17/10/2012

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:00:08. > :00:14.Tonight at Ten. Another fall in unemployment, despite the recession,

:00:15. > :00:22.and a record number in work. The jobless total falls by 50,000. It's

:00:22. > :00:28.a landmark moment according to Ministers. Unemployment down 50,000

:00:28. > :00:31.this quarter. That's a success. The claimant down 4,000. That's a

:00:31. > :00:37.success. But Labour says too many jobs are part time, and long-term

:00:37. > :00:42.unemployment is on the rise. long-term unemployment, there are

:00:42. > :00:45.more people out of work for longer than at any time for two decades.

:00:45. > :00:48.That's happening on his watch. We'll be asking what the figures

:00:48. > :00:50.might tell us about the state of the economy. Also tonight: After

:00:50. > :01:00.last night football scuffles and allegations of racist chanting,

:01:00. > :01:01.

:01:01. > :01:05.Serbia is charged by UEFA. How much but cut them by?

:01:05. > :01:07.It's full throttle. In the second presidential debate, we'll be

:01:07. > :01:10.assessing the impact on the campaign. Energy companies will be

:01:10. > :01:13.forced by law to offer customers the cheapest available tariff.

:01:13. > :01:23.And a day late, England take on Poland in their World Cup qualifier

:01:23. > :01:49.

:01:49. > :01:53.Good evening. Despite the continuing recession, the number

:01:53. > :01:58.out of work has fallen again in most of the UK and there's a record

:01:58. > :02:01.number of people in employment. The Government says the latest figures

:02:01. > :02:04.are a real landmark. But Labour says the number of long-term

:02:04. > :02:13.jobless remains high and more people are having to accept part-

:02:13. > :02:17.time work. Our chief economics correspondent, Hugh Pym, reports.

:02:17. > :02:20.Whether it is on the ground or high above, jobs are being created.

:02:20. > :02:23.Developments like this are providing firmer foundations for

:02:23. > :02:28.the labour market. It may be in London but some of the thousands of

:02:28. > :02:35.jobs it is supporting are far from the capital. Those jobs are both

:02:35. > :02:38.within London and throughout the UK. Certain parts of this building are

:02:38. > :02:42.prefabricating offsite and are providing jobs in the north of

:02:43. > :02:47.England, Yorkshire and Scotland. From manufacturing to service

:02:47. > :02:50.industries, there are opportunities, as these young recruits at the

:02:50. > :02:54.hotel chain Premier Inn have discovered. Today they met the

:02:54. > :02:59.employment Minister, who hailed news that the total number of

:02:59. > :03:06.people in work in the economy have gone up again. These are landmark

:03:06. > :03:10.figures. More people in work than ever before. 170,000 people fewer

:03:10. > :03:16.on benefits since 2010. Unemployment is still quite a bit

:03:16. > :03:21.higher than five years ago. At the end of the economic boom it was 1.6

:03:21. > :03:26.million. It carried on rising last year before falling back in recent

:03:26. > :03:31.months to 2.5 million. So how can the economy be creating jobs when

:03:31. > :03:35.it is apparently in decline? Experts are puzzled about that.

:03:35. > :03:40.Some feel the output figures are pessimistic and when they are

:03:40. > :03:46.revised they will show the economy has been broadly flat rather than

:03:46. > :03:49.contracting. The pain has been more evenly shared than in previous

:03:49. > :03:53.recessions. Another issue is the increase the part-time work. Most

:03:53. > :03:58.of the jobs created in recent years have been part time. People are

:03:58. > :04:02.working fewer hours per week than they used to do, so therefore they

:04:02. > :04:07.can't produce as much output. don't have to go far from the City

:04:07. > :04:12.of London to find a lingering problem. Here the charity Lifeline

:04:12. > :04:16.organises training to help the long-term jobless in a programme

:04:16. > :04:20.funded by the Government. The total out of work for more than a year is

:04:20. > :04:25.rising. Penny is one of them. She's been looking for office work for

:04:25. > :04:31.two years but so far has found nothing. I have probably applied

:04:31. > :04:39.for about 500 jobs within that region. There's probably maybe 20

:04:39. > :04:42.or 30 responses of thank you but no thank you and the rest nothing. And

:04:42. > :04:48.that's frustrating. Labour claims that despite sessions like these,

:04:48. > :04:52.the Government isn't getting to grips with long-term unemployment.

