Browse content similar to 03/06/2016. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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An overly sexualised atmosphere and a failure in its duty of care - | :00:00. | :00:08. | |
the verdict on an army barracks after the suicide | :00:09. | :00:10. | |
A coroner rules 18-year-old Private Cheryl James was badly let | :00:11. | :00:16. | |
down by the army at Deepcut Barracks in 1995 . | :00:17. | :00:20. | |
Deepcut was a toxic and horrible environment for a young woman | :00:21. | :00:23. | |
and we have no doubt that this would have had a terrible | :00:24. | :00:28. | |
impact on those that were required to live there. | :00:29. | :00:39. | |
We are sorry for the low level of supervision we provided for trainees | :00:40. | :00:44. | |
at Deepcut in 1995. Another recruit who was at | :00:45. | :00:47. | |
Deepcut Barracks around the same time tells the BBC she felt she too | :00:48. | :00:49. | |
suffered a culture of abuse there. He's accused of scaremongering | :00:50. | :00:52. | |
but the boss of one of the world's biggest banks says jobs could go | :00:53. | :00:56. | |
if the UK leaves the EU. After a Brexit we cannot do it | :00:57. | :00:59. | |
all here and we will have I don't know if it means | :01:00. | :01:02. | |
1000 jobs, 2000 jobs. Fifa admits three former top | :01:03. | :01:06. | |
officials, including Sepp Blatter, awarded themselves over ?50 million | :01:07. | :01:10. | |
over five years. After nearly a week, | :01:11. | :01:15. | |
the seven-year-old Japanese boy abandoned by his parents | :01:16. | :01:17. | |
in the woods is found. Reunited, back at Bletchley, the | :01:18. | :01:30. | |
codebreakers who changed the course of World War II. | :01:31. | :01:32. | |
Andy Murray is into his first ever French Open final after beating | :01:33. | :01:35. | |
He'll face world number one Novak Djokovic for the title. | :01:36. | :01:59. | |
Good evening and welcome to the BBC News at Six. | :02:00. | :02:01. | |
The Army failed in its duty of care to a young recruit who was found | :02:02. | :02:05. | |
dead at Deepcut Barracks in Surrey back in 1995. | :02:06. | :02:09. | |
That was the verdict of the coroner at the second inquest into the death | :02:10. | :02:12. | |
He ruled the 18-year-old had killed herself and he criticised | :02:13. | :02:16. | |
what he called the sexualised atmosphere at the barracks, | :02:17. | :02:18. | |
saying some instructors viewed female trainees | :02:19. | :02:20. | |
He also criticised the "haphazard" and "insufficient" provision | :02:21. | :02:25. | |
This was the final chapter of a mother and father's 21 year fight. | :02:26. | :02:45. | |
Doreen and Des James have been striving for so long to find out why | :02:46. | :02:48. | |
their only daughter was found dead at the start of her Army career. | :02:49. | :02:52. | |
Today they heard the coroner concluded that Cheryl James fired | :02:53. | :02:58. | |
the shot which killed her. While we welcome the coroner's findings today | :02:59. | :03:05. | |
on the environment at Deepcut, we are deeply saddened by the coroner's | :03:06. | :03:08. | |
conclusions, having sat through all of the evidence ourselves, listened | :03:09. | :03:15. | |
carefully to every word, read every statement and rewritten every | :03:16. | :03:24. | |
testimony. -- re-read every testimony. In short, it is our | :03:25. | :03:28. | |
opinion that it did not lead to this verdict. Cheryl James joined the | :03:29. | :03:34. | |
Army in the spring of 1995 and was posted to Deepcut Barracks, a | :03:35. | :03:38. | |
training base for young soldiers. Six months after she signed up, | :03:39. | :03:42. | |
18-year-old Cheryl was found dead with a single bullet wound to her | :03:43. | :03:47. | |
head. Her body was found in this area at the base perimeter, where | :03:48. | :03:51. | |
she was on armed guard duty. Today, the coroner told a packed courtroom: | :03:52. | :04:17. | |
