06/04/2016 BBC News at Ten


06/04/2016

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Tonight at Ten: Renewed concern about standards of care at one

:00:00.:00:08.

The health watchdog has strongly criticised Southern Health

:00:09.:00:15.

for failing to improve the way it cares for mental health patients.

:00:16.:00:18.

The mother of this teenager, who died at a Southern facility

:00:19.:00:21.

three years ago, said the latest findings were shocking.

:00:22.:00:27.

I'm absolutely bewildered that the board and the chief

:00:28.:00:33.

I don't see how they can stay in post to be honest.

:00:34.:00:40.

But the Trust's chief executive rejected calls for her resignation

:00:41.:00:42.

and said she had been clear and open about the work needed.

:00:43.:00:45.

We'll have more on the report and the questions it raises

:00:46.:00:48.

Also tonight: We talk to the man who might offer a solution

:00:49.:00:54.

to the steel crisis but he says the calculations so far have

:00:55.:00:57.

Smuggling money out of China often to buy property in Britain,

:00:58.:01:10.

the latest twist in the tale revealed in

:01:11.:01:12.

And why history is being made on Savile Row, the bastion

:01:13.:01:16.

Coming up in Sportsday on BBC News: Manchester City score in their first

:01:17.:01:23.

Champions League quarter-final but it's still a tough night in

:01:24.:01:25.

There's renewed concern tonight about standards of care at one

:01:26.:01:52.

of England's biggest NHS Trusts following a highly critical report

:01:53.:01:56.

It's strongly criticised Southern Health for failing

:01:57.:02:02.

to improve the way it looks after mental health patients.

:02:03.:02:05.

The Trust had previously apologised for failings and said

:02:06.:02:08.

Despite calls for her resignation, the Trust's chief executive said

:02:09.:02:13.

today she intended to stay in post, as our correspondent

:02:14.:02:16.

An NHS scandal. The up expected deaths of vulnerable patients going

:02:17.:02:28.

unexplained. Lessons not being learned. A failure of leadership. It

:02:29.:02:34.

left bereaved families to confront bosses at Southern Health NHS

:02:35.:02:39.

Foundation Trust themselves. I thought it was inappropriate you

:02:40.:02:42.

even say you might have added when you have definitely piled it on, all

:02:43.:02:47.

of you. We are all are incredibly sorry.

:02:48.:02:51.

Today came the verdict from the health service watchdogs.

:02:52.:02:58.

The Care Quality Commission said Southern Health

:02:59.:02:59.

had failed to mitigate against significant risks

:03:00.:03:01.

in the past and to adequately ensure it learned from incidents to reduce

:03:02.:03:04.

The NHS regulator said it would alter the Trust's operating

:03:05.:03:15.

licence to allow management changes should it not take rapid action.

:03:16.:03:17.

This all started with the case of Connor Sparrowhawk.

:03:18.:03:21.

He suffered a seizure and drowned in the bath

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Despite his epilepsy and learning difficulties,

:03:24.:03:26.

In December, the BBC revealed an unpublished report detailing

:03:27.:03:33.

the Trust's failure to investigate more than 1,000 unexpected deaths.

:03:34.:03:36.

It is totally and utterly unacceptable that according

:03:37.:03:40.

to the leaked report only 1% of the unexpected deaths

:03:41.:03:46.

of patients with learning disabilities were investigated.

:03:47.:03:51.

Southern Health says its improved the investigation of deaths,

:03:52.:03:54.

But despite tremendous pressure, the chief executive

:03:55.:03:58.

My job as the chief executive is to make the improvements

:03:59.:04:06.

that we need to make, to provide stable and consistent

:04:07.:04:08.

leadership to our staff, to our doctors and nurses who come

:04:09.:04:11.

in every day and that's the job I am continuing to do.

:04:12.:04:15.

And that has infuriated the bereaved mother of Connor Sparrowhawk.

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It's almost that the board and chief executive

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being made in that Trust because the culture at the top

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is so toxic that the improvements aren't happening.