:04:52. > :04:55.An incredible one third of people out of work have been out of work

:04:55. > :04:59.for a year. These are people the Government said they were going to

:04:59. > :05:08.help with their Work Programme. This is fresh evidence that that

:05:08. > :05:15.programme is comprehensively failing. The there's a slide right

:05:15. > :05:18.now the outlook seems fair. Live to Downing Street and our

:05:18. > :05:22.political editor, Nick Robinson. Nick, when Ministers say these are

:05:22. > :05:26.landmark figures, are they suggesting that we've turned a

:05:26. > :05:30.corner? They certainly wouldn't dare say that publicly. They

:05:31. > :05:36.remember the fate of Norman Lamb on the, who talked about green shoots

:05:36. > :05:38.of recovery when Chancellor in the 1990s. Privately they do talk at

:05:38. > :05:42.their surprise at these unemployment figures. There was an

:05:42. > :05:46.expectation that a recession this deep, this long, was bound to

:05:46. > :05:49.produce unemployment above 3 million. Indeed I was told today of

:05:50. > :05:55.one official forecaster who thought that if growth had been as flat as

:05:55. > :06:01.it has been, indeed that double dip recession, unemployment could have

:06:01. > :06:05.been 1.5 million higher than it has turned out to be. So as well as

:06:05. > :06:10.that surprise there's puzzlement and frustration. How can it be that

:06:10. > :06:14.the economy is apparently flat if not declining at the same time, as

:06:14. > :06:19.employment is going up? And there is a Bert awareness that the

:06:19. > :06:23.Chancellor when he stands up in seven weeks' time for his big,

:06:23. > :06:27.annual Autumn Statement, will have to unveil decisions on tax and

:06:27. > :06:33.spending which aren't about employment, but are about those

:06:33. > :06:36.growth figures. He may well have to announce to the country that he is

:06:36. > :06:39.off-target for his two crucial fiscal rules, the ones that say

:06:39. > :06:44.whether he is getting borrowing down and the deficit down, as he

:06:44. > :06:46.said he would. Yes, good news, but it is not really putting a huge

:06:46. > :06:49.smiles on ministerial faces. Nick, thank you.

:06:49. > :06:52.The Serbian Football Association has been charged by UEFA following

:06:52. > :06:54.allegations of racist chanting by Serbian fans at last night's match

:06:54. > :06:57.against the England Under-21 team. England also face a charge of

:06:57. > :07:00.misconduct after an outbreak of violence at the end of the game.

:07:00. > :07:06.The English FA says it has strong evidence that black players were

:07:06. > :07:16.targeted during the game, a claim strongly denied by the Serbs. Our

:07:16. > :07:17.

:07:17. > :07:21.sports correspondent, Dan Roan, has the latest. They were the scenes

:07:22. > :07:25.that shamed football. Players and coaches from England's under 21

:07:25. > :07:30.squad under physical and verbal attack after their match against

:07:30. > :07:35.Serb gentleman last night. Violence on the pitch and racist abuse from

:07:35. > :07:40.the stands. CHANTING And the Government has demanded

:07:40. > :07:45.football's authorities now act. think everybody is appalled by the

:07:45. > :07:49.scenes we saw last night. By any standards they are completely

:07:49. > :07:55.unacceptable. They should certain not have happened at a football

:07:55. > :07:59.match. We now want aif ta to take the toughest possible measures

:07:59. > :08:03.against those found guilty. Tonight both country's Football

:08:03. > :08:10.Associations were charged by UEFA for the behaviour of their players

:08:10. > :08:15.and the Serbian FA for the alleged chanting of their fans. Danny Rose

:08:15. > :08:19.angrily kicked the ball into the crowd and was sent off. The

:08:19. > :08:23.defender's gesture making it clear what abuse he felt he had been

:08:23. > :08:28.subject to throughout the game. The FA have backed the Sunderland

:08:28. > :08:34.player, insisting he and other black team-mates were provoked by

:08:35. > :08:40.what they called disgraceful racial abuse. It is quite clear that they

:08:40. > :08:46.are making monkey chants. Whether that's because of our Dan, there

:08:46. > :08:51.were other players as well, there was other black players in there as

:08:51. > :09:01.well and no doubt they were racially abused as well.

