29/06/2016 BBC News at Six


29/06/2016

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The terror attack in Turkey - at least 41 people are now

:00:07.:00:08.

known to have died - hundreds more have been injured.

:00:09.:00:12.

Captured on a security camera - the moment one of the bombers

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detonated his device at Istanbul's international airport.

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Walked around the corner into the main terminal, just a sea of people

:00:23.:00:28.

screaming, running, tripping, police with guns drawn.

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Turkish officials say so-called Islamic State were behind the

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attack. Labour's embattled leader

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Jeremy Corbyn clings on despite an overwhelming vote

:00:38.:00:42.

of no confidence and sharp words It might be in my party's interest

:00:43.:00:44.

for him to sit there, but it's not in the national

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interest. I would say, for

:00:49.:00:54.

heaven's sake, man, go. And then there were 27 -

:00:55.:00:57.

no seat now for Britain as EU leaders warn that access to Europe's

:00:58.:01:00.

single market means accepting 26 teenagers are rescued

:01:01.:01:02.

from the Brecon Beacons after they go missing

:01:03.:01:05.

on an expedition in torrential rain. The crowd go wild at Wimbledon for

:01:06.:01:23.

Britain's Marcus Willis. Ranked 772. He is taking on Roger Federer.

:01:24.:01:29.

And coming up in the sport on BBC News

:01:30.:01:32.

in the fourth one day international between England

:01:33.:01:33.

and Sri Lanka at the Oval, rain interrupts play,

:01:34.:01:36.

but Adil Rashid still finds time to get in the wickets.

:01:37.:01:52.

Good evening and welcome to the BBC News at Six.

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At least 41 people are now known to have been killed in a gun

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and bomb attack on Istanbul's main international airport.

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More than 200 others were wounded when three suicide

:02:03.:02:04.

bombers opened fire with automatic weapons before blowing

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themselves up at a security checkpoint at the entrance

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Turkish officials say they believe so called Islamic State

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From Istanbul, our Turkey correspondent Mark Lowen reports.

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This report contains distressing images.

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Europe's third busiest airport, late evening.

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Passengers rushed through Istanbul's international terminal,

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Here, an attacker is caught by CCTV, floored by shots from

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Wounded, he drops his rifle and it slides across the floor.

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The policeman approaches him, then spots his suicide belt and runs.

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Just before the gunmen detonated the device. Dozens were killed, many

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more wounded. Taken to nearby hospitals. According did attack on

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one of the world's busiest hubs, with devastating impact. As soon as

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it came out we saw the impact. Lawrence arrived on a flight from

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Latvia as the attack was unfolding, the horror became clear. I walked

:03:23.:03:28.

around the corner, into the main terminal, and it was a sea of people

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screaming and running, tripping, police with guns drawn. I started

:03:33.:03:37.

taking a few pitches and then the police started pushing us back into

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the back of the terminal and it became clear that something nasty

:03:41.:03:44.

had happened and this was not a drill or a hoax. They worked through

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the night to repair the area, windows shattered, ceilings

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destroyed by automatic gunfire and three huge blasts. The futile

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attempt to return to normality. The airport reopened quickly and

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attempts to reassure passengers, but this is a profoundly shaken country,

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Turkey's image once again hit by another deadly attack. And with the

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wave of bombings across Turkey showing no signs of abating, there

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will be questions about how to increase security at the most

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vulnerable points. The three attackers were driven in by taxi,

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the car not checked as it entered the airport, there were worries it

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was a soft target. The government says all signs point to the Islamic

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State group, the latest in a spate of attacks by IS cells. At the

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hospital, emotional scenes as families fought amongst themselves,

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a desperate search for who to blame, others waited for news of loved ones

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caught up in a situation they still can't comprehend. The first now

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being laid to rest, passengers, police, airport staff, lives ripped

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apart in a country that once felt safe. Amongst the casualties, Turks,

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but also 13 other nationalities including from Saudi Arabia, America

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France and Germany, the recriminations have followed, with

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critics gives in the government of intelligence lapses, which ever

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allowed IS to take root -- which add. This crucial Western ally in

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the Middle East is now wondering how to emerge from this nightmare. Tom

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Watson has told the BBC that he will not challenge Jeremy Corbyn for the

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leadership. But he says the party is facing an

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extra central crisis and that he had been trying to negotiate Jeremy

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Corbyn's departure. In a highly unusual move

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at Westminster, the Prime Minister has called on the Labour leader,

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Jeremy Corbyn to resign - saying it was "in the national

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interest" for him to stand down. Three quarters of Labour MPs have

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supported a vote of no confidence in him.

