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tv   Dateline  MSNBC  June 25, 2023 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT

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>> this is the early rundown radar. the aftermath of a rival that never was, wagner group boss
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eugenie prigozhin is headed to belarus after going to go into exile. the uprising exposed vulnerability to russia's forces as the u.s. turmoil continues over the weeks. >> i think we've seen more cracks emerge in the russian beside. it is too soon to tell exactly where they go and when they get their but certainly we have all sorts of new questions the putin is going to have to address in the weeks and months ahead. >> sarah ferguson's calling on the public to get checked after revealing the 63-year-old duchess of york was recently diagnosed with an early form of the disease which is detected after a routine mammograms screaming. the prince of wales is launching a project aimed at ending homelessness and assuring the issue is rare, brief, and and repeated. the five-year program brings together organizations and individuals to find local solutions --
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a man has died after a hot air balloon caught fire and fell to the ground was to share. the uk air accidents investigation branch has confirmed it's investigated the incident. one person has been killed and several others injured when rollercoaster derailed in stockholm. the ride in the swedish capital came partly off the rails. the park was evacuated in remains closed until further notice britain's greatest tennis player anymore heads into his 15th wimbledon next week surrounded by questions over whether it will be his last. the 36-year-old has told sky news that he's been thinking about retirement. >> we want to keep playing a bit longer. i know is not going to be going on forever but i have an idea of what i would like to finish and it's not this year's wimbledon.
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. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ >> sir elton john closest glastonbury with history making good by telling fans i will never forget you. joined on the stage by an array of young talent. >> good morning this is the early rundown leading the news today. the uprising that we'll never was. a challenge to vladimir putin and his more than two decades in power fizzled out after the rebellious mercenary commander ordered his troops took march on rosco abruptly reached a deal with the kremlin to go into exile. yevgeny prigozhin has since headed for belarus. the rebel exposed vulnerabilities among russian government force as wagner
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group soldiers moved without challenge toward the capital. a correspondent has our first report. >> as wagner forces continue to withdraw no word from the key players in this wildest of -- yevgeny prigozhin waved off to tears in rostov. but nothing new on the coup from the commander in chief, just simply recorded insight into his evening routine. >> >> it's as for the top military brass the supposed top of this coup not a whisper. but western officials have already drawn their own conclusions. >> i think we've seen more cracks emerge in the russian
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beside. it is too soon to tell exactly where they go and when they get their but certainly we have all sorts of new questions that putin is going to have to address in the weeks and months ahead. >> red square was still shut as an anti terror precaution. people still seemed unnerved. >> this situation was so bad. people in government didn't know what they had to do. >> >> in a space of 24 as putin is taking a major hit to his authority. but it's clear that the president and his security forces managed to turn a blind
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eye to -- the dangers that he presented to them in russia. yevgeny prigozhin in belarus is hardly out of sight and out of mind. in less he was dispatched there for a reason, a separate sphere of military authority from russia's military defense especially giving recent rumors over lukashenko's health. he remains a powerful leader of violent men and prigozhin is not the type to bow out quietly, it does not feel like this is his final act. sky news, moscow. >> okay burly gets perspective on this weekend's massive events in russia. >> the duchess of york has
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urged people to get screened after revealing she's undergone breast cancer surgery. sarah ferguson was recently diagnosed with an early form of the disease following routine mammograms. a spokesperson confirmed the duchess -- at least it looks as though the surgery was successful for the duchess. >> is it does. the duchess of york who was previously married to prince andrew left the king edward the 17 hospital in central london yesterday. she is understood to be recuperating with her family in windsor. a few weeks ago she launched a podcast called t talks with co-host sarah-jane thompson in which they promised to speak frankly about their experiences. and it's very clear that she has done that because in the fourth episode which airs today she talked about her diagnosis with breast cancer and her preparations for surgery and we can hear that now. >> i'm telling you that i am doing this.
