rain across parts of central england and wales the central england and wales at the moment gradually to moment. it is gradually going to start to push its way northwards as this evening as we go through this evening and so by the early and overnight. so by the early hours of friday morning, quite a wet parts wet picture across parts of northern england , southern
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northern england, southern scotland northern ireland. scotland and northern ireland. the low pressure that's brought some windy weather to scotland recently northwards recently is clearing northwards , windy orkney , but staying windy for orkney and . and temperatures and shetland. and temperatures will a little bit lower will drop a little bit lower than did last night for than they did last night for a few low single few places. low single figures perhaps scotland and some perhaps in scotland and some single in the south. so single figures in the south. so a wet picture across southern scotland, northern england and northern ireland first thing on friday that front friday morning. and that front doesn't anywhere, doesn't really go anywhere, particularly fast. as a result, we rainfall we could see some rainfall totals building up, particularly across parts southern across parts of southern scotland . towards the north. scotland. towards the north. there will be a few showers around. meanwhile, across central southern england and wales , lots fine sunny wales, lots of fine sunny weather had and weather to be had and temperatures higher than temperatures a touch higher than today to get into the mid today likely to get into the mid 20s as we go into saturday. and you that front really you can see that front really hasn't made much progress. so still rain building still some further rain building up, particularly parts up, particularly across parts of southern notice as southern scotland. and notice as well, already starting to see some pushing in from the some showers pushing in from the south. that's we have south. that's because we have some and some high some humid air and some high temperatures. temperatures peaking saturday high peaking on saturday in the high 20s bringing the risk of some
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thunderstorms . the temperatures thunderstorms. the temperatures rising by next. >> solar proud sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> it's 5 pm. it's patrick christys. it's gb news now as
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keir starmer stands on the brink of apparently coming up with some acceptance some new migrants acceptance quota european some new migrants acceptance quota italy european some new migrants acceptance quota italy facingeuropean some new migrants acceptance quota italy facing up)pean some new migrants acceptance quota italy facing up to�*an union. italy is facing up to 8000 in the space of union. italy is facing up to 80clast in the space of union. italy is facing up to 80clast day in the space of union. italy is facing up to 80clast day orn the space of union. italy is facing up to 80clast day or so.ie space of union. italy is facing up to 80clast day or so. not ace of union. italy is facing up to 80clast day or so. not all of the last day or so. not all of them, particularly desirable, it must yes there is an must be said. yes there is an individual, of 8000 individual, one of those 8000 arrivals washing himself in a rather rude area publicly. could all of that be on its way to britain? it is this eu migrant deal that keir starmer is looking to sign that could, according to some reports, see us take a quota of upwards of 100,000 migrants from around the continent into britain every single year. could you vote for a party that backs that but close to home in wales ? i'm close to home in wales? i'm going to show you probably the most outrageous case of an asylum seeker hotel that you will ever see right. these people actually live right next to this hotel to the point where the walls are conjoined. so the 400 men that would be dumped in basically a field in wales , basically a field in wales, they'd be living with. okay i'll be talking to a lady who's very
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, very concerned about this very shortly . but also, look at this. shortly. but also, look at this. we currently have british citizens and people who've arrived in this country legally living in shipping containers in inhumane conditions in this country right now. so we can't house them anywhere . i find that house them anywhere. i find that staggering. i've got another expose on all of this coming your way very shortly. and something rather different to end the hour as well. i mean, this it brings tear to the this is it brings a tear to the eye, doesn't it? jeremy vine knocked off his bike. this video footage of it. you hate to see it. patrick is dup. footage of it. you hate to see it. patrick is dup . news right. it. patrick is dup. news right. get your emails coming in gbviews@gbnews.com i will take the time to go through some of those and read them out this houn those and read them out this hour. could you vote for a party that does an eu migrant quota deal that's what i want to know. but now it's polly but right now it's polly middlehurst with the headlines.
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>> patrick, thank you. good evening . will. the top story evening. will. the top story from the gp newsroom is that around 1 in 7 brits are waiting for routine treatment from the nhs in england. new figures show 7.68 million people are currently on the list . there's currently on the list. there's also been a rise in longer waits of more than a year earlier , the of more than a year earlier, the government announced the nhs will receive £200 million to help with the coming winter, but labour says the money is a sticking plaster for the prime minister, adding the government is trying to improve waiting times . times. >> well winter is always a challenging time for the nhs and this year we started planning for winter earlier than ever before. today we're announcing £200 million, which will go to the nhs to help build extra capacity and resilience for this winter season, making sure that patients can get the care that they need. earlier this year, we also announced the long term workforce sure that workforce plan, making sure that for first time we train more for the first time we train more doctors and nurses and dentists here in the uk, but also the
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work we're doing to improve nhs performance , which the results performance, which the results today is delivering for today show is delivering for patients with big improvements in ambulance times and a&e times since the winter rishi sunak well, also in the news today, sir keir starmer says he'll seek an eu wide returns agreement for those who cross the english channel and come to the uk illegally . illegally. >> the labour leader says the deal may involve a quid pro quo of accepting migrants from the bloc . sir keir and the shadow bloc. sir keir and the shadow home secretary , yvette cooper home secretary, yvette cooper met with the eu's policing body europol in the hague this morning. will the shadow cabinet minister, nick thomas—symonds, told gb news labour do want to bnng told gb news labour do want to bring net migration down there are countries now where the government could be fast tracking people through the asylum system so that they can be deported . be deported. >> they can be doing that now instead . should we have instead. should we have a backlog in the asylum system of
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over 107, 30,000 odd people ? over 107, 30,000 odd people? thatis over 107, 30,000 odd people? that is a lack of control role. that's what this government is presiding over. and frankly , presiding over. and frankly, after 13 years, they ought to be sorting it out. well the immigration minister, robert jenrick says labour's plan won't stop the small boats crisis . stop the small boats crisis. >> well, i think the mask supped >> well, i think the mask slipped today . we saw what would slipped today. we saw what would happenif slipped today. we saw what would happen if there was a labour government and is that they government and that is that they would wave in tens of thousands of illegal migrants from a place of illegal migrants from a place of safety in europe if their plan to share the burden of european countries went ahead over 100,000 illegal migrants would come to the uk and the worst thing is it wouldn't even stop the boats . stop the boats. >> the personal details of greater manchester police officers have been hacked in a cyber attack. details such as identity badges and warrant cards , including names and cards, including names and photographs, are all thought to
