04/05/2016 Outside Source


04/05/2016

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Hello, welcome back to Outside Source. Let's look through some of

:00:14.:00:19.

the main stories. Donald Trump now has a clear path to the Republican

:00:20.:00:25.

nomination. Ted Cruz and John Kasich are suspending their campaigns. John

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Kasich will give a statement in the next few minutes. We will make

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America great again. We will start winning again. You will be so proud

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of this country very, very soon. Turkish citizens look set for visa

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free travel in the Schengen zone, much of the EU despite a range of

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conditions not being met. We will also be live in Canada to speak to

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one resident of the city, Fort McMurray, where all the population

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has had to be evacuated because of these wildfires. And it looks as if

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the Justice city are in the last chance saloon in the Champions

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League, they were down 1-0 against Real Madrid. They need one goal. We

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will cover that in Outside Source sport.

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Britain has confirmed that it will accept more unaccompanied child

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refugees from camps within Europe. This is a shift in policy, we have

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the Mirror newspaper saying that the Prime Minister has agreed to take

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charge refugees after some of his own Conservative MPs were

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threatening to revolt on the issue. Many of the child refugees concerned

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in the story are in Calais. They live in the camp we have covered

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many times on this programme and elsewhere on BBC News, known as the

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Jungle. This is where our international correspondent Lyse

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Doucet and has been. She has spoken to Syrian and Afghan teenagers who

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want to come to the UK to rebuild their lives. Hours after first

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light, on a cold, bleak morning in Calais. Boys struggle back to the

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shanty town to sleep. It has been another long night, another night of

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trying to make it to Britain illegally and failing. So it is

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another day in the squalid camp they call the Jungle. It is a hard life

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for grown-ups fleeing conflict and hardship, imagine what it is like

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for children on their own. They are scarred, and scared. But the Afghan

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boys at the centre say that they will not stop until they reach

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family and a new future in Britain. They don't want their faces shown.

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TRANSLATION: Last night I jumped into a lorry. The driver found me

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asleep. I was taken to a detention centre. By the time they let me go

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it was midnight. It to me four hours to walk back. It was raining and

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freezing. I did not know the way and I was very scared. Did you think it

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was going to be this hard? I knew the journey would be hard. But I did

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not know it would be this hard once we got to Calais. I did not know we

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would have to cross the sea to get to London. These boys were just some

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of the large, growing number of children now travelling alone across

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Europe. The risks that they face a growing as well. Some 10,000 already

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said to have gone missing. The big question is, does Britain have a

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moral and legal obligation to take care of at least some of them? Some

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of these boys were just one hour's journey from London. This shack is

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the home of 16-year-old Hassan. He fled to Syria alone six months ago.

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Today she is older Labour is making a window to let in some light. A

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godsend for a vulnerable boy. -- his older neighbour. TRANSLATION: He's

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still very young and gets scared at night. He wakes up and cries for his

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mummy and daddy. Sometimes he finds rats in his room. And night when you

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are in your tent, what do you dream about? I dream of getting to

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Britain, he says, to be with my family. Hassan is trying to get into

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existing EU rules. Only a small number succeed. He is being helped

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by a British charity. Britain is worried that this will create an

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incentive for more families to send children on these perilous journeys.

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And we say the British government has a moral and legal obligation to

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step up and do more now. I see and work with children every day who not

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only struggle under the pressures of living alone and to run a forum

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continent but who are at risk of real dangers of sexual exploitation

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on one hand and human traffickers on the other. As we are leaving Calais

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Hassan gets news come he can go to Britain and apply for asylum, the

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question now how many will follow. If you want more background on the

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crisis, you can find it through the BBC News website or the BBC News app

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which you can download. Let's turn to the sport. One of the biggest

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club matches of the year, the second leg of the Champions League

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semifinal, the focus is Madrid because it Real Madrid against

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Manchester City is ending in the Bernabeu Stadium. The last time I

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looked it was going well for real Madrid. We can go live to the BBC

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sports Centre. Are they still on course to win? Yes, just a couple of

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minutes of stoppage time, Real Madrid are leading Manchester City

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1-0. This is Manchester City's chance to make history. All the talk

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has been about Leicester City and their historic Premier League title

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win, this is a chance for Manchester City to pull off a first in the

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history, a first Champions League final. It does not seem like it will

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happen. Just a couple of minutes left in injury time. Man City

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started badly losing Vincent Kompany, injured, early in the