:04:30.:04:32.

It's not rocket science what should happen.

:04:33.:04:35.

And really at this stage with another failing inspection

:04:36.:04:42.

report they should go and why they haven't is just

:04:43.:04:44.

Today, health inspectors went out of their way to point out that this

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Trust only took action when they arrived to

:04:51.:04:53.

examine its failures, months after it was first alerted

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That was Tom Symonds reporting from Southampton on that report by the

:04:56.:05:08.

Care Quality Commission. The race is on to find

:05:09.:05:11.

a credible buyer for Tata's steel business in the UK,

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now that the Indian group has said it will launch

:05:14.:05:16.

the formal sale process One of the companies expressing

:05:17.:05:18.

an interest is Liberty House but it's already admitted

:05:19.:05:22.

that its plans have been written, in effect,

:05:23.:05:24.

on the back of an envelope. Thousands of jobs are at risk -

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most of them in South Wales. Our correspondent Hywel Griffith

:05:27.:05:29.

is in Newport tonight. Yes, thousands of Tata worker jobs,

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thousands of contractors and agency staff too who work on the same site.

:05:41.:05:45.

What they all now know is that the industrial equivalent of the for

:05:46.:05:49.

sale signs will be up by Monday. But who will buy? What's becoming

:05:50.:05:55.

increasingly clear is that very little of the details for any deal

:05:56.:05:59.

to be done is not yet in place. A deal that would make or break

:06:00.:06:00.

Britain's steel industry. What do you aim to achieve? It's a

:06:01.:06:11.

good question. The Business Secretary arrived to a flurry of

:06:12.:06:15.

Mumbai microphones, knowing that only Tata can decide what happens to

:06:16.:06:21.

its British business. Sajid Javid wanted assurance there wouldn't be a

:06:22.:06:25.

fire sale. He was told when the process will begin but not when it

:06:26.:06:29.

will end. He says Tata do want to find the right buyer. What they've

:06:30.:06:33.

shown again today is that they are very responsible and they actually

:06:34.:06:37.

do want to see a successful outcome to this process, clearly they've a

:06:38.:06:41.

role to play in that. The UK Government has a role to play. The

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Welsh Government has a role to play. We will all work together to make

:06:45.:06:49.

this a success. This is what is at stake. Port Talbot is Britain's

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biggest steelworks with around 4,000 staff and according to the unions

:06:55.:06:58.

another 3,000 contractors all dependent on its future. The

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Business Secretary insists several companies are interested but so far

:07:04.:07:06.

only one firm has put its name forward to say it wants to buy all

:07:07.:07:12.

of Tata UK. The head of Liberty is Sanjeev Gupta. Some have already

:07:13.:07:17.

cast him as the saviour of British steel but today he admitted he

:07:18.:07:21.

hadn't fully worked out what he would be taking on. When it's

:07:22.:07:25.

analysed it would be done on the back of an envelope, we have not had

:07:26.:07:28.

access. Things started a week ago, we have no engagement so we don't

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have access to data yet. What you have done so far is a back of an

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envelope calculation? Yes. Based on the fact that we know and we have

:07:36.:07:40.

plenty of friends in the industry and we have colleagues that we have

:07:41.:07:44.

some ex-Tata people, so we have information at hand. Have you been

:07:45.:07:49.

at Port Talbot? No. He have never been to the works? No, never been in

:07:50.:07:53.

it. This came as a surprise to me. When it happened it was a surprise.

:07:54.:07:56.

