21/02/2017 BBC News at Six


21/02/2017

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The Court of Appeal rules against a heterosexual couple

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who want to enter into a civil partnership, at present restricted

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Charles Keidan and Rebecca Steinfeld want legal recognition

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of their relationship, without getting married.

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There is so much in the ruling, together with our supporters

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incredible support, gives us reason to be positive and keep going.

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The couple say they hope to take their case to the Supreme Court.

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Plans to reform NHS care could mean hospital services cut or scaled back

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in the majority of areas in England.

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A British Islamic State fighter who died in a bomb

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attack in Iraq was - the BBC understands -

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a former detainee at Guantanamo Bay.

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A cash bonanza for the Treasury - strong tax receipts leave

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the government with a healthy surplus in January.

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And the bite that cost the Sutton United reserve goalie his job.

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And coming up in the sport on BBC News, Manchester City's manager

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prepares to face Monaco tonight in the last 16 of

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A heterosexual couple have lost their court battle

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to have a civil partnership, rather than be married.

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Civil partnerships give relationships legal recognition,

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and are currently only available to same-sex couples.

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Rebecca Steinfeld and Charles Keiden claimed that was discriminatory.

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But today, the Court of Appeal rejected their arguments,

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as our Legal Affairs Correspondent Clive Coleman reports.

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Emerging from court, Charles Keidan and Rebecca Steinfeld,

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a heterosexual couple fighting for the right to enter

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All three of the judges agreed we're being treated differently

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because of our sexual orientation and that this impacts our

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All three rejected the argument that we could just get married.

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All three emphasised that the government cannot maintain

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In December 2014, Charles and Rebecca were stopped

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from registering their notice of intention to form

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a civil partnership by their local registry office.

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defined as a relationship between two people of the same sex.

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Civil partnerships confirm virtually all

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of the same rights and responsibilities as marriage,

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including the right to be next of kin and access to a partner's

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Cohabitees have none of these rights.

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The couple had argued the ban on heterosexuals entering civil

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All three judges found that the ban on heterosexual couples

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entering into civil partnerships was potentially

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in breach of their human rights and discriminatory.

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But two of the judges found that the different treatment

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of same-sex and opposite sex couples was justified by the government's

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policy on civil partnerships, which is to wait and see how many

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same-sex couples want to enter into one, rather

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Charles and Rebecca are not giving up, and have started the

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process of appealing to the Supreme Court.

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And that technicality was that the other two

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judges felt that the government should have just a little more time

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But what we conclude is that the government

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really is on borrowed time, and has to act.

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Ministers have welcomed the court's ruling and say they

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The government has to wake up and smell the coffee.

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There is a growing feeling this needs to happen.

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There is a growing appreciation backed up by the court today

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that this is an inequality that cannot go on.

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Although they lost today, Rebecca Steinfeld and Charles Keidan

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may well have changed the direction of travel in the legalisation

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of civil partnerships for heterosexual couples.

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Clearly the judges are saying the government

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Absolutely, the government has actually been wrestling with this

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almost from the moment they invented same-sex marriage, which became

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legal in March 20 14. Within months they ordered a review which simply

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told them that the public is deeply divided on the issue. Keeping them

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as they are and extending them to all, or abolishing them completely.

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The survey showed the public opposed all of those options and because of

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the lack of concern since, the government decided they would do

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nothing at all. As Clive said, they would wait and see. They want to see

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what will happen to civil partnerships, we have some early

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data. Numbers of new civil partnerships have fallen

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dramatically, we have seen thousands of couples who were in a civil

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partnership convert that into a same-sex marriage. But not

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everybody. In the end, there is the conundrum for the government. Having

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invented civil partnerships, you cannot and invent them. Today's

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ruling equally makes it crystal clear that they cannot sit on the

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fence any longer. Mark, many thanks. -- un-invent.

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Hospital services in nearly two-thirds of England could be

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cut or scaled back - in an attempt to improve efficiency.