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match, very bad news from him, he's just back from injury. The only goal

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of might come initially claimed by Gareth Bale, the most expensive

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player in the world, was judged to be an own goal by Fernando. Real

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Madrid were leading 1-0, it has stayed that way. They've had the

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best chances although City had some, Fernandinho came closest, his shot

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hitting the post. Manchester City coming alive in the final stages of

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the matchs it looks as if it won't be enough to get them to a first

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Champions League final. 1-0 two Real Madrid. Plenty of famous faces in

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the crowd. Including some of the most famous tennis players in the

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world, many of them are in the city playing in the Madrid open, we have

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seen Djokovic and Nadal in the crowd enjoying the match. Thank you.

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Speaking of the way City have been approaching this, looking at the

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live page on the BBC sports app, Chris Waddell says that has been a

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bit of urgency about City, coming after only 89 minutes! Clearly some

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debate about the approach to the game. If you can see it on TV, try

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to follow it on the BBC sport app. Leicester City will be in the

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Champions League next day because on Monday night they won the Premier

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League, an extraordinary self. One man closely associated with

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Leicester City, a boyhood fan, he presents much of the day, Gary

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Lineker, of course, ages ago back in December he treated that if

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Leicester City won the Premier League he would present the first

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match of the day of next season injustice underwear. He of course

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never thought it would happen, although it has and he probably

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never imagined that this tweet would get mentioned in the House of

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Commons. It did, when one of Leicester City's members upon and

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raised the issue. Does he agree that in football, as in politics, when

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you make a promise you should keep it? I absolutely agree. I've been

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watching everything very Lineker says, he isn't quite answering the

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question, something that no one gets away with in this House! I welcome

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what is says and I hope it is the start of him joining the blue team!

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Of course Gary Lineker responded by saying this. It is always good to

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use this hashtag if you are following Prime Minister's

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Questions. Has been great analysis about what this victory means for

:09:39.:09:42.

Leicester City football club, its income and its position on the

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football scene. Also analysis of what it means the city. Amy Harris

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has been looking about. It started as a of support but this Jamie Vardy

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Coffey -- the Vardycciino, has become almost as famous as the

:10:05.:10:09.

striker. It's taken off. It's made headlines across the world and we

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have never sold as many of this type of coffee, it's gone into the

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thousands. Business is booming. And also booming here at the Local Hero.

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A scene of much jubilation at the weekend. Trade quadrupled. They had

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to turn hundreds away. We are busy on match days but not to the extent

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we have been in these last days. It's been great. Business, very,

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very good. And they are not the only businesses benefiting as the foxes

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fairly tale does wonders for the city. Leicester has been transformed

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by the success of the club, as you can tell it's still buzzing. It is

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thought that the overall economy of the city will benefit by at least

:10:55.:10:59.

?49 million. Businesses want people in the business to be vibrant, to

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have a good feeling about things, when I am talking to clients, they

:11:04.:11:07.

can only say positive things about Leicester winning the Premier

:11:08.:11:11.

League. All of this hot on the heels of the discovery of King Richard

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III. Tours bosses know they must make the most of this spell in the

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spotlight. It is once in five life terms, this chance to capitalise on

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all the attention on Leicester and to really put Leicester on the map.

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This is Leicester's moment and everyone knows it. The focus now is

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building on the momentum. Amy Harris, BBC News, Leicester. A very

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good week for Leicester City, not so good if you a fan of Manchester

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City, in the last few moments the final was all has gone in Madrid.

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1-0, Real Madrid go through for a repeat of the final couple of years

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ago, Real Madrid against Atletico Madrid, Zinedine Zidane against the

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red and whites of Diego Simeone. Very interesting. Athletics. Doping

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has been a huge issue recently because of the situation in Russia,

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although not just that, and the Olympics, three months away, it's

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given everything sharp focus. Tweet from a sports reporter in the

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Evening Standard, the World Anti-Doping Agency has suspended the

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accreditation for a laboratory in South Africa. We tend to the sports

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presenter on BBC focus on Africa. Here he is giving me the full story.

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It's the only world anti-doping agency accredited lab in South

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Africa. Well, it was, it sat to close because it didn't have enough

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funds. Wider did not say why it closed although we've spoken to some

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involved in anti-doping and it's a shortage of funds. It's based ad

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free State University in Bloemfontein. The funding comes from

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the South African government. They don't have enough money. One EPO

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testing machine costs $1 million, the person that we spoke to who

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works with South African anti-doping says there just isn't enough money.