:09:01. > :09:06.

:09:06. > :09:11.Serbian FA remains defiant. St George's Park, the brand-new

:09:11. > :09:15.training base for England's under 21s symbolises a positive new era

:09:15. > :09:22.for the national sport. Today the FA lodged a formal complaint with

:09:22. > :09:25.UEFA for what it described as the disgraceful events in Serbia.

:09:25. > :09:28.John Terry must decide by tomorrow night whether to appeal against his

:09:28. > :09:34.four match ban after the former England Captain was found guilty by

:09:34. > :09:38.the FA of racially abusing opponent Anton Ferdinand. And some say

:09:38. > :09:42.glirbl football must get its own house in order. We are definitely

:09:42. > :09:46.vulnerable to cries of hypocrisy, because my opinion on this matter

:09:46. > :09:49.is that it is immaterial who you play for. It is immaterial who the

:09:49. > :09:53.player is. It is immaterial what country they are from. This isn't

:09:53. > :09:59.the first time that Serbian fans have been accused of racism. The

:09:59. > :10:02.country's FA was fined just �16,000 five years ago when another black

:10:02. > :10:05.England player suffered abuse. A much tougher penalty will be

:10:05. > :10:07.expected this time. In America, politicians and

:10:07. > :10:11.commentators have spent the day analysing last night's televised

:10:11. > :10:14.debate between Barack Obama and Mitt Romney. It was the second of

:10:14. > :10:18.three presidential encounters, with just three weeks to go to election

:10:18. > :10:21.day. Early polling suggests that President Obama was seen as the

:10:21. > :10:23.winner, unlike the first debate, which was declared a strong win for

:10:23. > :10:33.Mr Romney. Our North America editor, Mark Mardell, watched the latest

:10:33. > :10:34.

:10:34. > :10:39.In 19 days time there'll be only one winner. One man will be elected

:10:39. > :10:43.President, but now both are claiming victory in the big debate.

:10:43. > :10:46.The two men faced questions from the audience, which reflected the

:10:46. > :10:50.overwhelming worry - jobs and the economy. What can you say to

:10:50. > :10:55.reassure me but more importantly my parents that I will be able to

:10:55. > :10:57.support myself after I graduate? What's happened over the last four

:10:58. > :11:02.years has been very hard for America's young people. I want tow

:11:02. > :11:06.be able to get a job. I know what it takes to get this economy going.

:11:06. > :11:09.Mitt Romney says his five-point plan will create 12 million new

:11:09. > :11:13.plan. President Obama, under pressure after his dull, passive

:11:14. > :11:18.performance after the last debate, went on the attack. He doesn't have

:11:18. > :11:22.a five-point plan, he has a one- point plan. To the make sure that

:11:22. > :11:28.folks at the top play by a different set of rules. That's been

:11:28. > :11:32.his philosophy in the price or, and Governor and as a presidential

:11:32. > :11:37.candidate. They paced around each other, two alpha males used to

:11:37. > :11:42.getting their own way, determined to have the last word. Not true

:11:42. > :11:45.Governor Romney. How much did you cut it by then? They scared up

:11:45. > :11:48.uncomfortably close. I had a question and the question was how

:11:48. > :11:53.much did you cut them by? Do you want me to answer? I'm happy to

:11:54. > :11:59.answer the question. Alright, and it is... The tension was punctured

:11:59. > :12:05.bay moment by an odd phrase by Mitt Romney talking about equal

:12:05. > :12:11.opportunities. I went to a number of women's groups and asked them to

:12:11. > :12:21.find folks. The most ill tempered clash came over the murder of

:12:21. > :12:25.

:12:25. > :12:31.America's ambassador to Libya. let me call it an act of terrorism.