Private James was the second of four young soldiers to die at the base | :04:18. | :04:26. | |
between 1995, and 2002. All of them suffered gunshot wins. The coroner | :04:27. | :04:30. | |
said he wanted the inquest to focus on what happened to Cheryl James and | :04:31. | :04:34. | |
her state of mind. But over the past few months we have also gained an | :04:35. | :04:37. | |
insight into the culture and failings at this base. The Army has | :04:38. | :04:44. | |
acknowledged that at Deepcut it fell down in its Judy of care to young | :04:45. | :04:50. | |
soldiers. We are truly sorry for the low levels of supervision we | :04:51. | :04:56. | |
provided for the trainees at Deepcut in 1995, and for the policies that | :04:57. | :05:01. | |
were applied to using trainees for guard duties. The coroner spoke of | :05:02. | :05:09. | |
Deepcut's sexualised culture, and the BBC has talked to many former | :05:10. | :05:13. | |
soldiers there who say they suffered bullying and abuse. One described | :05:14. | :05:19. | |
how she was the victim of a gang raped. I didn't tell anyone, I was | :05:20. | :05:24. | |
too frightened, because I felt so ashamed. I couldn't tell anyone. I | :05:25. | :05:30. | |
still haven't been able to talk about it for the last 20 years, and | :05:31. | :05:35. | |
I am not the person I am before I joined up. I am not that bubbly, | :05:36. | :05:42. | |
outgoing person who trusts people. Cheryl James, calling to her father, | :05:43. | :05:46. | |
as he filmed her passing out. The army says that over the past 20 | :05:47. | :05:51. | |
years there have been big improvements in the way training | :05:52. | :05:54. | |
establishments are run. Today, the coroner ruled on how he believed | :05:55. | :06:00. | |
Cheryl James' short life ended. For her parents, the years of searching | :06:01. | :06:04. | |
for answers are over, but there is no end when it comes to their sense | :06:05. | :06:05. | |
of loss. You can find out more | :06:06. | :06:08. | |
about Cheryl James' story in Deepcut: The Army's Shame, | :06:09. | :06:11. | |
tonight at 9pm on BBC Two. The head of one of the world's | :06:12. | :06:15. | |
biggest banks, JP Morgan, has said that a vote to leave | :06:16. | :06:18. | |
the European Union would be a terrible deal | :06:19. | :06:21. | |
for the British economy. Jamie Dimon warned that coming out | :06:22. | :06:23. | |
of the EU could force him to cut possibly thousands of UK jobs | :06:24. | :06:26. | |
and move them instead The campaign to leave the EU has | :06:27. | :06:28. | |
responded that the real danger to the economy is unsubstantiated | :06:29. | :06:33. | |
and illogical threats. Bournemouth. Sun, sea, sand and | :06:34. | :06:35. | |
global investment banking. The biggest | :06:36. | :06:45. | |
employer here is JP Morgan, with 4,000 staff. Today, the chief | :06:46. | :06:48. | |
executive, Jamie Diamond, the most famous banker on Wall Street, | :06:49. | :06:56. | |
delivered a Brexit warning. EU, when they negotiate, say that | :06:57. | :06:59. | |
anyone that does business as a bank with an EU company has to be based | :07:00. | :07:04. | |
in the EU, you're talking about three or 4,000 potential jobs. In JP | :07:05. | :07:07. | |
Morgan? JP Morgan jobs. And we don't know yet and I want to be clear, we | :07:08. | :07:10. | |
will take care of our people whatever the outcome, but we have to | :07:11. | :07:14. | |
be prepared to serve our clients around the EU. We have to start | :07:15. | :07:17. | |
preparing for the worst. I have do. If you were my board, you would be | :07:18. | :07:21. | |
saying are you prepared if the outcome is a really bad one? Critics | :07:22. | :07:24. | |
say this is a cosy alliance of those who favour the status quo. These are | :07:25. | :07:28. | |
the same people who have said the They are also the same | :07:29. | :07:34. | |
people who got it so wrong on the single currency, on | :07:35. | :07:38. | |
