06/06/2016 BBC News at Ten


06/06/2016

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The headlines at 10pm: A Frenchman is arrested in Ukraine suspected

:00:00.:00:08.

of planning mass attacks during the Euro 2016 football

:00:09.:00:12.

tournament which begins in France this week

:00:13.:00:15.

The man was caught with a huge cache of weapons including machine guns

:00:16.:00:18.

and explosives and was said to be driven by ultra-nationalist views.

:00:19.:00:24.

One of Britain's worst paedophiles is given 22 life sentences

:00:25.:00:27.

for abusing up to 200 children in Malaysia.

:00:28.:00:34.

Iraqis who've fled the city of Falluja have told BBC News

:00:35.:00:37.

they were tortured by Shia militiamen.

:00:38.:00:41.

Also in the next hour, the EU referendum campaigning heats

:00:42.:00:44.

David Cameron accuses the leave side of dodging the economic arguments

:00:45.:00:50.

but Boris Johnson warns migration is the biggest challenge facing

:00:51.:00:53.

And we'll look at tomorrow's front pages.

:00:54.:00:59.

The FT says markets have reacted to polls apparently

:01:00.:01:02.

showing momentum for Leave, rattling sterling investors.

:01:03.:01:24.

Good evening and welcome to BBC News.

:01:25.:01:26.

Intelligence officers in Ukraine have detained a man who they say

:01:27.:01:30.

was planning to carry out a string of terror attacks during

:01:31.:01:33.

the Euro 2016 football tournament, which starts in France on Friday.

:01:34.:01:37.

The Frenchman was caught with a huge cache of weapons including machine

:01:38.:01:40.

He was arrested on the border between Ukraine

:01:41.:01:43.

Tom Burridge has more from the capital, Kiev.

:01:44.:01:51.

Caught in a Ukrainian sting operation, these pictures have no

:01:52.:01:54.

sound but officials here say they show a Frenchman

:01:55.:01:57.

planning several terror attacks during the Euro

:01:58.:02:01.

Here he is filmed stashing a box of rocket propelled

:02:02.:02:07.

Watch here as he appears to use a blanket to wrap up

:02:08.:02:13.

Then two rocket propelled grenade launchers go into a sack

:02:14.:02:20.

Ukraine security service told us the man had earmarked

:02:21.:02:25.

15 targets in Western Europe, including a synagogue, a mosque,

:02:26.:02:28.

But as the Frenchman tries to cross the border from Ukraine into Poland

:02:29.:02:37.

and into the European Union, Ukrainian police swoop.

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The man is arrested and a full arsenal of weapons in the van.

:02:43.:02:45.

In total, five machine guns, 6000 bullets, and

:02:46.:02:47.

The man who was arrested has not been named but he has been described

:02:48.:03:01.

as an ultranationalist who was apparently unhappy

:03:02.:03:02.

about high levels of immigration in France.

:03:03.:03:08.

TRANSLATION: In December 2015 we learned a French citizen had

:03:09.:03:12.

arrived in Ukraine claiming to be offering volunteer aid.

:03:13.:03:15.

He made contact with members of the Armed Forces,

:03:16.:03:19.

promising to deliver equipment, but during this process

:03:20.:03:22.

he indicated his interest in purchasing weapons,

:03:23.:03:25.

explosives, and other means of destruction.

:03:26.:03:29.

There are questions tonight about how easy it is to buy

:03:30.:03:32.

machine guns and explosives here in the Ukraine.

:03:33.:03:35.

But the country's security service is claiming a massive coup,

:03:36.:03:39.

saying it has prevented mass murder just days before Euro 2016

:03:40.:03:45.

Security will be tight throughout the tournament.

:03:46.:03:50.

Today England were among the teams arriving in France ahead

:03:51.:03:53.

Many of the details about the operation by police

:03:54.:03:58.

The authorities in France say their investigation

:03:59.:04:04.

is about arms trafficking and not terrorism.

:04:05.:04:12.

One of Britain's worst paedophiles, who abused up to 200

:04:13.:04:15.

children in Malaysia, has been given 22 life

:04:16.:04:17.

Richard Huckle, a freelance photographer who's 30

:04:18.:04:21.

and from Ashford in Kent, admitted 71 charges, including rape.

:04:22.:04:25.

His youngest victim was just six months old.

:04:26.:04:27.

Angus Crawford reports from the Old Bailey.

:04:28.:04:30.

The judge told Richard Huckle this morning, your life

:04:31.:04:33.

revolves around your own sexual gratification.

:04:34.:04:36.

Referring to a letter Huckle sent this morning, he said,

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As Huckle was led away, a woman got to her

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feet in the public gallery and shouted, 1000 deaths

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You said you're not really a pro at anything except being a paedophile,

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what do you mean by that? Confronted with his crimes

:05:05.:05:07.

he says no comment. This is how he wanted others

:05:08.:05:10.

to see him - a devout Christian training to be a teacher

:05:11.:05:15.

here with the British Council. But in court he admitted raping

:05:16.:05:17.

children as young as six months old and posting the footage

:05:18.:05:21.

on the so-called dark web. Today he was given

:05:22.:05:25.

22 life sentences. We followed his trail

:05:26.:05:29.

through Kuala Lumpur He also travelled widely, using his

:05:30.:05:32.

faith to get close to children. The question is, are

:05:33.:05:39.

there victims here? Have investigators from

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the National Crime Agency He attended one church in Kent

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and another in London, which we cannot identify

:05:48.:05:53.

for legal reasons. Online he boasted about making

:05:54.:05:56.

friends with children We now know that the NCA only

:05:57.:05:59.

contacted that church last week. That is 18 months after Huckle

:06:00.:06:06.

was first arrested. Today the agency said it had

:06:07.:06:10.

voluntarily referred itself He hasn't committed any

:06:11.:06:14.

offence in the UK... He has not committed

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any offence in the UK. You did not ask the church

:06:21.:06:24.

until last week. We had no information that he has

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done any offending in the UK and even to this day we know he has

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not committed any offence in the UK. That is why the voluntary

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referral made to the IPCC is to check on our response -

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was it appropriate in It's not often you get intimate

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access inside a police sting... Huckle was first identified

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by detectives in Australia who infiltrated a dark

:06:49.:06:52.

website where paedophiles BBC News has learned Huckle wasn't

:06:53.:06:54.

the only British user. Details of 17 others

:06:55.:07:00.

were sent to the NCA. Although some were untraceable,

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today the agency confirmed two committed suicide,

:07:05.:07:07.

five are behind bars, and six He is only 30 but he will be

:07:08.:07:11.

in his 50s before he can even be Police are hunting for a man

:07:12.:07:23.

in connection with the fatal stabbing of a pensioner

:07:24.:07:34.

and the disappearance of his elderly A body, which has tonight been

:07:35.:07:37.

formally identified as that of 75-year-old Peter Stuart,

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was found in woodland in Weybread. Officers are looking

:07:41.:07:43.

to question Ali Qazimaj, who's from the former Yugoslavia,

:07:44.:07:46.

but are warning The Iraqi government has been urged

:07:47.:07:48.

to investigate allegations that civilians detained during the battle

:07:49.:07:56.