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And after work egos, this is as calm as it gets for Jeremy Corbyn, pushed

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to work, but there is nothing good about the Labour leader's

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day-to-day, or any day, it just keeps getting worse. There is a

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Polish centre to visit with Tom Watson, everyone knows his deputy

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can't wait for him to resign but he still has a job to do, today

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condemning hate crime. We've will prosecute people that commit hate

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crimes -- we will. Thanks ever some much. Barely time for a brief

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sentiment before he is hauled off by his staff, before people can ask

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about his struggling leadership. How long can this go on? He is used to

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being harassed, but never before has he faced demands to quit from so

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many. He was a laughing stock in the House of Commons. Thank you, Mr

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Speaker. Will the Prime Minister leave a one nation legacy? He talks

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about job insecurity, and it might be in my party's interests for him

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to sit there but it is not in the national interests and I would say

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to him, the heavens sake, man, go. That must have hurt, but it must

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have got worse when his former leader piled in, as well. I think

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his position is untenable, this is a time of acute national crisis and

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people from all wings of the party in parliament have lost confidence

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in Jeremy and so sadly I believe he has to go. Some colleagues seem

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afraid that this Civil War could end in the Labour Party being

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irreparably. -- being broken. There are huge risks to the Labour Party,

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but I care more about the risks to the country, there is a vacuum of

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leadership in the country, the public will look very badly on us if

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we carry on with a leader that does not have the support of most of the

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Parliamentary party and we just have division. Trade union support is

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crucial to Jeremy Corbyn and his opponents hope it will weaken. But

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not yet. We have got to test the views of the membership firstly, if

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Jeremy is on the ballot paper I expect he will win again. Angela

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Eagle is poised to launch her own leadership challenge, civil war is

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inevitable, but who will jump first? In the last few moments Tom Watson

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has made clear he won't be running for leader. By party is in peril and

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we are facing an accidental crisis, and I just don't want us to be in

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this position because I think there are millions of people in the

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country who need a left-leaning government who can give people

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opportunity and right now we are not doing that. So, the challenge

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everyone expects will now follow quickly, Angela Eagle, surely

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leading the charge for the rebels, Jeremy Corbyn digging in and

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fighting on or trying to, this will be messy, MPs are not at all sure

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there will be much if anything left of the Labour Party when this is

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over. We can go to our political editor in Westminster. What does the

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intervention of Tom Watson mean? Tom Watson matters in the Labour Party,

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as the deputy leader he was elected by thousands of members himself,

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like Jeremy Corbyn he has an individual mandate beyond just being

:09:47.:09:52.

his being elected as an MP, and he is really the person who has been

:09:53.:09:55.

trying to hold this together behind the scenes. His decision to speak

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out and make it clear he thinks Jeremy Corbyn should quit, to make

:10:01.:10:04.

it clear that he is trying to persuade Jeremy Corbyn to quit

:10:05.:10:10.

today, matters very much. In the course of 24 hours, three quarters

:10:11.:10:17.

of the party's MPs showed that they have no confidence in Jeremy Corbyn,

:10:18.:10:20.

and former leaders like Ed Miliband have joined in the call, saying

:10:21.:10:24.

Jeremy Corbyn might have tried his best, but he's not up to the job,

:10:25.:10:28.

all of them joining together, saying that it is over for him and he must

:10:29.:10:33.

move on. But there is now an extraordinary stand-off, I've spoken

:10:34.:10:37.

again to one Jeremy Corbyn's team who say the only way this will be

:10:38.:10:42.

settled is by a leadership election. He has no intention of resigning, he

:10:43.:10:47.

is just not going to budge. The danger of course in order this,

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while they are engaged and locked in his complete battle with him

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refusing to back down, so much damage is done to the Labour Party

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that it could take them years to recover from this, if they actually

:10:59.:11:05.

recover from this at all. Jeremy Corbyn's team is sure they have the

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overwhelming mandate from Labour Party members who backed him so

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enthusiastically in the heady days of last summer, but as this

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slow-moving car crash continues I have to say, relying on the Labour

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Party membership support for good is a hell of a gamble for Jeremy

:11:21.:11:28.