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i'm telling people out there because i want every single person that is listening to this podcast to go and get checked, go get screened. go do it. >> in the podcast she also revealed that she had had a vasectomy, a mastectomy, and had one of her breasts removed. she was -- women in the uk's between 50 and 71 will have regular mammograms every three years but it seems she is very much using her position, using her profile to encourage other women to make sure that they get checked. her doctor says her prognosis is very good -- >> alice, thank you. >> also this morning, look, cancers could be caught sooner or prevented. the program backed by recommendation to the uk
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national screening committee will see patients have their risk of cancer based on smoking history and other factors considered with high risk invited for especially scanned every two years. it said to cost 270 million pounds annually once fully established. >> the nhs is performing linked substantially less well on life expectancy compared to similar countries including the u.s., canada, and australia. reports by the association of the pharmaceutical industry says the uk health systems poor performance measures including avoidable mortality should be a serious concern for political leaders and policymakers. the prince of wales is launching a project saying it's ending homelessness and ensuring issue is very brief and on repeated. the initiative called homeward aims to make forms of temporary
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accommodation thing of the past. rocha responded -- >> it's a big project with a bold ambition. prince william wants to end homelessness. >> the program commit to working with six locations across the uk over the next five years. >> it's his first interventionist prince of wales but it's a cause he's long supported and one very close to his heart. as boys, his mother took him at harry to the charity the passage. on his 21st birthday to newport with his -- >> the prince as patron of
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centerpoint visiting the charities. but his home which project goes even further bringing together local groups and people to find local solutions to homelessness. >> sabrina hadn't cohen is closely involved. she's one of the uk's most senior fire officers and as a teenager. >> i've been really invested in the princes -- -- the way that he wants to take a personal-centric approach. it's not just about giving somebody house this is about the rest of the challenges that come with surviving homelessness. >> some might say ending homelessness is for politicians, not princes. and this project certainly puts this prince of wales in a political arena. but this is an issue he wants changing. as air to the throne his father wasn't afraid to speak up and neither, it seems, is william.
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>> -- in a bid to track down rampant inflation the prime minister is ensuring struggling families that we will get through this. he also wore millions of public sector workers that future pay rises can be blocked. let's bring in some are cohen who joins me now. a mentally sure how -- he's insisting that the nation will get through it so the question is how. >> we know that the chancellor jeremy hunt met mortgage lenders last week this week he will be meeting the consumer washed watchdogs representing energy, water, and telecoms to ask if there's anything they could be doing to feed through lower prices to consumers. but as for homeowners we are
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seeing this spike in interest rates feed through hundreds if not thousands of extra pounds a year. the message from the prime minister in a rare interview yesterday was holden area, we will be sticking to the plan to get inflation down. he was asked if he was living in a parallel universe on the bbc when he said that but he said it would be the wrong thing to do to subsidize people's mortgages. ali said it will be challenging to get inflation halved this year as he promised he said he supported the bank of england's decision to raise interest rates to 5% and said that that was necessary to get a grip on inflation. labor today have research showing that mortgages are higher in the uk than across western europe and that will put pressure on the government. we saw a couple of new opinion polls at the weekend showing -- certainly conservatives i've spoken to having a despondency that the cost of living will be able to get under control or the next election.