for Falluja have been The BBC has obtained footage of men

:07:57.:07:58.

who had apparently They describe being beaten,

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denied food and water, Many desperate, others in need

:08:04.:08:07.

of water and medical treatment after fleeing the fighting around

:08:08.:08:17.

the city of Falluja. They follow a steady stream

:08:18.:08:20.

of mostly Sunni families leaving their homes

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as the fighting continues. But some of these people claim

:08:24.:08:26.

they were tortured by the Shia militia, an ally of the Iraqi army

:08:27.:08:29.

fighting so-called Islamic State. They claim to have suffered more

:08:30.:08:33.

than routine interrogation. TRANSLATION: They almost

:08:34.:08:38.

slaughtered us, but we got out TRANSLATION: I swear to God,

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they beat me with a baton They threatened to kill anyone

:08:41.:08:51.

who asked for water. TRANSLATION: We told them

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we were seeking God's protection and their protection, and they

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responded by saying, you are our enemies, you

:08:59.:08:59.

don't deserve our protection. Claims four people died

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under interrogation TRANSLATION: This does not get along

:09:04.:09:06.

with our faith or our ethics, We may make mistakes

:09:07.:09:12.

here and there as individuals, but we hold those

:09:13.:09:16.

individuals accountable. Falluja has always been a hotbed

:09:17.:09:18.

of Sunni defiance It has been held by IS since 2014,

:09:19.:09:21.

and is one of the remaining Iraq's army began fighting to retake

:09:22.:09:28.

the city late last month and on Sunday said it had

:09:29.:09:34.

all but encircled the city. Despite government advances,

:09:35.:09:38.

these latest claims underline fears already voiced by human rights

:09:39.:09:42.

groups that atrocities are being committed by Shia militia

:09:43.:09:45.

and show that even if IS can be defeated, Iraq's sectarian divide

:09:46.:09:50.

will be hard to heal. Earlier I spoke to Hadya Al-alawi

:09:51.:09:59.

from BBC Arabic about how The footage was originally

:10:00.:10:02.

released by the detainees who were released from

:10:03.:10:08.

the popular mobilisation forces. They alleged they were tortured

:10:09.:10:14.

while being interrogated, then it was shared on Facebook

:10:15.:10:19.

and Twitter and also on different news agencies,

:10:20.:10:23.

so it has been widely spread. Mentioning the sectarian divide,

:10:24.:10:27.

the worry will be that people don't feel safe enough to leave Falluja,

:10:28.:10:31.

so they are stuck between At the beginning of the battle,

:10:32.:10:34.

the UN was warning of the humanitarian crisis that might

:10:35.:10:43.

happen in Falluja. IS has resorted to starving them,

:10:44.:10:45.

so with a shortage of food, water, medical equipment

:10:46.:10:52.

and they are killing people who are even trying to leave

:10:53.:10:56.

the city, and now there is another aspect of that,

:10:57.:10:59.

which is the sectarian division. The mobilisation forces

:11:00.:11:03.

are being accused of these crimes, so they are not likely to go

:11:04.:11:07.

into the city because the majority of people in the city are Sunnis,

:11:08.:11:11.

and because of that sectarian division, it will be difficult

:11:12.:11:15.

for the army to take control of the city without the help

:11:16.:11:19.

of the militia. People are literally

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stuck in so many senses. It is these divisions that led us

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to this problem Unfortunately, I hear that

:11:30.:11:32.

Iraq was not like that It is these divisions and not

:11:33.:11:36.

being on the same team The Army has in the past accused

:11:37.:11:40.

people in Falluja of supporting IS, even welcoming them or being

:11:41.:11:46.

sympathetic to them. It is because the Sunnis were kind

:11:47.:11:52.

of put aside in a lot of senses under the Shia government,

:11:53.:11:57.

so that led to a lot of division, which has led to these battles

:11:58.:12:01.

and these wars being waged. We are two weeks into the war

:12:02.:12:07.

for Falluja at the moment. The Prime Minister mentioned last

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week that the first two parts of the battle are over,

:12:12.:12:21.

and there are three stages but we don't know

:12:22.:12:24.

exactly what that means. What does the first

:12:25.:12:27.

stage contain exactly? It is not two armies fighting,

:12:28.:12:30.

it is more of a street fight. It is difficult to advance

:12:31.:12:40.

in the city because the Army needs to clear street by street

:12:41.:12:44.

and area by area, so IS does not have that capability,

:12:45.:12:48.

it is not a regular war between two sides, or it would be much

:12:49.:12:56.

easier for the Army, but they resort to suicide bombings

:12:57.:13:01.

and things like that and putting bombs in the streets

:13:02.:13:06.

and attacking civilians, They don't have any

:13:07.:13:09.

military strategies. For weeks now, much of the EU

:13:10.:13:18.

referendum debate has been dominated by the economy,

:13:19.:13:20.

with Remain campaigners outlining what they see

:13:21.:13:22.

as the disadvantages of leaving. But today Boris Johnson argued that

:13:23.:13:25.

it was riskier to stay in the EU. He claims that UK taxpayers may have

:13:26.:13:30.

to pay for eurozone bailouts But a deal to opt out of funding

:13:31.:13:33.

future bailouts has already been agreed, and the UK has a veto over

:13:34.:13:39.

future budget increases. Our political editor

:13:40.:13:42.

Laura Kuenssberg reports. This campaign is dirty,

:13:43.:13:49.

and it will take a lot more than a visit to a soap factory

:13:50.:13:51.

to clean it up. Handle with care the claims made

:13:52.:13:56.

by the outers today. Nobody can say we are not running

:13:57.:14:01.

the clean campaign, Boris Johnson and friends tried

:14:02.:14:04.

to say that not just that the EU costs us

:14:05.:14:12.

now but it will cost us The risk of remaining in this

:14:13.:14:14.

over-centralising, overregulating, job-destroying machine are becoming

:14:15.:14:20.

more and more obvious and I think that is why

:14:21.:14:25.

we are winning the arguments. The risks, he claims,

:14:26.:14:27.

are stumping up more cash to prop up the Eurozone, even though

:14:28.:14:31.

the Prime Minister brokered a deal You have told this audience

:14:32.:14:34.

here this morning that we will somehow be dragged into paying

:14:35.:14:39.

for the failures of the Eurozone, when you know very well the PM has

:14:40.:14:41.

done a series of deals to keep The idea that the opt out is somehow

:14:42.:14:45.

going to protect us - well, it has no legal basis at the moment,

:14:46.:14:51.

it isn't the treaty. There is absolutely no

:14:52.:14:56.

way we will be able, in the future, to insulate

:14:57.:14:58.

ourselves from such calls Even though he has enough

:14:59.:15:01.