:12:31. > :12:34.Slapped down by the Moderator Mitt Romney found it hard to recover.

:12:34. > :12:43.took them a long time to say this was a terrorist act by a terrorist

:12:43. > :12:48.group. Am I incorrect in that regard? On Sunday your secretary...

:12:48. > :12:51.Excuse me. President Obama strode over, intimidating his floundering

:12:51. > :12:55.opponent. Some voters were shock by the brutality of the confrontations.

:12:56. > :12:58.A lots of the money points that Americans wanted to hear weren't

:12:59. > :13:02.heard because of the aggression. That kind of put me off. I didn't

:13:02. > :13:07.think it was going to be as aggressive. I know that Mitt Romney

:13:07. > :13:11.is that way but I didn't think And become that aggressive May be

:13:11. > :13:15.offputting to some, but what this debate has done is put Obama back

:13:15. > :13:20.in the game. Quelled the fear of supporters that he didn't have the

:13:20. > :13:23.fight left in him. There's still everything to play for.

:13:23. > :13:26.Energy companies are to be forced to give customers the cheapest

:13:26. > :13:29.available tariff, according to the Prime Minister. Details of the

:13:29. > :13:32.initiative are expected to come in the Government's Energy Bill in the

:13:32. > :13:34.next few weeks. The move comes after a number of gas and

:13:34. > :13:42.electricity companies announced above inflation price increases.

:13:42. > :13:47.Our industry correspondent, John Moylan, is with me now. How would

:13:47. > :13:51.it work? Not very clear. Up until now, the onus has been on you and

:13:51. > :13:55.me to find ourselves the best energy deal by switching et cetera.

:13:55. > :13:58.Now the accepts from this is the onus will be on the companies to

:13:58. > :14:03.make sure we are on the best deal and perhaps force us on to the best

:14:03. > :14:06.deal as well. All we know is what the Prime Minister said today. He

:14:06. > :14:10.said the Government would legislate so that energy companies have to

:14:10. > :14:14.give the lowest tariff to their customers. I spoke to a Number Ten

:14:14. > :14:17.spokesperson who said they are looking at a number of options. One

:14:17. > :14:21.might be you receive a letter from your energy company telling you you

:14:21. > :14:25.could be on a better deal and they intend switching you to save money

:14:25. > :14:28.unless you choose to opt out. There's a sense of compulsion. In

:14:28. > :14:31.another part of Government, the department for energy, they are

:14:31. > :14:35.moving away from that sense of compulsion, simply saying not

:14:35. > :14:39.enough people are switching. They want more people to switch, and

:14:39. > :14:42.putting the emphasis on a greater obligation on firms to ensure that

:14:42. > :14:45.customers are on the best or the lowest tariff. There is confusion

:14:45. > :14:49.tonight. There's a sense of a policy which to be charitable

:14:49. > :14:54.hasn't been fully formed yet. The companies don't like it. They

:14:54. > :14:59.didn't know anything about it. These are the same companies that

:14:59. > :15:04.are asked to invest billion to keep the lights on in future. Tonight

:15:04. > :15:08.one of the main switching websites has warned that they've said this

:15:08. > :15:18.has to be a mistake. The unintended consequences of this would be to

:15:18. > :15:20.

:15:20. > :15:22.The Government's Chief Whip, Andrew Mitchell, is reported to have been

:15:22. > :15:25.criticised by several Conservative MPs at a meeting this evening,

:15:25. > :15:28.where they discussed his confrontation with a police officer

:15:28. > :15:32.outside Downing Street. Labour has renewed its call for Mr Mitchell to

:15:32. > :15:36.be sacked. An almighty row between the Cabinet minister and police was

:15:36. > :15:40.always going to make the headlines but this just won't blow over. It's

:15:40. > :15:45.four weeks since police reported that Andrew Mitchell swore at them

:15:45. > :15:51.and called them plebs at the gits of Downing Street. Today pressure

:15:51. > :15:56.mounted at Mr Mitchell faced calls from Tory MPs to resign and rumours

:15:56. > :16:02.swept Westminster that his deputy wanted to quit. He usually stays

