Browse content similar to 16/05/2016. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
Line | From | To | |
---|---|---|---|
Tonight at Ten, the urgent need to improve safety | :00:00. | :00:08. | |
standards inside the prisons of England and Wales. | :00:09. | :00:14. | |
The BBC has new evidence of thousands of banned items | :00:15. | :00:18. | |
Some delivered by drones, into prison cells. MPs say the situation | :00:19. | :00:24. | |
is getting worse and needs immediate action. | :00:25. | :00:26. | |
The banned items include drugs, weapons and mobile phones -- | :00:27. | :00:31. | |
Former inmates say it is a deadly mix. | :00:32. | :00:37. | |
Drugs are rife in prison and drugs and violence go hand in hand. | :00:38. | :00:42. | |
We'll have an exclusive report on safety in prisons - | :00:43. | :00:45. | |
and we'll be asking what's being done to address the problem. | :00:46. | :00:47. | |
Guilty of manslaughter - this man killed an elderly motorist - | :00:48. | :00:55. | |
but his family say warnings about his mental health | :00:56. | :00:57. | |
If the EU fails to tackle the migration crisis, | :00:58. | :01:04. | |
there could be a popular uprising, a former head of MI6. | :01:05. | :01:09. | |
It was a fake bomb like this left by security firm at Old Trafford which | :01:10. | :01:16. | |
prompted the evacuation of Manchester United's round yesterday. | :01:17. | :01:21. | |
The confrontation between minors and police at Orgreave, 32 years on new | :01:22. | :01:25. | |
links between the police investigation and the Hillsborough | :01:26. | :01:26. | |
disaster. And a case of painting the town blue | :01:27. | :01:30. | |
as Leicester welcomes the Premier League champions | :01:31. | :01:33. | |
in great style. Euro 2016 draws closer, | :01:34. | :01:34. | |
and Marcus Rashford is in the 26. The 18-year-old Manchester United | :01:35. | :01:39. | |
striker is named in Roy Hodgson's Concerns about safety standards in | :01:40. | :02:11. | |
prisons in England and Wales have intensified. The number of land | :02:12. | :02:17. | |
items being thrown to inmates of a prison walls or sent over by drone | :02:18. | :02:22. | |
has more than doubled in the last two years. BBC News has found more | :02:23. | :02:25. | |
than 2000 packages detected last year. We reveal the lengths that | :02:26. | :02:31. | |
inmates go to to obtain mobile phones, and weapons. | :02:32. | :02:36. | |
In the first of a series of exclusive reports -- | :02:37. | :02:38. | |
on the state of Britain's prisons -- here's our special correspondent | :02:39. | :02:41. | |
The prisoners can't get out, but there's little to stop drugs, | :02:42. | :02:45. | |
Wandsworth Prison last month, and a drone hovers. | :02:46. | :02:48. | |
Beneath it, a package dangles in mid-air, packed with spice, | :02:49. | :02:51. | |
a synthetic drug causing havoc in jails, and mobile phones. | :02:52. | :02:55. | |
It's delivery by drone and it is room, or actually, cell service. | :02:56. | :02:59. | |
A prisoner guides the haul into his cell, and after a few | :03:00. | :03:02. | |
attempts, the drone lands its banned goods. | :03:03. | :03:07. | |
But caught on CCTV, this was a wasted effort, | :03:08. | :03:09. | |
Outside Pentonville prison, a more low-tech attempt. | :03:10. | :03:17. | |
A man attaches a bundle to a rope and from inside the jail, | :03:18. | :03:21. | |
the banned package is hauled in, lifted up the wall | :03:22. | :03:23. | |
It is a problem jails across the country are | :03:24. | :03:28. | |
A snag, as it's caught on a branch, but then it's lifted over. | :03:29. | :03:35. | |
An arm from inside the prison then yanks it in. | :03:36. | :03:38. | |
Official figures show there have only been 15 incidents of banned | :03:39. | :03:42. | |
items thrown over Pentonville's walls in the last year. | :03:43. | :03:45. | |
But locals say they must have missed a zero off. | :03:46. | :03:49. | |
They say they've seen it happen many more times. | :03:50. | :03:51. | |
This, another drone that crash-landed in Wandsworth prison | :03:52. | :03:57. | |
grounds as it tried to smuggle in banned items. | :03:58. | :04:02. | |
Some drugs and phones are seized, sometimes packed into drink cartons. | :04:03. | :04:06. | |
The BBC has found the number of banned items thrown into prisons | :04:07. | :04:12. | |
