12/10/2016 Outside Source


12/10/2016

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Newcastle. At best 14 or 15 Celsius. For more on the UK weather, the

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weather for the week ahead is coming up just before 10pm.

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This is Outside Source. An hour of international news in the BBC

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newsroom. The lead story at the moment is that Russia and the US are

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to resume diplomatic talks over Syria. But President Putin says the

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US needs to start behaving like a partner, remember America has been

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fiercely critical of Russian air strikes in Syria. We'll get into the

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latest on the US elections. Hillary Clinton's campaign chairman has had

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his e-mail hacked. He says the FBI is investigating whether the

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Russians were behind this. We also report on Germany. Over 200,000

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people are trying to stop a major free trade deal between Canada and

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the European Union. We'll find out why they don't want it to happen.

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And this is Australian tennis player Nick Kyrios

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at the Shanghai Masters - he's being booed for not

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Russia and America are restarting talks on the crisis in Syria.

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President Putin appears decidedly unimpressed with America's approach.

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keep your expectations to a minimum. There doesn't seem to be any

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particular plan. TRANSLATION: You know, it's very

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difficult to have a dialogue with the current Administration. The

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administration formulate its needs and then insists that they be met.

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It is not a dialogue, it is a diktat.

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There's an alternative view which if anyone is dictating

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the shape of events its Vladimir Putin.

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I've been talking to Jonathan Marcus about that.

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He certainly seems to be in the driving seat in terms of the tempo

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and also in terms of getting what he wants up till now. He has done

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pretty well what he wants in Ukraine and Syria, ensuring that the Assad

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regime remains a feature of the landscape and will have to be dealt

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with in any future settlement. The problem is you see here the gulf

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between Washington and Moscow. We now know that the Americans and the

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Russians are meeting again on Saturday. Secretary Ceri and Sergei

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Lavrov, opposite numbers. That is more keeping a diplomatic avenue

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open, keep the door open. There will be multilateral talks, possibly

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involving the British, French and Germans here in London, on Sunday we

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think. The Americans' interests seem to be multilateral approaches. The

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old bilateral effort to do some sort of grand deal with the Russians, or

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perhaps joint military action, has gone. It's clear there has to be

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some fundamental rethinking of the whole pattern of the relationship

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between Moscow and Washington. It's not just the US that

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Russia is at odds with. Yesterday, the UK foreign secretary,

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Boris Johnson, encouraged a protest outside the Russian

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embassy in London The Russians have accused Mr Johnson

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of Russophobic hysteria. It reads: "Information for citizens

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of Russia-beware of the "clowns"!" It is a warning from the Russian

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Embassy. Warning Russian citizens in the UK to beware of this craze of

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people scaring people dressed as clowns. The Russian Embassy chose

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today to warn Russian citizens about that. Lots of background about the

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Syrian crisis available online on BBC News.

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Time for OS Sport - and the Shanghai Masters.

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Rafael Nadal had a shock defeat in his opener - to the world

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More interesting still was Nick Kyrgios' behaviour.

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Nick, you can't play like that, OK. Sorry? The umpire was saying to him,

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you cannot play like that. And this was his response to the fans

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expressing a little upset. I'm what? What does that even mean? I'm good

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at hitting a tennis ball over a net. Big deal. I don't owe them anything.

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It's my choice. If you don't like it, I don't ask you to come and

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watch. Just leave. If you are so good at giving advice about tennis,

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why aren't you as good as me? Why aren't you on tour? Not that keen on

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building bridges there. Perhaps a little more time gave him a change

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of heart. Or perhaps someone told him to have a change of heart. He

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went on Twitter to say this: A few football managerial moves

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to report from the Championship - Steve McClaren has this

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afternoon been confirmed that is the tweet pick from Derby

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saying welcome back. He was also the manager of Derby County a couple of

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years back. He went to Newcastle. He will be hoping to take Derby County

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back into the Premier League. Confirmation that Aston Villa,

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formerly a Premier League club, will be managed by Steve Bruce, who left

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Hull City in the summer. An experienced Premier League manager

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who has been hired to get Villa back into the Premier League.