:16:02. > :16:06.behind the scenes. Today he was the focus of attention. What the Chief

:16:06. > :16:10.Whip did was wrong, that's why he had to apologise and apologise

:16:10. > :16:13.properly. It has been accepted by the officer concerned and the head

:16:13. > :16:17.of the Metropolitan Police. Mitchell looked uncomfortable as Ed

:16:17. > :16:22.Miliband said he should have been arrested like any other yob who had

:16:22. > :16:26.sworn at police and he seized on reports that the Chief Whip had

:16:26. > :16:30.headed off to an exclusive private members club after the

:16:30. > :16:34.confrontation. While it is a nit in a cell for the yobs, it is a night

:16:34. > :16:37.in the Carlton Club for the Chief Whip. Isn't that the clearest case

:16:37. > :16:40.there could be of total double standards. He doesn't want to talk

:16:40. > :16:44.about how we build on our record in unemployment. He has no plans. He

:16:44. > :16:52.doesn't want to talk about how we reform we will faifrplt he is

:16:52. > :16:56.opposed to welfare caps. That is the truth. -- how we will reform

:16:56. > :17:00.welfare. He has nothing serious to say.

:17:00. > :17:05.say I practise class war and they go around calling people plebs. It

:17:05. > :17:09.is good it seat Cabinet in their place roping him in public but in

:17:09. > :17:13.the newspapers he is undermined. His position is untenal. In other

:17:13. > :17:17.words, he's toast. Later Mr Mitchell's deputy was said to be on

:17:17. > :17:20.the verge of quitting. He met the Prime Minister in Downing Street

:17:21. > :17:25.and Number Ten insisted there would be no resignations. Tonight

:17:25. > :17:28.Conservative MPs spent more than half an hour in a room upstairs

:17:28. > :17:31.discussing Andrew Mitchell's future. He may be the Chief Whip, the man

:17:31. > :17:35.supposed to be in charge of party discipline but several spoke out

:17:35. > :17:38.against him, some calling for him to resign. Senior Conservative

:17:38. > :17:42.sources acknowledge that Mr Mitchell has been weakened by this

:17:42. > :17:47.whole affair and they say he'll have to rebuild relationships with

:17:47. > :17:51.colleagues in the coming months. REPORTER: Prime Minister is it time

:17:51. > :17:54.for Mr Mitchell to go? Many believe Mr Cameron has missed his chance to

:17:54. > :18:02.sack Andrew Mitchell, the damage has already been done.

:18:02. > :18:10.Coming up: Wayne Rooney on target as England

:18:10. > :18:14.strike first but it is a draw against Poland.

:18:14. > :18:17.Now leading universities in England should provide weekly grants to A-

:18:18. > :18:22.level students from poorer backgrounds to help them win

:18:22. > :18:24.university places. It's one of the main recommendations by the former

:18:24. > :18:27.Labour minister Alan Milburn who will publish a report tomorrow on

:18:27. > :18:30.higher education and social mobility. He says more attention

:18:30. > :18:37.should be paid to the applicant's background when university places

:18:37. > :18:41.are decided. Getting pupils from poorer

:18:41. > :18:46.backgrounds into top universities has proved a hard nut to crack. Too

:18:46. > :18:50.few applicants with too few A grades among them are major factors.

:18:50. > :18:54.It is an issue for ministers, schools and universities. A day out

:18:54. > :19:00.at an Oxford college from 14 and 15-year-olds from ordinary schools.

:19:00. > :19:04.Oxford does this outreach work regularly in an effort to demystify

:19:04. > :19:07.the place and encourage them to apply It is a really good. Off

:19:07. > :19:11.taste of something different and new that you don't normally do. It

:19:11. > :19:15.is nice to see what it is like to be at university. Everyone deserves

:19:15. > :19:20.a chance. It doesn't matter what ethnic background, or what your

:19:20. > :19:23.parents are like. Number of students from poorer backgrounds

:19:24. > :19:27.has gone up significantly in the last 15 years or so but not at the

:19:27. > :19:33.most selective universities. Oxford now says it is casting its net