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have been stolen . the force says have been stolen. the force says it's aware of the attack and is treating it very seriously . but treating it very seriously. but it's not believed the data breach includes any financial information on three metropolit police officers are to face a misconduct hearing for their role in the strip search of a minor. the incident took place at a school in hackney in december 2020. it's alleged three officers just didn't follow procedure proper and they discriminated against the child on the grounds of her race and genden on the grounds of her race and gender. the met say the incident should never have happened . should never have happened. taking you to libya now, where casualties could have been avoided if the country had had a functioning weather service. that's the message from the head of world meteorology . of world meteorology. meteorology at least 5300 people are known to have died after storm daniel hit the coastal city of derna in the country . city of derna in the country. rescue operations have been complicated by political fractures in the country, which has experienced conflict for more than a decade. the uk
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government, though, says it's going to provide an initial aid package worth up to £1 million here at home, house prices declined in august at their fastest rate since 2009. that's according to the royal institution of chartered surveyors. it says a majority of property professionals are reporting declines, largely due to high mortgage rates. new bar inquiries also continue to fall , while rents continue to rise . , while rents continue to rise. and finally, the westminster dog of the year award has been presented to mims davis and her dog tj . if you're watching on dog tj. if you're watching on television, take a look also at rosie duffield and her cavalier king charles spaniel paco, which has picked up the sir david amess public vote award. it's in memory of the late conservative mp sir david was a staunch advocate of the competition and advocate of the competition and a tireless campaigner for dog welfare . lovely sunny day in welfare. lovely sunny day in london. you're with gb news across the uk on tv, in your car
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on your digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news lose. this is britain's news . play gb news lose. this is britain's news. channel >> well, the cat's out of the bag.the >> well, the cat's out of the bag. the mask has slipped. sir keir starmer , the man who could keir starmer, the man who could well be our next prime minister is do a deal with is looking to do a deal with the eu on illegal migrants. now, this could see us taking a quota of the of people arriving in the european union. he says that this may well open the door, if you'll excuse the pun, it you'll excuse the pun, when it comes to borders, to a comes to our borders, to a returns agreement the on returns agreement with the eu on channel migrants he also says that he dropped the rwanda plan. right. well look, this might mean might mean that we see fewer people crossing the channel fewer people crossing the channel, but it will almost definitely mean more people overall . all the fatal flaw with overall. all the fatal flaw with labour's plan is that because the uk has such a high population, quota from the population, our quota from the eu would almost definitely be higher. so we could end up having to accept between 100,000
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and 182,000 people every single year reportedly are already crowded. little island will be packed to the rafters even more . look, just look at the latest from italy. okay? and bear in mind that this is all coming our way. okay the island of lampedusa received around 8000 migrants, mostly men, mostly from africa in the last couple of days , 8000 the last couple of of days, 8000 the last couple of days. these people arrived in something resembling an old fashioned armada. they were gathered for processing. then there was a fight between them and the border officials. and then, as we can see, footage of them doing things like washing their in the public their genitals in the public fountain is it's not fountain, which is not it's not great, it really? now great, is it really? no. now imagine about 182,000 people being picked up from places like lampedusa and other parts of europe and plonked into the uk. do you think that's okay? because i certainly don't. now people will say let them work. really do. a lot of those really do do. a lot of those people look like highly skilled doctors. people who would be a net benefit, maybe to our economy and our country ? i don't
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economy and our country? i don't think so. where are they going to live? and this is the vital point for me. where are they going to live? we don't have the housing. you housing. as i will show you later on hour. have later on this hour. we have british have people british citizens. we have people who this country who have come to this country legally living in places like shipping with shipping containers with cockroach infestation and all sorts of problems. we've got people already living like that and we're telling them we can't house them anywhere. so where do we house people ? so it we house these people? so it would also be another step towards the european would also be another step towardever the european would also be another step towardever closerthe european would also be another step towardever closer tieseuropean would also be another step towardever closer ties to opean would also be another step towardever closer ties to europe union ever closer ties to europe . and what evidence is there to say that this would actually stop what's going on in the channel? we would end up, in my view, with the worst of both worlds. what this is, is a capitulation from a man leading a party that i am convinced will eventually come out in favour of an amnesty for everybody who's come here illegally or something very much like it. that does not ideologically oppose open borders and would be quite happy to see us back in the european union . how on earth could labour
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union. how on earth could labour be trusted not to sell britain? our culture, our way life, our culture, our way of life, our society completely down the river? is happening in the river? what is happening in the channel right now is bad , it is channel right now is bad, it is bad, and the tories have not got hold of it. in fact , they've hold of it. in fact, they've royally messed it up. there's no getting around that. okay, but the solution is not some kind of quota system with the european union that will see vast swathes of world know that they are of the world know that they are guaranteed a place in britain if they can just make it to the european union illegally. and if he goes ahead with this, i think it will be a gift to the tories . how could you vote for that . . how could you vote for that. gb views gbnews.com. that's the email address i want to hear from you on all this. and i think this is an astute, punishing political up here from keir starmer. why didn't he just keep his mouth shut? keep your mouth shut. let the tories mess it up. we've got no idea what
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sir keir starmer wants to do and it turns out wants so it turns out he wants this. so anyway, olivia utley correspondent olivia utley joins me thank you much, me now. thank you very much, olivia could be olivia. i mean, this could be a catastrophic political own goal for keir starmer. catastrophic political own goal for keir starmer . surely for keir starmer. surely >> i think it well might be a big own goal for keir starmer. westminster has been waited with bated breath for quite a long time to hear what keir starmer has to say on immigration. even in february he set out his big speech, his five missions for a better britain , and very better britain, and very conspicuously there was no mention of small boats at all. so ever since then, people have been asking keir starmer with increasing urgency , what he increasing urgency, what he would do about the crisis. that's why he's spoken up now. but this plan that he's come up with to reach some sort of returns agreement with the eu will very controversial will be very controversial indeed. there were plenty of labour brexiteers and they've already been quite suspicious of keir starmer because for so long after the referendum he was at the front of a rejoin the eu campaign. he now appears to have
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accepted the result of the referendum and so slowly has been regaining the trust of some of those labour. brexiteer peers. but there's a worry that he could be destroying it all again in one fell swoop with this agreement, which, as you say , some would argue is just say, some would argue is just allowing the eu to take back control , if you like, of control, if you like, of britain's immigration system. the tories have jumped on this. unsurprisingly, there's already a starmer attack poster out saying that we could be the uk could receive up to 100,000 migrants a year under keir starmer's new plan , and they're starmer's new plan, and they're going to be feeling really, really gleeful about this. the prime minister has been having a tough few months. nothing's going right for him. his five prime cities, which he's been talking about since january, january are pretty much all falling through inflation is not going down quickly. the economy is not growing. in fact, it shrunk by 0.5. the small boats crisis is ongoing, but now the prime minister will be thinking, i've got a glimmer of hope here. keir starmer might just have