warning of the banking problems, and fortunately, the British public just | :07:39. | :07:41. | |
do not believe them. a pretty stark and specific warning | :07:42. | :07:45. | |
from an employer about how many jobs might go from here to the European | :07:46. | :07:50. | |
Union if we voted to leave the EU. Of course, the concern for many | :07:51. | :07:55. | |
people is the opposite, how many workers from the European Union | :07:56. | :07:59. | |
would come to these shores and how, if at all, we can control it. I | :08:00. | :08:07. | |
think JP Morgan were part of the banking crash, which ruined it for | :08:08. | :08:12. | |
everyone anyway, and I think that is just another one of these threats, | :08:13. | :08:15. | |
being as JP Morgan has also put a lot of money into the not exit. It | :08:16. | :08:20. | |
is hard for anyone anyway these days to find a job and compete for | :08:21. | :08:25. | |
salaries as well. I think a lot of the time if people come over, they | :08:26. | :08:30. | |
will work for a lower wage than the skilled people within this country. | :08:31. | :08:34. | |
We just moved back from Germany. It is like living in Europe and I think | :08:35. | :08:39. | |
it is a good thing, freedom of movement. There are warnings from | :08:40. | :08:44. | |
both sides. Stay in the EU and be unable to hold back the tide of | :08:45. | :08:47. | |
migrant workers or, as JP Morgan warns, leave the EU and see jobs ebb | :08:48. | :08:56. | |
away into Europe. With just just four days | :08:57. | :08:59. | |
left to register to vote in the EU referendum, | :09:00. | :09:05. | |
thousands of 18- to 24-year-olds are said to be abandoning | :09:06. | :09:08. | |
their attempts to sign up through the official | :09:09. | :09:10. | |
Government website. According to an independent | :09:11. | :09:11. | |
group set up to engage young people in politics, | :09:12. | :09:13. | |
it's because they are being asked for their National Insurance | :09:14. | :09:16. | |
numbers, which many can't remember There are many questions about | :09:17. | :09:28. | |
whether Britain is better off in or out of Europe, but one question | :09:29. | :09:30. | |
could be stopping younger people from voting in the referendum. I | :09:31. | :09:38. | |
have no idea. That is knowing their national insurance number. I have no | :09:39. | :09:43. | |
idea what it begins with. You have to remember the numbers and letters. | :09:44. | :09:48. | |
These workshops are encouraging young people to engage in politics. | :09:49. | :10:00. | |
If you go to the page and do not have your National Insurance number, | :10:01. | :10:03. | |
it will give you advice but that can evolve a phone call, filling in | :10:04. | :10:06. | |
forms. If you say you cannot find it, they will often ask you to post | :10:07. | :10:10. | |
evidence of your identity. We find that with people who are not as | :10:11. | :10:14. | |
confident and in gauged in government institutions, they could | :10:15. | :10:17. | |
feel, they want too much of my identity. The electoral commission | :10:18. | :10:22. | |
says that they use national insurance numbers to verify voter | :10:23. | :10:26. | |
identities. National insurance numbers can also be found on | :10:27. | :10:29. | |
payslips, P 60 forms and student loan forms, but it would seem this | :10:30. | :10:33. | |
is not the only obstacle in getting younger people to vote. In Luton, | :10:34. | :10:38. | |
distrust and disengagement is causing some to drop out of making a | :10:39. | :10:44. | |
decision. I feel like a lot of people, especially young people, | :10:45. | :10:47. | |
don't take much interest in politics because it is unknown. A lot of | :10:48. | :10:51. | |
people are not taught much about it, do not know much about what is going | :10:52. | :10:57. | |
on. I had a middle-aged man coming to me and saying, are you voting. I | :10:58. | :11:02. | |