It's a daunting proposition. I am not suggesting that it's easy or

:07:57.:08:01.

obvious. It won't be easy to sell his ideas to Tata workers as Liberty

:08:02.:08:07.

want to recycle scrap, not make steel from scratch, a huge change at

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the heavy end of the business. The model looks in the long-term to the

:08:13.:08:16.

closure of the blast furnaces although I understand he has a

:08:17.:08:21.

transition plan for that. So my concern is how can we make that

:08:22.:08:25.

transition without losing very large numbers of jobs? Liberty knows it

:08:26.:08:30.

may not be the only bidder. But by entering the race early believe it

:08:31.:08:32.

is can build up a head of steam. All 27 million households

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in the United Kingdom are to receive a leaflet setting out

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the Government's arguments The exercise will cost the taxpayer

:08:42.:08:43.

over ?9 million. Ministers say it's a reponse to

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public demands for more information. But there's been an angry reaction

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from those campaigning to leave the EU, with some claiming that

:08:56.:08:57.

in sending this one leaflet the Government will spend more

:08:58.:09:00.

than the official Leave campaign can Our deputy political editor

:09:01.:09:03.

James Landale has the latest. For weeks now both sides have been

:09:04.:09:16.

campaigning in earnest. Delivering the speeches... We got 78 days to

:09:17.:09:20.

go. Pounding the streets. Lovely to meet you. Look at this! Making their

:09:21.:09:24.

case to voters. Thank you very much.

:09:25.:09:27.

But tonight the Government's raised the stakes with a leaflet it will

:09:28.:09:32.

send to every household, arguing that Britain should remain in the

:09:33.:09:35.

European Union or risk a decade of economic uncertainty.

:09:36.:09:39.

This leaflet is designed to respond to what people in there see as the

:09:40.:09:44.

growing public appetite for more facts about the EU referendum. But

:09:45.:09:48.

these are just the Government's facts and they want to get facts

:09:49.:09:52.

direct to the voter, not through the prism of the media. It's important

:09:53.:09:57.

that people do understand what the Government research shows, what the

:09:58.:10:00.

Government's information shows, so that they can use that to make their

:10:01.:10:05.

own decision. Very soon your postman or woman will be delivering more

:10:06.:10:10.

than the usual letters and parcels. The leaflet will be delivered to all

:10:11.:10:15.

27 million UK households and advertised across social media. That

:10:16.:10:21.

will cost some ?9 million. Now that's more than the ?7 million

:10:22.:10:25.

spending limit for both official campaigns. But they will both get

:10:26.:10:29.

their own publicly funded mailshots in weeks to come.

:10:30.:10:33.

But those campaigning to leave don't have a Government machine making

:10:34.:10:36.

their case and they argue that it's unfair for Number 10 to use the full

:10:37.:10:40.

resources of Whitehall to make the case for remain. It's crazy to use

:10:41.:10:47.

quite so much taxpayers' money on stuff that's intended to scare

:10:48.:10:50.

people and to stampede people in one direction. What we want is a proper

:10:51.:10:55.

informed debate and if you are going to use taxpayers money you should

:10:56.:10:58.

allow people to put the other side of the case as well. I think

:10:59.:11:01.

Government using taxpayers money to tell us what we should think and how

:11:02.:11:05.

we should vote, frankly, is outrageous. That's the least of it.

:11:06.:11:09.

When you read the document itself it's untruth after untruth.

:11:10.:11:15.

But the Government argues that there is a precedent for this. In 1975

:11:16.:11:20.

during the referendum on Britain's membership of the European Community

:11:21.:11:23.

the Government put out a similar leaflet. Although that contained a

:11:24.:11:28.

picture of the then Prime Minister Harold Wilson. Today's leaflet is

:11:29.:11:32.

rather different. No pictures of David Cameron, just arguments

:11:33.:11:35.

claiming that the shock of leaving the EU would raise prices, cost

:11:36.:11:39.

jobs, and reduce investment. So the referendum battle is moving

:11:40.:11:43.

to a letterbox near you soon. The Government agencies case is going to

:11:44.:11:48.

be first on the doormat. The Government genuinely insists

:11:49.:11:52.

they are responding to what they see as a real public thirst for more

:11:53.:11:56.

information about this referendum and they say it's entirely

:11:57.:11:59.

legitimate to use public money to make that information more

:12:00.:12:03.

available. They insist they are not neutral by-standers in this debate.

:12:04.:12:07.