in England and Wales has doubled in the last two years - | :04:13. | :04:15. | |
2,000 packages, many more not detected. | :04:16. | :04:17. | |
Sam, whose voice has been disguised, served five years | :04:18. | :04:22. | |
It can literally get thrown over the wall. | :04:23. | :04:30. | |
It is quite a military operation, like literally, | :04:31. | :04:32. | |
And they're going to the correct people. | :04:33. | :04:36. | |
Wandsworth has seen just this method, managing | :04:37. | :04:38. | |
Spice in the packets here is the legal high that | :04:39. | :04:42. | |
And with spice on the increase, so, too, is the violence. | :04:43. | :04:52. | |
The BBC has also learned that more than 1,000 weapons were found | :04:53. | :04:55. | |
in prisons in England and Wales in just six months last year. | :04:56. | :04:58. | |
Nearly three quarters, knives and blades. | :04:59. | :04:59. | |
Jonathan Burke was released last year after serving time for robbery. | :05:00. | :05:03. | |
And drugs and violence go hand-in-hand. | :05:04. | :05:14. | |
I see it change, especially since spice come into prison. | :05:15. | :05:16. | |
It was sort of regular violence and then the spice came in, | :05:17. | :05:19. | |
and about three months later, it was just ridiculous. | :05:20. | :05:21. | |
Literally 70%, 80% of the wing is smoking it. | :05:22. | :05:29. | |
I've personally known people that have made thousands, | :05:30. | :05:34. | |
They are richer when they come out of prison than they | :05:35. | :05:38. | |
Seized in Wandsworth jail - the BBC has also discovered | :05:39. | :05:45. | |
an increase in people charged with smuggling drugs | :05:46. | :05:48. | |
Oliver was released from jail last year. | :05:49. | :05:54. | |
Staff is the most consistent way of getting drugs into prison | :05:55. | :05:57. | |
on a regular basis, and that way, you can regularly | :05:58. | :05:59. | |
I've seen the handing over of drugs and mobile phones | :06:00. | :06:04. | |
personally in prisons, on a pretty regular basis. | :06:05. | :06:08. | |
Those working in prison say this is a minority of staff, | :06:09. | :06:16. | |
but they accept smuggling and weapons are a growing problem. | :06:17. | :06:23. | |
The defence which prisoners are presenting is that they were tooling | :06:24. | :06:26. | |
And this becomes what was described to me as almost an arms | :06:27. | :06:36. | |
The combination of drugs, drones, knives and fewer staff make | :06:37. | :06:40. | |
a dangerous mix for prisoners and officers. | :06:41. | :06:47. | |
Lucy is with me now. We heard in that report that it is a growing | :06:48. | :06:53. | |
problem, what measures are being taken to deal with it? I think | :06:54. | :06:57. | |
people, especially politicians will be astonished by some of those | :06:58. | :07:00. | |
pictures of the drones going straight to prison cells. The | :07:01. | :07:05. | |
problem that there is that the people we speak to inside, and some | :07:06. | :07:09. | |
on the outside, say that the trade in phones and drugs in prisons is so | :07:10. | :07:15. | |
lucrative, they can afford to lose turns all packages, and in fact the | :07:16. | :07:18. | |
drone in that bees use or actually flew into the prison cell, prisoners | :07:19. | :07:24. | |
broke it into pieces and flushed it down the toilet to try to avoid | :07:25. | :07:29. | |
detection. But the Ministry of Justice say they have taken a zero | :07:30. | :07:33. | |
tolerance approach and they are committed to cracking down on drugs | :07:34. | :07:36. | |
and weapons in prison, they take this very seriously. Yet they admit | :07:37. | :07:41. | |
that on the banned items in prison that there is more to do. Wednesday, | :07:42. | :07:45. | |
we have the Queen's Speech and there will be measures on prison reform, | :07:46. | :07:50. | |
be headed by Michael Gove. But today that was a committee of MPs who | :07:51. | :07:55. | |
warned him that the increasing levels of violence, suicide and self | :07:56. | :07:59. | |
harm in prison threatened to undermine those reforms. We will | :08:00. | :08:03. | |
have more all week on prisons and tomorrow we will hear startling | :08:04. | :08:06. | |
words from the Chief Inspector of prisons about what he has seen. Lucy | :08:07. | :08:09. | |