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>> some are in westminster, thank you. let's go to australia now where the country's highest court has blocked russia from moving its embassy closer to australia's parliament house. after they canceled a russian lease on a block of land almost two weeks ago. correspondent nikole johnston joins me now. nicole, just bring us up to date with this latest standoff. >> it seems to be game over for russia in this standoff as you said between russia and australia. russia had wanted to move its embassy from the outskirts of cambrai to the central parts to the capital close to parliament house close to the chinese embassy. but two weeks ago the australian government said this was not happening. it passed emergency legislation. it said that it was a national security threat. russia came out and said that this was russia phobic hysteria on the behalf of australia and unfriendly action. it then barred dozens of
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australians from entering russia. on friday, this whole story took another bizarre twist when it turned out that there was a man squatting on the site. russia had been leading the site that they had spent over 3 million pounds on it so they weren't happy. local media here said that the man may have been a russian diplomat. this was never actually confirmed but now the high coat has thrown out russia's legal challenge paid the man. the mystery man for the prime minister has said was no threat to national security referred to him as quote, a bloke standing out in the cold on a piece of grass. he's packed up and left and this whole saga appears to be over. russia won't be moving its embassy it will stay on the outskirts of camera. and clearly the relationship between russia and australia has deteriorated even further. >> nikole from sydney, thank you. on to some of the other stories
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making the news this morning in inquest into the death of -- the 45-year-old mother of two went missing from st. michaels on the 27th of january. her body was found more than three weeks later. the air accidents investigation project is investing in the death of a man in a hot air balloon accident. the man said to be agent's 20 static the scene following the accident. about 20 past six on sunday morning. vt has apologized for technical faults that effect in 99 calling yesterday. the dp then switched to a backup system the telecommunications company says the issues resolved but has admitted it still doesn't know the cause. be -- the uprising in russia has
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exposed deep cracks in blood reporting's presidency. moscow remains under anti-terror measures [interpreter] . the duchess of york urged the public to -- a stop at the right time for retirement but it will not be after wimbledon this year. >> let's take a look now with dominating the front page this morning. the guardian saying the wagner uprising reveals cracks in putin's authority. also covering the wagner uprising saying that putin is staying silent on the mutiny. -- the metro says the wagner group took up 39 russian aircrew and that ukraine is making progress
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in all directions. the times says britain has been told to prepare for the fall of vladimir putin. the daily mail leading on the duchess of york undergoing surgery for breast cancer and is now recovering. and the sun reports the headline fergie i've got cancer. the duchess's operation has been a success. the mere leading on the same story saying the counselor was found during a routine mammogram. i telegraph says ending homelessness is prince williams's life work. the star saying five he waves are on the way and the rsp sea is warning that snakes are waking up to catch the sunrise. -- if you want to see any of those front pages again or read the story just scan the qr code on your screen and that will take
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you straight to the press review on the sky news website. they set out from glasgow three families who lost their loved ones to suicide. along the way, in olympic star torch was handed from parent to parent. it's called the baton of hope and over the next two weeks will be carried through towns and cities across the uk. it's encouraged a nationwide conversation about mental health. our national correspondent walks with families on that would attenborough. just a warning that his report contains discussions of suicide that some viewers may find distressing. >> this is grads goes sculpture of hope. beneath it, for the first time, with some more movable beacon. never before has the subject of suicide had a symbol like this. baton that carries so much. but above all, it carries hope. and scott knew that she had to
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be here. she lost her 23 year old daughter ellen on this day six years ago. >> it certainly giving me hope. in that somebody is actually doing something and six years on have seen so much has happened. it's as if she was part of starting this conversation and she's here with us today. >> on day one of this uk tour they set off through the east end of glasgow. 40 plus miles to edinboro >> we've got to smash the stigma and make people understand that if we keep pushing it under the carpet it simply will not get any better. >> mike is a former sky news journalist who lost his own son ross a few years ago. he was a father himself who asked his family to campaign for better mental health support. >> to realize that ross, in his