But those campaigning to leave are genuinely unhappy and I think that

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if they go on to lose this referendum they will look back and

:12:12.:12:15.

claim this leaflet is another example of why they believe that it

:12:16.:12:16.

hasn't been a fair fight. Thousands of junior doctors

:12:17.:12:27.

across England are on strike for the fourth time in their dispute

:12:28.:12:29.

with the Government The Department of Health estimates

:12:30.:12:31.

that about 5,000 operations and procedures that were due to take

:12:32.:12:35.

place today and tomorrow have had Ministers say they will impose

:12:36.:12:38.

the new contract in August, to help hospitals increase

:12:39.:12:41.

their staffing at weekends. Our health editor,

:12:42.:12:45.

Hugh Pym, reports. Junior doctors took their campaign

:12:46.:12:51.

to the front door of The actress Vanessa Redgrave

:12:52.:12:56.

gave her backing to their strike I'm very angry that we should be

:12:57.:13:02.

having to meet today... The Government argues that 90%

:13:03.:13:07.

of a deal was agreed and the only outstanding issue was Saturday pay,

:13:08.:13:11.

but the British Medical Association says the new contract has inadequate

:13:12.:13:14.

safeguards on working hours and part-time workers - mainly women

:13:15.:13:18.

- will be disadvantaged. Ministers say when talks got nowhere

:13:19.:13:24.

they had to impose the new contract, but junior doctors, like these

:13:25.:13:27.

at Ipswich Hospital, who today have walked out of routine

:13:28.:13:31.

but not urgent care, disagree. They say they will continue

:13:32.:13:34.

with the action unless Both sides seem as firmly entrenched

:13:35.:13:37.

as ever and hospitals are now having to face up to how

:13:38.:13:44.

they are going to manage at the end of this month when the dispute

:13:45.:13:48.

is escalated and junior doctors plan to walk out for the first time

:13:49.:13:51.

on all forms of care, Consultants like Craig Parkinson

:13:52.:13:54.

are covering junior doctors He supports their action,

:13:55.:13:57.

though he's concerned what will happen next time

:13:58.:14:00.

when there is an all-out strike. I think it will put significantly

:14:01.:14:07.

more strain on the situation. Not only will we have to provide

:14:08.:14:11.

ward-based care, we will then have For any patients coming

:14:12.:14:15.

into the hospital, we will have to provide

:14:16.:14:20.

that initial assessment. At the moment, that is being

:14:21.:14:22.

provided by the juniors, We'll have to do that

:14:23.:14:24.

as well as what I am The Chief Executive gave his

:14:25.:14:28.

view on the next wave I am really increasingly

:14:29.:14:32.

becoming quite concerned. As this dispute goes on,

:14:33.:14:35.

week after week, month after month, that cumulative effect

:14:36.:14:37.

on the organisation is starting I asked one junior doctor how

:14:38.:14:40.

she would justify walking out on patients, including

:14:41.:14:47.

emergency cases. And that includes not

:14:48.:14:50.

agreeing to a contract So that is my primary

:14:51.:14:54.

obligation, to do no harm. Doctors claim the new contract

:14:55.:15:00.

is unsafe. The Government denies that

:15:01.:15:02.

and says it is better There is certainly no sign of any

:15:03.:15:05.

dampening down of the strong After the longest-running inquests

:15:06.:15:09.

in British legal history the jury looking at the deaths of 96

:15:10.:15:16.

Liverpool football supporters at Hillsborough has retired

:15:17.:15:19.

to consider its conclusions. They're being asked to decide

:15:20.:15:23.

if the fans were unlawfully killed in the crush at the stadium

:15:24.:15:26.

in April 1989. The hearings into the disaster first

:15:27.:15:31.

began two years ago. Our correspondent, Judith Moritz,

:15:32.:15:38.

has been following events 27 years of the disaster, very

:15:39.:15:49.

significant moment today? Absolutely. It comes after two

:15:50.:15:55.

years, during which the jury here have heard evidence from more than

:15:56.:16:00.