Eastern Europeans on the shop floor to need signs in Polish,

:15:02.:15:06.

the boss here wants out, too. We export to 75 countries

:15:07.:15:09.

around the world. Britain is seen by all our export

:15:10.:15:11.

customers as a great place Outers are energised by pulling

:15:12.:15:15.

ahead in some recent polls. Despite being told their claims

:15:16.:15:24.

about cash are wrong by independent number crunchers,

:15:25.:15:28.

and having the majority of economic As they crisscross the country,

:15:29.:15:31.

the Out campaigners aren't trying to get you to swallow and digest

:15:32.:15:37.

the minutiae of all of their claims. They are hotly disputed

:15:38.:15:41.

by the other side, anyway. What they want you to hear

:15:42.:15:44.

is a broader message, that in their belief staying

:15:45.:15:48.

inside the European Union could have Further down the road,

:15:49.:15:52.

another local boss believes even The indecision that is out there,

:15:53.:15:58.

and the unknown, I mean, nobody has a plan B in business,

:15:59.:16:07.

in my belief. Because, what is the plan

:16:08.:16:11.

if you leave? But look - a battlebus

:16:12.:16:14.

and a matching fleet of Minis, and a folding bike for

:16:15.:16:22.

the Green Party leader. David Cameron and his

:16:23.:16:24.

new friends Tim, Harriet, and Natalie - different

:16:25.:16:26.

parties, but with the same drive. I cannot stand back and allow

:16:27.:16:32.

the Leave campaign to guide us toward economic ruin

:16:33.:16:35.

because of a campaign based on lies. Staying in the EU is the best

:16:36.:16:39.

chance we have to meet the biggest challenge

:16:40.:16:42.

of our time, climate change. So don't blame the EU

:16:43.:16:47.

for problems in the NHS. What none of them consider a joke -

:16:48.:16:51.

if we choose to leave the EU and its trading area they say

:16:52.:17:03.

we could all be poorer. The shock impact, the uncertainty

:17:04.:17:06.

impact, the trade impact, and you put a bomb under our

:17:07.:17:10.

economy, and the worst thing is we would have

:17:11.:17:13.

lit the fuse ourselves. As a million more of us sign up

:17:14.:17:18.

to vote, Labour is stepping more Politicians of every stripe

:17:19.:17:21.

are trying to persuade us after months of their manoeuvrings

:17:22.:17:27.

it is nearly time for Hello, and welcome to our look ahead

:17:28.:17:30.

to what the the papers will be With me are Helen Joyce,

:17:31.:17:51.

the international editor at The Economist, and Craig Woodhouse,

:17:52.:17:54.

chief political The front page of the metro has a

:17:55.:18:11.

story that has been running this evening, a Euro 2016 terror plot

:18:12.:18:17.

smashed in Ukraine. A slightly odd lease for it to have been smashed,

:18:18.:18:24.

we have been reporting on an Islamic attack and this is a French farm

:18:25.:18:28.

worker plotting a far right up tax, so it is good to show the

:18:29.:18:34.

authorities are run high alert but there is a big event, lots of people

:18:35.:18:41.

and it is a serious risk. And it must concern the French police

:18:42.:18:44.

because they are dealing with floods and strikes and now they have

:18:45.:18:50.

terrorists to worry about. Yes, this flooding could not have come at a

:18:51.:18:54.

worse time, the tournament kicks off on Friday night and the great fear

:18:55.:19:00.

is that they will have been so focused on avoiding a repeat of what

:19:01.:19:04.

we saw in Paris last year but this kind of thing slips to the net.

:19:05.:19:09.

Thankfully the Ukrainian security services caught this guy with TNT in

:19:10.:19:16.

his van, a phenomenal amount of explosives, he was clearly planning

:19:17.:19:21.

something major. 15 targets including train stations and it is

:19:22.:19:26.

not clear if football station -- stadiums were a target. Terrorists

:19:27.:19:34.

learn from each other, this is what security services worry about, one

:19:35.:19:39.

person has a wonderful idea in the sense of a different sort of target

:19:40.:19:44.

and every other bad person thinks that looks like fun, this is a great

:19:45.:19:48.

way to cause chaos and a new group come forward. No surprise that most

:19:49.:19:55.

front pages have something on the EU referendum. That start with The i

:19:56.:20:00.

and a story they have gone with on the front page, if Britain voted for

:20:01.:20:06.

Brexit, the House of Commons would vote to stay in the single market.

:20:07.:20:14.

How would that go down? Badly, MPs who are pro-European have worked out

:20:15.:20:19.

they have a majority in the House of Commons over those who want to

:20:20.:20:23.

leave, and they say if there is a vote for Brexit, they will use that

:20:24.:20:28.

built Commons majority to make sure the UK stays in the single market

:20:29.:20:33.

with access to borderless trading. That will mean we end up with a

:20:34.:20:38.

Norway situation where we have to accept free movement and they end to

:20:39.:20:44.

the club and we get all the downsides, as Brexit supporters

:20:45.:20:49.

would see it. The point the Brexit team have been making is that they

:20:50.:20:53.

want to be free to negotiate whatever deals they want. They have

:20:54.:21:00.

suggested several options and all descriptions, Albania, Norway,

:21:01.:21:04.

Switzerland, but you are not having a referendum for a specific outcome

:21:05.:21:11.

but a referendum to negotiate and this is saying that this is the deal

:21:12.:21:14.

we can force on the government because we have the majority. They

:21:15.:21:20.

cannot actually do this. Maybe they can according to the rules to can

:21:21.:21:25.

and margin actually doing this in front of the nation? Would anyone

:21:26.:21:33.

put down name to this? Labour MP Stephen Kinnock has gone on the

:21:34.:21:38.

record, others said they will not let Michael Gove and Boris Johnson

:21:39.:21:41.

getaway with taking risks on the export side, and their argument is

:21:42.:21:47.

that Brexit MPs are not putting forward a clear case for what we are

:21:48.:21:52.

voting for if we vote for Brexit. The other low to say one thing one

:21:53.:21:58.

time, another thing another time, and in response to one argument they

:21:59.:22:03.

can say they would not do that but these things are not compatible. We

:22:04.:22:08.

have to treat the polls with some caution after last year but if you

:22:09.:22:14.

want to look beyond those, you could look at currency fluctuations. It is

:22:15.:22:19.

more than looking at polls with caution after last year. Polls on

:22:20.:22:24.

one-off things like referendums are very difficult because with an

:22:25.:22:28.

election you can't ask people who they voted for last time, but this

:22:29.:22:32.

time there is no weight can gauge how likely someone is to vote and

:22:33.:22:38.

turn it will be essential for this. Just to remind everyone, midnight

:22:39.:22:42.

tomorrow is your deadline to register to vote. We do not know

:22:43.:22:49.

what the turnout will be. The theory is that a low turnout will pay into

:22:50.:22:53.

the dregs of side because we are more committed on this but we do not

:22:54.:22:58.

know, so the polls are going different directions and then each

:22:59.:23:02.

time a different poll comes out it affects currencies because trading

:23:03.:23:08.

is such a matter of guessing what way the economy will go in the short

:23:09.:23:15.

term. It is not necessarily a reflection on the big one on me.

:23:16.:23:21.

It's a mixture of two things. Some people say this is a strong

:23:22.:23:24.

reflection on the league, make that this short-term movement is an

:23:25.:23:30.

attempt to get a minute or a Dave's edge over other people and that is

:23:31.:23:35.

causing volatility. What about headlines like this one in the

:23:36.:23:40.