Manning, thank you. A man who killed an elderly | :08:10. | :08:12. | |
motorist after a road accident in West Sussex | :08:13. | :08:14. | |
has been found guilty of manslaughter on the | :08:15. | :08:16. | |
grounds of diminished responsibility, | :08:17. | :08:18. | |
but cleared of murder. The court heard that Matthew Daley | :08:19. | :08:19. | |
had been treated for psychosis and that his family had pleaded | :08:20. | :08:21. | |
for him to be sectioned. Sussex Partnership NHS | :08:22. | :08:24. | |
Foundation Trust has admitted its care "should | :08:25. | :08:27. | |
have been better". Our correspondent Robert | :08:28. | :08:29. | |
Hall has the details. In a police interview | :08:30. | :08:38. | |
room, Matthew Daley, calmly describing a horrific attack | :08:39. | :08:47. | |
on a country road in July last year. His victim was 79-year-old Donald | :08:48. | :08:59. | |
Lock, a retired solicitor who had just been given the all-clear | :09:00. | :09:02. | |
after cancer treatment. On that July evening Donald Lock | :09:03. | :09:04. | |
was travelling In front of him, Matthew Daley | :09:05. | :09:06. | |
pulled out of a side road. Witnesses said that | :09:07. | :09:19. | |
after a few yards, Daley braked suddenly | :09:20. | :09:20. | |
for no apparent reason. Mr Lock, who was travelling at less | :09:21. | :09:25. | |
than 20 miles an hour, also braked, but he hit | :09:26. | :09:35. | |
the back of Daley's car. Matthew Daley stabbed Mr Locke 39 | :09:36. | :09:37. | |
times and then turned and drove off, leaving his | :09:38. | :09:40. | |
victim lying in the roadway. When armed police officers arrested | :09:41. | :09:42. | |
Daley in Worthing two days later, the knife | :09:43. | :09:45. | |
was still in his bag. During his trial, Donald Lock's | :09:46. | :09:47. | |
family have heard detailed argument about Daley's mental state | :09:48. | :09:49. | |
at the time of the attack. His parents told the | :09:50. | :09:53. | |
court that they had repeatedly asked the NHS Trust | :09:54. | :09:55. | |
to act as his behaviour grew more Sussex partnership NHS Trust have | :09:56. | :09:58. | |
apologised and there will now be an independent review of ten | :09:59. | :10:02. | |
other deaths involving their We didn't give Matthew | :10:03. | :10:05. | |
the right care. What I can say is that | :10:06. | :10:14. | |
that would have had an impact | :10:15. | :10:16. | |
on the outcome. Outside court today Donald Lock's | :10:17. | :10:18. | |
family also condemned the It is clear that dad | :10:19. | :10:20. | |
would still be here today Nothing we say or do now would bring | :10:21. | :10:26. | |
dad back to us but we will continue the spirit that dad | :10:27. | :10:35. | |
carried with him. Tonight one mental health charity | :10:36. | :10:37. | |
said that all too often Our own analysis of independent | :10:38. | :10:40. | |
inquiries into 100 homicides committed by a person | :10:41. | :10:50. | |
with a mental illness or disorder revealed that | :10:51. | :10:52. | |
in 55% of the cases one | :10:53. | :10:53. | |
of the key factors leading to the tragedy | :10:54. | :10:55. | |
was a failure to listen to | :10:56. | :10:57. | |
the families and carers. Matthew Daley will be | :10:58. | :11:01. | |
sentenced in July. Robert Hall, BBC News, | :11:02. | :11:03. | |
East Sussex. The former head of MI6, | :11:04. | :11:09. | |
Sir Richard Dearlove, has warned that unless | :11:10. | :11:11. | |
the European Union can take control of the migration crisis, | :11:12. | :11:13. | |
it will face a popular uprising. He also criticised plans to relax | :11:14. | :11:17. | |
visa restrictions for Turks as part of a deal to cut migrant | :11:18. | :11:20. | |
numbers - saying it was like Sir Richard was speaking at a BBC | :11:21. | :11:23. | |
conference on migration along with the Hollywood | :11:24. | :11:32. | |
actress and UN envoy Our security correspondent | :11:33. | :11:34. | |
Gordon Corera reports. Thousands of migrants wait in a camp | :11:35. | :11:37. | |
in northern Greece hoping to travel deeper into Europe, and today | :11:38. | :11:45. | |
a stark warning from a former intelligence chief about the risks | :11:46. | :11:47. | |
of the EU failing to tackle the Speaking at the BBC's | :11:48. | :11:50. | |