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dying moments thought of a cause that could be champions in a world that he wouldn't be part of. hey i'm quite proud of it. >> it's backed by our olympians music stars footballers, royalty, and political figures. >> it's intolerable in modern 2023 britain that suicide remains the biggest killer of young men. it has to be stopped and i hope that whatever mike and his team take up a ton of hope people come out and support it. >> each hand over means so much. -- >> i will grieve for the rest of my life, i will grieve every single day for the rest of my life. if i can make just a swipe slight difference in somebody's life,. --
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be -- sky news glasgow. >> if you are someone you know has been affected by the topics mentioned that report you can call samaritans for help on 16 1 to 3, that's 116 1 to 3 or email joe at samaritans dot org. >> let's quickly return to the rebellion russia now. some pictures just into the key figure in the war in ukraine under fire. defense minister sergei shoigu and he's being visiting a command center for the war in ukraine just days after so you came under scathing criticism from the wagner chief yevgeny prigozhin where he launched a short-lived rebellion over the weekend. there's been speculation over the weekend that shoigu might be sacked following that rebellion. the pictures that you are
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seeing now are from russian state media. we don't know where or when they were filmed. britain's greatest tennis player andy barton has told sky news that he's been thinking about retirement but will not lay down his racket until he's completely competing for the final. this year's wimbledon title again. the 36-year-old speaking exclusively -- >> i hope not. you never know, the athletes need to make the most of it while they're still able to have a big injury or something would happen -- a wouldn't come back from a major operation or surgery again. i want to keep playing a bit longer, i know it's not going to be going on forever but i
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have an idea of what i would like to finish and it's not this year's wimbledon. >> tell us when it is? >> no because i'm not sure sure when it will be. i want to finish on my own terms. i'm playing at a really high level and i think i can do that for a couple more years. my family have been incredibly supportive, my wife's been amazing in pushing me to keep going and keep working hard and i think that's for the right reasons, i hope it's not just because she wants to get me out of the house. >> but of -- nick -- admitted he has suicidal thoughts when he lost a match in 2019. does that surprise you? >> probably not. i don't mean the next case i just mean in sports are
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difficult in putting yourself out there. every single week, granted i'm fully aware there are way more important things in life than a tennis match and i'm sure nick as well is also very aware of that but sometimes it is very difficult it can become a lonely place. when you are sitting in hotel rooms -- and you are away from your friends and family in those sorts of things you can have some really tough moments and it doesn't surprise me when athletes struggle with their mental health. their whole social media side of things probably 15 20 years ago wasn't an issue. but that's also not easy. you get back to room look at twitter or instagram you are receiving tons of abuse when you are probably already not a great place, it's not easy.
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>> novak djokovic continuing too get as many in the bag as possible. to think he is now the greatest of all time and if he is considered to be so now will he parc >> there are definitely arguments there for him to be the greatest of all time. the thing that for me that has been really special about pierre those two guys pierre is their services. rough on the clay, raf on the clay, novak is clearly the best hard-core player of all-time and then grass is kind of still to be decided between him and roger. well those guys achieved is amazing pierre.
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if you just go one grand slam titles you have to give that to novak, but for me it's a slightly more nuanced -- >> finally it's been a really big talking point tennis about the belarusian players, and russian players. they are playing this year, do you any thoughts of the, is that the right thing to do? if you had to play a player from one of those countries would it affect even anyway? >> i have competed against players from those countries. i wouldn't say it is affected me. i have the utmost sympathy for all the ukrainians playing in that situation and i can only imagine how difficult that must be. also the tournaments they are also in pierre a really difficult situation as well with the government body. some of these events with the
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sanctions that were getting placed on them potentially wouldn't have been able to survive like another year as well without ranking points, defines that we're getting placed against them if they didn't allow the russians and that the russians to play. so it was also a really difficult one for the tournaments as well. >> still to come on the early run down -- going into the final day of the woman's -- s -- what do we always say, son? liberty mutual customizes your car insurance... so you only pay for what you need. that's my boy. now you get out there, and you make us proud, huh? ♪ bye, uncle limu. ♪ stay off the freeways!