Corbyn's team to take. Thank you. The Conservative leadership battle

:11:29.:11:29.

is also underway. Nominations have just opened

:11:30.:11:31.

in the race to be the next Conservative leader and the next

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Prime Minister. Our Political Editor

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Laura Kuenssberg reports. Politics is being pulled apart

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before our eyes, but who will rebuild? The race to be the next

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Prime Minister, the rules have been decided. Tory MPs will decide who is

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in charge. The favourite, the biggest winner from last week, Boris

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Johnson, he can always pull a crowd, but in a moment of crisis, is a

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politician who is sometimes accused of cartoonish behaviour the right

:12:03.:12:06.

choice? Boris Johnson has the ability to reach out to people, he

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was the Mayor of London twice and he secured a massive mandate as part of

:12:11.:12:15.

the Leave campaign and I think we need to talk about the other

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policies that we want to deliver. Looking increasingly cheerful, his

:12:21.:12:23.

main rivalry, the Home Secretary Theresa May, they say her serious

:12:24.:12:29.

style is picking up support. I want someone with a clear track record of

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leadership, of making decisions and leading at the top level, and

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someone who has a record of delivering on that, Theresa May has

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got back, she has the focus and determination and sincerity that I

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want to see and I Prime Minister. Enter the first candidate to launch

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openly. Stephen Crabb, now in charge of work and pensions. I was brought

:12:50.:12:53.

up to understand that nothing gets handed to you on a plate. On the

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rainy rugby fields west Wales I learned that there is no question of

:12:59.:13:02.

waiting for the ball to pop out of the back of the scrum. If you want

:13:03.:13:07.

it, you do what is required and you get your hands on it. APPLAUSE

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From a different generation and a different background to the other

:13:13.:13:16.

candidates, he says he would get back control of immigration and have

:13:17.:13:19.

close trading relationships with the rest of the EU, but he would put

:13:20.:13:27.

together a cross-party relationship. Do you think members of the Tory

:13:28.:13:32.

party and the public would look to someone who has been in the Cabinet

:13:33.:13:35.

for two years to move into number ten? There is no one around the

:13:36.:13:39.

Cabinet table who has the full range of experience to be able to deal

:13:40.:13:42.

with the unique set of problems in front of them, no one has a playbook

:13:43.:13:47.

and a manual with all of the clear instructions that we should be

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taking. We are in uncharted waters and that is why you need someone

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with the right values, the right sense of the need for national

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unity. You are putting a marker down for the next time around? I don't

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see it like that. When Margaret Thatcher ran to be the leader, she

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had only been the Education Secretary the two years, David

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Cameron had never been in the Cabinet. On one of the younger ones

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but that's no bad thing, in an age when we are thinking about

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intergenerational to reconnect with those people who look at all of us

:14:21.:14:23.

in Westminster now and they do not believe a single word that any of us

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say. Anyone else who would like the most important seat at this table

:14:28.:14:31.

has got to confirm their bid tomorrow, but in the end it will be

:14:32.:14:35.

Tory party members, not the rest of us, to choose who they believe.

:14:36.:14:42.

There have been signs of recovery in the markets today

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as the FTSE 100 regained all the ground it lost

:14:45.:14:47.

in the wake of the vote to leave the European Union.

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The share index closed up 3.6% after a flurry

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The pound has also climbed by a small amount

:14:52.:14:58.

against the US dollar - but remains well below levels

:14:59.:15:00.

at least 41 people are now known to have died.

:15:01.:15:08.

Hundreds more have been injured at Istanbul's International Airport.

:15:09.:15:15.

Coming up in Sportsday on BBC News two quick wickets from Adil Rashid

:15:16.:15:18.

helps England peg back Sri Lanka after the tourists made a good start

:15:19.:15:42.

There was one less chair at this table in Brussels today as the

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European Union's now 27 member states held talks about its future

:15:46.:15:50.

for the first time without Britain in more than 40 years.

:15:51.:15:53.

The President of the European Council, Donald Tusk, said if

:15:54.:15:57.