would be, what are you on? If it was someone nearer my age, more involved | :11:03. | :11:06. | |
than passionate, I am more likely to relate to them. It is negative, | :11:07. | :11:12. | |
rather than positive, and that scares us even more. It is estimated | :11:13. | :11:18. | |
that more than 5,000,018 to 24-year-olds are eligible to vote in | :11:19. | :11:21. | |
this referendum. The deadline to register is the 7th of June. | :11:22. | :11:23. | |
And if you want to know how you can register to vote for the referendum, | :11:24. | :11:27. | |
Let's go live now to our Deputy Political Editor, | :11:28. | :11:35. | |
Another week dominated by debate about the economy and immigration. | :11:36. | :11:43. | |
Yes, the chorus of corporations and leaders warning against a vote to | :11:44. | :11:49. | |
leave the EU keeps getting larger and louder. I have been told by a | :11:50. | :11:53. | |
source in the Remain camp that they expect more merchant banks to follow | :11:54. | :11:58. | |
suit, raising questions over thousands more jobs. Meanwhile, | :11:59. | :12:03. | |
David Cameron has been called a deceiver for saying he got a deal to | :12:04. | :12:06. | |
see that EU nationals are kicked out if they are here for longer than six | :12:07. | :12:11. | |
months or money of their own. That power has existed in British and EU | :12:12. | :12:15. | |
law four-year is and has been rarely used. The promise to cut net | :12:16. | :12:21. | |
migration below 100,000 is now being called an ambition and there is no | :12:22. | :12:24. | |
timetable for all of that. So there has been a move. What we are seeing | :12:25. | :12:29. | |
now on the Remain side is that they have accepted they cannot compete | :12:30. | :12:34. | |
with the other side for a contest to see who is toughest on migration | :12:35. | :12:38. | |
policy. And they have started to join pro-Europeans in arguing more | :12:39. | :12:42. | |
clearly for the Colosseum -- the policy, for migration. | :12:43. | :12:45. | |
Football's governing body, Fifa, has said three | :12:46. | :12:47. | |
former top officials, Sepp Blatter, Jerome Valcke | :12:48. | :12:48. | |
and Markus Kattner, awarded themselves salary increases | :12:49. | :12:50. | |
and bonuses totalling more than ?50 million over five years. | :12:51. | :12:52. | |
Fifa said it had passed the results of its investigation to Swiss | :12:53. | :12:55. | |
Fifa have called this a coordinated attempt by these three | :12:56. | :13:05. | |
Staggering sums of money. ?50 million over five years. Fifa's | :13:06. | :13:20. | |
internal investigation has uncovered these documents, some of which only | :13:21. | :13:24. | |
in the past few days. These secret payments were going on for things | :13:25. | :13:28. | |
such as successful completion of a World Cup in South Africa, or | :13:29. | :13:34. | |
Brazil. If tournaments were successfully staged, multi-million | :13:35. | :13:37. | |
pound bonuses were going to the three men with the knowledge of only | :13:38. | :13:42. | |
a few at the top levels of Fifa. Fifa wants to maintain victim status | :13:43. | :13:46. | |
in the eyes of the US and Swiss authorities, so the currently dish | :13:47. | :13:51. | |
it will show that this is evidence of it being serious about reforming. | :13:52. | :13:55. | |
Sepp Blatter's lawyer has said he believes he will show these payments | :13:56. | :13:58. | |
were in line with what other senior sports leaders were receiving and | :13:59. | :14:04. | |
they were fair, but he is subject to a Swiss criminal investigation and I | :14:05. | :14:08. | |
am told they are taking a keen interest in these developments. | :14:09. | :14:10. | |
In Paris, the floodwaters are still rising, with the River Seine | :14:11. | :14:13. | |
More than 200,000 artworks have had to be moved to safety | :14:14. | :14:17. | |
with the Louvre and d'Orsay museums forced to close. | :14:18. | :14:19. | |