World On The Move conference, a former head of MI6 said | :11:51. | :12:05. | |
there was a danger that extremist If Europe cannot act together | :12:06. | :12:08. | |
to persuade a majority of its citizens that it can gain | :12:09. | :12:11. | |
control of its migratory crisis, then the EU will find | :12:12. | :12:14. | |
itself at the mercy of a populist uprising | :12:15. | :12:16. | |
which Sir Richard raised | :12:17. | :12:17. | |
particular concerns over the deal between the European | :12:18. | :12:22. | |
Union and Turkey. Turkey has agreed to stem the flow | :12:23. | :12:26. | |
of migrants arriving in Europe in return for a deal | :12:27. | :12:31. | |
which could lead to Turkish citizens gaining visa-free access | :12:32. | :12:37. | |
to parts of Europe, That, he argued, was | :12:38. | :12:38. | |
a short-term solution For the EU, however, | :12:39. | :12:41. | |
to offer visa-free access to 75 million Turks to stem the flow | :12:42. | :12:49. | |
of migrants across the Aegean seems Like storing gasoline next | :12:50. | :12:53. | |
to the fire we are trying to Richard Dearlove spent nearly 40 | :12:54. | :13:00. | |
years working inside MI6. He said today that | :13:01. | :13:05. | |
part of the job was making informed predictions | :13:06. | :13:09. | |
about where the world was heading, but he also warned there would be no | :13:10. | :13:13. | |
James Bond-style miraculous solutions | :13:14. | :13:15. | |
to the problems posed by migration. Dangers of a political backlash were | :13:16. | :13:19. | |
also emphasised by Angelina Jolie Pitt, the UN Refugee Agency | :13:20. | :13:26. | |
special enjoy envoy, Fear of uncontrolled | :13:27. | :13:28. | |
migration has eroded public confidence and the ability | :13:29. | :13:36. | |
of governments and international institutions to control | :13:37. | :13:38. | |
the situation. It has given space to a false air | :13:39. | :13:43. | |
of legitimacy to those who promote politics of | :13:44. | :13:46. | |
fear and separation. More than a million people entered | :13:47. | :13:49. | |
Europe last year. Today, two different voices both | :13:50. | :13:54. | |
warned of the potential consequences if institutions failed to find | :13:55. | :13:58. | |
solutions to the resulting crisis. The Chancellor, George Osborne, | :13:59. | :14:03. | |
flanked by his former Labour opponent Ed Balls and by his | :14:04. | :14:15. | |
former cabinet colleague the Lib Dem Sir Vince Cable,has | :14:16. | :14:17. | |
warned it would be a 'huge mistake' for Britain | :14:18. | :14:20. | |
to leave the European Union. Mr Osborne claimed a vote to Leave | :14:21. | :14:22. | |
would mean a loss of trade worth ?200 billion by | :14:23. | :14:25. | |
the end of the decade. He spoke on the day that 300 | :14:26. | :14:27. | |
business leaders backed the case for Leaving, | :14:28. | :14:29. | |
as our political editor Please welcome George Osborne, | :14:30. | :14:31. | |
Ed Balls and Vince Cable. Travel companions, | :14:32. | :14:37. | |
for the day at least. The Remain campaign | :14:38. | :14:39. | |
produced its own plane, with three captains, | :14:40. | :14:41. | |
all claiming the There's a reason that the three | :14:42. | :14:43. | |
of us are standing here today, putting aside our very | :14:44. | :14:49. | |
obvious differences. The economic argument | :14:50. | :14:53. | |
is beyond doubt. Leaving the EU is a one-way ticket | :14:54. | :15:01. | |
to a poorer Britain. That argument ain't over, | :15:02. | :15:05. | |
just cos these three say so. Mr Cable, you called | :15:06. | :15:09. | |
George Osborne very cynical. Chancellor, the Tories | :15:10. | :15:11. | |
called Mr Balls the most Who asked who to come today and how | :15:12. | :15:13. | |
did those phone calls go? There are certain moments | :15:14. | :15:22. | |
in a country's history where judgments and decisions | :15:23. | :15:25. | |
are so important that they transcend We have common agreement on this | :15:26. | :15:27. | |
issue, that the case for remaining But the warnings aren't all one way, | :15:28. | :15:32. | |
and they only work if voters As campaign stunts go, | :15:33. | :15:38. | |
this is a real show of brute force. It is not just about safety | :15:39. | :15:45. | |
in numbers, but a political attempt to close down | :15:46. | :15:47. | |