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Onto cycling - the location for the 2019 Road World

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Very exciting if you're watching in the UK -

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Let's go up to the BBC Sports Centre in Salford. Catherine Downes 's life

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with us. Yorkshire is doing pretty well now at pulling in the big

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cycling events. Yes. Yorkshire has cemented its position on the cycling

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circuit. In 2014 it hosted the opening couple of stages of the Tour

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De France, and since then it has hosted its own tour events. People

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turned up in Harrowgate to watch the opening stages of the Tour De

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France, and the riders spoke of how much they enjoyed riding the terrain

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in Yorkshire. So the county has proved its credibility as a venue

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for big tour races like that. This is big news for British cycling,

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because it's 37 years since Britain has hosted the world Road cycling

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Championships. They are currently being held in Joe Hart in kata at

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the moment, and plenty of complaints that about the heat that riders have

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had to experience. What is the format. It is more than the Tour De

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France just coming for a couple of days. The Tour De France is ridden

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over 20 81 stages and lasts about a month. This is the world Road

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Championships, so time trials and things will go into the event.

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Another bit of sporting News related to cycling. The Tour De France's

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efforts to support women's cycling has been half-hearted at best, but

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it gave a strong hint today that next year's format for la course,

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the women's event for the Tour De France, is going to change, and

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hopefully will be a more substantial event than previous additions. He is

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another story from France. Lawyers representing the key suspect

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in the Paris attacks of last year TRANSLATION: We know that he will

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enact his right to remain silent. In our position, what would you have us

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do? If the client remained silent we will stop defending him.

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The attacks in Paris last November killed 130 people.

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The Islamic State group it was behind them.

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Salah Abdeslam was arrested in Brussels in March.

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And he's not refused to speak to the authorities.

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Salah Abdeslam is a man who everyone wants to hear speak, because he has

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a lot of secrets. He is the only survivor of the attackers last

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November, who can presumably tell us a lot about how they were planned,

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the logistics, and whether there was a link to individuals in Syria and

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getting people from Syria to Europe. He's been in detention here since

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April. He hasn't said a word to the examining magistrate. These two

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lawyers are not on his side, but they were very much people who

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wanted him to talk. They say he isn't talking, and therefore,

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there's no point continuing their work.

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The first baby with DNA from three people was born

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But there are already concerns being expressed about this process.

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Leading US scientist in this field - Dr Marcy Darnovsky:

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"We appear to be in a race to the bottom."

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They are conducting dangerous and socially fraught experiments

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Earlier, our BBC Health reporter, James Gallagher, explained how

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This was a long piece of research, largely conducted in the UK, to try

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to prevent genetic diseases that are passed down through families. The

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idea is you take mum and dad, plus a donor woman's eggs, so that the

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resulting child has the genetic information from the mum and dad,

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but also a little bit from the donor woman as well. So a 3-person baby.

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Is the risk moral, or is there are physical risk? It hasn't really been

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done in anybody yet. Animal studies suggest it's safe. It is being done

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to prevent diseases, however the concern is now that it will be more

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widely used. A group in Ukraine have been using it as a fertility

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treatment, for example. So it's changing the balance of risk and

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benefits. We don't know how good it is going to be. If it is just to

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prevent disease, it is worth taking risks, but it -- if it is for

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fertility, it isn't. The concern is that people are doing it without

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thought for consequence. Realistically, what can one group of

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scientists in one country do about what is being done in another?

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Absolutely nothing. The UK was the first country to introduce laws that

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legalise the creation of 3-person babies. If you are in a country that

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does not have any laws preventing it, it is legal by default. The

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concern about the spread of this technology to other conditions that

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it has not been tested for. This is a report on how politicians use fear

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is a way of generating support. I will play the report in full in a

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few minutes' time. A leaked document seen by the BBC,

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says some GP surgeries that are at risk of closure in England,

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should be allowed to Our Health Editor,

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Hugh Pym, has more. They are at the heart of local

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communities. GP practices are at the front line of health care, but

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really a month goes by without reports of closures. This doctor is

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a GP leader in South Yorkshire, who says that recruiting doctors are

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getting harder, patient numbers rise, and the job becomes ever more

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difficult. GPs are really struggling to keep their head above water. NHS

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England says around one in ten practices are vulnerable, including

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those with recruitment problems. It has set up a ?10 million support

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fund, but hardly any money has been handed out. A note seen by the BBC,

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written by an NHS chief in the Yorkshire and Humber area, says:

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A mixture of health promotion... This GP doesn't know if they are on

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the list. He does no budget cuts are possible, which might mean they have

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to close. I cannot point to one example of something that somebody

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has done, absolutely no new investment into our budgets. We are

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in an emergency. We are racing kingship. No good promising us a

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lifeboat in three years' time. Patients at the surgery told me how

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they felt about the possibility of closure. There is a big worry that