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BBC analysis of local plans across 44 areas found that 28

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of them affected hospital care - from full closures - to centralising

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NHS England argues that the plans will allow them to put

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more resources into care in the community.

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NHS budgets in England are rising, but patient demand is growing

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Now each local area has been told to come up with a plan to

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At this Nottingham trust, seen here recently, they want to

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shift resources out of hospitals, and into the community.

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Is somebody is in a hospital bed, that costs a

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If that could be better spent, by giving people

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the care they need in the community, then we can reinvest that money into

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But the plan involves cutting 200 hospital beds

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at two sites, and local campaigners are concerned that patient care will

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If we take out 200 beds, have we got the real capacity and

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professionalism to deal with those in the community?

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We've seen massive cuts in social care and we need to

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be sure we can have the full, professional capacity to treat those

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The NHS in England is under extreme pressure, simply trying to

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Budgets are over stretched, so trying to carry out an ambitious

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transformation programme, which itself requires more investment,

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Local health and social care leaders in England

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have drawn up what are known as "sustainability and transformation

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BBC analysis has found that in 28, cuts to services are proposed.

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These include plans to downgrade A units, schemes to centralise

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maternity services, and to close some hospitals.

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With resources being invested elsewhere.

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Hi, I am Cathy. I've come to see how you are?

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The plans also involve concentrating specialist

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care in centres of excellence, for one part of London, cancer experts

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are being brought together in one hospital.

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Covering a population close to 4 million.

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Having a big team means we've been able to think

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of new models of giving treatment to patients close to their home.

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A good example is breast cancer chemotherapy, where we are now

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testing a model where patients can self administer their drugs in their

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In Scotland, integration plans involve hubs where GPs work

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alongside social services and pharmacists.

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Welsh local authorities and NHS bodies are required to pool

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Each part of the UK is coming up with its own solutions to the big

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More than 3000 people are trafficked into the UK every year,

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according to official statistics, and that number is rising.

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They come from all over the world, but by far the biggest share

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In 2015, this relatively small country accounted for over

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600 potential victims, about a fifth of the total.

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Of those, the vast majority were female, and most of them

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The authorities in Albania have been criticised for failing to crack down

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on the problem with just 18 convictions last year.

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I've been speaking to some of the victims.

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Blessed with natural beauty, but the centre of a dark trade.

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Albania has over two decades built up a brutal industry,

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TRANSLATION: I hate them, and I want them to get

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This girl, still a teenager, was just 14 when she was sold

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into a trafficking ring by a man that she thought was her boyfriend.

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She was forced to sleep with several men a day and tells of a bewildering

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and terrifying world of abuse, in which she could trust no one.

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TRANSLATION: We were terrified, they would beat us up

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To be controlled by someone, to be used as I was is totally degrading.

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She lives here, in a refuge for trafficked women

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But these are schoolgirls, and some already have

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She helped to put some of hers behind bars.

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Several convicted traffickers are held here in this

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Some here are serving 20 years or more.

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The Albanian authorities let us talk to one of them.

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He was sentenced to 15 years for trafficking children to Greece,

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and forcing them to work as prostitutes or beggars.

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What made him, a married man with his own children,

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TRANSLATION: It was a time where everyone was doing

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You used a child in order to earn some money.

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TRANSLATION: It's terrible, what if that were my child?

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He faced justice, but Albania has been criticised

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for a lack of prosecutions, and there are concerns

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Some senior figures question whether trafficking is a real

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problem, but the official line is that there are systems

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It's not an increasing trend, it is kind of constant but it has

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to be tackled properly and have all of those factors

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But Albania still tops the list of people trafficked into Britain.

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People duped into promises of a better life, like Anna.

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She is now in a safe house in the UK, duped into leaving home,

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She weeps throughout our interview, but insists she wants

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TRANSLATION: I was somewhere underground.

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I had no sense of the world around me.

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And is now supported in this safe house, run by the Salvation Army.

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She has a baby which gives her a reason to carry on.