the referendum's main argument. But the air has not all gone | :15:48. | :15:54. | |
out of the other side. Campaigns are fought | :15:55. | :15:57. | |
on the street, too. We have got to have | :15:58. | :16:00. | |
straight bananas. Out campaigners in Witham in Essex | :16:01. | :16:05. | |
were doing a brisk lunchtime trade. First time in in my life I've ever | :16:06. | :16:07. | |
done anything like this. I'm 79, never been involved | :16:08. | :16:12. | |
in anything but I feel so strongly, not about money, | :16:13. | :16:15. | |
but about my country. I don't believe a word that | :16:16. | :16:21. | |
Cameron is threatening us I think when it comes | :16:22. | :16:26. | |
to the grassroots level, You don't want to | :16:27. | :16:31. | |
leave the EU, do you? Babies, balloons and chief | :16:32. | :16:40. | |
Outer Boris Johnson on tour When you look at the EU now, | :16:41. | :16:42. | |
it makes me think of some badly-designed undergarment | :16:43. | :16:47. | |
that has now become too tight in some places, | :16:48. | :16:52. | |
far too tight, far too constricting, and dangerously | :16:53. | :16:57. | |
loose in other places. Anyway, knickers to | :16:58. | :17:04. | |
the pessimists, how about that? This is about spirit and sentiment | :17:05. | :17:07. | |
as well as the numbers, and nothing in the end is settled | :17:08. | :17:10. | |
until you have your say. All aboard for Britain remaining | :17:11. | :17:16. | |
in the European Union. The head of the security firm | :17:17. | :17:24. | |
which accidentally left a fake bomb at Old Trafford has taken full | :17:25. | :17:27. | |
responsibility for the mistake which prompted the evacuation | :17:28. | :17:30. | |
of Manchester United's ground yesterday, minutes before | :17:31. | :17:33. | |
the match against Bournemouth Chris Reid said it was a genuine | :17:34. | :17:35. | |
error and apologised The match has been abandoned | :17:36. | :17:41. | |
today on police advice. It was the blunder that left | :17:42. | :17:49. | |
Manchester United red-faced - Old Trafford being evacuated | :17:50. | :17:52. | |
yesterday after a fake bomb was left behind from a training exercise last | :17:53. | :17:57. | |
Wednesday but only found The first time a Premier League | :17:58. | :17:59. | |
match has been abandoned due This was a fiasco, | :18:00. | :18:05. | |
but not an amusing one. Clearly in the end, a massive | :18:06. | :18:15. | |
inconvenience to tens I think Manchester United need | :18:16. | :18:17. | |
to apologise very, very seriously But in a statement, United's | :18:18. | :18:21. | |
executive vice chairman insisted they weren't to blame, | :18:22. | :18:30. | |
saying: as to why four days passed before | :18:31. | :18:42. | |
United staff found the device. But this evening the head | :18:43. | :18:47. | |
of the security company involved apologised | :18:48. | :18:50. | |
for his role in the error. I made a mistake, | :18:51. | :18:53. | |
a devastating mistake. An item that was placed in the male | :18:54. | :18:57. | |
WC was not recovered. As I had a similar item in my bag | :18:58. | :19:01. | |
that I had not used. I saw this and made the mistake | :19:02. | :19:05. | |
of thinking the item in the WC had been brought back when found | :19:06. | :19:08. | |
by the attendees, as had other items United say all ticket holders | :19:09. | :19:11. | |
will be refunded and can watch tomorrow's rematch for free, | :19:12. | :19:16. | |
but that doesn't cover all of the cost that some | :19:17. | :19:18. | |
travelling fans have suffered. It's his birthday next week | :19:19. | :19:21. | |
so I bought him a ticket for us. It has always been | :19:22. | :19:31. | |
a dream to come here. Will you be able to come tomorrow | :19:32. | :19:33. | |
night to the game? Tomorrow night, thousands of fans | :19:34. | :19:36. | |
will return here for the rearranged final fixture of the Premier League | :19:37. | :19:40. | |
season, but even though this was an embarrassing mistake rather | :19:41. | :19:43. | |
than anything more sinister, it does serve as a timely reminder | :19:44. | :19:45. | |
of football's sense of vulnerability ahead of a tournament where security | :19:46. | :19:50. | |
will be a greater concern than ever. In the wake of last year's terror | :19:51. | :19:57. | |