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signed his own political suicide note . note. >> absolutely. i mean, keir starmer, from what can gather, >> absolutely. i mean, keir starmanaged what can gather, >> absolutely. i mean, keir starmanaged wicome an gather, >> absolutely. i mean, keir starmanaged wicome up gather, >> absolutely. i mean, keir starmanaged wicome up wither, has managed to come up with the only than we've only thing worse than what we've got then present it as, got now and then present it as, this what i'm going if this is what i'm going to do. if you olivia, thank you let me. but olivia, thank you let me. but olivia, thank you very much. great you very, very much. great stuff. a stuff. olivia there is a political reporter outside westminster for us. i am stuck at the keir starmer. i mean, the mask has well and truly slipped as as i can see. tony blair as far as i can see. tony blair 2.0. i mean, doesn't take 2.0. i mean, it doesn't take a genius to work out who's pulling 2.0. i mean, it doesn't take a gen strings, ork out who's pulling 2.0. i mean, it doesn't take a gen strings, does ut who's pulling 2.0. i mean, it doesn't take a gen strings, does ut vbuts pulling 2.0. i mean, it doesn't take a gen strings, does ut vbut does ing the strings, does it? but does the strings, does it? but does the take its fair the uk already take its fair share of asylum seekers? bearing in mind that if we signed up to this look, we voted to leave the eu. the eu is not going to let us as a nation, as far as i can tell, take less as a quota per head of population than its member states would. why because that would tell all the member states if vote leave the states, if you vote to leave the european union, then do european union, we will then do a with that allows you a deal with you that allows you to take fewer asylum seekers. so why let us do that? why would the eu let us do that? so we're going to have to take our fair share. do our quotes fair share. do we already share? i'm already take our fair share? i'm joined former joined now by former brexit party lowe and
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party mep rupert lowe and professor of economics and pubuc professor of economics and public at king's college public policy at king's college london, portes . london, jonathan portes. jonathan, you, jonathan, i'll start with you, if all right. do we if that's all right. do we already take share ? already take our fair share? >> there's no such thing as a fair share. what the uk needs is a fair human, humane and well—managed asylum seeking system . system. >> we haven't got that now. obviously it's a mess . >> we haven't got that now. obviously it's a mess. in order to do that part of the answer, not the whole answer, but part of the answer is to negotiate , of the answer is to negotiate, to manage that in conjunction with european partners, even though we have left the eu because we still share the same geographic neighbourhood with you. now, what i would say is that, frankly, everything you've said up to now is a mixture of fantasy and lies. said up to now is a mixture of fantasy and lies . there said up to now is a mixture of fantasy and lies. there is absolutely no substance whatsoever to well , the idea whatsoever to well, the idea that the sort of agreement that is proposed by starmer dealing with information sharing and
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deaung with information sharing and dealing with the allowing some as and remember , we've done this as and remember, we've done this before, right? david blunkett did this. >> no, no, no , no, no, no, no, >> no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. i'm to. going you've got to answer that . so you've got to answer that. so which of that was was which bit of that was was fantasy and lies ? come on. fantasy and lies? come on. >> the idea that there is any prospect whatsoever of an agreement between us and the eu that would result in us taking between 100 and 182,000. >> so we're 13. so we are 13% of europe's population , right? so europe's population, right? so 13. so if you work that out across what our quota will have to be, it would have to be an agreement. >> no, that's not how it works. that simply is not how it works, because the vast majority of the people who are coming across into the eu do not have any connection with the uk. unlike like, for example, the afghans who are the national party, who are the most predominant crossing the channel at the moment. most of the largest
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single component of those who are crossing the channel now are people from afghanistan , and people from afghanistan, and there are people who have a connection because they work with british forces, because with the british forces, because they have family some they have family here or some other uk. other connection with the uk. now in the early 2000, when we did a bilateral agreement with the french to resolve the then crisis , crossing the channel of crisis, crossing the channel of people crossing the channel. yes we did take some people and the french took some people back . french took some people back. that was how the deal worked. it did not lead to some sort of mass massive expansion in the number of people coming here. it was a pretty sensible , practical was a pretty sensible, practical way of dealing with a common problem. now, we don't know what an agreement between a keir starmer led government and the eu would look like, but the idea that it's going to lead to hundreds of thousands extra people coming here, as i said , people coming here, as i said, it's a mixture of fantasy and lies and nobody in their right mind should take it seriously . mind should take it seriously. and rupert. >> rupert. rupert i'll throw that over to you. former brexit
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party mep rupert lowe . is it a party mep rupert lowe. is it a mixture of fantasy and lies to suggest that we could now have, you know, upwards of 100,000 people a year, potentially coming with keir starmer doing some kind of deal with the european union? >> well, i don't think that's a fair comment, but having looked at jonathan's career, a lot of his career is very theoretical rather than practical . rather than practical. >> what i would say is that immigration structured immigration structured immigration in patrick is a good thing . thing. >> but what we clearly haven't got in any way is structured immigration. what we've got is a complete mess and the whole point of brexit and the brexit vote, which if you believe in democracy, was that the british people voted to take back our sovereign borders . and that sovereign borders. and that means that our government , means that our government, elected by the british people , elected by the british people, their job elected by the british people, theirjob is to serve the their job is to serve the interests of the british people and quite clearly we now have a sovereign nation that that is clear . but we sovereign nation that that is clear. but we don't have a
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government that's capable of actually doing what it should be doing. and that means policing our borders. so there are two issues here. i think, first of all, there's the illegal migration at the boats , which migration at the boats, which were clearly not stopping . and were clearly not stopping. and even though we've got our own navy, we have our own what i call border taxi service, because that's a appears to be what they we aren't policing that equally. we are seeing far too many legal migrants coming into the country. i think there is a point here that processing is a point here that processing is too slow. there are still 170,000 people waiting to be processed . but what we have to processed. but what we have to look , i'm just going to because look, i'm just going to because because we're because just because we're because just because we're because just because we're a bit past time, rupert, i'm just really to rupert, i'm just really going to drill just to know. i want >> i just want to know. i want to drill down. do you think what keir starmer is supposedly going to union to do with the european union will worse than will be better or worse than what now? what we've got now? >> much worse . >> rupert well, i'm much worse. i mean, keir starmer, as i've just said, the british people voted back sovereign voted to take back our sovereign borders. and what the tories are