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Her story should trigger alarm in authorities

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A broken life caused by a brutal crime.

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That was Anna, one of the young women I spoke to, from Albania.

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The BBC understands that a British fighter with self-styled

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Islamic State who died in a suicide bomb attack on Iraqi forces

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in Mosul is a former detainee at Guantanamo Bay.

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With me is our security correspondent Frank Gardner.

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What more do we know about this? He spent two years in detention at

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Guantanamo Bay, having been picked up first in Pakistan in 2001, then

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transferred to Afghanistan and taken them back. His original name, he was

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born Ronald Fiddler, he was 50 when he died, he blew himself up a few

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days ago, and he was released in 2004. He was brought to Britain, one

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newspaper said he was paid ?1 million in compensation. Ten years

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later, he crossed from Turkey into Syria, presenting himself to

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so-called Islamic State saying he did not know much about Islam, but

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wanted to be a fighter. His wife and family followed him and begged him

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to change his mind. They feed for their lives to escape from IS

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territory. There's an official recruitment paper by so-called

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Islamic State, which has his Islamic name on it, she changed his name to

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Jamal al-Harith. He was then given a nickname. Rather than staying as a

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fighter, he volunteered for a server side mission. It is believed a few

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days ago, in Mosul. -- suicide mission. Isis released a picture of

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him smiling, driving to his mission, before he blows himself up. Thank

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you. The Court of Appeal rules

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against a heterosexual couple who want to enter into a civil

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partnership, without Just been kicked off the plane,

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not going to New York. Why was this teacher from Wales,

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travelling with his pupils, removed from a flight

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to the United States? And coming up in the sport on BBC

:14:25.:14:29.

News, Manchester City's manager The pie that forced the satin

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reserve goalkeeper to resign, it -- as part of an investigation into a

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breach of rules. A Muslim school teacher

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from South Wales says he felt humiliated after being removed

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from a flight to New York whilst Juhel Miah was escorted off a plane

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in Iceland despite having a valid The incident happened a week

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after judges in the US ruled a temporary halt

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on President Trump's travel ban. That's on the coach on the way to

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the airport. Juhel Miah, a maths teacher from Swansea, was meant to

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be going to New York on a school trip which had started in Iceland.

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But he was told by officials at Reykjavik airport he wasn't allowed

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to travel to the United States. Just been kicked off the plane, not going

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to New York. The whole experience made me feel like I'm something I'm

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not. They made me feel like I'm a criminal and I'm not. The way people

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looked at me, as if I was a problem and going to do something to them,

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that's how I felt. It was humiliating. The 25-year-old was

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told to wait in a nearby hotel until visiting the US embassy the

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following day. I had to keep in control. I'm glad I'm a teacher I

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suppose, otherwise I would have panicked. Unable to get help, Juhel

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came home. It has got the attention of the Welsh First Minister Carwyn

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Jones who said it appeared... "The UK Government's travel advice and

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agreement with the US government have been disregarded and that the

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incident looked like it was an act of discrimination against a UK

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passport holder". The local assembly member is also demanding answers.

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What Donald Trump has done is creating, in my opinion, a culture

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of discrimination. What happened to Juhel Miah is an example of that.

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It's wrong he should be put in that position. It's not clear why Juhel

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was taken off the plane. US officials have refused to comment.

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All he wants is an apology and for no one else to go through what he

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did. The government took in more money

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than it spent last month, according to the Office for National

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Statistics. The first month of the year

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traditionally sees a surplus, because of the high level

:17:06.:17:07.

of receipts from income tax. But at ?9.4 billion,

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the surplus last month With me is our economics editor

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Kamal Ahmed, this looks a lot better Well, we're used to talking about

:17:12.:17:22.

government Black holes when it misses its borrowing targets. But

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yes, here seem to be some green shoots. What's happening is the

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economy is performing a lot better than people expected after the

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referendum result. When the economy performs better and our wages

:17:35.:17:38.

increase, rather more quickly, people pay more tax, businesses pay

:17:39.:17:42.

more tax and that increases the receipts for the government. It

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means they are on course to beat their borrowing target that they set

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for the end of the year, for the end of March. What does that mean for

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the budget next month. The government has got more money than

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it may be thought it had. Probably not too radical, but it could spend

:17:58.:18:01.

more money on things like business rates, easing those higher bills

:18:02.:18:04.

that have been so crunchy version. Maybe a bit more money for the NHS

:18:05.:18:10.

and social care, easing some of those controversies and problems.