attack at the Stade de France in Paris, security has been | :19:58. | :20:01. | |
tightened at major sporting venues. But with the European Championships | :20:02. | :20:04. | |
in France less than a month away, yesterday will only have heightened | :20:05. | :20:06. | |
anxiety, even though The people of Leicester have crowded | :20:07. | :20:11. | |
the streets this evening to greet the players | :20:12. | :20:19. | |
of Leicester City and to celebrate their notable feat | :20:20. | :20:21. | |
in winning the Premier League. They've enjoyed an open-top bus | :20:22. | :20:24. | |
parade and our correspondent This is the home of Leicester City | :20:25. | :20:39. | |
football club, today's celebrations had taken in the whole of the | :20:40. | :20:43. | |
community. Almost a quarter of a million people lined the streets to | :20:44. | :20:48. | |
support a team who have gone from being 5000-1 outsiders to becoming | :20:49. | :21:01. | |
champions. Thousands of people lined Leicester's streets, turning the | :21:02. | :21:06. | |
city centre into a sea of blue. The atmosphere unlike anything else in | :21:07. | :21:17. | |
the club's 132 year history. They played with heart and soul and | :21:18. | :21:21. | |
people understood this. The achievement, what we have done, and | :21:22. | :21:27. | |
it will bring extra revenue next year so it is unbelievable. We are | :21:28. | :21:34. | |
just enjoying it at the front with the trophy. This is the moment they | :21:35. | :21:38. | |
have all been waiting for, some of these people have been standing here | :21:39. | :21:42. | |
for hours to catch a glimpse of their heroes. It means everything. | :21:43. | :21:50. | |
Once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. We have waited 132 years for it so the | :21:51. | :21:55. | |
whole town has come out. It is probably the only time we will ever | :21:56. | :22:00. | |
see anything like it. I'm not really into football but because of the | :22:01. | :22:04. | |
atmosphere and we love Leicester. We have all come out, it is brilliant. | :22:05. | :22:12. | |
And the city is capitalising on the team's success. No business | :22:13. | :22:16. | |
opportunity being missed. This family firm has been making saris | :22:17. | :22:21. | |
for almost half a century. Blue has never been so popular here. When | :22:22. | :22:28. | |
brides and grooms come in and ask for a royal blue or a navy blue, | :22:29. | :22:33. | |
they ask for Leicester City blue and it is wonderful. It's exciting to be | :22:34. | :22:38. | |
in Leicester at this present time. Even King Richard III was eclipsed | :22:39. | :22:44. | |
today according to the city's mayor. When we buried the king here we have | :22:45. | :22:49. | |
had the eyes of the world on us. This is bigger by far than that and | :22:50. | :22:53. | |
it is bringing business here and of course investment to our economy we | :22:54. | :22:59. | |
never dreamt of. The Premier League champions and your manager, Claudio | :23:00. | :23:07. | |
Ranieri! This was a fairy tale ending to a story few could have | :23:08. | :23:11. | |
imagined at the start of the season. The dream that became a reality, and | :23:12. | :23:16. | |
a night that the city will certainly remember. | :23:17. | :23:20. | |
For the first time, the BBC can reveal the names of two | :23:21. | :23:23. | |
senior police officers and a solicitor who worked | :23:24. | :23:24. | |
for South Yorkshire Police and who were involved in shaping | :23:25. | :23:27. | |
the force's response to the Hillsborough disaster | :23:28. | :23:29. | |
and to the confrontation with miners at Orgreave during the | :23:30. | :23:31. | |
Deputy Chief Constable Peter Hayes and Assistant Chief Constable Walter | :23:32. | :23:37. | |
Jackson were involved in both cases as was Peter Metcalf. | :23:38. | :23:42. | |
The Home Secretary has already said she's considering calls for a public | :23:43. | :23:45. | |
inquiry into the Orgreave confrontation and how | :23:46. | :23:47. | |
police dealt with evidence, as Dan Johnson explains. | :23:48. | :23:58. | |
It was a violent showdown between striking miners and police officers. | :23:59. | :24:08. | |
Both suffered injuries. 95 miners arrested, many charged with riot. In | :24:09. | :24:13. | |
court cases collapsed after it emerged parts of statements had been | :24:14. | :24:18. | |