Independent, does that have any affect on the Brexit campaign? Both

:23:41.:23:46.

sides tried to turn these things to their advantage. David Cameron will

:23:47.:23:53.

say this is evidence that the fact holds our edging towards this shows

:23:54.:23:56.

it is damaging the economy but the Brexit will say last time we said

:23:57.:24:01.

this to rid three weeks ago when there was a bad pop and the pound

:24:02.:24:07.

lunch, by yesterday it was back to her it was before, so speculation is

:24:08.:24:14.

speculation on the currency market. And no luck on the Brexit camp for

:24:15.:24:17.

bankers who will be making money on this. The FT had a story about

:24:18.:24:25.

fluctuations in the currency and this is pure speculation, it is not

:24:26.:24:31.

inside information in the technical sense, it is just earlier

:24:32.:24:34.

information than other people so you can make a killing, they don't care

:24:35.:24:39.

whether it goes up or down. The Telegraph has another poll that puts

:24:40.:24:43.

the two sides quite close at their main headline is about criminals

:24:44.:24:49.

that are free to live in Britain as a result of EU membership, taking on

:24:50.:24:54.

what Michael Gove was talking about last week. It is his deputy who

:24:55.:25:01.

works at the Ministry of Justice, tomorrow unveiling a dossier of 50

:25:02.:25:06.

hardened criminals who we have not kept out of Britain, he says because

:25:07.:25:12.

of European courts, including the guy who stabbed to death Philip

:25:13.:25:18.

Lawrence, saying this is truth -- proof that the EU is a threat to our

:25:19.:25:22.

security, which is one of their strong suits and there will continue

:25:23.:25:28.

to be. I think you are both coming back for a later reviewed so we will

:25:29.:25:30.

look forward to that. Don't forget all the front pages

:25:31.:25:32.

are online on the BBC News website, where you can read a detailed

:25:33.:25:36.

review of the papers. It's all there for you seven

:25:37.:25:39.

days a week. And you can see us there too,

:25:40.:25:41.

with each night's edition of The Papers posted on the page

:25:42.:25:43.

shortly after we've finished. Next it's time for

:25:44.:25:46.

the weather. The weather is going to change

:25:47.:26:08.

significantly and the weekend before that it feels like summer with some

:26:09.:26:12.

more days a fair courtesy of strong sunshine. With high humidity, we are

:26:13.:26:20.

seeing that through the Dave aid shall work loads are developing and

:26:21.:26:26.

as we saw on Monday, some current shall local downpours and thunder

:26:27.:26:29.

and lightning, and that will be the setup in the next day or two.

:26:30.:26:34.

Monday's storms are still rumbling away in the North West and into the

:26:35.:26:39.

early hours and we could still import some showers to affect the

:26:40.:26:44.

south-east, but most places having a dry night, quite a steep towards --

:26:45.:26:50.

misty towards the eastern coast of Scotland. They could be an early

:26:51.:26:55.

shower in the south-east, they will fade away, further showers in

:26:56.:27:01.

Northern Ireland in the morning but for most places temperatures will

:27:02.:27:04.

shoot up and thunderstorms will develop widely in the afternoon.

:27:05.:27:11.

Many places avoid thunderstorms, other places seeing some torrential

:27:12.:27:16.

downpours with hail and gusty winds and a risk of localised flooding. It

:27:17.:27:22.

will be mostly near high ground but they could drift into populated

:27:23.:27:25.

areas as we go through the afternoon. In the sunny spells,

:27:26.:27:30.

temperatures will get up into high 20s, still pretty cool around

:27:31.:27:35.

north-east coast of Scotland in contrast to inland. If you work on

:27:36.:27:42.

the move tomorrow, keep an ear on the forecast, a chance of nasty

:27:43.:27:46.

under storms and local flooding and the storms will rumble into the

:27:47.:27:51.

night, some could go right into Wednesday morning, so there will be

:27:52.:27:55.

further showers and thunderstorms scattered around on Wednesday but

:27:56.:28:00.

still a lot of fine weather on Wednesday and Thursday. Temperatures

:28:01.:28:06.

in the low to mid 20s. She mid air but that will not last for ever

:28:07.:28:10.

because fresh conditions are lying in wait in the Atlantic, but those

:28:11.:28:16.

conditions will also bring rain, active fronts pushing them off the

:28:17.:28:21.

Atlantic, so a dramatic change at the end of the week, we will all see

:28:22.:28:23.

some wet weather. One of Britain's worst paedophiles

:28:24.:30:26.

has been given 22 life sentences, on multiple charges of sex

:30:27.:30:28.

abuse, including rape. Richard Huckle, who's a former

:30:29.:30:31.

Sunday school teacher, admitted more than 70 offences,

:30:32.:30:35.

and shared images of his How many times did you have

:30:36.:30:42.

sex with children? It's feared he may have abused

:30:43.:30:46.

as many as 200 children, with his victims all

:30:47.:30:49.

in Malaysia and Cambodia. But it's been revealed two churches

:30:50.:30:59.

Huckle attended here in the UK were only informed of his crimes

:31:00.:31:02.

last week, despite his A Frenchman has been

:31:03.:31:05.

arrested in Ukraine, accused of planning terror attacks

:31:06.:31:10.

during the Euro 2016 Will you be voting in the upcoming

:31:11.:31:12.

referendum? It's thought millions of people

:31:13.:31:20.

still haven't registered to vote How a million-pound offer

:31:21.:31:23.

from Chelsea wasn't enough to stop their former doctor taking

:31:24.:31:28.

them, and Jose Mourinho, to court. Tributes tonight to the playwright

:31:29.:31:34.

Sir Peter Shaffer, who's died Peter Shaffer was the British

:31:35.:31:50.

playwright and perhaps one of the world's Labourites who had his

:31:51.:31:53.

finger on the pulse of the audience better than almost anybody I ever

:31:54.:31:54.

knew. And coming up in

:31:55.:31:56.

Sportsday on BBC News. Chelsea's former doctor who rejected

:31:57.:31:58.

a ?1.2 million settlement. Eva Carneiro's claiming

:31:59.:32:00.

constructive dismissal, with separate legal action

:32:01.:32:02.

against Jose Mourinho. One of Britain's most

:32:03.:32:25.

prolific paedophiles, who may have sexually abused up

:32:26.:32:28.

to 200 children in Malaysia, has Richard Huckle, a former Sunday

:32:29.:32:31.

school teacher from Kent, shared images of his crimes

:32:32.:32:39.

on the internet, and admitted 71 But there are now questions

:32:40.:32:41.

about whether he also abused Huckle attended two churches

:32:42.:32:46.

in London and Kent, but investigators only informed them

:32:47.:32:54.

last week of his crimes, The National Crime Agency has now

:32:55.:32:56.

referred itself to the police watchdog over its handling

:32:57.:33:01.

of that aspect of the case. This is how he wanted others

:33:02.:33:03.

to see him, a devout training to be a teacher,

:33:04.:33:28.

here with the British Council. But in court, he admitted raping

:33:29.:33:30.

children and babies. A woman shouted, "A thousand deaths

:33:31.:33:32.

are too good for you". Huckle filmed the sexual abuse

:33:33.:33:40.

and posted it on the so-called dark web, the hidden part of the internet

:33:41.:33:44.

that can only be reached using He even tried to make

:33:45.:33:47.

money out of his crimes, offering more photos and videos

:33:48.:33:52.

for those willing to pay. We followed his trail

:33:53.:33:56.

through Kuala Lumpur, He travelled widely, using his faith

:33:57.:34:00.

to get close to children. The question is, are

:34:01.:34:06.

there victims here? Have investigators from

:34:07.:34:12.

the National Crime Agency He attended one church in Kent

:34:13.:34:14.

and another in London, which we Online, he boasted about making

:34:15.:34:20.

friends with children and going on We now know that the NCA

:34:21.:34:27.

only contacted that That is 18 months after Huckle

:34:28.:34:34.

was first arrested. Today, the agency said it had

:34:35.:34:37.

voluntarily referred itself to the He has not committed any

:34:38.:34:41.

offending in the UK. He has not committed any

:34:42.:34:47.

offending in the UK. That you know of.