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people will end up in these super surgeries, where it will be hard to

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get an appointment and it's unlikely you will see the same GP twice. NHS

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England distance itself from the comment about practices being

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allowed to fail. A spokesperson said:

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GPs in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have called on their

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covenants to invest more in general practice. It's a frequent refrain

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around the UK as the pressure across the NHS landscape continues to

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build. This is Outside Source live

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from the BBC newsroom. In Syria, the BBC has found evidence

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that a rebel group has set up an internment camp to hold defectors

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form Islamic State. Some breaking news on Outside Source

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from Germany. This coming in from a German website. It says that the

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Syrian terror suspect held in Germany over a bomb plot has

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committed suicide in police custody. This is a reliable source from

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Germany. Looking to get further confirmation, but dare Speigel

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reporting that a terror suspect arrested on Monday has committed

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suicide. On Saturday this man escaped a raid in a town in Germany.

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The search for him went on for two days, and he was eventually found in

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Leipzig. He was turned over by other Syrian refugees who identified him

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from a police wanted picture. He'd apparently been planning to bomb a

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Berlin airport. Reports in Germany that the man who was caught on

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Monday has committed suicide. We will bring you more information as

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we get it on the BBC. You can find the story through Speigel online if

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you speak German. A major free trade agreement between

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Canada and the European Union could now get derailed

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by German courts. It's a potent political issue -

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more than 200,000 German's and campaigners signed a petition

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calling for it to be stopped. Damien McGuiness has

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more from Berlin. This court case is the largest

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constituency court case that's ever been presented in Germany. More than

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200,000 people have presented complaints. They are saying they are

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putting pressure on the court to force the German government not to

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allow the deal to be implemented before ratification, because that's

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what might happen. The deal is going to be signed between the EU and

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Canada. Ordinarily, if things go as planned, in a few weeks' time. After

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that, all EU states would have to ratify, which could take months or

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years. The plan now is to enable the deal to professionally go ahead,

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which means that the free trade would start happening, even though

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the EU states have not all ratified it. The activists are now telling

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the German court to prevent that. If they manage to block it, if it is

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derailed by the German government, if the government is forced to do

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this by the courts, that could derail the whole deal. This

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afternoon, saying that if this deal is derailed, it could put what is in

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fact the largest deal of this type between Canada and the EU in

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jeopardy. Now to go back to the US presidential election. The campaign

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is very different to the ones that have gone before, but there is one

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thing that links it to all election campaigns, and that is how

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politicians use fear to win votes. That's the issue this next report

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explores. He preyed on working people. Islamic

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extremist terrorism! A one-man wrecking queue -- wrecking crew.

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Fear mongering plays such a big role in American life. Almost every

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presidential campaign in the past few decades has involved a great

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deal of fear mongering. Today a violent crime is committed every 60

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seconds. Three, two, one. Weakness attracts those who are waiting to do

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America harm. Mr Trump is especially effective. Death, destruction,

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terrorism and weakness, an attack on all Americans. Illegal immigrants

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with criminal records roaming free to threaten peaceful citizens.

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Clinton made a decision, or so it would seem, to keep the themes on

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love and hope. Freedom, equality, justice and opportunity. We should

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be so proud that those words are associated with us. But it would be

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a mistake to say that the Clinton campaign is not engaging in fear

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mongering itself. Powerful forces are threatening to pull us apart.

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Both campaigns are engaging in fear mongering about each other. Donald

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Trump painted a negative, dark, devices picture. Hillary wants to

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essentially abolish the second amendment. What fear mongering

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politicians are doing is motivating voters to simplify their decision.

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I'm afraid, and if I vote for this particular candidate, I won't need

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to be afraid any more. That's generally the message, versus

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talking about matters that are actually quite complicated, and it

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would require levels of specificity. Voting is a simple act. You vote for

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one person or another, or not at all. In the end, the voter makes a

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simple decision that is highly emotional. One of the paradoxes here

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is that Americans live in one of the safest times in human history. What

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will determine the election is which message is delivered most

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consistently, whether that is a predominantly fear mongering

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message, or a predominately hopeful and positive, with a little fear

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mongering to spice it up. Just to return to the breaking

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stories coming in to the newsroom. It comes from Germany, about a man

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who escaped a police raid on Saturday, but was found on Monday.

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It is the online version of the Der Spiegel paper. The suspect has

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committed suicide, he is suspected by police of planning a bomb plot.

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Police are working to confirm. I will speak to you tomorrow. Goodbye.

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