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the l'or barista coffee and espresso system. a masterpiece in taste. >> -- >> >> the woman's ashes test remains in the balance going into the final day england needs 152 to win well five more wickets won't lead australia to victory. england's in the quarterfinals of the under 21 championships. they be israel to now. a week to go into wimbledon and spain is back on top of the tennis world rankings after winning the queens cup
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championships. the 20-year-old be australia's alex demure in straight sets. china's rowing yang won the pga women's championship in america. she boarded the final hole to finish eight under par. northern ireland's stephanie meadow finished in a tie for third. but see what's on the back pages. the guardian they're saying that australia have taken control for women's -- they say england -- -- -- -- jamele reporting the -- -- the daily star's back page leading on michael arteta
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saying that arsenal needs to splashed the cash this summer if they are to compete with manchester city. the mayor reports along the same lines there and says kind of its will likely be the first of many signings for the north london club. the son says that the pressure for those association supports marcus rushford claims that the number of games in a season is too high. >> still to come on the early rundown we will have all the latest headlines for you. plus analysis from our defense and security editor deborah hands on the situation in russia how to fix the war -- [inaudible] [inaudible l i could to prevent recurrence. verzenio reduces the risk of recurrence of hr-positive, her2-negative, node-positive,
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. the uprising expose vulnerabilities in russia's forces -- >> think we've seen more cracks emerge in the russian beside. it is too soon to tell exactly where they go and when they get there but certainly we have all
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sorts of new questions the putin is going to have to address in the weeks and months ahead. >> russia's defense minister sergei shoigu has visited command center for the war in ukraine. shoigu was criticized by wagner chief yevgeny prigozhin once he launched his rebellion over the weekend. it's unclear when or where these pictures -- the 63-year-old duchess of york was recently diagnosed with an early form of disease which was detected after a routine mammograms screening. >> the prince of wales is launching a project aimed at ending homelessness assuring the issue is rare, brief, and an repeated. the partnership tries to find
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local solutions to sleeping rough. >> a person was killed and several others were injured after a rollercoaster derailed in stockholm. the rollercoaster came partly off the rails. the park remains closed until further notice. britain's greatest tennis player andy murray heads into his 15th wimbledon next week surrounded by questions over whether it will be his last. the 36-year-old has told sky news he's been thinking about retirement. >> i want to keep playing a bit longer. i know it's not going to be going on forever but i have an idea of when i would like to finish and it's not this year's wimbledon. >> ♪ ♪ ♪ >> elton john closes glastonbury with a history making good by telling fans i will never forget you.
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joined on the stage by an array of young talent. >> what makes russia weaker makes us sources senior divisor to ukraine's defense ministry as fierce fighting continues in the east of the country. events across the border have little effect on many of the frontline and in kyiv. many they're hoping that president putin's loosen clip, grip on power can accelerate the end of the war. >> on ukraine's front line they fired russian targets in a brutal counteroffensive. the ukrainian armed forces say these images show two battalions locked in battle. the infighting in moscow has no
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immediate impact on the real fighting here. but as senior politicians said ukrainian forces since weakness in russia's divided lines. >> i think that now ukraine has an opportunity to do something. russian mercenaries at the heart of this weekend's abortive uprising were crude but lethal force in putin's arsenal. they captured the eastern city of bequeaths in the bloodiest battle of the war so far. >> it means the rift between the head of the wagner group and russia's military chief can
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only be good news for ukraine. yevgeny prigozhin even openly defied putin by accusing moscow of lying to the public over its justification for the entire invasion. >> we always say russia as an empire built on lies will implode and something tells me that what happened yesterday is probably just the beginning of a larger self destruction of this empire of evil of course what makes russia weaker makes us stronger and breaks, brings our victory closer. >> but that's only going to happen if ukraine keeps fighting. in fact analysts say the instability in russia should harden restroom resolve to keep up supply of aid to kyiv. >> victory is possible only in situations when -- that will facilitate
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destruction. for ukraine's soldiers they just want to win back their territory. if a victory also prompts the accelerated demise of putin's regime that would be an added bonus. debra haynes, sky news. >> we've had these latest pictures for the last hour of so -- the defense minister sergei shoigu -- just days after that rebellion attempt in russia. sergei shoigu came under scathing criticism from wagner chief yevgeny prigozhin when he launched his short-lived rebelling over the weekend. they've been speculations that so you may have been sacked after that rebellion.