dictated by detectives. Five years later across Sheffield, the | :24:19. | :24:21. | |
Hillsborough disaster, a very different event at the same police | :24:22. | :24:25. | |
force was in charge. Now we know some of the same officers and the | :24:26. | :24:32. | |
same solicitor for were involved in the aftermath. These were the men | :24:33. | :24:37. | |
that linked the event. Peter Metcalf suggested amendments after | :24:38. | :24:41. | |
Hillsborough, but a year earlier he was defending police against claims | :24:42. | :24:46. | |
of unlawful arrest brought by some of the Orgreave miners. Some police | :24:47. | :24:50. | |
statements didn't match video evidence. He made a note saying he | :24:51. | :24:54. | |
had been told there was opposition at police HQ to anything that might | :24:55. | :25:03. | |
undermine the case. They were not my words, but the implication of those | :25:04. | :25:09. | |
words was to put in jeopardy the person I had arrested for | :25:10. | :25:13. | |
obstructing police from his duty to an offence of riot that carried a | :25:14. | :25:18. | |
lifetime imprisonment. Peter Hayes ordered a review of the evidence | :25:19. | :25:22. | |
gathering at Orgreave, who was later involved in coordinating the case | :25:23. | :25:26. | |
after the Hillsborough disaster, agreeing the way statements would be | :25:27. | :25:31. | |
taken. Walter Jackson was the senior officer on call when Hillsborough | :25:32. | :25:35. | |
happened, he was criticised for failing to take command. Four years | :25:36. | :25:39. | |
earlier he had led the internal review into the lease macro | :25:40. | :25:47. | |
evidence. Lawyers for Walter Jackson and Peter Hayes said they deny any | :25:48. | :25:52. | |
wrongdoing and cannot comment further. Peter Metcalf said he had | :25:53. | :25:56. | |
nothing to say about Orgreave. Last year he told the Hillsborough | :25:57. | :25:59. | |
inquest he had acted in the interests of the truth and denied | :26:00. | :26:03. | |
any attempt to avert the course of justice. This used to be the | :26:04. | :26:07. | |
headquarters of South Yorkshire Police. The Hillsborough coroner was | :26:08. | :26:12. | |
asked to let the jury hear evidence about the way former officers here | :26:13. | :26:16. | |
responded to the issues around Orgreave but the coroner refused, | :26:17. | :26:18. | |
saying that evidence was not sufficiently relevant to how the 96 | :26:19. | :26:24. | |
Liverpool fans denied. However the links between these events are now | :26:25. | :26:29. | |
becoming clearer. We won't have the full truth about Hillsborough until | :26:30. | :26:33. | |
we also have the full truth about Orgreave. There are very strong | :26:34. | :26:37. | |
links between them. Home Secretary Theresa May was -- must decide | :26:38. | :26:46. | |
whether what happened here should be investigated. | :26:47. | :26:47. | |
Universities in England will be able to increase their tuition fees | :26:48. | :26:50. | |
above ?9,000 from Autumn 2017, subject to certain conditions | :26:51. | :26:52. | |
including the quality of teaching and students' job prospects. | :26:53. | :26:55. | |
The plans were included in a Government White Paper. | :26:56. | :26:57. | |
But Labour has warned of inadequate controls | :26:58. | :26:59. | |
and the gamble of rapidly expanding new universities. | :27:00. | :27:06. | |
Our education editor Branwen Jeffreys reports from Manchester. | :27:07. | :27:12. | |
This generation has borrowed ?9,000 a year. | :27:13. | :27:19. | |
When fees go up at Manchester Metropolitan, will they focus more | :27:20. | :27:22. | |
Once you get into your final year, especially in your final term, | :27:23. | :27:28. | |
students are automatically thinking about the next steps, | :27:29. | :27:30. | |
Would I go back and do it again? | :27:31. | :27:34. | |
Would I go back and do it again if it was even more money? | :27:35. | :27:38. | |
That's a question that, if you ask people, | :27:39. | :27:40. | |
The difference in fees will gradually get bigger | :27:41. | :27:44. | |
between universities, with only the best on teaching | :27:45. | :27:46. | |
What happens if you are from a low-income background | :27:47. | :27:54. | |
and you can't afford to go to a university which has better | :27:55. | :27:57. | |