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clearly not doing and i mean the problem, that problem, patrick, is that the entire westminster establishment with service behind with the civil service behind them deficient. so the them is deficient. so the british people, the british people now the next election have a choice . do they vote for have a choice. do they vote for another party? who's to going sit in opposition for another whatever it is, five years and blame the others for all the problems and then really want another party who does just the same ? what we've got to do is we same? what we've got to do is we need change. complete need change. we need complete and utter change. >> jonathan, i'll throw. >> so, jonathan, i'll throw. yeah, i'll get i'll get i'll get that kind of change that you talking about jonathan? i'll throw as far as throw over to you. so as far as you're genuinely hand throw over to you. so as far as yotheart, genuinely hand throw over to you. so as far as yotheart, you genuinely hand throw over to you. so as far as yotheart, you believe uinely hand throw over to you. so as far as yotheart, you believe that.y hand throw over to you. so as far as yotheart, you believe that underi on heart, you believe that under what? kind of what? keir starmer the kind of thing is proposing, thing keir starmer is proposing, it channel it would stop the channel migrant and it would lead migrant crisis and it would lead to fewer people rocking up in britain . and for us having to britain. and for us having to look after through an asylum or refugee system every single yean refugee system every single year, what you're saying ? >> 7- >> it's not 7 >> it's not going to solve the crisis on its own. it would be an improvement on the chaos and, you know, have some sympathy
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with what you said about the situation at the moment, which clearly is unacceptable. it is one part of the solution to the current chaotic, unmanaged system numbers, though. >> jonathan, come on. just just numbers. >> lower numbers , lower numbers >> lower numbers, lower numbers coming through legal and managed routes as opposed to what we have now, which is large numbers coming through . what about dangerous? >> what about actual numbers of people , regardless of what what people, regardless of what what we bracket them as? right. whether we do some kind of eu deal where we don't call them channel migrants anymore, we just go and pluck them straight from lampedusa or whatever we do. the numbers do. these are the numbers of people every single people arriving every single year that we would still have to find somewhere to house. i've just a piece. we've got just done a piece. we've got british in british citizens living in shipping right the shipping containers right at the moment and we're telling them we haven't anywhere them to haven't got anywhere for them to live. yeah, do. live. so yeah, we do. >> and we did not have >> and we and we did not have that during the covid period. why because it anything why not? not because it anything to do with migration. they have wait a obviously people living across the channel during them. the didn't
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the reason that we didn't have people on our streets homeless then is because the government took spend the took a decision to spend the money and put the resources in to stopping homelessness in the country . we did that the same country. we did that at the same time as people. asylum time as people. we had asylum seekers . it's got the two seekers. it's got the two issues. don't really have anything to do with each other. if homelessness, if you want to end homelessness, this country, you simply take a political decision to end homelessness. we can do that simply saying if we want to end homelessness, i will simply end. >> we all >> where do we get all the houses jonathan well, we houses from? jonathan well, we how many did you see homelessness the pandemic ? >> why 7 >> why not? because the government decision, government took a decision, a political decision to devote the resources to ending homelessness. we did that in the late 2000. we did it again dunng late 2000. we did it again during covid government . during covid government. >> i don't know if you i don't know if you've already if you've already done it. jonathan i don't know. already done it. jonathan i doryou1ow. already done it. jonathan i doryou be. already done it. jonathan i doryou be i used to. i was >> you be i used to. i was a civil servant for 25 years. yes. >> and you housed the refugee and you had refugees . do you and you had refugees. do you have a do you have people living with you living with me?
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>> no. yes why? why do you. >> no. yes why? why do you. >> astonishing. isn't it? the idea that someone you might. you might welcome in asylum? would you seeker living might welcome in asylum? would yo your seeker living might welcome in asylum? would yo your house? seeker living in your house? >> if i had the right type of house in the right circumstances, yes. that's problem. >> why not? >> why not? >> there are plenty of plenty. there plenty have there are plenty of. have you got that ? got john lydon? exactly that? >> no. what kind of house have you a two bedroom flat. you got? a two bedroom flat. >> why do you have. >> why do you have. >> you've got room or not. >> i've got a i've got a bedroom and an office. i've got a bedroom and an office that i share yes share with my partner. yes >> so you would so you just so it's not not for you, but obviously you know, we've got we could. we we could end could. we could, we could end homelessness with just to be someone it? >> we could end homelessness by putting people in housing the way that you did in the late in the late 2000 and the way that we did during the covid pandemic. there weren't people sleeping on the streets during the covid pandemic. why? because the covid pandemic. why? because the government took policy measures to end homelessness. it's that difficult . it's not that difficult. >> but you you wouldn't you wouldn't have policy
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wouldn't have that policy measure around at your house, though, b is though, would you be b is everyone else's, isn't it? >> i think you don't need to requisition to >> i think you don't need to recwe tion to >> i think you don't need to recwe didn't to >> i think you don't need to recwe didn't do to >> i think you don't need to recwe didn't do that to >> i think you don't need to recwe didn't do that in to >> i think you don't need to recwe didn't do that in the to it. we didn't do that in the late 2000. you casey on this late 2000. you had casey on this programme right? all programme before, right? all right . right. >> you can tell you how to end homelessness. >> it doesn't involve it doesn't i >>i -- >> i get m >> i get what you're about, jonathan. i get it. i get it. all right, i'll go on. rupert. we'll just final word quickly. rupert will. >> the answer your question >> the answer to your question is simply the one you is quite simply the one you asked is no, asked jonathan just now is no, it people coming it will not stop people coming over and what it will over in boats. and what it will also it will surrender our also do is it will surrender our sovereign select who we sovereign right to select who we accept the country and who accept into the country and who we don't. it it ultimately it is the thin end of the wedge as we know keir starmer armour and his team are very much accepting of a return to the european union , a return to the european union, not what the british people voted for. clearly, they don't respect democracy . and at the respect democracy. and at the end of the day, you know , we end of the day, you know, we need our sovereign borders policed by navy and our policed by our own navy and our own police. >> all right. both of you, look, thank very, much.
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thank you very, very much. fascinating on a few fascinating discussion on a few different reasons. think, different reasons. i think, though, a former brexit party though, as a former brexit party mep, rupert and professor though, as a former brexit party mieconomics and professor though, as a former brexit party mieconomics public'ofessor though, as a former brexit party mieconomics public policyr though, as a former brexit party miking'snics public policyr though, as a former brexit party miking'snics london, )olicyr at king's college london, jonathan offers a no jonathan portes, who offers a no room whatsoever available there for under his now for anyone to live under his now more migrants are more than 400 male migrants are about to be in a hotel in about to be housed in a hotel in about to be housed in a hotel in a tiny welsh village. i think this might be the most egregious example hotel that example of a migrant hotel that i've it's patrick i've come across. it's patrick christys news, britain's
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>> britain's news .