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we don't know where or when they were filled. some other headlines around the world, in greece the conservative prime minister has secured another four years in power after a landslide win in parliamentary elections which the oh votes counted his center right new democracy party leader with just over 40% of the votes. their main rivals the left wing party was a distant second. a person has been killed in a rollercoaster accident at a theme park in sweden. nine others including children were injured and are being treated in hospital, three of them with severe injuries. witnesses say the have jet -- in airport worker in the u.s. has died after being sucked into the plane engine in texas. the incident took place at san
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antonio international airport on friday across. -- you are watching the early rundown still to come we are taking a closer look at the papers this morning with our political correspondent. and in the sport -- d in the sport - if you have heart disease and are on a statin, lowering cholesterol can be hard. and diets and exercise add to the struggle. it can feel never-ending. but today, it's possible to go from struggle to cholesterol success with leqvio. taken with a statin, leqvio is proven to lower bad cholesterol by over 50%. so, if you feel like you're getting nowhere... ...go with 2 doses a year of leqvio
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we moved out of the city so our little sophie could appreciate nature. an opportunity. but then he got us t-mobile home internet. i was just trying to improve our signal, so some of the trees had to go. i might've taken it a step too far. (chainsaw revs) (tree crashes) (chainsaw continues) (daughter screams) let's pretend for a second that you didn't let down your entire family. what would that reality look like? well i guess i would've gotten us xfinity... and we'd have a better view. do you need mulch? >> any showers will temporarily what, we have a ton of mulch.
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reduce the pollen levels. pollen levels >> reminded of our top stories this morning. this weekend's near uprising in russia has exposed deep cracks in blood putin's presidency. as parts of moscow remain under anti terror measures. the duchess of york urges the public against -- to get screening following a diagnosis for breast cancer. and andy murray tells sky news he's thought about the right time for retirement, but it will not be after wimbledon.
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>> with take a look then at this morning's front pages to see with dominating. the guardian leading on the u.s. uprising. p is also covering the wagner uprising saying putin is staying silent on the mutiny. the ftc says china supports russian stability following the uprising. well metro says the wagner group took out 39 russian aircraft and that ukraine is making progress in all directions. the times says britain's being told to prepare for the fall of vladimir putin. away from that story, daily mail leading on the duchess of york undergoing surgery for breast cancer and is now in recovery. and the sun also covering the same story it's headline, fergie, i've got cancer. the duchess's operation has
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been a success. and the mayor also leading on that same story saying the cancer was found early in a routine mammogram. and the telegraph says ending homelessness is prince william's life work. and the star is saying five heat waves are on the way and the our spca is warning you might want to pay attention for them, snakes, you heard me right, snakes are waking up to catch the sunrise. if you want to see any of those front pages again or read the stories just scan the cure code which is on the screen and that will take you straight to the press review on the sky news website. let's cross over now to our political correspondent for a look at the papers. good morning to you there let's kick off with the time for page four. some grim reading shows that the nih s is looking behind other countries for doctors --
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nurses, but equipment. >> morning, vanessa. i want to start with the story about the nhs lagging behind which is got coverage in a lot of pages we are respect expecting the government to release a workforce plan for the nhs. this is the backdrop, this is a big report by the king fund. it's a very respected thing tied. they've looked at health systems in 19 advanced western countries and they say that the uk is behind. they say that if you look at the example, the number of doctors per thousand peoples or beds per thousand people they say in the uk they use -- the amount of investment in the nhs is low compared to other comparable nations and they are now starting to see that in terms of life expectancy for british basements. they do say the nhs is one of the most efficiently run health systems in its report. but certainly when you hear