teaching because they charge a stupid amount of money? | :27:58. | :28:00. | |
So, is it a huge gamble, as Labour argues? | :28:01. | :28:03. | |
I asked the minister, how can they guarantee quality? | :28:04. | :28:08. | |
That's why we're putting in place incentives for universities to focus | :28:09. | :28:10. | |
on the quality of teaching in the system so students get | :28:11. | :28:13. | |
the kind of teaching experience which they have a right to expect, | :28:14. | :28:16. | |
their parents want for them, and which employers need. | :28:17. | :28:20. | |
Those in charge of universities know they face more competition. | :28:21. | :28:25. | |
I think it will focus the minds of universities on delivering things | :28:26. | :28:29. | |
they are really genuinely very good at, and able to deliver | :28:30. | :28:31. | |
I think the result is some course closures and some universities | :28:32. | :28:35. | |
In the future there will be many more ways to study for a degree, | :28:36. | :28:40. | |
many more places that will be able to give you a degree, | :28:41. | :28:44. | |
but the real test for students will be whether these measures | :28:45. | :28:47. | |
really deliver on value for money for their tuition fees. | :28:48. | :28:50. | |
Nice straight back, grab the handle... | :28:51. | :28:54. | |
They are studying for a degree, but at the Manchester College. | :28:55. | :28:57. | |
Some further education colleges may do more of this in future, | :28:58. | :29:01. | |
but in these students, the ones ministers want to encourage, | :29:02. | :29:05. | |
still some doubt about the price of a degree. | :29:06. | :29:09. | |
It can stop a lot of people, and the fact that people have got | :29:10. | :29:12. | |
degrees but don't always get a job in the industry they want. | :29:13. | :29:15. | |
I know a lot of people myself who work in call centres, | :29:16. | :29:19. | |
after three or four years of university studying. | :29:20. | :29:22. | |
It's their future and they will pay, however well these changes work. | :29:23. | :29:25. | |
Branwen Jeffreys, BBC News, Manchester. | :29:26. | :29:32. | |
With just over five weeks to go to the referendum on Britain's | :29:33. | :29:34. | |
future in the European Union, we'll be hearing from a range of voters | :29:35. | :29:38. | |
about the factors that will determine how they vote | :29:39. | :29:40. | |
And we'll start tonight with Jon Rudoni from the village | :29:41. | :29:44. | |
I've been flying balloons for a living for 25 years. | :29:45. | :29:54. | |
There is something quite romantic and attractive | :29:55. | :29:59. | |
about the United Kingdom pulling up the drawbridge | :30:00. | :30:05. | |
and rowing our own boat for a change and regaining some sovereignty. | :30:06. | :30:12. | |
My business head certainly says that we need to stay in Europe | :30:13. | :30:16. | |
and we need to keep our economy steadily growing and we need to keep | :30:17. | :30:19. | |
There is a small part of me that thinks it would be exciting, | :30:20. | :30:27. | |
maybe slightly mischievous, and it might even unite the country | :30:28. | :30:32. | |
if we suddenly felt that our little island was once again | :30:33. | :30:34. | |
My children are strongly pro-Europe and they are excited | :30:35. | :30:42. | |
about the future and what their lives may hold. | :30:43. | :30:47. | |
Having those open doors across the whole European | :30:48. | :30:49. | |
market, I think, gives them more opportunity. | :30:50. | :30:55. | |
My parents are fairly strongly against Europe. | :30:56. | :30:58. | |
What is lacking is concrete empirical evidence that we can | :30:59. | :31:03. | |
There does not seem to be a clear answer. | :31:04. | :31:17. | |
I think there would be quite a lot of damage done | :31:18. | :31:20. | |
It would send out a message that we were a divided nation. | :31:21. | :31:28. | |
That was Jon Rudoni who's not yet decided whether he'll vote | :31:29. | :31:31. | |
to stay in or leave the EU with his thoughts. | :31:32. | :31:34. | |
Tonight we have one of our EU debate. We have a crowded studio to | :31:35. | :31:43. | |
ask whether the Brussels machine works for us, the way it spends | :31:44. | :31:49. | |
money, the mechanics of its decision-making. Join me | :31:50. | :31:51. |