500 witnesses and they have been shown more than 4,000 documents.

:16:01.:16:04.

They now have the task of coming up with a new narrative about Britain's

:16:05.:16:09.

worst ever stadium disaster because the first inquest, the verdicts from

:16:10.:16:13.

those were quashed, this is the second set of inquests. They have

:16:14.:16:17.

been given a questionnaire. They take this away with them into the

:16:18.:16:21.

jury room. It has 14 sections, broken down into a range of

:16:22.:16:25.

questions. They will be asked to decide whether the 96 Liverpool fans

:16:26.:16:29.

were unlawfully killed. They have been told that if they are going to

:16:30.:16:33.

say "yes" to that, they have to be sure that the match commander, Chief

:16:34.:16:38.

Superintendent David Duckenfield, was responsible for manslaughter by

:16:39.:16:41.

gross negligence. There is also another range of questions in here

:16:42.:16:44.

which deals with organisations, including South Yorkshire Police and

:16:45.:16:48.

Sheffield Wednesday Football Club. There is a question about the

:16:49.:16:50.

behaviour of the fans. That is something the Coroner has said he

:16:51.:16:54.

recognises is controversial. Well, the families who have been coming

:16:55.:16:58.

here, they say that this is the beginning of the end of a long

:16:59.:17:02.

process. The Coroner told the jurors that they must all work together in

:17:03.:17:07.

the interests of justice. Thank you very much. Our correspondent at

:17:08.:17:12.

those inquests in Warrington. The World Health Organisation says

:17:13.:17:15.

there's been a four-fold increase in diabetes

:17:16.:17:16.

in the past four decades. Worldwide, nearly one in eleven

:17:17.:17:18.

adults now has the disease. In one of the largest studies

:17:19.:17:20.

to date the WHO found that poor and middle-income countries had seen

:17:21.:17:24.

the steepest rise in cases. It's prompted a warning that

:17:25.:17:27.

diabetes has reached levels that could bankrupt some health systems,

:17:28.:17:31.

as our medical correspondent, Certainly that applies to Type 2

:17:32.:17:34.

diabetes, which is strongly linked to poor diet and obesity and

:17:35.:17:43.

accounts for most cases worldwide. It used to be a condition

:17:44.:17:49.

of affluence. But now it's middle-income

:17:50.:17:53.

countries, like India and Brazil, which have the greatest burden

:17:54.:17:57.

of Type 2 diabetes. It makes me feel so scared

:17:58.:18:01.

because I also feel that I may fall into the same category,

:18:02.:18:08.

I may fall ill one day like them. TRANSLATION: I'm very

:18:09.:18:13.

worried about it. When people realise they have

:18:14.:18:16.

it, it is too late. Other things follow,

:18:17.:18:22.

like blindness, and this The global rise in

:18:23.:18:25.

diabetes is staggering. In 1980, 108 million adults

:18:26.:18:30.

worldwide were affected. By 2014, that had risen

:18:31.:18:34.

to 422 million, which works out at around 1 in 11

:18:35.:18:39.

adults on the planet. Poor control of blood sugar levels

:18:40.:18:44.

is linked to 3.7 million deaths a year, increasing the risk

:18:45.:18:49.

of heart and kidney disease, One factor is increasing

:18:50.:18:52.

urbanisation. Since 1950, the number of people

:18:53.:19:00.

living in towns and cities has increased five-fold,

:19:01.:19:04.

from 750,000 million This graph shows the shift and how

:19:05.:19:08.

the trend will continue. With urbanisation comes less manual

:19:09.:19:15.

work, more fast-food, Add to that the global addiction

:19:16.:19:19.

with smartphones and you get a recipe for physical inactivity

:19:20.:19:25.

and expanding waistlines. We have to make our cities more

:19:26.:19:31.

liveable and healthier by making sure we can walk and cycle

:19:32.:19:34.

safely to work and school, by making sure there

:19:35.:19:38.

is place for exercising, for physical activity,

:19:39.:19:41.