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>> britain's news. channel >> britain's news. channel >> welcome back. it is 5:28. you're watching . listening to you're watching. listening to me. patrick christys on gb news. look in a few moments time as the government million look in a few moments time as tidayivernment million look in a few moments time as tiday on'nment million look in a few moments time as tiday on certain million look in a few moments time as tiday on certain hotels million look in a few moments time as tiday on certain hotels , million look in a few moments time as tiday on certain hotels , one illion look in a few moments time as tiday on certain hotels , one of on a day on certain hotels, one of which, by the way, i will bring you shortly, i'm having look you shortly, i'm having a look at conditions that at some of the conditions that british are living in. british citizens are living in. but our asylum seekers to but our asylum seekers coming to a you, or they could a town near you, or they could be very a welsh be very soon a small welsh village population of village with a population of around 1200 in but it's around 1200 in total. but it's being used to house over 400 migrants in a hotel in pentre. i'm not quite sure i've pronounced that correctly. it's bad to say, but it's suggested that the northop hall country house hotel will have around 18 members of staff. there looking after around 400 migrants. you can see from the little map there. so the was coloured in red and purple right is people's houses already. so they they live on little kind of live on this little kind of compost. of houses, compost. a cluster of houses, but backs on as seeing but it backs on as you're seeing there to what would be a large asylum seeker hotel but not just with the hotel they're looking at actually putting up
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containers where people would live as well. so these people, the residents, one of whom the local residents, one of whom are now, are about to talk to you now, would surrounded would be completely surrounded by or men who by asylum seekers or men who could just walk into their property essentially any time that they like. and joining me now is local residents kate banjo and gina hamilton. both of you, thank you very, very much. great to have you on the show. now, could explain now, could you just explain to me bit, i'll me a little bit, kate, i'll start with you, exactly what's going on where you are then at start with you, exactly what's goirmoment. re you are then at the moment. >> we, my parents and i live >> so we, my parents and i live next door, literally adjoining , next door, literally adjoining, um, a hotel. >> and the there is an application for 408 undocumented did asylum seeker men or men not women and children. not families all men to be housed for seven years . years. >> for seven years and the situation as well in terms of just like the geography of it all gina is as i understand it, there's conjoining walls . isn't
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there's conjoining walls. isn't that right, between some of the houses , some of the property houses, some of the property there and this hotel ? houses, some of the property there and this hotel? and houses, some of the property there and this hotel ? and so, houses, some of the property there and this hotel? and so, i mean, you you would quite literally be living in an asylum hotel, basically , kind of that's correct. >> and so kate's house is actually adjoined on two sides by the hotel and along the back of her house is the low, flat roof building part of the hotel i >> -- >> and this flat roof is easily accessible . anybody can hop onto accessible. anybody can hop onto it. and from there, as you can see, there are bedroom windows. kate's family sleep in those bedroom windows . there's a bedroom windows. there's a bathroom. so they will be completely overlooked if anybody decides to jump on that roof , decides to jump on that roof, which would be very easy to do if you've got nothing else to do. they will be exposed and do. and they will be exposed and kate actually has a little girl and of two years old who uses the bedroom. she uses the bathroom . bathroom. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> so what you're seeing now is
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kate's house and the black line delineates her house from the hotel . so one side is her house. hotel. so one side is her house. and the side you're looking at now, that is the hotel. >> and that is where people will be living . be living. >> and asylum seekers. that's another one of our private properties. that's my house. and then we come back around to kate's house. yeah i mean. >> and. the court it's ridiculous . it's, it's ridiculous. it's, it's absolutely ludicrous . and kate absolutely ludicrous. and kate as well , you know, just explain as well, you know, just explain again the situation in in terms of the local residents, the kind of the local residents, the kind of ages of the local residents that we're talking about here as well, potentially how vulnerable you guys could be to this ? you guys could be to this? >> yeah, we're all extremely vulnerable . so my myself , as vulnerable. so my myself, as i said, i live with my parents, my dad is late 70. my mum is mid to late 60s. i dad is late 70. my mum is mid to late 60s . i have a little girl late 60s. i have a little girl who actually is type one diabetic as well. so she she has a disability. um, we are up all
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night throughout the night. the lights are on. you know, the fear of people just peering through the windows . they could through the windows. they could literally rub their faces up against the window. that's. that's how close we would be. um we then have neighbours , we then have neighbours, obviously. gina and her husband david as well. um david as suffered from, from poor mental health because of this, because of , of this health because of this, because of, of this situation. it's, it's extremely terrifying to all of us. there's then two other ladies who are in their early 50s and that's it, you know, against that 408 men, that will change. even if we had, you know, all lovely people that were staying there for six weeks, there's then a refresh of another six weeks, another 408 men and then another and another and another. for seven years. it's over 49,000 men. i mean, it's astonishing . it's astonishing. >> i think this is probably the
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most outrageous, genuinely the most outrageous, genuinely the most outrageous, genuinely the most outrageous case of one of these proposed hotels that i've ever come across. it's hard to imagine what i mean. you live literally next door to it. you share a wall with it 408 people potentially about to arrive and look, just just very, very quickly on this one, because i'm going to keep following this story over the course of the coming decision coming weeks. there's a decision that's made , i that's going to be made, i believe gina, by the local council is that is that right? at point soon, whether at some point soon, it's whether or really ahead, or not this really goes ahead, is that right? >> yeah, that's correct. so >> yeah, that's correct. and so planning in planning permission went in because as he is planning to put housing module . so a bit like housing module. so a bit like the shipping containers you were talking about before , 2 to 256 talking about before, 2 to 256 of the men there , asylum of the men there, asylum seekers. but they're all single men and the home office references them as between the ages of 18 and 39. so they're all quite young . and the all quite young. and the planning , the planning decision planning, the planning decision , i think, might be made around the end of september for. >> all right. well well, look,
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we'll we'll keep on top of this all right? and we'll keep chatting to you. and i really appreciate this appreciate you bringing this to my yeah , my attention here. and yeah, obviously, we'll stay in touch and we'll just keep following this. i just think it's absolutely astonishing, really, that even possibility absolutely astonishing, really, that it even possibility absolutely astonishing, really, that it ehappen. ssibility absolutely astonishing, really, that it ehappen. butility absolutely astonishing, really, that it ehappen. but asy that it could happen. but as kate gina kate banjo there and gina hamilton, local residents, we will of that story. will stay on top of that story. thank of thank you very much, both of you. still come. you. loads more still to come. between i've been between now and six, i've been speaking to people forced to live legal migrants live brits and legal migrants forced to live in these ridiculous containers forced to live in these ridicwe've containers forced to live in these ridicwe've got containers forced to live in these ridicwe've got westitainers forced to live in these ridicwe've got west london that we've got in west london whilst people are up whilst certain people are put up in hotels. but right now, in plush hotels. but right now, as polly . patrick. >> thank you. the top stories this hour, around 1 in 7 brits are waiting for routine treatment from the nhs . new treatment from the nhs. new figures show 7.68 million people are currently on the waiting list in england. well earlier the government announced the nhs will receive £200 million to help with the service in the coming winter. but labour says the money is just sticking the money is just a sticking