To add to the city's problems, there's just a week to go to Euro | :14:20. | :14:25. | |
Can you imagine that, agreeing to host a major football tournament | :14:26. | :14:39. | |
only to find that your capital city is almost flooded a few days before | :14:40. | :14:45. | |
it begins. Life in Paris is dominated by this, the rising level | :14:46. | :14:49. | |
of the Seine. Many Parisians savoury have never seen anything like it. | :14:50. | :14:53. | |
This statue, known as the Zouave, measures the height of the Seine. | :14:54. | :14:56. | |
Parisiens crowd around to see how high the river has got. | :14:57. | :15:00. | |
Normally, the water barely reaches the Zouave's toes. | :15:01. | :15:03. | |
Now it goes all the way up to his thighs. | :15:04. | :15:08. | |
It's incredible, like, I think everyone is shocked | :15:09. | :15:11. | |
and all Parisiens are like, wow, oh, God, what is happening? | :15:12. | :15:15. | |
I think it is completely crazy and it starts to be maybe dangerous | :15:16. | :15:21. | |
The Government is declaring a state of natural disaster in flooded | :15:22. | :15:30. | |
Rescuers have moved more than 20,000 people from their homes. | :15:31. | :15:41. | |
This week, we found the town of Nemours cut in two. | :15:42. | :15:43. | |
The only way across is by canoe or tractor. | :15:44. | :15:48. | |
Floodwaters from some zones have flowed towards the capital. | :15:49. | :15:52. | |
The River Seine has risen dramatically. | :15:53. | :15:58. | |
There is barely any room left underneath the bridges. | :15:59. | :16:01. | |
One of the city's most famous sites, the Louvre Museum, | :16:02. | :16:05. | |
the home of the Mona Lisa, is right next to the Seine. | :16:06. | :16:10. | |
The Louvre invited us to see its emergency measures. | :16:11. | :16:13. | |
It has stopped tourists from coming and it has moved these boxes | :16:14. | :16:17. | |
of antiquities from the basement to the ground floor, | :16:18. | :16:20. | |
The Mona Lisa herself lives safely on the first floor. | :16:21. | :16:28. | |
The city now waits to see whether waters were received. | :16:29. | :16:36. | |
The city now waits to see if the waters will recede. | :16:37. | :16:39. | |
For years, France was concerned about its economy going under. | :16:40. | :16:41. | |
Now it's got the same worry about its capital. | :16:42. | :16:43. | |
James Reynolds, BBC News, Paris. | :16:44. | :16:46. | |
After the death of an 18-year-old recruit at Deepcut Barracks, | :16:47. | :16:50. | |
for failing in its duty of care to her. | :16:51. | :16:55. | |
Andy Murray wins in Paris to reach the final of the French Open - | :16:56. | :16:59. | |
the first British man to do so for nearly 80 years. | :17:00. | :17:08. | |
Coming up in the sport on BBC News, Heather Knight says she is honoured | :17:09. | :17:14. | |
and proud after being named the new England women's cricket captain, | :17:15. | :17:19. | |
succeeding the retired Charlotte Edwards, who held the position for a | :17:20. | :17:20. | |
decade. The World War Two code breakers | :17:21. | :17:25. | |
of Bletchley Park are famous for cracking the Enigma code, | :17:26. | :17:28. | |
but did you know they also broke the Lorenz cypher, | :17:29. | :17:32. | |
known as "Hitler's secret code"? Today, the surviving team members, | :17:33. | :17:36. | |
many in their 90s, have reunited at the National Museum of Computing | :17:37. | :17:39. | |
for a re-enactment What happened at Bletchley was | :17:40. | :17:53. | |
hugely important in World War II. Yes, indeed, and to the history of | :17:54. | :17:58. | |
computing. It looks rather scruffy but this unassuming building really | :17:59. | :18:00. | |
was one of the birthplaces of computing and, of course, the | :18:01. | :18:06. | |
intelligence gathered here from intercepted German signals proved | :18:07. | :18:07. | |
vital to the Allies in World War II. Hitler and his generals thought | :18:08. | :18:11. | |