:34:48.:34:51.

We had no information... You do not ask the church

:34:52.:34:58.

until last week. any offending in the UK and to this

:34:59.:35:00.

date, we know he has not committed That is why the voluntary

:35:01.:35:05.

referral made to the Was it appropriate in

:35:06.:35:09.

the circumstances or not? It's not often you get

:35:10.:35:13.

intimate access inside a Huckle was first identified

:35:14.:35:15.

by detectives in Australia who infiltrated a dark web

:35:16.:35:19.

site, where paedophiles share BBC News has learned

:35:20.:35:23.

Huckle was not the Details of 17 others were sent to

:35:24.:35:27.

the NCA. Although some were untraceable,

:35:28.:35:33.

today, the agency confirmed Five were convicted, six are still

:35:34.:35:36.

being investigated. Richard Huckle - Christian,

:35:37.:35:44.

photographer, predatory paedophile. At just 30, he now faces most

:35:45.:35:50.

of the rest of his life behind bars. The authorities in Ukraine say a man

:35:51.:35:55.

they arrested with a vanload of weapons and explosives

:35:56.:36:03.

was planning to carry out attacks during the Euro 2016

:36:04.:36:05.

football tournament. Officials say the Frenchman,

:36:06.:36:07.

who was detained on Ukraine's border with Poland, was motivated

:36:08.:36:10.

by far-right views. Our Kiev correspondent,

:36:11.:36:12.

Tom Burridge has the details. A French man, caught on camera

:36:13.:36:17.

in a sting operation Officials claim he was planning

:36:18.:36:20.

several terror attacks to coincide with the Euro

:36:21.:36:26.

2016 football championships. Here, he is filmed stashing a box

:36:27.:36:31.

of grenades into a van. The man was apparently under

:36:32.:36:36.

surveillance for several months. He is seen using blankets to wrap up

:36:37.:36:39.

Kalashnikov machine guns and then two rocket propelled grenade

:36:40.:36:44.

launchers go into a sack. Ukraine's Security Service said it

:36:45.:36:48.

seized details of 15 possible targets, including a synagogue,

:36:49.:36:56.

a mosque and a French tax office. When he tries to cross the border

:36:57.:36:59.

from Ukraine into Poland, and into the European Union,

:37:00.:37:02.

Ukrainian officers are waiting. He's arrested with an arsenal

:37:03.:37:06.

of weapons in the van. Five machine guns, 6000

:37:07.:37:10.

bullets and these small blocks of explosives -

:37:11.:37:14.

125 kilograms of them. The man who was arrested is reported

:37:15.:37:21.

to be Gregoire Moutaux, Officials in Ukraine described him

:37:22.:37:24.

as a far-right extremist who was apparently unhappy

:37:25.:37:29.

about high levels of TRANSLATION: In December 2015,

:37:30.:37:32.

we learned that a French citizen arrived in Ukraine claiming to be

:37:33.:37:41.

providing volunteer aid. He started establishing contacts

:37:42.:37:45.

with members of the armed forces, But, during this process,

:37:46.:37:49.

he indicated his interest in purchasing weapons,

:37:50.:37:55.

explosives and other There are questions tonight

:37:56.:37:57.

about how easy it is to buy machine But the country's security service

:37:58.:38:03.

is claiming a massive coup, saying it has prevented mass murder

:38:04.:38:10.

just days before Euro 2016 kicks Security will be tight

:38:11.:38:13.

throughout the tournament. Today, England were among the teams

:38:14.:38:20.

arriving in France ahead Ukraine's security service has left

:38:21.:38:22.

many details about the operation unanswered and the authorities

:38:23.:38:31.

in France say their investigation is about arms trafficking,

:38:32.:38:35.

and not terrorism. For weeks now, much of the EU

:38:36.:38:38.

referendum debate has focused on the economy,

:38:39.:38:43.

with Remain campaigners outlining what they see

:38:44.:38:46.

as the disadvantages of leaving. But today, Boris Johnson said things

:38:47.:38:50.

would get worse for the economy He claimed UK taxpayers may have

:38:51.:38:52.

to contribute to future Eurozone That's despite an agreement

:38:53.:38:58.

in February to opt out of funding future bailouts,

:38:59.:39:05.

and the UK has a veto over Our political editor

:39:06.:39:08.

Laura Kuenssberg reports. How do you do?

:39:09.:39:13.

Good morning. The campaign is dirty on both sides

:39:14.:39:16.

and it will take a lot more than a visit to a soap factory

:39:17.:39:19.

to clean it up. Handle with care, the claims made

:39:20.:39:23.

by the Outers today. No one can say that we're not

:39:24.:39:29.

running the cleaner campaign, Johnson and friends try to say not

:39:30.:39:32.

just that the EU costs us now but it The risks of remaining in this

:39:33.:39:41.

over-centralising, over-regulating, job-destroying machine are becoming

:39:42.:39:50.

more and more obvious. That is why I think we're

:39:51.:39:52.

winning the argument. The risks, he claims,

:39:53.:40:01.

are stumping up more cash to prop up the Eurozone, even though

:40:02.:40:04.

the Prime Minister brokered a deal You have told this audience

:40:05.:40:06.

here this morning somehow we will be dragged into paying for the failures

:40:07.:40:10.

of the Eurozone, when you know very well the Prime Minister has done

:40:11.:40:14.

a series of deals to keep us out The idea that the opt-out is somehow

:40:15.:40:17.

going to protect us, well, it has no legal

:40:18.:40:20.

basis at the moment. There's absolutely no way

:40:21.:40:22.

that we will be able in the future to insulate ourselves from such

:40:23.:40:28.

calls on the British taxpayer. Even though he has enough eastern

:40:29.:40:32.