British business wants to keep access to Europe's single market,

:15:58.:16:02.

it must continue to accept the free movement of people too.

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Our Europe Editor Katya Adler is in Brussels.

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But no British Prime Minister stepped out of a shiny black car

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The UK was locked out today for the first time 40 years.

:16:23.:16:35.

A glaring absence but matched here by a definite sense of defiance.

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I think it's not about him today, today is about us.

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But by "him" she meant David Cameron,

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and by "us" she meant the other EU leaders.

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But the referendum he called was their focus of debate today.

:16:48.:16:52.

How to deal with the Brexit process and how to heal the EU

:16:53.:16:56.

with an intentional show of unity after the UK voted out and the fear

:16:57.:17:00.

When it came to talks of future trade deals with the UK,

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One by one, they ruled out the possibility that Britain

:17:07.:17:18.

could have good access to the single market and stop EU migration.

:17:19.:17:22.

There will be no single market a la cart.

:17:23.:17:27.

President Juncker, will the UK find an accord with the EU

:17:28.:17:30.

There will be no negotiations without notification.

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No negotiation without notification, he said.

:17:37.:17:40.

The EU wants the UK to trigger formal Brexit talks with them

:17:41.:17:43.

Of course, when the EU leaders insist there will be no

:17:44.:17:48.

that does not mean there won't be flexible in the in the future.

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After all, Brussels is known as the capital of compromise.

:17:58.:17:59.

The truth is, no one knows, not the leaders,

:18:00.:18:02.

No country has ever left the EU before.

:18:03.:18:07.

Plots, plans and rumours fly around, but certain is only this,

:18:08.:18:11.

for talks with senior EU officials in the wake of the Brexit vote.

:18:12.:18:30.

Ms Sturgeon said the aim of the talks was to make Brussels

:18:31.:18:33.

understand that Scotland doesn't want to leave the EU.

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However the leaders of France and Spain dealt a blow to Scottish

:18:37.:18:38.

hopes of staying in when they both insisted that the EU must negotiate

:18:39.:18:42.

Our Scotland Editor Sarah Smith reports now from Brussels.

:18:43.:18:46.

Nicola Sturgeon looks like a woman ready to stride

:18:47.:18:49.

Meeting the President of the European Commission as part

:18:50.:18:55.

of her campaign to try to keep Scotland inside the EU.

:18:56.:18:59.

That will take a lot more than just smiles and kisses.

:19:00.:19:02.

The First Minister dashed from meeting to meeting telling

:19:03.:19:05.

everyone Scotland wants to stay and should not be forced out.

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I asked her if she really expects some kind of special

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I have a duty to try to deliver that and to explore all possible options

:19:14.:19:22.

Do you think it is still highly likely there will be a second

:19:23.:19:26.

While all options are on the table I think it is highly likely

:19:27.:19:32.

we will reach a point where the only option for Scotland,

:19:33.:19:35.

if we want to retain our membership of the EU, is to do that

:19:36.:19:38.

He doesn't want to talk to Scotland until then.

:19:39.:19:44.

The Spanish Prime Minister, worried about separatists movements

:19:45.:19:47.

in his own country says the EU should negotiate only with the UK

:19:48.:19:51.

and not be talking to Scotland at all.

:19:52.:19:56.

TRANSLATION: I am extremely against it, the treaties

:19:57.:19:59.

I believe everyone is extremely against it.

:20:00.:20:04.

If the UK leaves the European Union, Scotland leaves too.

:20:05.:20:13.

Nicola Sturgeon says she was not surprised by that Spanish hostility

:20:14.:20:16.

as she walked and talked her way around the corridors of power.

:20:17.:20:20.

But even sympathetic politicians can't see how Scotland can cut

:20:21.:20:24.

a separate deal if it's not a separate country.

:20:25.:20:30.

Scotland is part of the UK. What will happen in the UK has to be

:20:31.:20:38.

decided in Scotland, in Edinburgh and together with London. It's no

:20:39.:20:42.

secret what Nicola Sturgeon really wants is for Scotland to join the

:20:43.:20:46.

European Union as an independent sovereign nation. So, her mission

:20:47.:20:51.

here today can't really fail. If she can secure a special deal for

:20:52.:20:55.