:18:11.:18:13.

Treasury officials I spoke to made it very clear, the government still

:18:14.:18:16.

wants to balance those government pics and it's still borrowing ?60

:18:17.:18:22.

billion a year. The Treasury at least is still worried. There could

:18:23.:18:27.

be a negative Brexit affect on the economy. If it's got any spare money

:18:28.:18:31.

it wants to keep it in case it needs to spend it in later years. Thank

:18:32.:18:33.

you. Police in Swindon have begun

:18:34.:18:36.

excavation work at the former home of Christopher Halliwell,

:18:37.:18:38.

who's serving a life sentence The 53-year-old killed

:18:39.:18:40.

Becky Godden in 2003 Officers are digging

:18:41.:18:43.

at two addresses, the work Five people have been killed

:18:44.:18:47.

after a light aircraft crashed into a shopping centre

:18:48.:18:54.

in Melbourne in Australia. Four Americans were onboard

:18:55.:18:56.

the charter flight. Their Australian pilot reported

:18:57.:19:00.

a "catastrophic engine failure" shortly after take-off

:19:01.:19:03.

from an airport nearby. No one on the ground is believed

:19:04.:19:07.

to have been injured. Next week Northern Ireland returns

:19:08.:19:22.

to the polls just nine months after Stormont's last election. The

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power-sharing government fell apart after Martin McGuinness resigned,

:19:27.:19:30.

amid a complete breakdown of relations between the DUP and Sinn

:19:31.:19:35.

Fein. Bitter words have fuelled memories of divisive elections from

:19:36.:19:44.

Northern Ireland's past. One place the polls can't help of his Northern

:19:45.:19:51.

Ireland... The real issue before the Ulster voters has not been power

:19:52.:19:55.

saving but power-sharing. In Northern Ireland it sometimes feels

:19:56.:19:58.

like the politics haven't changed much. Throughout the years both have

:19:59.:20:04.

often been presented as a battle between Irish nationalism and

:20:05.:20:06.

British unionism. It's clear those old divisions run deep in the bad

:20:07.:20:11.

blood of this current campaign. Nowadays in Northern Ireland we

:20:12.:20:14.

don't have enough respect for Orange men to walk down a road... APPLAUSE

:20:15.:20:22.

This heated election follows the collapse of Stormont's power-sharing

:20:23.:20:26.

government, and there is frustration among voters, following allegations

:20:27.:20:30.

of incompetence and corruption. It's time they got their act together,

:20:31.:20:34.

learn to work together and that power-sharing and all it stood for

:20:35.:20:40.

into practice. Ian Paisley's hard-line voice softened with age,

:20:41.:20:44.

he eventually lead the Democratic Unionist party into government with

:20:45.:20:48.

Sinn Fein. Ten years later there a new leader, and Irish republicans

:20:49.:20:51.

are once again being portrayed the enemy. If you feed a crocodile belt

:20:52.:20:58.

keep coming back and look for more. Arlene Foster was. The office of

:20:59.:21:03.

First Minister when Sinn Fein walked out of government, over a financial

:21:04.:21:07.

scandal surrounding a botched green energy initiative. She was the

:21:08.:21:11.

minister in charge when the scheme was designed inexplicably without

:21:12.:21:15.

cost controls, but she's not asking for forgiveness. She is fighting

:21:16.:21:18.

back with what are at times harsh words. That's not fair because I

:21:19.:21:23.

said I want devolution back up and running again so we can have

:21:24.:21:27.

stability for our people. Do you regret any of your words in the last

:21:28.:21:32.

month? Maybe that's a question you should ask other parties. When you

:21:33.:21:34.

look at the brutality of what happened to be in December and

:21:35.:21:38.