Europeans on the shop floor to need signs in Polish, the boss

:40:33.:40:35.

here wants Out, too. We export to 75 countries around

:40:36.:40:38.

the world and Britain is seen by all our export customers

:40:39.:40:44.

as a great place to invest Outers are energised by pulling

:40:45.:40:46.

ahead in some recent polls. Despite being told that their claims

:40:47.:40:50.

about cash are wrong by independent number-crunchers and having

:40:51.:40:57.

the majority of economic As they crisscross the country,

:40:58.:41:00.

the Out campaign is not trying to get you to swallow and digest

:41:01.:41:06.

the minutiae of all of their claims. They are hotly disputed

:41:07.:41:10.

by the other side anyway. What they do want you to hear

:41:11.:41:13.

is a broader message, that in their belief,

:41:14.:41:16.

staying inside the European Union could have real costs

:41:17.:41:21.

for the country, too. Further down the road,

:41:22.:41:23.

another local boss believes even The indecision that is out

:41:24.:41:26.

there and the unknown, I mean, no one has got

:41:27.:41:34.

a plan B in business, in my belief because what is

:41:35.:41:38.

the plan if you leave? But look, a battle bus

:41:39.:41:42.

and a matching fleet of Minis, and a folding bike

:41:43.:41:48.

for the Green Party leader. David Cameron and his new friends,

:41:49.:41:52.

Tim, Harriet and Natalie. Different parties but with

:41:53.:41:55.

the same drive. I cannot stand by and allow

:41:56.:41:59.

the Leave campaign to guide us toward economic ruin

:42:00.:42:02.

because of a campaign based on lies. Staying in the EU is the best chance

:42:03.:42:12.

we have to meet the biggest challenge of our time,

:42:13.:42:16.

climate change. So don't blame the EU

:42:17.:42:17.

for problems in the NHS. What none of them consider a joke

:42:18.:42:20.

is if we choose to leave the EU and its trading area,

:42:21.:42:29.

they say we would all be poorer. The shock impact, the uncertainty

:42:30.:42:33.

impact, the trade impact, and you put a bomb under our

:42:34.:42:39.

economy, and the worst thing is, we would have lit

:42:40.:42:43.

the fuse ourselves. As a million more of us sign up

:42:44.:42:46.

to vote, Labour is stepping more Politicians of every stripe

:42:47.:42:49.

are trying to persuade us but after months

:42:50.:42:54.

of their manoeuvrings, it is nearly time for

:42:55.:42:56.

all of us to decide. Laura Kuenssberg, BBC News,

:42:57.:42:59.

Stratford-upon-Avon. And there's been a warning this

:43:00.:43:03.

evening from the head of America's Central Bank

:43:04.:43:06.

about the possible impact Janet Yellen says there could be

:43:07.:43:09.

"significant economic Our business editor

:43:10.:43:12.

Simon Jack is here. Simon, we have had warnings of

:43:13.:43:24.

Brexit on the economy from the IMF, the governor of the Bank of England

:43:25.:43:28.

and now Janet Yellen. Housing is a good is this latest intervention?

:43:29.:43:31.

Coincidently, she was voted the third most powerful woman in the

:43:32.:43:35.

world today and for my money, that's an underestimate. When it comes to

:43:36.:43:39.

financial markets, there is no man or woman more powerful. What she

:43:40.:43:42.

said today is that a vote to leave the European Union would be a

:43:43.:43:45.

significant shock to the financial system, such a big shock it might

:43:46.:43:51.

play a part in delaying the US central bank raising interest rates

:43:52.:43:53.

will stop we have heard this before, that currencies might fall, the Bank

:43:54.:43:57.

of England governor, mark Carney said sterling could fall quite

:43:58.:44:01.

sharply. That may not be a bad thing in the long run. We saw more

:44:02.:44:05.

evidence of that today. As the polls have injured in the favour of Vote

:44:06.:44:09.

Leave, so sterling has had a bit of a fall but what we found out today

:44:10.:44:13.

from Janet Yellen and the currency markets is that the financial

:44:14.:44:17.

markets, the world's most powerful woman in financial terms, all of the

:44:18.:44:20.

world is watching this one. Thank you for joining us. Simon Jack,

:44:21.:44:21.

there. It's believed several million people

:44:22.:44:24.

still haven't registered to vote in the EU referendum,

:44:25.:44:26.

including many young people, and some from black

:44:27.:44:28.

and minority ethnic communities. The deadline to register

:44:29.:44:31.

is midnight tomorrow, and with less than three weeks to go

:44:32.:44:33.

before the vote, the campaigns up and down the country have been

:44:34.:44:36.

sharpening their message. Our chief correspondent Gavin Hewitt

:44:37.:44:38.

has been gauging opinion in Lincoln. On the eve of the deadline

:44:39.:44:42.

to register to vote, the referendum Hi, sir, will you be

:44:43.:44:45.

voting in the referendum? It is thought millions

:44:46.:45:00.

still haven't registered. On the streets,

:45:01.:45:02.

confusion and questions. Have you registered

:45:03.:45:06.

for that already? With so many voters unregistered,

:45:07.:45:11.

party activists know turnout is key. He is In, she is Out,

:45:12.:45:19.

she is In, he is Out. Years ago, we used to be out,

:45:20.:45:25.

and we managed fine. The world has changed,

:45:26.:45:38.

it has globalised, we need I think I am going to vote to stay,

:45:39.:45:41.

which is probably what All the money that we say

:45:42.:45:48.

we put into the EU, when we come out of the EU,

:45:49.:45:59.

will that money come back to us? I was passing by, and I spoke

:46:00.:46:02.

to the people who represent the Remain campaign and I felt

:46:03.:46:07.

strongly about what they said, In the past three weeks, 1.3 million

:46:08.:46:09.

people have registered to vote, But it still seems many younger

:46:10.:46:14.

people haven't signed up. Seeing us out here gives people

:46:15.:46:21.

so much positivity, and it makes them talk about the campaign

:46:22.:46:24.

in a way they might not I think what we are doing

:46:25.:46:26.

is vitally important, We have distributed in and around

:46:27.:46:29.

just Lincoln city, somewhere in the region of 30,000

:46:30.:46:33.

leaflets to households. In the general election,

:46:34.:46:35.

Lincoln is a marginal, a key battleground,

:46:36.:46:38.

but in a referendum that doesn't matter because every vote

:46:39.:46:41.

carries equal weight. The two camps, In and Out,

:46:42.:46:45.

have been adopting different strategies in the ground war,

:46:46.:46:49.

on the streets. Dr Caitlin Mulazo been

:46:50.:46:53.

researching this campaign. She says the Remain camp is hosting

:46:54.:46:56.

more events, focused on urban areas If you want to go to a pro-EU area,

:46:57.:47:01.

and you're a pro-EU group, you are trying

:47:02.:47:08.

to mobilise people, right? You are not trying to convert,

:47:09.:47:10.

you are trying to get people Get out the vote

:47:11.:47:13.

that is on your side. That would suggest that Remain

:47:14.:47:17.

is adopting a very strong She says the Leave campaign appears

:47:18.:47:19.

more engaged in trying to convert Two campaigns now fully engaged

:47:20.:47:24.

on Britain's streets. Gavin Hewitt, BBC News,

:47:25.:47:30.

Lincoln. Leading scientists say

:47:31.:47:35.

advances in genetics and biology are heralding

:47:36.:47:38.

a revolution in medicine. A technique known as gene editing

:47:39.:47:41.

already enables researchers to alter But a new faster and cheaper process

:47:42.:47:43.

could lead to many more Our medical correspondent Fergus

:47:44.:47:51.