:19:33. > :19:38.wider to try to get a broader range of students. I'm studying

:19:38. > :19:41.interactive media. The Government's social be mobility advisor Alan

:19:41. > :19:45.Milburn wants all universities to go further. He says they spend

:19:46. > :19:52.hundreds ve mill yonges of reduced fees and bursaries from poorer

:19:52. > :19:56.students, defined as those on free school meals or those from

:19:56. > :20:00.neighbourhoods where few go ton higher education. He says they

:20:00. > :20:05.should invest earlier. Rather than spending this money on hopeless

:20:05. > :20:09.things like fee-waivers that have no impact on who gets into

:20:09. > :20:14.university, they should instead take some of that money, and

:20:14. > :20:18.apolyit to kids who are studying in disadvantaged schools, in hard-

:20:18. > :20:24.pressed areas, to give them a financial incentive. He wants

:20:24. > :20:29.universities to fund a new education maintenance a lowance

:20:29. > :20:33.which was scrapped in England and led to protests.

:20:33. > :20:42.He wants a cheaper scheme with money taken from bursaries. Abbey

:20:42. > :20:46.is from a low income family and got into Oxford after coming from a

:20:46. > :20:52.summer school. She says getting a bursary really helps. I wouldn't

:20:52. > :20:57.have been able to join in with all of the social aspects and I would

:20:57. > :21:03.have felt left out. Alan Milburn wants social background routinely

:21:03. > :21:07.considered when the universities make offers. I think that's the

:21:07. > :21:10.most controversial aspect of all of the different reports that Alan

:21:10. > :21:13.Milburn has produced, whether or not universities should target

:21:13. > :21:18.particular applicants because of the kind of school they go to. We

:21:18. > :21:21.have always been opposed to the idea of targets or quotas of that

:21:21. > :21:27.kind. These are just recommendation bus if they are acted on, they

:21:27. > :21:31.could change the social make-up of England's top universities.

:21:31. > :21:34.Now in the US a man has been arrested over an alleged plot to

:21:34. > :21:38.detonate what he believed to be a massive bomb in front of the

:21:38. > :21:42.Federal Reserve building in New York. The FBI says the man, from

:21:42. > :21:46.Bangladesh, was tracked by agents who sold him fake explosives. Let's

:21:46. > :21:50.talk to our correspondent Barbara Plett in New York. What do you

:21:50. > :21:52.have? Well we are told by the Justice Department that this

:21:52. > :21:56.Bangladeshi man arrived in the United States back in January with

:21:56. > :22:02.the intention of carrying out a terrorist attack here. But when he

:22:02. > :22:07.tried to recruit people to help him, he inadvertently contacted an. If

:22:07. > :22:10.bi. Informer and he was closely monitored. It was an FBI agent

:22:10. > :22:16.pretending to be an Al-Qaeda facilitator who supplied him with

:22:16. > :22:21.what he thought was explosives. The agent was with him this morning

:22:21. > :22:25.when he assembled what he thought was a 1,000 lb bomb and parked it

:22:25. > :22:28.next to the Federal Reserve bang and when he tried to detonate it.

:22:28. > :22:32.He was arrested immediately afterwards. Clearly this was a

:22:32. > :22:34.sting operation, with all the intended pitfalls of possible

:22:34. > :22:39.entrapment which the agents would have been aware of. They followed

:22:39. > :22:43.him right to the toned try to get as much evidence as possible to try

:22:43. > :22:47.to use against him in court. -- followed him right to the end.

:22:47. > :22:52.jury has failed to reach a verdict in the case of a man accused of

:22:52. > :22:55.supplying a gun to Mark Duggan, whose fatal shooting by police

:22:55. > :22:59.sparked the riots in August last year. Kevin Hutchinson-Foster was

:22:59. > :23:04.accused of selling or transferring a prohibited firearm to Mr Dug dau,

:23:04. > :23:09.charge he denied. The trial has revealed new details about the

:23:09. > :23:13.shooting. -- Mr Duggan. This is Kevin Hutchinson-Foster,

:23:13. > :23:17.now facing re-trial after a jury failed to reach a verdict on

:23:17. > :23:21.whether he'd supplied this gun to a man who became famous for all the

:23:21. > :23:25.wrong reasons. That man was Mark Duggan, shot dead

:23:25. > :23:30.by police, in August last year. A killing that sparked the Tottenham

:23:31. > :23:34.riots and all the unrest across England that followed.

