tv Breakfast with Eamonn and Ellie GB News February 5, 2025 6:00am-9:30am GMT
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killing barnaby webber, grace o'malley—kumar and ian coates. >> now, what's going to happen today is the victims families will call for a public inquiry. >> the cracks in the lucy letby case become gaping holes as world leading experts cast their doubts. >> we did not find any murders. in all cases, death or injury were due to natural causes or just bad medical care. >> sweden in mourning. a school campus shooter leaves at least ten people dead in the nation's worst mass killing. >> oh my god. oh my god. oh my
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god. >> the prime minister is accused of giving in to mauritius to push the chagos islands deal through. that's despite president trump's reservations. >> we'll take over the gaza strip, and we will do a job with it, too. we'll own it. >> that's donald trump's gaza takeover as the president shocks onlookers as he announces an ambitious plan to forever change the middle east. >> watch out for scammers. turns out most tech owning teens have been targeted by scam messages. is it time to set an age limit on owning a phone? >> all of you. my name is catherine and i'm going to come on your school trip today. >> and the princess of wales delights schoolchildren as she joins them on a very special toun >> and in sport this morning, arsenal will try to overturn a two goal deficit at newcastle in the carabao cup semi—final
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second leg tonight. there have been 13 var errors in the premier league, only 13 this season so far and in tennis, one double grand slam winner retires as our one off grand slam winner. guess who that is? loses again. >> at long last, i bring news of sunny skies for virtually all of us during the next few days. find out the latest in the forecast coming up. >> hello there. very good morning to you. on this wednesday morning i'm eamonn holmes. >> i'm ellie costello and this is gb news breakfast. >> i don't know about you guys but when it comes to holidays now i get i think the world's become a much smaller place. you think of wildfires in greece and portugal and la and then earthquakes in the greek islands, earthquakes. >> in santorini at the moment. >> in santorini at the moment. >> yeah. so shocking. santorini.
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there is an evacuation going on there. you'll see from these pictures here. and people are getting on boats and getting on planes to head to athens. as the famous greek tourist island suffers from increased seismic activity. so my point is, paul, of all the things we're worrying about here, have you ever been involved in an earthquake? >> i don't think i ever have, actually, i tell a lie. yeah. when i was on the radio in peterborough years ago and i was about 21, 22, there was an earth tremor. yeah. and it was the biggest news that we'd ever had in the city. so the front page, i remember it now. the evening telegraph said quake rocks city. and the true thing is that i was on the air and they'd announced it and on the news were going, oh, look. and there's been this earthquake and it's happened. and they're trying to obviously it's the biggest story. it happenedin it's the biggest story. it happened in the city for years anyway. and then things started to rumble. and then the guy who was reading the news said, it's happened again. just to let you all know, at 802 it's happened
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again. and it turned out there were three men that were working on the roof at the new material, and the whole thing is gone. and it's happened again, and we've had another one. but that was the closest i ever got to an earth tremor was in the middle of. >> the taurini, which we were seeing there, and there's some good pictures on instagram today, an awful lot of steam coming out of the side of mountains. and santorini is actually built upon a volcano. >> that's how it was formed. >> that's how it was formed. >> yeah, well, the thing is, the volcano has erupted now in a good few years, i think about 150 years or so. but what you're seeing now, that's gases that are being forced out from underground and people are thinking, well, do we stay or do we go? >> i would be on the. the thing is around santorini as well. you would you'd have all the cruise liners. they all line up around the outside so they stop off. loads will get off, fill the streets and then they go again. i mean, they're not going to be stopping there. >> it's such a popular tourist destination. >> huge tourist. the volcano is a sea bearing volcano. that's
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that's where it's that's that's. >> that's how it was formed. >> that's how it was formed. >> so it's not you're going to be better off being in the water and looking at the island, or. >> you want to be on the mainland. you want to be in athens. >> so this is as it's going to get worse than this. they they know. >> expect it to last for days and weeks. and the seismic activity that they're talking aboutis activity that they're talking about is every few minutes. so the most intense one so far was a tremor with a magnitude of 4.9. that was yesterday morning about three, 3:00 in the morning. but since then it's every few minutes and you'll know everyone will know santorini because it's so famous, isn't it? those white buildings? well. >> i'll not be going there for a summer holiday. >> so don't. >> so don't. >> go this week. no. >> go this week. no. >> but the schools are shut, businesses are shut. 3000 people have left the island already. very small island, as you know. so. >> but we are open for business and we're with you until 9:30 this morning. mr paul will be here in 20 minutes with last night's sporting action. >> now to our top story. this morning. an independent review has revealed that triple killer valdo calocane fear of needles
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prevented him from taking his anti—psychotic medication. >> now, this report also highlighted how the risk to mental health carers was managed by making arrangements for staff to not visit calocane home alone, but a plan wasn't made if he came off medication. >> well, that, says the families of the three victims barnaby webber, grace o'malley—kumar and ian coates prepare to hold a press conference today where they will demand a public inquiry. >> so is it time to ask why calocane slipped through the net? with us now, former conservative special adviser lauren mckevitt. lauren, you think you've heard everything there is to hear in these cases? and then we look at the background here and society or the institutions just don't be able seem to be able to cope with a man like this who's bipolar and schizophrenic. >> what i find interesting about this story is this is the same story that we were talking about
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three weeks ago, with relation to axel rudakubana, the, the, the killer from last year. the system that exists in this country to deal with mental health and the potential for violence for people within the mental health system and the system for dealing with police and crime and justice, are not talking to each other well enough.the talking to each other well enough. the mental health system is basically waiting until the point at which there has been a crime to put people on indefinite hold, because it is not for the police to start holding mental health victims basically in advance of a crime. that's a system that no one really wants to get into. over the course of the last 60 years in the united kingdom, we have consistently moved away from the concept of basically long term inpatient care in advance of a crime being committed by someone with significant mental health difficulties. and it would appear that there is a shift change in attitude in this country as to whether or not that should continue to be the case. now, what i think is not a
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mistake, but perhaps a misstep on the part of the government that, you know, this call for an inquiry today, there's going to be about 17 inquiries running at the same time. they're all going to be looking at the same thing, which is that there is a fundamental state breakdown in how the organs of the state work with each other to deal with people like this who need a from their own devices to be protected and be for the purposes of protecting others. so they need to be protected from you by the state. >> what would you be proposing? >> what would you be proposing? >> a widespread investigation across england, which is the area that we're talking about within the mental health system of how health, police and justice work together and how much money is required, which facilities need to be built in order to better house people with mental health difficulties that are severe enough that people cannot go in and deal with with their patients one on one, it should not be with with their patients
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