by making sure we have access to healthy foods

:19:42.:19:43.

in urban environments. Particularly in lower

:19:44.:19:47.

and middle-income countries, The WHO backs ideas like a sugar

:19:48.:19:49.

tax, already levied in Mexico The epidemics of obesity and Type 2

:19:50.:19:56.

diabetes are among the greatest threats facing society,

:19:57.:20:04.

which, left unchecked, will swallow In America, Donald Trump has

:20:05.:20:08.

suffered a heavy defeat in the latest primary

:20:09.:20:18.

contest in Wisconsin. He was beaten by Senator Ted Cruz

:20:19.:20:21.

who said his victory marked a "decisive turning point"

:20:22.:20:24.

in the campaign. In the Democratic race,

:20:25.:20:27.

Bernie Sanders scored a convincing For Republican candidates

:20:28.:20:30.

the target is 1,237 - that's the number of delegates

:20:31.:20:37.

they need to win a majority at the July convention to secure

:20:38.:20:40.

the Party's nomination. The front-runner,

:20:41.:20:44.

Donald Trump, has 740. Senator Ted Cruz has now

:20:45.:20:47.

gathered 514 delegates. But the Wisconsin result has cast

:20:48.:20:52.

doubts on Donald Trump's If that happens, then a brokered

:20:53.:20:54.

convention, as it's called, where voting starts again

:20:55.:21:00.

from scratch, would be necessary, as our North America editor,

:21:01.:21:03.

Jon Sopel, explains. It is 8.51am, you're listening

:21:04.:21:08.

to Newsradio 620 WTMJ. Was last night a turning point

:21:09.:21:14.

in the race for President? I think it was for

:21:15.:21:16.

a number of reasons. Good morning, Milwaukee,

:21:17.:21:19.

after a dramatic night Donald Trump beaten and conservative

:21:20.:21:21.

talk radio hosts like The thing about Donald Trump -

:21:22.:21:26.

not only does he act like a 12-year-old bully

:21:27.:21:31.

on the playground, he is a remarkably thin-skinned

:21:32.:21:33.

individual, who runs away This visit to a diner yesterday

:21:34.:21:36.

morning was the last that was seen He held no party, no news

:21:37.:21:43.

conference, nothing last night. A man who has been ever-present

:21:44.:21:49.

on TV screens went to ground. His campaign issuing

:21:50.:21:54.

a terse statement saying, He is a Trojan Horse being used

:21:55.:21:56.

by the Party bosses attempting to steal the nomination

:21:57.:22:02.

from Mr Trump. Mr Trump is the only candidate

:22:03.:22:05.

who can secure the delegates needed But try telling that to the victor,

:22:06.:22:09.

the conservative evangelical senator He is not much-loved

:22:10.:22:16.

by the Republican establishment either, but he is massively

:22:17.:22:20.

preferred to Mr Trump Last night, therefore,

:22:21.:22:23.

a win for him, a win for them. It is a call from the hard-working

:22:24.:22:29.

men and women of Wisconsin This is a hugely significant victory

:22:30.:22:37.

for Ted Cruz because it means there are now no certainties

:22:38.:22:47.

in the Republican race. Yes, Donald Trump is way out

:22:48.:22:50.

in front, but having spent nine months defying political gravity,

:22:51.:22:53.

tonight he's come back to earth with a bump,

:22:54.:22:57.

to the delight of the people in this room and a good many

:22:58.:23:01.

in the Republican establishment. NEWSREEL: They packed the hall

:23:02.:23:06.

for a tense night session... What they are eyeing now

:23:07.:23:08.

is something called a brokered The candidate chosen by arm-twisting

:23:09.:23:10.

and backroom deals. For Republican grandees, the last

:23:11.:23:16.

best chance to stop Mr Trump. This summer's convention takes place

:23:17.:23:21.

in the hall where the first Republican debate was held last

:23:22.:23:24.