Walsh has this special report. San Francisco has been a focal point

:47:52.:47:58.

in the fight against HIV since the first AIDS cases

:47:59.:48:02.

were identified here among gay I was just looking at your chart,

:48:03.:48:04.

actually, I like what I'm seeing. Matt is one of around 80 HIV

:48:05.:48:13.

patients whose immune cells have been DNA edited to try to make them

:48:14.:48:16.

more resistant to the virus. Since the trial, he stopped taking

:48:17.:48:21.

any antiretroviral drugs. My lab values look really good,

:48:22.:48:28.

my viral load is pretty good, That's kind of the point

:48:29.:48:32.

of the study, to try to see how well you can naturally control HIV,

:48:33.:48:38.

after you get the treatment. And how long have you been

:48:39.:48:43.

off your meds? We can't be sure how effective

:48:44.:48:46.

the treatment will be in the long term, but the HIV trials

:48:47.:48:54.

with a world's first Now, a new technique,

:48:55.:48:56.

called CRISPR, has made Inside each cell in our body

:48:57.:49:06.

is our genome, billions of pieces It's the blueprint,

:49:07.:49:17.

or instruction manual, for life. A single error or spelling mistake

:49:18.:49:25.

in that DNA can trigger disease. There are thousands of genetic

:49:26.:49:30.

disorders and many more conditions CRISPR gene editing enables

:49:31.:49:33.

scientists to scan the entire genome and then, using molecular scissors,

:49:34.:49:41.

to cut both strands of DNA and delete, insert

:49:42.:49:46.

or repair the code. The biochemist who co-discovered

:49:47.:49:53.

CRISPR believes it will Just thinking about the opportunity

:49:54.:49:55.

to cure a genetic disease, not treat it, not just give

:49:56.:50:03.

palliative treatment, but really provide a cure

:50:04.:50:06.

in the future, is so exciting. And do you think diseases

:50:07.:50:12.

will be cured? People say that this

:50:13.:50:15.

is going to be century of biology, and I think there's

:50:16.:50:20.

a lot of truth to that. But when scientists can alter DNA

:50:21.:50:23.

at will, society must decide what limits should be placed on such

:50:24.:50:27.

a powerful technology. An employment tribunal has been told

:50:28.:50:31.

Chelsea's former team doctor turned down an offer of more

:50:32.:50:42.

than ?1 million to settle her Eva Carneiro is claiming

:50:43.:50:45.

constructive dismissal. She's also accusing the former

:50:46.:50:49.

manager, Jose Mourinho, of sexual discrimination,

:50:50.:50:51.

saying she was forced out Our sports correspondent

:50:52.:50:53.

Richard Conway has more. It was last August, as Swansea took

:50:54.:51:02.

on Chelsea in the Premier League, that Dr Eva Carneiro infuriated

:51:03.:51:05.

Jose Mourinho by running onto the pitch to treat an injured

:51:06.:51:07.

player, leaving his team a man down. Mourinho accused his medical team

:51:08.:51:20.

of being impulsive and failing Today, it was revealed that

:51:21.:51:23.

Dr Carneiro has turned down ?1.2 million to settle

:51:24.:51:26.

the constructive dismissal, victimisation and

:51:27.:51:28.

discrimination claims. In court documents, her legal team

:51:29.:51:31.

accused Jose Mourinho In response, Chelsea claimed

:51:32.:51:33.

Dr Carneiro had become increasingly preoccupied

:51:34.:51:49.

with developing her profile and associating herself

:51:50.:51:54.

with the first-team, signing autographs and seeking

:51:55.:51:56.

to position herself behind Jose Mourinho

:51:57.:51:58.

during televised matches. I would like to nominate

:51:59.:52:02.

Branislav Ivanovic... Nominating a prominent Chelsea

:52:03.:52:05.

player for a charity ice bucket challenge was also cited by the club

:52:06.:52:07.

as a sign that Dr Carneiro wanted to link herself

:52:08.:52:11.

with its star performers. It may well be that, for her,

:52:12.:52:15.

this is a matter of principle. What it means for Jose Mourinho

:52:16.:52:18.

is that, as early as next week, he must come here and give evidence

:52:19.:52:21.

on behalf of himself Much of that evidence will relate

:52:22.:52:24.

to a dispute over his words. Dr Carneiro claims she was called,

:52:25.:52:34.

in Portuguese, "filha da puta", Chelsea and Mourinho maintain

:52:35.:52:37.

he said "filho da puta", meaning "son of a bitch",

:52:38.:52:42.

in a reference to what was happening With all parties in a stand-off,

:52:43.:52:44.

the case could yet become Let's have a quick look at some

:52:45.:52:50.

of the day's other top stories. Police are hunting for a man

:52:51.:53:00.

in connection with the fatal stabbing of a pensioner

:53:01.:53:03.

and the disappearance of his elderly A body of Peter Stuart was found

:53:04.:53:05.

in woodland in Weybread. Officers are looking to question

:53:06.:53:16.

Ali Qazimaj, who's from the former Yugoslavia, but are warning

:53:17.:53:19.

he should not be approached. A man who's thought to be Britain's

:53:20.:53:21.

oldest ever defendant has pleaded not guilty to 31 child sex offences

:53:22.:53:24.

at Birmingham Crown Court. Ralph Clarke - who is 101 years

:53:25.:53:26.

old - is accused of a string of child sex offences

:53:27.:53:30.

in the 1970s and '80s. The BBC has learnt that

:53:31.:53:32.

one of Britain's best selling hybrid cars,

:53:33.:53:41.

the Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV, Security experts say criminals can

:53:42.:53:43.

disable the alarm and unlock the vehicle, and an urgent security

:53:44.:53:47.

update is essential. Our technology correspondent

:53:48.:53:50.

Rory Cellan-Jones has the story. ADVERTISEMENT VOICEOVER: Introducing

:53:51.:53:57.

the Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV... The Mitsubishi Outlander PHEV,

:53:58.:53:59.

a popular petrol and electric hybrid Among them, a smartphone app that

:54:00.:54:01.

controls some of its functions. But one expert says

:54:02.:54:11.

the car is not secure. He's found that the Wi-Fi network

:54:12.:54:15.

on which the app depends Most cars use 3G, so they talk

:54:16.:54:17.

to the manufacturer's servers, the manufacturer

:54:18.:54:21.

talks to your phone. Unfortunately, this one uses Wi-Fi,

:54:22.:54:23.

so I can link my phone Unfortunately, the Wi-Fi key

:54:24.:54:28.

isn't strong enough. That means an intruder could switch

:54:29.:54:35.

on the lights or, more So, your colleague with a laptop has

:54:36.:54:38.

now hacked it, he's I can get in, though I'd still need

:54:39.:54:42.

to programme a key to drive away. But isn't this rather

:54:43.:54:52.

a remote threat? I'd say it's a ?15 piece of Wi-Fi

:54:53.:54:55.

kit you need to crack the key Because these Mitsubishis use this

:54:56.:54:59.

system, their locations can be tracked on a public site

:55:00.:55:05.

which maps Wi-Fi networks. Mitsubishi told us, "We take this

:55:06.:55:08.

matter very seriously." But, the company said,

:55:09.:55:11.

while it was obviously disturbing and would be investigated,

:55:12.:55:15.

there was limited effect If you haven't got one of these

:55:16.:55:17.

clever connected cars, But in a few years' time,

:55:18.:55:23.

just about every new car sold in the UK is likely

:55:24.:55:27.

to have an internet connection That will mean cyber security

:55:28.:55:30.

will be just as important Last year, researchers showed

:55:31.:55:34.

they could take control of a Jeep, even disabling the brakes -

:55:35.:55:39.

more proof that hackers could prove I think we need to be careful

:55:40.:55:42.

with a connected car. Obviously with hackers,

:55:43.:55:51.

we've seen it in the past, people can get into mobile phone

:55:52.:55:54.

devices, they can get into our cars now, maybe stealing data or maybe

:55:55.:55:56.

even controlling what they do Meanwhile, for worried Mitsubishi

:55:57.:56:01.

owners, there is a simple, They just need to disconnect the app

:56:02.:56:04.

and turn off the Wi-Fi network. They're 500-1 rank outsiders,

:56:05.:56:09.

but also the in-form team heading into the Euro

:56:10.:56:16.