their codes were unbreakable. Top secret signals encrypted | :18:12. | :18:13. | |
using Enigma machines were routinely deciphered at Bletchley Park, | :18:14. | :18:16. | |
but there was another German code, even more secret, known as Lorenz, | :18:17. | :18:18. | |
and that too was Today, wartime veterans reassembled | :18:19. | :18:21. | |
at the National Museum of Computing, where, for the first time, | :18:22. | :18:29. | |
all the equipment needed to encrypt and decrypt the signals has | :18:30. | :18:32. | |
been brought together. There is a teleprinter used | :18:33. | :18:37. | |
by the Germans for typing in the original message, | :18:38. | :18:39. | |
picked up for a tenner on eBay. There is a Lorenz cypher machine, | :18:40. | :18:43. | |
on loan from a museum in Norway, with its 12 wheels used | :18:44. | :18:47. | |
for encrypting messages. And there is a reconstruction | :18:48. | :18:50. | |
of the machine they built here, known as a tunny, which mimicked | :18:51. | :18:54. | |
the working of the Lorenz, Much of the work was done by Wrens, | :18:55. | :18:57. | |
who had little idea of the time Much of the work was done by Wrens, | :18:58. | :19:06. | |
who had little idea at the time of the significance | :19:07. | :19:10. | |
of what they were doing. Well, we realise we were working | :19:11. | :19:12. | |
codes, you had to be a fool not to realise, | :19:13. | :19:14. | |
but we weren't told very much. We certainly didn't know | :19:15. | :19:17. | |
we were working Hitler's codes Irene, like these Wrens, | :19:18. | :19:19. | |
worked on Colossus, arguably Colossus machines worked out | :19:20. | :19:23. | |
the Lorenz cypher's machine settings It took weeks by hand, but then | :19:24. | :19:30. | |
there were 1.6 million billion It is fascinating to think that this | :19:31. | :19:35. | |
is the world's first This building links the history | :19:36. | :19:40. | |
of the code breaking work And the pioneers that built | :19:41. | :19:46. | |
these machines weren't computer scientists, | :19:47. | :19:54. | |
the term hadn't been invented, but Post Office telephone | :19:55. | :19:58. | |
engineers, using standard Five gang members who were behind | :19:59. | :20:00. | |
the country's biggest known gun smuggling operation have been jailed | :20:01. | :20:11. | |
for up to 30 years. The ringleader - Harry Shilling, | :20:12. | :20:15. | |
seen here on the left - The group smuggled over ?100,000 | :20:16. | :20:17. | |
worth of weapons into the UK. Some came from the same source | :20:18. | :20:23. | |
as those used in the Charlie Hebdo Usain Bolt could lose one of the | :20:24. | :20:38. | |
three gold medals he won at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. It is being | :20:39. | :20:43. | |
reported a sample from one of his team-mates in the 100 metres relay, | :20:44. | :20:47. | |
Nesta Carter, has tested positive for a banned substance. 400 samples | :20:48. | :20:52. | |
have been retested from the 2008 games. Carter will face sanctions | :20:53. | :20:56. | |
only if the second sample also tests positive. | :20:57. | :20:58. | |
A huge rescue operation has been underway off the Greek island | :20:59. | :21:01. | |
of Crete after a boat carrying many hundreds of migrants capsized. | :21:02. | :21:03. | |
More than 300 have been rescued, some by a passing | :21:04. | :21:06. | |
British cargo vessel - but it's unclear at present how many | :21:07. | :21:09. | |
Our reporter Thomas Fessy is in Crete now. | :21:10. | :21:11. | |
Well, according to the latest figures that we have, 340 migrants | :21:12. | :21:25. | |
have been rescued so far. Nine, we are told, have died. But tonight, at | :21:26. | :21:31. | |
this stage, no one knows how many exactly were on the boat, where they | :21:32. | :21:34. | |
were coming from and where they were headed. This has been a major | :21:35. | :21:40. | |
operation and is still going on off the coast behind me. We are talking | :21:41. | :21:47. | |