January, when you look at the rhetoric that was directed towards

:21:39.:21:42.

me, I think we should all look at our words. Stormont's opposition

:21:43.:21:49.

parties are back out on the Road, campaigning again, including the

:21:50.:21:54.

SDLP. But they all know that there is no guarantee of a news

:21:55.:21:57.

power-sharing deal, that means there is a chance that Westminster might

:21:58.:22:01.

have to take over government here at least for a period, through what's

:22:02.:22:06.

known direct rule. We could have exactly the same result or we could

:22:07.:22:09.

have changed in our politics. The problem is, if we get the same

:22:10.:22:14.

result, we end up with direct rule. Once we have direct rule I'm not

:22:15.:22:18.

sure we'll get the assembly back up and running again. With all the cosy

:22:19.:22:23.

appearances now gone at Stormont, the cross community Alliance party

:22:24.:22:26.

bully people have been given a taste of how better things have become. I

:22:27.:22:31.

think there is a danger that as we try to move forward, every time we

:22:32.:22:35.

have an election we get this sectarian, divisive rhetoric and it

:22:36.:22:39.

drags the community back to a place I didn't think we need to be. It

:22:40.:22:45.

sometimes fills like all politics is dominated by unionism or

:22:46.:22:48.

nationalism. But there are real issues worrying people including

:22:49.:22:52.

health, education, the economy and Brexit. I think the public have

:22:53.:22:56.

moved on and I think us as politicians have a bit of catching

:22:57.:23:03.

up to do. I then get depressed often -- I don't get depressed often but

:23:04.:23:06.

when I listen to one of the last debates, it did get me down. He said

:23:07.:23:15.

-- it had been a difficult ten years for the DUP and have been difficult

:23:16.:23:17.

because they don't want to share power. Martin McGuinness who made

:23:18.:23:22.

the journey from IRA leader to Deputy First Minister stepped down.

:23:23.:23:28.

Michelle O'Neal is the new leader and she doesn't have the

:23:29.:23:31.

paramilitary past of her predecessor. But she's been

:23:32.:23:36.

criticised for speaking at an IRA commemoration during this campaign.

:23:37.:23:43.

For young fellows that found themselves in extraordinary

:23:44.:23:47.

circumstances. They were also four young men who were involved in an

:23:48.:23:51.

IRA attack... Will always have a different narrative on the past but

:23:52.:23:55.

that's where we need to get to in society, where we understand that we

:23:56.:23:59.

have a different narrative. It's undeniable that the peace process

:24:00.:24:05.

has changed Northern Ireland for the better but pictures political

:24:06.:24:08.

togetherness seem somewhat dated now. It could take months to get an

:24:09.:24:11.

agreement that will allow power-sharing to return at Stormont.

:24:12.:24:15.

Chris Buchler, BBC News, Belfast. Sutton United's reserve goalkeeper

:24:16.:24:20.

has resigned from the club after being investigated by the FA

:24:21.:24:22.

for potentially Wayne Shaw was caught on camera

:24:23.:24:24.

eating a pie during the club's FA Before the match a bookmaker

:24:25.:24:28.

had offered odds on the Wayne Shaw eating, a pasty, he says.

:24:29.:24:45.

He's big, clearly, Sutton United's reserve goalkeeper, improbably. This

:24:46.:24:48.

that would bet. The company that sponsored Sultan's shirt had offered

:24:49.:24:53.

odds he would eat a pie. Speaking on the BBC at lunchtime, Wayne Shaw

:24:54.:24:58.

said he didn't infringe FA rules by betting on it himself, just claimed

:24:59.:25:01.

he was pleasing the crowd and was hungry. We are told we aren't

:25:02.:25:08.

allowed to gamble, because it's full-time football. I in no way put

:25:09.:25:12.

anyone in jeopardy of that. This is definitely not the case here. This

:25:13.:25:17.

is just a bit of fun and ultimately being hungry. Park reserve keeper,

:25:18.:25:22.