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plaster . the money is just a sticking plaster. meanwhile, sir keir starmer he'll seek an eu starmer says he'll seek an eu wide agreement for those wide return agreement for those who cross the english channel and try to come to the uk illegally . the labour leader illegally. the labour leader says the deal may involve a quid pro quo approach of accepting migrants from the bloc. sir keir starmer and the shadow home secretary, yvette cooper were pictured with the eu's policing body europol in the hague this morning and the personal detail of officers at greater manchester police have been stolen in a cyber attack. details like identity badges and warrant cards , including names warrant cards, including names and photograph offs, are all thought to have been hacked. the force says it's treating the attack very seriously . those are attack very seriously. those are the top stories. more on all of them by heading to our website, gbnews.com . direct bullion gb news.com. direct bullion sponsors gbnews.com. direct bullion sponsors the finance report on gb news for gold and silver
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investment . investment. >> it . quick look at the markets >> it. quick look at the markets and the numbers. >> the pound buying you $1.2412 and ,1.1647. the price of gold is £1,539.58 an ounce. and the ftse 100 has closed today . at ftse 100 has closed today. at 7673 points. direct bullion sponsors the finance report on gb news investments that matter a brighter outlook with boxt solar >> proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. hello again. >> as we head through the end of the week, we are going to see the week, we are going to see the weather front. that's currently across the uk still lingering by weekend lingering whilst by the weekend some air brings the some warm, humid air brings the risk thunderstorms . looking risk of thunderstorms. looking at at the moment, risk of thunderstorms. looking at can at the moment, risk of thunderstorms. looking at can see at the moment, risk of thunderstorms. looking at can see that the moment, risk of thunderstorms. looking at can see that frontroment, risk of thunderstorms. looking at can see that front that nt, you can see that front that i mentioned and it's bringing cloud and across parts of cloud and rain across parts of central england wales the
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central england and wales at the moment . it is gradually going to moment. it is gradually going to start to push its way northwards as go through this evening start to push its way northwards as overnight. gh this evening start to push its way northwards as overnight. so this evening start to push its way northwards as overnight. so thirthe aning start to push its way northwards as overnight. so thirthe early and overnight. so by the early hours quite a hours of friday morning, quite a wet picture across parts of northern england , southern northern england, southern scotland northern ireland. scotland and northern ireland. the low pressure that's brought some weather scotland some windy weather to scotland recently northwards recently is clearing northwards , but staying orkney , but staying windy for orkney and as temperatures and shetland as temperatures will a little bit lower will drop a little bit lower than they last night for than they did last night for a few places. low single figures perhaps scotland and some perhaps in scotland and some single the south. so single figures in the south. so a wet picture across southern scotland, northern england and northern ireland first thing on friday and front friday morning. and that front doesn't really go anywhere, particularly fast. as result, particularly fast. as a result, we rainfall we could see some rainfall totals building up, particularly across parts of southern scotland towards the north. there will be a few showers around. meanwhile across central southern , lots southern england and wales, lots of weather to be had of fine sunny weather to be had and temperatures higher and temperatures a touch higher than likely to get into than today likely to get into the mid 20s as we go into saturday. and you can see that front really hasn't made much progress. further progress. so still some further rain particularly rain building up, particularly across southern across parts of southern scotland notice well, scotland and notice as well, already starting to see some
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showers from the showers pushing in from the south. that's because we have some air and some high some humid air and some high temperatures. temperatures peaking the high peaking on saturday in the high 20s risk of some 20s, bringing the risk of some thunderstorms . thunderstorms. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar are proud sponsors of weather on . weather on. gb news. >> welcome back. we have british citizens and legal migrants, taxpayers, law abiding individuals living in conditions that are not fit for human habitation. where is the outrage? that's what i want to know. where's the human rights bngade? know. where's the human rights brigade? where's army brigade? okay, where's the army of people of charities and lawyers, people queuing signalling, queuing up virtue signalling, telling us that we have to do more for these people . it's not more for these people. it's not just me asking these questions. it's the residents of meath court hope gardens, a shipping container site in acton, ealing , west london. i spoke to a lady who had to flee a violent partner, a man that she claims is still on the run from police
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and poses a very real and present threat to her and her young children . she claims that young children. she claims that eaung young children. she claims that ealing council told her they'd secured her a two bedroom flat. well, what she discovered was a shipping container riddled with damp showers and bathroom facilities. so poor that some people have to wash using a bucket of water. there's an infestation of cockroaches, other bugs on one side of this 60 container or so facility , 60 container or so facility, there is rampant drug dealing, which we have footage of drug users living in the laundry room, sex workers performing sexual acts in a bin store. one woman was allegedly pushed off the top of one of these containers and had to be resuscitated by paramedics. it's not known whether or not she survived, despite several survived, despite having several young and in danger young children and in danger from a violent ex—partner, she was placed in a site without proper that's the proper security. that's the management office you're looking at. closed . when at. they're closed. when we turned shockingly , she is turned up, shockingly, she is not classed as a band or band b person on the housing waiting list, meaning that she and others like her are not deemed
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to be priority for social housing. now, in 2019, the eaung housing. now, in 2019, the ealing council really celebrated the arrival of the shipping containers, saying their innovative emerged accommodation that provides stable , that provides stable, comfortable environments to house people. well, the council has been very vocal about the lengths it's to going accommodate new arrivals from afghanistan and ukraine. the local mp, rupa huq, is even keen on having an amnesty for illegal immigrants. apparently the reality is, however, that vulnerable british citizens are left behind. now i spoke to one lady whose identity we are protecting due to those aforementioned family circumstances who said what it's like to live at meath court and how she feels about being a brit at the back of the queue . i came at the back of the queue. i came down here in the evening because they gave me the full address, so i said let me go and have a look. >> when i came here i said, is this a joke? i walked around and the gates were open , so i walked
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the gates were open, so i walked through and when i looked around, i said , this can't be around, i said, this can't be the same address . this cannot be the same address. this cannot be the same address. this cannot be the same address . but then i saw the same address. but then i saw someone, a tenant at the time, and i was like, excuse me, is this the right address? and she said, yes. and i said, is this shipping she shipping containers? and she said, yes . and said, oh my said, yes. and i said, oh my god, they're putting me in containers . it's absolute hell. containers. it's absolute hell. it's your worst nightmare. honestly it's like living in a prison , a mental hospital. prison, a mental hospital. that's how it feels. it's frightening . it's scary. you frightening. it's scary. you can't live a normal life. the children are traumatised. my son even, you know, says to me, mummy, why is there police here? again why are they here? are they coming ? i'm like, no, they coming? i'm like, no, they're not coming . but i have they're not coming. but i have to like, you know, try to cover it you can't . you walk it well, but you can't. you walk outside there's police on outside and there's police on the corner there at someone's doon the corner there at someone's door. they're doing police raids . you can't escape it . the drug
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. you can't escape it. the drug use as well. and the sexual acts that are happening on the actual premises, that's traumatising. and children are witnessing this. one of my neighbours witnessed a sexual act being performed in urban area and she had her son with her. that's disgusting . and my kids have disgusting. and my kids have seen two drug users doing heroin downstairs and anyone can walk in the gates were completely broken. i'd say about two months ago. they fixed the gates downstairs and they're broken again. but it's quite pointless because people are jumping over the drug dealers , the drug the drug dealers, the drug users, and they're breaking the gates. they're forcing the open and they're putting bricks and stuff to wedge the gate. so anyone can just walk in and on a daily basis, you're seeing people that don't live here. and also drug dealers that the council are aware of . the council are aware of. the builder manager is aware of it.