August. But Donald Trump isn't

:23:25.:23:26.

going to go without a fight. It could be a bloody battle

:23:27.:23:29.

for the nomination, for the soul Jon Sopel, BBC News,

:23:30.:23:32.

Milwaukee, Wisconsin. A man accused of murdering

:23:33.:23:40.

a shopkeeper in Glasgow has issued a statement saying he killed him

:23:41.:23:44.

because he claimed the victim had 40-year-old Asad Shah

:23:45.:23:47.

was discovered seriously injured outside his shop two weeks' ago -

:23:48.:23:51.

he was pronounced dead in hospital. The accused - Tanveer Ahmed -

:23:52.:23:56.

has been remanded in custody Live now to our correspondent,

:23:57.:23:58.

Lorna Gordon, in Glasgow. Well, this was the 32-year-old's

:23:59.:24:14.

second appearance at the Sheriff Court in Glasgow. Afterwards, in an

:24:15.:24:20.

unusual move, Tanveer Ahmed from Bradford issued a statement through

:24:21.:24:23.

his lawyer in which he admitted killing Asad Shah and gave his

:24:24.:24:27.

reasons for doing so. He said he believed Mr Shah had disrespected

:24:28.:24:32.

the Prophet Muhammad by claiming to be a prophet himself. He said the

:24:33.:24:36.

incident had nothing to do with Christianity. He claimed if he had

:24:37.:24:40.

not killed Mr Shah, others would. During the police investigation,

:24:41.:24:47.

officers had claimed that this was religiously prejudiced. Asad Shah

:24:48.:24:55.

was a Muslim and hundreds attended a vigil in his memory. Tanveer Ahmed

:24:56.:25:00.

was remanded in custody. No date has yet been set for his trial. Thank

:25:01.:25:02.

you very much. The latest analysis of the so-called

:25:03.:25:05.

Panama Papers has highlighted the vast sums of money leaving China

:25:06.:25:08.

- some of it ending up in the UK's Leaked details of the offshore

:25:09.:25:11.

accounts arranged by Mossack Fonseca - the law firm at the centre

:25:12.:25:16.

of the controversy - Beijing limits the amount of money

:25:17.:25:18.

that Chinese people are allowed to take abroad, but the leak

:25:19.:25:22.

suggests large numbers of wealthy people are breaching

:25:23.:25:24.

the regulations. Our correspondent, Celia Hatton,

:25:25.:25:26.

sent this report from Hong Kong. They're desperate to

:25:27.:25:32.

keep their money safe. Many are anxious to smuggle

:25:33.:25:37.

their wealth out of China, away I met a man who works as a money

:25:38.:25:41.

mule, carrying cash over the border TRANSLATION: I strap the money

:25:42.:25:49.

to my body, or I carry a small bag. The customs officers always target

:25:50.:25:59.

people with lots of luggage or those who look nervous, so I just

:26:00.:26:03.

try to act normal. Even China's communist elite

:26:04.:26:08.

are keeping their money offshore. Earlier this week,

:26:09.:26:12.

we showed you leaked files from Mossack Fonseca that revealed

:26:13.:26:15.

right at the top how the relatives of China's leaders use

:26:16.:26:18.

offshore companies. Now, we have learned China

:26:19.:26:22.

is the firm's biggest market. Mossack Fonseca manages more

:26:23.:26:26.

than 16,000 offshore companies It's not just people with ties

:26:27.:26:31.

to the leadership who Growing numbers of people

:26:32.:26:36.

are moving their money out of China on a scale never seen before

:26:37.:26:41.

and much of that money Last year, Chinese buyers snapped up

:26:42.:26:45.

more than ?35 billion in overseas property,

:26:46.:26:56.

much of it in the UK. This woman works for a company

:26:57.:26:59.

which lists properties abroad that may be of interest

:27:00.:27:05.

to Chinese buyers. In the UK alone - typically

:27:06.:27:09.

London is very popular. Just in this past quarter we have

:27:10.:27:14.

seen that Brighton has seen a 700% increase in popularity

:27:15.:27:17.

in just the past year. Every Chinese citizen can transfer

:27:18.:27:22.