Wayne Shaw was part grounds men, part volunteer cheerleader at

:25:23.:25:26.

Sutton. He became a focal point of their joyous FA Cup run. But this

:25:27.:25:31.

afternoon got serious. The UK gambling commission concerned about

:25:32.:25:34.

novelty bets, said integrity and sport is not a joke and we've opened

:25:35.:25:39.

an investigation to establish exactly what happened. The FA

:25:40.:25:40.

equally unamused... In the light of all this, Sutton

:25:41.:25:54.

asked Wayne Shaw to resign. He did. The implications of it wide

:25:55.:25:58.

reaching. We didn't realise it has been staged for a bet. I think Wayne

:25:59.:26:03.

has made a bad error of judgment. The manager reckons 2000 people bet

:26:04.:26:08.

and one on the pie being eaten. If any of them were on Sutton's staff,

:26:09.:26:13.

they are in trouble. The indigestion has begun. Joe Wilson, BBC News.

:26:14.:26:16.

Time for a look at the weather, Here's Matt Taylor.

:26:17.:26:19.

We've had a couple of lovely mild days but it's not going to last.

:26:20.:26:25.

It's all change. We are going to take a canter through the seasons in

:26:26.:26:32.

reverse. We started with a skip through spring on Monday, with

:26:33.:26:38.

temperatures reaching 18 degrees. Some of you will be trudging through

:26:39.:26:41.

the snow by the end of the week has temperatures take a massive drop.

:26:42.:26:47.

Some stormy weather on the way too. Through this evening and overnight

:26:48.:26:51.

some lively wind to come. Northern Scotland in particular. Scotland and

:26:52.:26:55.

Northern Ireland will turn much drier. Thoroughly wet in north-west

:26:56.:26:59.

England throughout and staying damp across southern areas. We'll keep

:27:00.:27:02.

temperatures in double figures to take us into the morning. With

:27:03.:27:06.

clearer skies further north, is a distinct chill in the air. Split the

:27:07.:27:14.

country and tomorrow. Lively winds over Scotland to begin with, may

:27:15.:27:18.

reaching 80 miles an hour. Across Wales, the Midlands and southern

:27:19.:27:22.

England, a grey day in store. Particularly across the hills of

:27:23.:27:26.

central and west Wales. Rain and drizzle on and off. Temperatures

:27:27.:27:31.

into the teens. In the sunshine northern England, Scotland and

:27:32.:27:35.

Northern Ireland. As we head into Thursday the stormy weather begins.

:27:36.:27:44.

This is storm Doris. An Amber Warning is out. We could see some

:27:45.:27:49.

damage particularly across parts of England. 70, maybe 80 miles an hour.

:27:50.:27:55.

This could change subtly as we could see the other feature of birthday's

:27:56.:27:59.

weather, the snow. As much as ten centimetres. Thursday by and large

:28:00.:28:08.

after a wet start, windy throughout but many will brighten up throughout

:28:09.:28:11.

the day, particularly in southern and western areas. It is going to

:28:12.:28:15.

turn substantially colder. The wind is coming down through the north.

:28:16.:28:19.

That will lead into a frosty night to take us into Friday. We'll finish

:28:20.:28:23.

the week on Friday with a bit of sunshine around. One or two wintry

:28:24.:28:27.

showers and some sunshine before we see something a bit milder moving

:28:28.:28:35.

back into the wing -- into the weekend. Back to February once

:28:36.:28:36.

again. That's all from the BBC News at Six,

:28:37.:28:39.

so it's goodbye from me, and on BBC One we now join the BBC's

:28:40.:28:42.

news teams where you are.

:28:43.:28:45.

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