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i'm not sure what he's doing, to be honest with you. it's ridiculous . be honest with you. it's ridiculous. it's just not a nice environment to live in at all. and as you said, there's not a single camera . and as we are in single camera. and as we are in this building, single camera. and as we are in this building , there's not a this building, there's not a smoke alarm either. there's not a single smoke alarm . i've never a single smoke alarm. i've never had a smoke alarm . there's never had a smoke alarm. there's never been any inspections. there's no fire extinguisher. there's no signs for like a fire exit. there's nothing , nothing at all. there's nothing, nothing at all. >> if they were put in places like this, there would be outrage, right? how do you feel about that? because it doesn't really feel like people are standing up for you as much. >> it'sjust standing up for you as much. >> it's just not fair. it's really not fair. like we live here, we are born and bred here. we pay our taxes. you know, we just do what we meant to be doing. do you understand? and then people are coming from other country , as i understand, other country, as i understand, they're fleeing from , um, you they're fleeing from, um, you know, trauma and stuff . i do
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know, trauma and stuff. i do understand. and they should be entitled to every bit of help . entitled to every bit of help. but when it comes to housing, why are they getting brand new flats, brand new houses on the spot? yeah. and they can argue and say, oh, but that's not true. it is true . it is true. true. it is true. it is true. and it's a very harsh reality of this country, a country like this, a whole uk , a rich country this, a whole uk, a rich country like this with a monarchy . like this with a monarchy. >> okay . all right. so i have >> okay. all right. so i have gone to ealing council about this . i'm yet gone to ealing council about this. i'm yet to hear back from them. i've also gone to rupa huq, who got back quite quickly, actually, at least a member of her staff did. and she said she was unavailable for an interview. fair enough. at the moment, office interview. fair enough. at the mon me , office interview. fair enough. at the mon me that office interview. fair enough. at the mon me that written office told me that she'd written to eaung told me that she'd written to ealing month and ealing council last month and that she'd raised the concerns that she'd raised the concerns that of constituent that a number of constituent had complained that a number of constituent had complain
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more footage. there'll be more on to on this tomorrow. i'm going to speak now to stephen pound, who used ealing. used to be an mp for ealing. stephen, is not absolutely stephen, this is not absolutely staggering live in a staggering that we live in a country now where brits are at the back of the queue. i mean, if asylum seekers in a if we put asylum seekers in a situation there'd be outrage. >> look, this is not >> patrick look, this is not a question of anybody being back of queue. of the queue. >> borough like >> look, when a borough like ealing, it's got like 14 to ealing, when it's got like 14 to 20,000 and 20,000 homeless families and this a symptom of this is actually a symptom of utter desperation . we're in utter desperation. we're in a complete in housing in complete crisis in housing in london and we all know we all know that the sources, we all know that the sources, we all know the problems come know that the sources, we all know it's the problems come know that the sources, we all know it's tsolutionzms come know that the sources, we all know it's tsolution that'syme from. it's the solution that's the thing. the difficult thing. >> ealing has been >> now, look, ealing has been sending birmingham, sending people to birmingham, to middlesbrough, , middlesbrough, to bolton, because are desperate to because they are so desperate to house do not house people because we do not have housing the have the housing left. the problem violence problem with domestic violence cases in many cases cases is that in many cases people are fleeing domestic violence, but they do want to flee that far. and so what we would to do in a case like would like to do in a case like that, if somebody feeling that, if somebody is feeling domestic should that, if somebody is feeling dome up: should that, if somebody is feeling domeup: purple should that, if somebody is feeling domeup: purple sh0land bang up the purple traitor. and instead that person instead of giving that person a free saying we're going instead of giving that person a fre move saying we're going instead of giving that person a fre move the saying we're going instead of giving that person a fremove the people we're going instead of giving that person a fre move the people away. joing to move the people away. now, look, the of you could look, in the case of you could put fair, though, stephen, put to be fair, though, stephen, look, take much to look, it doesn't take much to put cctv cameras in a place,
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have a police officer there stationed, stationed there. >> i mean, they've got police officers in schools now full time, by the way. so you could put one there to make sure that time, by the way. so you could put haven'tre to make sure that time, by the way. so you could put haven't got» make sure that time, by the way. so you could put haven't got women;ure that you haven't got women being thrown the top of buildings. thrown off the top of buildings. they haven't drug or they haven't got drug dealers or people sex acts in people performing sex acts in front and all of front of children and all of this i mean, that this stuff. i mean, that wouldn't take much. if people this stuff. i mean, that would care,ke much. if people this stuff. i mean, that would care,ke m|could people this stuff. i mean, that would care,ke m|could do ople this stuff. i mean, that would care,ke m|could do that i >> -- >> it's two totally separate issues look there's issues there. look there's established, , secure established, you know, secure council have the council housing which have the similar problems and we have to address it with the police. we've these things address it with the police. we'with these things address it with the police. we'with police,ese things address it with the police. we'with police,ese ttheis out with the police, with the local these modular local authority. these modular homes symptom of sheer homes are a symptom of sheer desperation . and dear god, i desperation. and dear god, i weep for people who, you weep for the people who, you know, are faced with these options. but i've been inside them and they're actually they're not that bad. they're like that used to like the prefab that we used to have last major housing have in the last major housing crisis, caused crisis, which was caused by the luftwaffe rather than right luftwaffe rather than the right to thing. so the to buy thing. and so the problem, bad. problem, they are bad. >> i get what you mean. maybe they when they first they weren't bad when they first went up. i understand that. but if around one of if you'd have been around one of these weeks, these in the last few weeks, like around stephen, these in the last few weeks, like you around stephen,
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these in the last few weeks, like you couldn't.tephen, these in the last few weeks, like you couldn't. you en, honestly, you couldn't. you couldn't you just. couldn't live there. you just. i'm you, i'm telling i'm telling you, i'm telling you, couldn't . i you, you. you really couldn't. i know know what mean. know that. i know what you mean. when first went if not when they first went up, if not there, where? >> right. >> all right. >> all right. >> well yeah, fair >> well. well well, yeah, fair enough. we should enough. well, maybe we should build more. look, stephen, build some more. look, stephen, thank much. bang thank you very much. we are bang out of i'm afraid. yeah out of time, i'm afraid. yeah good pound, good stuff. stephen pound, former ealing. good stuff. stephen pound, former i've ealing. good stuff. stephen pound, former i've loads.ing. good stuff. stephen pound, former i've loads more right now i've got loads more coming your way. jeremy vine is back. come off second back. they've come off second best colliding a van. best after colliding with a van. patrick news patrick christys gb news britain's
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on gb news, the people's.