?35,000 a year outside the country. Anything more than that often has

:27:23.:27:25.

to be moved illegally. But for those who fear their nest

:27:26.:27:29.

eggs will be wiped out by China's slowing economy, for those

:27:30.:27:33.

who want to hide their wealth from the authorities,

:27:34.:27:35.

money smuggling is a necessary risk. The outflow of capital is something

:27:36.:27:40.

which the Chinese government is very, very unhappy

:27:41.:27:43.

about and they want to contain it. But the fact that they are giving it

:27:44.:27:47.

a fair bit of priority and yet the scale of problem remains

:27:48.:27:55.

so large means they're not Across Hong Kong it is common to see

:27:56.:27:59.

visitors from mainland China Think of it as a symbol for what is

:28:00.:28:07.

happening around the globe. China's richest people,

:28:08.:28:13.

including the country's top leaders, are choosing to take their money out

:28:14.:28:16.

of the country to spend elsewhere. They're protecting themselves,

:28:17.:28:21.

but they're making The offices of European football's

:28:22.:28:23.

governing body, Uefa, It comes after ex-Secretary

:28:24.:28:31.

General Gianni Infantino, who is now President of the world

:28:32.:28:36.

governing body, Fifa, Football, and Manchester City

:28:37.:28:39.

have had a good night in their first-ever Champions'

:28:40.:28:49.

League quarterfinal tonight. They managed a 2-2 draw

:28:50.:28:51.

in their first leg away at French The Brazilian Fernandinho

:28:52.:28:54.

scored the equaliser. The second leg will be played

:28:55.:28:59.

in Manchester next week. For the first time in its history -

:29:00.:29:05.

which spans over two centuries - the home of bespoke English

:29:06.:29:08.

tailoring, Savile Row, features a shop owned

:29:09.:29:11.

by a female master tailor. Kathryn Sargent's clients include

:29:12.:29:15.

members of the Royal Family and celebrities,

:29:16.:29:17.

including David Beckham. She started out as an art student,

:29:18.:29:20.

but she told our correspondent, David Sillito, that her love

:29:21.:29:23.

for tailoring grew despite the lack For 170 years, it's meant

:29:24.:29:25.

quality, tradition and it's I'm the first female master

:29:26.:29:39.

craftsman to have a business on Savile Row and the first woman

:29:40.:29:59.

to have their own name above the door so, yes,

:30:00.:30:02.

I think that's quite something. Here's your jacket, Sir.

:30:03.:30:06.

Thank you. Kathryn Sargent learnt her skills

:30:07.:30:11.

on Savile Row. Born in Leeds, the day she first

:30:12.:30:13.

visited London's home of tailoring, All the tailors looked like clubs

:30:14.:30:17.

almost, and they have beautiful uniforms and garments in the window,

:30:18.:30:24.

so I was determined that - and I thought this is where I would

:30:25.:30:27.

like to work. NEWSREEL: Introducing the

:30:28.:30:32.

best-dressed street in the world. Savile Row was founded

:30:33.:30:35.

here by the first and most famous tailor of them,

:30:36.:30:37.

Mr Henry Poole. So now Henry Poole has a new female

:30:38.:30:40.

neighbour and chief cutter She was the one female amongst

:30:41.:30:44.

a number of young men and... No, I did try, but, you know,

:30:45.:30:52.

that's the way it goes. But things have really changed,

:30:53.:30:58.

many more women now? And while Kathryn Sargent is the

:30:59.:31:01.

first on the Row, What used to be a men-only

:31:02.:31:08.

world is changing fast. Newsnight's about to begin over

:31:09.:31:16.

on BBC Two in a few moments. You can buy a surface-to-air missile

:31:17.:31:31.

on Facebook. Not in this country. But we will tell you where. Join me

:31:32.:31:36.

for that now on BBC Two. 11.00pm in Scotland.

:31:37.:31:39.

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