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We need to refurbish and do some training and we hope to open again

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in September. How does this work, Alaba funded by the South African

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government and the Southern African University servicing all the South

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African federations in the continent? That's what I thought but

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not so. It is also for other nations in South Africa, although they are

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using labs in Paris, London and Switzerland. Just so you know, the

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testing in South Africa will go on although they will send it to Qatar

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and back. Our two flights a day there and back. Big places like

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Ethiopia and Kenny will do their testing in Europe instead of in

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South Africa. This makes for a big headline, although is it less

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significant than it first seems? It does seem less significant than it

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seems. Three countries in Africa are in a crisis, as Sebastian Coe said,

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Ethiopia, Kenya, and Morocco. Not South Africa. Doping is big

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especially with the Olympics coming but this is about getting it right

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for the future. As we were told, it is about hosting the Commonwealth

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Games in Durban, they need testing lab and they want to get right. And

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in a couple of days the Minister of sport for South Africa will announce

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his budget for the year and you can be sure that this will be a key

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component of that they will push the funds. More coverage of that to the

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BBC sport app. In moments I will play you this report, from Texas,

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from a town that has had no drinking water for decades.

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Sainsbury's has reported a fall in annual profits as the price war in

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the supermarket sector continues, it takes its toll. The country made 500

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metres of million pounds for the year to March, down by over six and

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?58 million on the previous year. A drop of 14%. It blames falling food

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prices in a competitive market. Our business correspondent Emma Simpson

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can tell us more. Consumers are benefiting but these companies are

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hurting. It is a good time to be a shopper. Especially in the

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supermarket aisles. We have now had almost two years of falling prices.

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According to new research, the average household is spending just

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over ?78 a week. If prices had risen at the same rate as they had stern

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of the last decade we would have been spending much more. Consumers

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are now thought to be around 400 p a year better off. Customers really

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are enjoying a golden time of falling prices. For instance, pork

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has become much cheaper, whether joints other processed varieties of

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sausages and bacon. Things. Staffers spot and crisps, much cheaper which

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makes weekly shopping basket much more manageable. Not because we are

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buying more of these. We like a bargain but supermarket promotions

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are now at their lowest level for seven years. The big grocers have

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shifted to cutting prices on everyday essentials instead.

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Sainsbury's is phasing out its multi-byte items altogether. It has

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been coping better than its main rivals but it also has been forced

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to make more price cuts to cope with the rise of body and Lidl. And that

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has dented its profits. Its boss told me the scale of the change is

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one president at. We've seen price deflation of almost 4% in the last

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couple of years, quite a profound change. Great from a customer point

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of view because they are enjoying regular lower prices more

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challenging if you are a retailer. He says Sainsbury's is making good

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progress although he does not think things will get any easier any time

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soon. And he expects falling food prices to continue through the

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summer. This is Outside Source live from the

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BBC newsroom. The lead story, Donald Trump is appealing to Republicans

:17:48.:17:50.

across the USA to back him coming as two main rivals for the Republican

:17:51.:17:54.

nomination are both suspending their campaign so he has a clear run to

:17:55.:17:58.

victory in the first stage of his campaign for the White House. Coming

:17:59.:18:04.

up after this programme, outside the UK, world News America is next, and

:18:05.:18:08.

the Smithsonian easier and whether national parasite collection has

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just arrived, or 20 million specimens of it. The news at ten is

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next on the BBC News channel, with the report of a group who scanned ?1

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million, that is 1,000,000 and a half dollars from the dish

:18:24.:18:26.

pensioners, some of the money ended up used by British men believed to

:18:27.:18:32.

be linked to Islamic State. We spoke about this earlier. Let's go back to

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Canada, where a huge wildfire has forced the entire population of one

:18:37.:18:42.

city, Fort McMurray, to evacuate. It's in the north-eastern part of

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Alberta province. About 80,000 people call it home. And they have

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all been forced to head north or south, because the city is

:18:53.:18:57.

uninhabitable at the moment. One person has got in touch with the BBC

:18:58.:19:01.

and sent us some of the pictures that he took before he escaped. You

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get an impression of the extraordinary scenes that were

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playing out. A helicopter involved in the effort, the huge traffic jams

:19:13.:19:18.

coming out of the city. Masks being worn by people, as you would

:19:19.:19:22.

imagine, because when you have this kind of fire and smoke it is

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incredibly difficult to operate. Simon, a Polish man who has lived in

:19:28.:19:32.

the UK for a long time before moving to Canada, sent these pictures.