:23:34. > :23:37.These images of Mark Duggan on the ground surrounded by paramedics

:23:37. > :23:41.showed the aftermath of the shooting but for the past three

:23:41. > :23:47.weeks a court has heard for the first time evidence of what came

:23:47. > :23:49.first. This is the spot where the minicab in which Mark Duggan was

:23:49. > :23:53.travelling was intercepted by police. They say as he got out of

:23:53. > :23:56.the cab he pulled a gun from the waistband of his trousers. They

:23:56. > :24:01.thought he was going to shoot so, they fired first. But they were the

:24:01. > :24:05.only witnesses who said they saw Mark Duggan holding a gun.

:24:05. > :24:09.There were conflicting accounts of what happened. After Mark Duggan

:24:09. > :24:13.fell to the ground, no gun was found on him. One eye witness told

:24:13. > :24:20.the court she saw police take a gun from the minicab. But police say

:24:20. > :24:26.they found it at least 12 feet away, to the other side of railings.

:24:26. > :24:28.Loaded but not fired, and with no trace of Mark Duggan's finger

:24:28. > :24:33.sprints. Kevin Hutchinson-Foster admitted he himself had borrowed

:24:33. > :24:37.the gun a week earlier. He used it to beat a barber at this Hackney

:24:37. > :24:40.hair salon, now under different ownership. He denied giving it to

:24:40. > :24:43.Mark Duggan. This firearm was being moved around or it is suggested

:24:43. > :24:48.that it was being moved around from one criminal to another criminal.

:24:48. > :24:52.It was being leased or loaned in order to scare, intimidate, maybe

:24:52. > :24:55.not necessarily to commit a crime such as a murder, maybe, but

:24:55. > :24:59.clearly to intimidate and frighten another person. The trial has told

:24:59. > :25:03.us much more than we ever knew about the shooting of Mark Duggan

:25:03. > :25:11.but key questions remain unanswered. Was he holding a gun? And were the

:25:11. > :25:16.police right to shoot him? Football and England took on Poland

:25:16. > :25:19.in Warsaw this afternoon in a World Cup qualifier. The match was called

:25:19. > :25:26.off yesterday after the heavy rain flooded the pitch. There are mixed

:25:26. > :25:30.fortunes for England. The calm after the storm. After

:25:30. > :25:34.Tuesday's washout, Warsaw basked once more in glorious sunshine and

:25:34. > :25:39.those England fan that is managed to stay on arrived for the game

:25:40. > :25:44.with bags packed and plans to make quick gettaways. I could make the

:25:44. > :25:49.first half and then a mad dash to the airport. I have an 8.00 flight.

:25:49. > :25:55.I have a 5.00 flight. When they kick-off I will be taking off.

:25:55. > :25:58.extra rest worked in Poland's favour and pe thought England under

:25:58. > :26:03.pressure. Robert Lewandowski wasting one of a number of chances

:26:03. > :26:07.created by the hosts. Then against the run of play, Wayne Rooney took

:26:07. > :26:14.advantage of poor Polish marking. It could have been 2-0 midway

:26:14. > :26:19.through the second half but Rooney for once lacked his usual composure

:26:19. > :26:22.on the heavy surface that. Scoreline would have been unfair on

:26:22. > :26:26.the Polish and with 17 minutes to go, they got their reward. It was

:26:26. > :26:29.left to England's manager to acknowledge after the game, that it

:26:29. > :26:33.wasn't his team's night. Well, I'm pleased we didn't lose the game. I

:26:33. > :26:36.don't think it was one of our better performances. I maybe

:26:36. > :26:41.underestimated the fact that we had to stay the extra night and that

:26:41. > :26:47.the pitch was a little bit sodden. There was disappointment from both

:26:47. > :26:55.players and manager alike over the level of performance on the