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from ministers the problems in the nhs have been caused by covid this report really does put into context the big questions about whether austerity and under investment have brought us to this point and therefore whether this workforce plan hold out much prospect of getting us out of this hole in the short term. >> staying within the pundits sector a clear warning from the government to unions overpay. >> -- teachers grandchildren and a couple of weeks time. what we learned last year to the beginning of this year every time ministers were asked why can't unions demand they said hang on this is not actually one for us this is in the hands of the independent paid review bodies, these independent panels for doctors, teachers, and police officers
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which look at all of the issues facing the sector including recruitment challenges and cope with the figure. we are expecting some of those figures to come out quite soon and what's been leaked is some of the newspapers is the idea that the recommendation for teachers that has been submitted to the government is 6.5%. that's relatively high. what we've heard for the prime minister when he gave a rare tv interview yesterday is that he might ignore those review bodies is we have to do but is affordable. so having hidden behind those independent bodies for some months he's now saying in order to try to get a grip on inflation the government may not actually do what they are suggesting think that holds at the prospect of strikes dominating the rest of this year and in the next year as we head towards election with all the disruption that entails, and more -- >> also, tomorrow it's been a dramatic weekend in russia.
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we saw that rebellion over the weekend from the wagner group and now news of an apparent threat to the family of the group's leader yevgeny prigozhin before he called off charlotte -- >> fascinating story on the front of the telegraph as we try to get to grips with what actually happened during this 24-hour mutiny. the suggestion in the telegraph has not been confirmed to sky news but they quote uk intelligence assessments saying that what may have been behind prigozhin's decision to suddenly retreat. it's the fact that they suggest that wagner only had 8000 men, that the 25,000 that have been reported, and that there were direct threats from the russian state to the families of the leaders of that group. we wait to hear more today from uk ministers and i imagine there will be an urgent question in part of it today. does the uk share the assessment that anthony blinken,
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the u.s. secretary of state put forward over the weekend but this shows real quacks improves authority. -- >> tomorrow in westminster, thank you. >> let's take a look now this morning sports news. >> >> -- >> england needed 152 runs to win a five more wickets will give australia's victory. the quarterfinals of the european under 21 championships they beat israel two nil, anthony gordon and smith rule with the goals. weeks ago into wimbledon and spain's carlos alvarez is back
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on top of the tennis world ranking after winning the queens club championships. the 20 year old be australian alex demeanor in straight sets. china won the women's pga championship in america. she boarded the final hole to finish a shot clear of eight under par. northern ireland stephanie meadow finished in the tie for third. and this is how the back pages are looking this morning the guardian saying australians have taken control of women's fascist after england's betting collapse. the times says england could delay naming their team for the second -- [inaudible] -- >> carlos alcaraz says he is ready to challenge novak djokovic after winning the title.
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the football association supports merck's rush his claims that the number of games in a season is too high. in a season is too high. >> there will be further showers and spots of rain in the week ahead. after a hot and humid week most places will have a pleasant start this morning with plenty of sunshine and just a few isolated showers. scattered showers will develop throughout the day, some heavy and some parts will remain
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largely dry and sunny. y dry and sunny. >> still to come on sky news there we are live on the ground in moscow. w. when i was diagnosed with h-i-v, i didn't know who i would be. but here i am... being me. keep being you... and ask your healthcare provider about the number one prescribed h-i-v treatment, biktarvy. biktarvy is a complete, one-pill, once-a-day treatment used for h-i-v in many people whether you're 18 or 80. with one small pill, biktarvy fights h-i-v to help you get to undetectable—and stay there whether you're just starting or replacing your current treatment. research shows that taking h-i-v treatment as prescribed and getting to and staying undetectable prevents transmitting h-i-v through sex. serious side effects can occur, including kidney problems and kidney failure. rare, life-threatening side effects
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welcome to join us on the breakfast show on sky news. after weekend that shook. russia it is vladimir putin's

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