about the Greek, the Italian and the Egyptian coast guards involved in | :21:48. | :21:53. | |
these rescue efforts. Vessels, but also helicopters and planes, are | :21:54. | :21:58. | |
involved in the operation. Now, crucial to this operation has been | :21:59. | :22:01. | |
the presence of commercial ships in the vicinity of the sinking. A | :22:02. | :22:07. | |
Norwegian gas tanker was the closest and we understand that it has taken | :22:08. | :22:16. | |
over 200 migrants on board, it is heading to Italy. Others have been | :22:17. | :22:21. | |
taken to Malta, to Turkey, two Egyptair. We also understand a | :22:22. | :22:26. | |
British container ship has picked up 17 migrants and they were due to be | :22:27. | :22:31. | |
transferred to the Egyptian coast guard. But really tonight, the main | :22:32. | :22:35. | |
question remains how many more dozens or hundreds have yet to be | :22:36. | :22:37. | |
rescued? Thomas Fessy, thank you. | :22:38. | :22:40. | |
Now for the extraordinary story of a little boy | :22:41. | :22:42. | |
left to fend for himself in a wood in Japan. | :22:43. | :22:44. | |
Seven-year-old Yamato Tanooka was briefly abandoned | :22:45. | :22:46. | |
by his parents as a punishment for being naughty last Saturday. | :22:47. | :22:49. | |
When they returned, they couldn't find him | :22:50. | :22:50. | |
Soldiers have only now found him, cold and hungry. | :22:51. | :22:55. | |
His parents have apologised but many in Japan have called | :22:56. | :22:58. | |
Yamato Tanooka is brought into hospital for a checkup after a week | :22:59. | :23:06. | |
Apart from a bit of dehydration, the doctors say he is fine. | :23:07. | :23:13. | |
As a punishment for throwing stones, his parents abandoned him | :23:14. | :23:17. | |
The seven-year-old was missing for six days. | :23:18. | :23:24. | |
Moments after being reunited with his son, a mightily relieved | :23:25. | :23:27. | |
TRANSLATION: We raised him with love and I admit that what we did | :23:28. | :23:36. | |
was excessive but I had no idea it would end up like this. | :23:37. | :23:40. | |
I deeply regret my excessive behaviour but what I did, | :23:41. | :23:42. | |
A densely forested area of Hokkaido in the north of Japan. | :23:43. | :23:51. | |
Not a great place for a seven-year-old to go missing, | :23:52. | :23:53. | |
especially as it is home to huge and sometimes not | :23:54. | :23:56. | |
All week, close to 200 people, including soldiers | :23:57. | :24:03. | |
and volunteers, combed the woods, desperate for clues. | :24:04. | :24:08. | |
Some people were starting to lose hope. | :24:09. | :24:11. | |
Then early this morning, a soldier stumbled across him | :24:12. | :24:14. | |
inside this military training camp, wearing just jeans and a T-shirt, | :24:15. | :24:24. | |
the resourceful seven-year-old got between these mattresses | :24:25. | :24:26. | |
This soldier says Yamato's first words were, "I'm hungry," | :24:27. | :24:29. | |
An extreme lesson in survival for a seven-year-old | :24:30. | :24:34. | |
and for parents, a lesson in how not to discipline a child. | :24:35. | :24:41. | |
Tennis and Andy Murray has made it to the final | :24:42. | :24:43. | |
of the French Open in Paris - the first British man to do | :24:44. | :24:47. | |
He beat defending champion Stanislas Wawrinka in four | :24:48. | :24:50. | |
sets and will now face Novak Djokovic in Sunday's final. | :24:51. | :24:52. | |
Our sports correspondent Andy Swiss was watching the action. | :24:53. | :25:02. | |
Heading once again into history. The Parisien play has proved sticky | :25:03. | :25:10. | |
territory for British tennis. No men's finalist since 1937, but if | :25:11. | :25:14. | |
Andy Murray was feeling any pressure, you would hardly have | :25:15. | :25:19. | |
guessed it. His opponent Stan Wawrinka was the defending champion, | :25:20. | :25:23. | |
yet soon he was a mere spectator. Murray blazed his way to the first | :25:24. | :25:28. | |