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channel >> welcome back. it's . is 5:51. >> welcome back. it's. is 5:51. you're watching or listening to me. patrick christys on gb news on your radio and online now. jeremy vine is the ultimate cyclist champion who he loves nothing more than calling out motorists. what he claims is their bad driving. and it's the latest social media video which has viral. has gone absolutely viral. we can see him and his bike coming off second best with a van. you see jeremy here steaming along a cycle lane and then he circles a van, he says, making an illegal right turn. anybody on this show will know that we don't like things that turn to the right and the van there. look at it happening and then it reverses into jeremy . it reverses him. into jeremy. it reverses him. he's saying, stop, stop . he he's saying, stop, stop. he says, banging on the van, banging stop it. stop it. banging on. stop it. stop it. you're damaging me my bike. you're damaging me and my bike. and pulls forward and then the van pulls forward and on the floor. and the bike's on the floor. it's in tatters. jeremy is miffed. i think he was actually hurt in the situation as well. clearly catastrophic for jeremy and you know, the world. i'd
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right. michelle dewberry joins me now. dewbs& co is up next. hello jeremy vine they're coming off second best with a bike what do you make of that? >> right so just to put it out there for the record , i am there for the record, i am a cyclist and a driver, right? so i can see both sides in this. and i and i also like. jeremy vine. yeah so i get what he's trying to do is say that actually, you know , you take actually, you know, you take your life into your own hands when you hop on a pushbike in the streets of london. and it is when you hop on a pushbike in the soften; of london. and it is when you hop on a pushbike in the soften you_ondon. and it is when you hop on a pushbike in the soften you do, ion. and it is when you hop on a pushbike in the soften you do, but and it is when you hop on a pushbike in the soften you do, but asd it is true often you do, but as a motorist as well, i can see the flip side of this because if i had a pound for every single time a cyclist has performed a ridiculous manoeuvre in front of my car smashed that i would a my car smashed that i would be a very comes to very rich woman when it comes to that . but in that incident. but in particular, one of the things that felt quite uncomfortable that i felt quite uncomfortable about of about was the way it's kind of framed. make an framed. he's about to make an illegal right turn. you know what? maybe the dude just took a wrong turn. yeah, maybe he's not this awful, vicious , nasty this awful, vicious, nasty individual that thinks he gets
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two points for every cyclist that he hits. and i don't know why we go into this really extreme form of kind of judgement and language. the video that you just shown , it video that you just shown, it goes on a little bit. there's another part to it, which is where basically talks to where jeremy basically talks to the shakes his hand, you the driver, shakes his hand, you know, basically no hard feelings. me you know, no harm done seconds he's done. five seconds later, he's putting it on his social media and shaming the dude to the nation. and shaming the dude to the nat yeah, course. >> yeah, of course. >> yeah, of course. >> and i'm just not really sure because, you know what? if what you to do to you wanted to do was to highlight behaviour highlight bad behaviour or whatever, blurred whatever, you could have blurred his face out. >> yeah. why don't you blur his face out? >> do you need to show him >> why do you need to show him to the nation and interestingly. right, belgium . right, i'm sure it's belgium. i'm will i'm keen eyed. viewers will correct if am about correct me if i am wrong about the place , and i'll make this the place, and i'll make this a short version because i am mindful time. yeah. a family mindful of time. yeah. a family on walk, a five year old on a walk, a five year old little girl, a cyclist comes along, the dad is filming it all. nudges this kid all. cyclist nudges this kid over his knee or his leg. over with his knee or his leg. kid falls over. long story short, puts the footage onto short, dad puts the footage onto social media. the cyclist has
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now successfully saw sued the dad. really yeah. for damage to his reputation. >> for damage to his reputation. >> for damage to his reputation. >> because obviously everyone's then kicked off. >> you know, the thing is, i could never do that because as regular viewers of this show will don't a will know, i don't have a reputation but reputation to protect. but michelle, even michelle, we haven't even had time coming up. michelle, we haven't even had timel've coming up. michelle, we haven't even had timel've loved coming up. michelle, we haven't even had timel've loved the coming up. michelle, we haven't even had timel've loved the chat.ng up. michelle, we haven't even had timel've loved the chat. okay. but i've loved the chat. okay. so you stay tuned so make sure you stay tuned because dewberry, because michelle dewberry, we'll have for in have a fantastic show for you in the see you the next hour. i'll see you tomorrow three. takes tomorrow at three. takes >> looks like things are heating up . boxed boilers proud sponsors up. boxed boilers proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. of weather on. gb news. >> hello again . as we head >> hello again. as we head through the end of the week, we are going to see the weather front. that's currently across the uk still lingering whilst by the uk still lingering whilst by the weekend some warm, humid air bnngs the weekend some warm, humid air brings of thunderstorms brings the risk of thunderstorms . looking at the at the . looking at the picture at the moment see that front moment you can see that front that i mentioned and it's bringing and rain across bringing cloud and rain across parts central england and parts of central england and wales the moment. is wales at the moment. it is gradually to start to push gradually going to start to push its northwards as go
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its way northwards as we go through evening and through this evening and overnight. so by the hours overnight. so by the early hours of friday morning, wet of friday morning, quite a wet picture northern picture across parts of northern england, and england, southern scotland and northern ireland. the low pressure that's brought some windy weather to scotland recently clearing northwards, windy weather to scotland rece staying:learing northwards, windy weather to scotland rece staying windyg northwards, windy weather to scotland rece staying windy for)rthwards, windy weather to scotland rece staying windy for orkneyis, windy weather to scotland rece staying windy for orkney and but staying windy for orkney and shetland. will drop shetland. temperatures will drop a little bit lower than they did last night for a few places. low single figures perhaps in scotland some figures scotland and some single figures in south. so a wet picture in the south. so a wet picture across southern scotland, northern england and northern ireland first thing on friday morning. and that front doesn't really particularly really go anywhere, particularly fast. as a result, we could see some totals building some rainfall totals building up, across parts of up, particularly across parts of southern scotland . towards the southern scotland. towards the north. there will be a few showers . meanwhile, showers around. meanwhile, across central southern england and , lots of fine sunny and wales, lots of fine sunny weather to be had and temperatures a touch than temperatures a touch higher than today to get the mid today likely to get into the mid 20s as we go into saturday. and you can that front really you can see that front really hasn't made much progress. so still building still some further rain building up, across parts of up, particularly across parts of southern and notice as southern scotland. and notice as well, starting to see well, already starting to see some showers in from the some showers pushing in from the south. that's because have south. that's because we have
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some and some high some humid air and some high temperatures. temperatures peaking saturday the high peaking on saturday in the high 20s the risk of 20s bringing the risk of some thunderstorms . looks like things thunderstorms. looks like things are heating up by next boilers. >> proud sponsors of weather on
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why not? you tell me . and the why not? you tell me. and the next wave of 20 mile an hour zones is set to be rolled out. i chuckle because, i mean, i'm sure you can go faster than that on some pushbikes and electric scooters. but anyway. is this a war on mercury or just basic common sense? should 20 miles an hour a default speed limit hour be a default speed limit across the country? and shoplifting ? let's face it, we shoplifting? let's face it, we all know out of control all all know it's out of control all around, though, as broken out as to is causing it. is it to what's is causing it. is it desperate people pushed to the bnnk desperate people pushed to the brink a cost of living brink by a cost of living crisis? oh, quite frankly , is it crisis? oh, quite frankly, is it just bunch chancers who just a bunch of chancers who just a bunch of chancers who just massive just got such a massive disregard for the law? they think, frankly, can think, quite frankly, they can do whatever they want. you tell me. and over in peckham in london, shopkeeper is in london, a shopkeeper is in hiding. he says he's being worried for his life. he's separated from his wife. he's having to take his kids out of school and probably will never

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