2016 football tournament. Northern Ireland are now in France,

:56:17.:56:21.

and are preparing for their first match against Poland

:56:22.:56:24.

in Nice on Sunday. Katie Gornall's report

:56:25.:56:26.

from the team's base, near Lyon, It wasn't planned, but then

:56:27.:56:29.

the best parties never are. This was the moment

:56:30.:56:36.

Northern Ireland's manager knew they had qualified

:56:37.:56:39.

for the European Championship Before flying out to France,

:56:40.:56:41.

Michael O'Neill told me of his pride It's an incredible achievement

:56:42.:56:46.

for the group of players, not only to qualify but to go

:56:47.:56:51.

there as group winners as well. I think the sense of

:56:52.:56:57.

optimism and euphoria in Northern Ireland is down

:56:58.:57:00.

to the fact that people We're not Brazil, we're

:57:01.:57:03.

Northern Ireland - Michael O'Neill! Their achievement has put

:57:04.:57:11.

O'Neill in the spotlight. But his award-winning career

:57:12.:57:13.

in management nearly didn't happen. When he retired from playing,

:57:14.:57:17.

he became a financial advisor. That changed one day in a department

:57:18.:57:20.

store, ten years ago. We were in Edinburgh,

:57:21.:57:24.

on a Saturday afternoon, My wife and I were looking

:57:25.:57:26.

at jumpers or something I just felt like there

:57:27.:57:29.

was something... I thought, it's Saturday afternoon,

:57:30.:57:34.

I shouldn't be here, this isn't what I've spent my life

:57:35.:57:37.

doing on Saturday afternoons. O'Neill took a part-time job

:57:38.:57:41.

at Cowdenbeath before building his reputation

:57:42.:57:44.

at Brechin City in the When he took them into Europe

:57:45.:57:46.

on limited resources, Northern Ireland decided

:57:47.:57:53.

he was the man for them. Northern Ireland may be rank

:57:54.:57:56.

outsiders, but they arrive here in France as the tournament's

:57:57.:57:59.

form team, on a 12-game unbeaten run that's given this squad

:58:00.:58:06.

a real sense of belief. O'Neill has managed to change

:58:07.:58:08.

results without changing the squad. We just go that extra

:58:09.:58:11.

mile, just for him, This is his reward, at the end

:58:12.:58:13.

of the day, obviously. Their first taste of the tournament

:58:14.:58:21.

comes on Sunday against Poland. Ukraine and world champions

:58:22.:58:23.

Germany are next. You know, it's taken me

:58:24.:58:27.

ten years to get here, and it's been ten years

:58:28.:58:30.

of hard work. But it's immensely rewarding,

:58:31.:58:32.

when you get the opportunity to lead your country

:58:33.:58:34.

to a major tournament. And, if Northern Ireland continue

:58:35.:58:37.

to defy expectations, O'Neill may struggle to stay under

:58:38.:58:41.

the radar much longer. The playwright Sir Peter Shaffer,

:58:42.:58:44.

described as one of the greats of British theatre, has died

:58:45.:58:52.

at the age of 90. He enjoyed success in the UK

:58:53.:58:56.

and on Broadway, with plays including Equus and Amadeus,

:58:57.:59:00.

his drama about the composers Mozart and Salieri which was turned

:59:01.:59:02.

into an Oscar winning film. Our arts editor Will Gompertz looks

:59:03.:59:06.

back at his life and career. A scene from Equus, Peter Shaffer's

:59:07.:59:11.

1973 play about a teenage boy who blinded six horses

:59:12.:59:16.

with a metal spike. This way and that way,

:59:17.:59:22.

his neck comes out of my body... It had huge success on both sides

:59:23.:59:26.

of the Atlantic but not The playwright said it

:59:27.:59:29.

caused a scandal in the UK because it was cruel to animals

:59:30.:59:33.

and a scandal in America because it Tragedy is not for me

:59:34.:59:36.

a conflict between... Or for anybody, I suspect,

:59:37.:59:42.

between demonstrable right It is a collision between two

:59:43.:59:44.

different kinds of right. I think that is what I was trying

:59:45.:59:49.

to do in Equus. I think each of them

:59:50.:59:58.

is incomplete and damaged. I look at pictures of centaurs

:59:59.:00:01.

trampling the soil of Argos and outside my window,

:00:02.:00:03.

that boy's trying to become one In 1977, his screenplay of Equus

:00:04.:00:06.

for a film starring Richard Burton He stands for an hour in the dark,

:00:07.:00:09.

sucking the sweat of Many of Peter Shaffer's plays

:00:10.:00:20.

were given their premiere at the National Theatre,

:00:21.:00:26.

including Amadeus in 1979, his tale about the rivalry

:00:27.:00:28.

between composers Antonio Salieri and Mozart,

:00:29.:00:30.

who was played by Simon Callow. It was a sensational experience

:00:31.:00:32.

because it was a very Many people were very,

:00:33.:00:34.

very shocked by it but Peter's brilliance was that he shocked them

:00:35.:00:38.

and then he made them fall in love with him and finally,

:00:39.:00:41.

to be very deeply moved The play was directed

:00:42.:00:44.

by Sir Peter Hall, who witnessed the painstaking and to some,

:00:45.:00:49.

painful way in which Peter Shaffer is a wonderful writer

:00:50.:00:51.

but he writes by constantly He would sit in rehearsals

:00:52.:00:56.

scribbling away, while the actors looked out of the corner

:00:57.:01:04.

of their eyes and thought, "Right, So, and you liked it,

:01:05.:01:07.

you really liked it. He won an Oscar for his

:01:08.:01:16.

screenplay of Amadeus. My great pleasure is that Mozart has

:01:17.:01:23.

now reached millions and millions of people who had not

:01:24.:01:25.

heard him before. Peter Shaffer was a funny,

:01:26.:01:27.

intelligent, cultured man, whose childhood interest

:01:28.:01:29.

in the theatre turned into a lifelong love affair

:01:30.:01:33.

which was wonderful for him and us. The playwright Sir Peter Shaffer,

:01:34.:01:45.

who has died at the age of 90.

:01:46.:01:47.

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