set before breezing towards the second. Wawrinka could only stand | :25:29. | :25:33. | |
and admire and at two sets up, the Murray camp was understandably | :25:34. | :25:38. | |
bullish. But then the wobble. Wawrinka edged the third set. He | :25:39. | :25:44. | |
seemed to be roaring back. Just when it mattered, though, Murray | :25:45. | :25:47. | |
relocated his magic and 79 years of waiting were emphatically ended. | :25:48. | :25:55. | |
Game, set and match, Murray. It now means Murray has reached every Grand | :25:56. | :26:00. | |
Slam final, some achievement, but he will be hoping the best here is | :26:01. | :26:05. | |
still yet to come. Let's take a look at the weather now, not as much rain | :26:06. | :26:09. | |
as in France, I hope. Absolutely and I'm quite optimistic | :26:10. | :26:13. | |
that the weekend, it is not looking too bad at all. The weather has been | :26:14. | :26:17. | |
stunning across so many parts of the country in the last few days, not | :26:18. | :26:22. | |
necessarily the east coast, this is from east Sussex earlier, grey skies | :26:23. | :26:26. | |
and rubbish weather for many days, but look in Cumbria, on the coast in | :26:27. | :26:30. | |
Keswick, beautiful blue skies and you can see the contrast between the | :26:31. | :26:35. | |
cloudy skies and the sunny skies we have had in the last few days and | :26:36. | :26:39. | |
honestly, it has been all or nothing. We have seen one city | :26:40. | :26:44. | |
overcast and just miles away, Birmingham in the clear. This is the | :26:45. | :26:47. | |
weather front that has been plaguing the east coast and what it is doing | :26:48. | :26:52. | |
is finally starting to shift further towards the west and it is also | :26:53. | :26:56. | |
starting to fall apart, so that means the clouds will start thinning | :26:57. | :27:00. | |
and tomorrow morning, yes, for many of us, it is going to be | :27:01. | :27:11. | |
disappointed, a lot of cloud and missed and Merck around the eastern | :27:12. | :27:13. | |
coast but finally, the eastern strip that has been so cold and cloudy | :27:14. | :27:16. | |
will finally brighten up. You will notice in the west, where it has | :27:17. | :27:19. | |
been so sunny, you will get the cloud, there may be some showers | :27:20. | :27:23. | |
tomorrow, watch out in Western areas but by Sunday, I think most of us | :27:24. | :27:28. | |
are in the clear and I... I won't say promise, but it does look as | :27:29. | :27:32. | |
though Sunday will be a beautiful day, really warm, 25 in London and | :27:33. | :27:36. | |
comfortably in the 20s further north. So a fine weekend on the way. | :27:37. | :27:42. | |
Yesterday, we were talking about this hint of something even warmer | :27:43. | :27:46. | |
coming in from the south, hot air across France wafting in our | :27:47. | :27:50. | |
direction but also some humid air and the chance of some thunderstorms | :27:51. | :27:55. | |
into next week. So the weekend, for sure it will be worn widely across | :27:56. | :28:00. | |
the UK, some sunshine but just a few scattered thunderstorms that | :28:01. | :28:03. | |
hopefully most of us will miss, you will have to water the garden is | :28:04. | :28:04. | |
instead. The death of an 18-year-old recruit | :28:05. | :28:07. | |
at Deepcut Barracks - for failing in its | :28:08. | :28:11. | |
duty of care to her. Her parents say she was badly let | :28:12. | :28:21. | |
down. Deepcut was a toxic and horrible environment for a young | :28:22. | :28:27. | |
woman and we have no doubt that this would have had a terrible impact on | :28:28. | :28:30. | |
those that were required to live there. We are truly sorry for the | :28:31. | :28:36. | |
low levels of supervision that we provided for the trainees at Deepcut | :28:37. | :28:39. | |
in 1995. That's all from the BBC News at Six, | :28:40. | :28:41. | |
so it's goodbye from me | :28:42. | :28:44. |