Scotland ultimately. She comes out a winner. If she can't, she can always

:20:56.:21:01.

hold another referendum on Scottish independence. Either way, it looks

:21:02.:21:07.

good and Miss Sturgeon seems to be fighting for Scotland's interesting

:21:08.:21:11.

even if she can't claim to have won any consciences today.

:21:12.:21:13.

A big search and rescue operation was launched in the Brecon Beacons

:21:14.:21:17.

this afternoon after more than 20 teenagers went missing.

:21:18.:21:19.

They were taking part in a Duke of Edinburgh Awards expedition

:21:20.:21:22.

is in just north of the village of Aber-crave.

:21:23.:21:32.

Those 26 teenagers are now safe and well though they are feeling the

:21:33.:21:38.

effects of the cold. They've been brought down the hillside behind me.

:21:39.:21:43.

This huge operation launched just after 1.00 when they raised the

:21:44.:21:47.

alarm. The weather conditions really closed in. There was low cloud,

:21:48.:21:51.

torrential rain and high winds. This area can get really treacherous.

:21:52.:21:55.

It's very exposed up here. We're told they are safe and well. It was

:21:56.:22:00.

three Mountain Rescue teams involved in the search. And that coastguard

:22:01.:22:08.

helicopter. They've been taken to a local centre where they're being

:22:09.:22:10.

given a warm drink. Thank you. The number of families in temporary

:22:11.:22:12.

housing is at its highest for more than five years with more

:22:13.:22:15.

than a million in England and Wales The latest figures will be announced

:22:16.:22:18.

tomorrow but housing analysts are warning of a "perfect

:22:19.:22:22.

storm" of rising rents, benefit cuts and an acute shortage

:22:23.:22:24.

of affordable housing. The Government says they have a ?5

:22:25.:22:28.

million fund to help councils Our UK Affairs Correspondent Jeremy

:22:29.:22:31.

Cooke has this special report. Healthcare assistant Natasha,

:22:32.:22:38.

and Henry, just turned nine. A small family overwhelmed

:22:39.:22:44.

by a giant housing crisis. At the same time,

:22:45.:22:49.

it's our dining table. Two of them now sharing four

:22:50.:22:53.

walls, one room, one bed. Among thousands now in

:22:54.:23:02.

temporary accommodation. We first met Natasha

:23:03.:23:06.

when she was facing eviction from her West London

:23:07.:23:13.

flat six months ago. A working mum who fell

:23:14.:23:15.

behind on her rent. The council says it's tried to help

:23:16.:23:18.

but the few places on offer are too expensive or too

:23:19.:23:22.

far away from her job. I can't sleep because

:23:23.:23:26.

of the situation. How can a human being who's working,

:23:27.:23:29.

earning money, you don't enjoy life. She went to the doctors

:23:30.:23:35.

and her blood pressure was up. I got upset because I knew the first

:23:36.:23:46.

thing it was this house It may be centred on London, but

:23:47.:23:52.

this is a national housing crisis. With soaring rents, benefit cuts

:23:53.:24:02.

and, now, more than a million people waiting for council houses which

:24:03.:24:06.

simply aren't there. The response is often crisis

:24:07.:24:12.

management, fire fighting, a sticking plaster on the symptoms

:24:13.:24:14.

of a wider housing crisis The people who are paying the price

:24:15.:24:19.

are ordinary families. Families like Hayley's,

:24:20.:24:27.

stuck in a temporary one-bedroom flat for more than a year

:24:28.:24:30.

with four children. The council house waiting list

:24:31.:24:34.

makes grim reading. Here, it's two rooms

:24:35.:24:38.

for five people. After all this time,

:24:39.:24:46.

the temporary is feeling permanent. It feels like it's

:24:47.:24:51.

never going to end. Hayley, originally from

:24:52.:24:54.

South Africa, was working. But divorce meant eviction,

:24:55.:24:58.

unemployment and then, this place. The council says it is

:24:59.:25:02.

trying to help her. I don't feel anybody

:25:03.:25:06.

thinks I'm important. It is a crisis which will have

:25:07.:25:21.

a profound impact on many young lives as they grow up

:25:22.:25:33.

with no place to call home. Jeremy Cooke, BBC News,

:25:34.:25:35.