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Simon, tell us when you had to leave the city. Were told at work at 3pm

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and we rushed home to get our belongings. We had a panic because

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we thought the fire was under control. Sadly it was not and it was

:19:54.:19:57.

attacking the housing estates. Me and my colleague rushed back to town

:19:58.:20:03.

and tried to take only necessary items like passports and visas,

:20:04.:20:09.

paperwork, it was very terrifying because we got into the gridlock

:20:10.:20:15.

situation, we could not go anywhere, smoke was closing on us, it was a

:20:16.:20:21.

very unpleasant experience, to be honest. What do you know of your

:20:22.:20:25.

home and the homes of your colleagues and friends? Some of my

:20:26.:20:34.

English colleagues, their homes culpably got burned because they

:20:35.:20:39.

were living in an area that was attacked by fire directly --

:20:40.:20:44.

probably got burned. I was lucky with my place being OK, as far as I

:20:45.:20:49.

know it is still there. There's no news on that, unfortunately, yet.

:20:50.:20:54.

Szymon, you are speaking to me from the village a couple of hundred

:20:55.:20:58.

kilometres south of the city, how come you have gone there? Some

:20:59.:21:03.

friends of friends because Canadians have a big heart and a big

:21:04.:21:07.

community, they believe in helping each other, they give each other

:21:08.:21:11.

hand if anything like this happens, regardless, actually, friends of my

:21:12.:21:18.

colleagues, if a guy called Frank can hear me, thank you for having me

:21:19.:21:23.

tonight. It is a pleasure to be with him. He has been in Fort McMurray

:21:24.:21:28.

for some time and I assume he lost some of his property, I am not sure

:21:29.:21:32.

of the details because different messages are coming in and out so we

:21:33.:21:35.

are not sure what is real and what is not yet. Szymon, we certainly

:21:36.:21:41.

appreciate you speaking to us. Best wishes to you and your friends and

:21:42.:21:44.

colleagues in these incredibly difficult days. Szymon was speaking

:21:45.:21:51.

live from Fort McMurray, -- from south of Fort McMurray, the race you

:21:52.:21:56.

could see there. We talked about this area, the story of Flint,

:21:57.:22:01.

Michigan, and it's tainted water supply. We have covered this story

:22:02.:22:05.

repeatedly on Outside Source. It's now got Cecilia is that the

:22:06.:22:09.

president is in the town to talk about it. It has got so serious.

:22:10.:22:15.

Let's hear more about what he said. What happened here is an extreme

:22:16.:22:26.

example, an extreme and tragic case of what is happening in a lot of

:22:27.:22:30.

places around the country, we have seen an acceptably high levels of

:22:31.:22:35.

lead around the Jersey shore and the major cities of North Carolina.

:22:36.:22:39.

We've seen it in the capitals of Mississippi... 30 minutes ago the

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president said this should never have happened. He's not talking

:22:43.:22:46.

about tragic circumstances in Flint and is there to reassure people that

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the government is taking it seriously. In the meantime, we have

:22:50.:22:56.

marked the city on the map. Let's go much further south and highlight

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Sand Branch in Texas. Because we have a report about a place in quite

:23:04.:23:08.

a different situation. It has not had usable water for decades. Here

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is its story. The residents of Flint have brown water. We have no water.

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Never in 140 years of this community have we ever had drinking water.

:23:24.:23:41.

We have jokes that we get from a community centre once a month. -- we

:23:42.:24:02.

have jokes. -- Jugs. And pump it out but that tank. Just to bring water

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to the community will cost $2 million. I began a relocation

:24:10.:24:13.

effort. There was a lot in the community about, Wow, you guys want

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to take the land. The land has no value. They tried to force us out.

:24:19.:24:26.

If I decided I wanted to sell, what would they give me for my place?

:24:27.:24:33.

$4000. You people have got to be out of your minds. Son went to a trailer

:24:34.:24:45.

park and the road, some went to apartments, some lived with

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relatives because $4000 is not a lot of money. Biggar we have been here,

:24:50.:24:57.

since 1966, our home is paid for and I'm too old to start over somewhere

:24:58.:25:00.

else. Thank you for watching, that

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