London. He's ranked 772nd in the world,

:25:36.:25:41.

coaches at Warwick Boat Club and almost quit tennis

:25:42.:25:45.

earlier this year. But, this afternoon,

:25:46.:25:51.

Briton Marcus Willis stepped out to face Roger Federer

:25:52.:25:53.

on Centre Court at Wimbledon. against the man who's won 17 Grand

:25:54.:25:55.

Slam titles? Our Sports Correspondent

:25:56.:26:00.

Joe Wilson is there. Centre Court on Wednesday afternoon.

:26:01.:26:09.

What an earth is Marcus Willis doing here? He's supposed to be back in

:26:10.:26:13.

Warwick. There are people here want can their tennis lessons. Well,

:26:14.:26:18.

sorry, your coach is taking on Roger Federer! Wherever Willis treads so

:26:19.:26:30.

goes the Will Barmy Army. And th will you don't get to world 772

:26:31.:26:36.

without having skills on court. Even against the greatest of all time.

:26:37.:26:42.

COMMENTATOR: This is unbelievable. Ah Federer won the game. Those who

:26:43.:26:47.

know Willis know he has ability. Maybe not always the application to

:26:48.:26:52.

fitness. Here, he was going to grab every moment. Sadly, the scoreboard

:26:53.:26:56.

told its own story as the first set went to the man who's won Wimbledon

:26:57.:27:02.

seven times. UMPIRE: Game, first set Federer,

:27:03.:27:07.

6-0. Centre Court wanted Willis to do himself justice. At the start of

:27:08.:27:11.

the second set he won his first game. Greeted as if he'd won the

:27:12.:27:19.

championship. Well, Willis lost that second set 6-3. Has just lost the

:27:20.:27:24.

third 6-4 and lost the match. There are limits to heroics. This is

:27:25.:27:31.

Wimbledon not Hollywood. He is Marcus Willis, not Bruce! Thank you.

:27:32.:27:33.

The covers have been in operation through the course of the afternoon

:27:34.:27:44.

in Wimbledon and will get another workout tomorrow. A shame it's not

:27:45.:27:50.

taking place in Fife. There was a hint of sunshine earlier on today.

:27:51.:27:54.

There will be further bouts of rain coming in across the UK over the

:27:55.:27:58.

next few days. Some places seeing a bit of sunshine at times. Overall,

:27:59.:28:02.

cool and blustery. Some lively conditions at the moment. Heavy

:28:03.:28:05.

showers over parts of Lincolnshire and the Midlands. They'll steadily

:28:06.:28:10.

fade. Persistent rain clearing from south-east England and south-east

:28:11.:28:13.

Scotland. Many of us dry overnight. Chilly over northern Britain.

:28:14.:28:17.

Temperatures in rural areas could drop down to single figures.

:28:18.:28:20.

Tomorrow morning, many places starting dry and bright with some

:28:21.:28:24.

sunshine. But, like the last few days, the cloud thickens up. Showery

:28:25.:28:28.

rain develops, particularly in the west and south. Nowhere immune from

:28:29.:28:32.

the showers tomorrow. It probably won't be as persistent the rain, not

:28:33.:28:36.

quite so soggy out there. Be prepared for outbreaks of rain

:28:37.:28:39.

particularly through the afternoon across the south. Those covers may

:28:40.:28:45.

well be needed at Wimbledon. Not too many showers across north-east

:28:46.:28:47.

England, south-east Scotland. Showery rain on and off through the

:28:48.:28:51.

day across Northern Ireland and western Scotland. Temperatures in

:28:52.:28:55.

many places struggling to get beyond the mid-teens. Friday is another day

:28:56.:29:00.

of sunshine and showers. Bands of showers tend to drift shoutwards.

:29:01.:29:05.

Aguessive showers. Heavy, thundery downpours likely during Friday

:29:06.:29:10.

afternoon and into the evening. More sunshine around. Temperatures a

:29:11.:29:16.

little higher. Many of us stuck in the lower to mid-teens. Change of

:29:17.:29:19.

month come the end of the week. Into the weekend, more of the same.

:29:20.:29:23.

Showers, some heavy on Saturday. More weather fronts approaching.

:29:24.:29:29.

More rain likely on Sunday. That's

:29:30.:29:30.

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