:00:12. > :00:15.A new budget for the European Union after 25 hours of negotiations, a
:00:15. > :00:19.deal is struck to cut spending. The prime minister says the agreement
:00:19. > :00:23.is good for Europe and for Britain. I think the British public can be
:00:23. > :00:27.proud that we have cut the seven- year credit card limit for the
:00:27. > :00:31.European Union for the first time ever. We will be looking at the
:00:31. > :00:38.details and assessing whether it is as good as he claims.
:00:38. > :00:44.Also tonight, after Findus, now Aldi discovers in fact contain 100%
:00:44. > :00:47.horsemeat. A woman abused by a child as a
:00:47. > :00:53.choirmaster who took her own life just days after giving evidence at
:00:53. > :00:55.his trial. Protests at the funeral of a
:00:55. > :01:00.Tunisian opposition leader whose murder has plunged the country into
:01:00. > :01:05.turmoil. And England's women cricketers
:01:05. > :01:10.struggle to defend their title in the World Cup in India.
:01:10. > :01:13.And coming up in Sportsday on the BBC News Channel, it is the battle
:01:13. > :01:23.of the Championship promotion hopefuls as Watford take on Crystal
:01:23. > :01:37.
:01:37. > :01:41.Good evening. David Cameron has hailed the deal on the budget for
:01:41. > :01:45.the European Union as something the British public can be proud of.
:01:45. > :01:49.After 25 hours of gruelling negotiations in Brussels, EU
:01:49. > :01:53.leaders agreed a budget of more than 900 billion euros over the
:01:53. > :01:57.next seven years, just over a 3% cut and spending. The Prime
:01:57. > :02:00.Minister said it was the first cut and a history of the European Union,
:02:00. > :02:04.but it is not clear whether European Parliament will approve it.
:02:04. > :02:09.From Brussels, Nick Robinson reports.
:02:09. > :02:12.It is the deal he was told could not be achieved, a deal to cut the
:02:12. > :02:15.EU budget. How close you feel you are?
:02:16. > :02:19.The deal for an age of austerity in which the Prime Minister ditched
:02:19. > :02:25.the limo in favour of an early morning stroll back to the
:02:25. > :02:29.negotiating table after a long, long night without sleep. At the
:02:29. > :02:33.end of another whole day of talking, David Cameron was proclaimed the
:02:33. > :02:36.winner. So I think the British public can be proud that we have
:02:36. > :02:40.cut the seven-year credit card limit for the European Union for
:02:40. > :02:47.the first time ever. Every previous time these multi-year deals have
:02:47. > :02:52.been agreed, spending has gone up. Not this time. Brussels awoke this
:02:52. > :02:56.morning to the news that inside the EU summit, few had been to bed.
:02:56. > :03:03.Journalists and politicians had spent the hours of darkness waiting
:03:03. > :03:07.to see who would blink first in the game of Euro-budget pogo. This has
:03:07. > :03:11.been a battle between the French President of the one hand and the
:03:11. > :03:15.British Prime Minister, a battle about how much money Europe needs
:03:15. > :03:20.and who should get it. The French media declared their President the
:03:20. > :03:25.loser. They said he had been abandoned by the German Chancellor.
:03:25. > :03:30.Francois Hollande put on a brave face. TRANSLATION: If you ask me,
:03:30. > :03:35.is this your dream budget, if it had been up to me, then no. Today's
:03:35. > :03:41.talks settled how much the European Union can spend up until the year
:03:41. > :03:47.2020. The budget for the last seven years set a ceiling on EU payments
:03:47. > :03:53.of 943 billion euros. The new budget ceiling is 35 billion lower,
:03:53. > :03:57.at 908. That is a cut of more than 3%. Britain's leading critic of the
:03:57. > :04:01.EU says that even this deal leaves the country pay more than it should.
:04:01. > :04:06.He has done as well as he could do, given the nature of the
:04:06. > :04:09.negotiations, but 40% of the money will go to billionaires and
:04:09. > :04:15.landowners. Nothing has been done to sort out the budget, and the
:04:15. > :04:19.British taxpayer is still getting a rotten deal. The deal done behind
:04:19. > :04:24.these windows will still see Britain's annual payments to the EU
:04:24. > :04:28.go in up, albeit less than they might have done. What you say to a
:04:28. > :04:32.British taxpayer who says, I do not care what Europe's total budget is,
:04:32. > :04:38.but I do care that Britain is spending more and more in Europe?
:04:38. > :04:41.Because of changes to our rebate in 2005, changes that Tony Blair made,
:04:41. > :04:49.that I vigorously opposed at the time, our net contributions were
:04:49. > :04:53.always going to go up. Prime minister, are you happy? Yes.
:04:53. > :05:02.Cameron has experienced isolation in Europe. Today he had allies and
:05:02. > :05:06.he got a deal. It is clear which Europe editor Gavin Hewitt is in
:05:06. > :05:12.Brussels for us. The Prime Minister is claiming this is a good deal, is
:05:12. > :05:17.it as good as he claims? Well, Fiona, an important marker was put
:05:17. > :05:23.down today. EU budgets do not just God, they can also come down, but
:05:23. > :05:28.was it really a modern reforming Budget? -- Go up. The largest item
:05:28. > :05:31.is still farm spending. The common agricultural policy is however
:05:31. > :05:35.coming down. The cost of administration have actually gone
:05:35. > :05:39.up since the last seven-year budget, and some say the money spent on
:05:39. > :05:44.perks and pay is still too high. And then there is a major hurdle
:05:44. > :05:48.ahead, because his budget has to be approved by the European Parliament,
:05:48. > :05:52.at some MPs are threatening to try to block it. They do not like
:05:52. > :05:55.seeing a budget coming down. Some are even talking about holding a
:05:55. > :05:59.secret ballot, so they will not be put under pressure by their
:05:59. > :06:03.national governments. David Cameron has already condemned that. But
:06:03. > :06:07.looking politically here in Europe, do not underestimate the
:06:08. > :06:11.significance that on a major issue, the German Chancellor, Angela
:06:11. > :06:15.Merkel, sided with the British Prime Minister over a French
:06:15. > :06:21.President. And what of course this means in the end, taxpayers,
:06:21. > :06:28.protecting the taxpayers' trumps, the deployment of further EU funds
:06:28. > :06:33.in the hope that it would boost growth.
:06:33. > :06:37.After Findus, it was the turn this evening of the supermarket chain
:06:37. > :06:42.beef ready meals are in fact entirely horsemeat. The products
:06:42. > :06:47.from both companies originated from a French supplier, Comigel. It
:06:47. > :06:49.claims the horsemeat came from an abattoir in Romania. Here the heads
:06:49. > :06:56.of suppliers and retailers have been called for a government summit
:06:56. > :07:03.tomorrow. Findus prides itself on using only
:07:03. > :07:08.the best ingredients. But in some of these meals, there may have been
:07:08. > :07:13.no beef, just horsemeat, and there is suspicion that contamination did
:07:13. > :07:18.not happen by accident. This is a very serious matter, and the FSA
:07:18. > :07:22.have been working with the police, and other police forces across
:07:22. > :07:26.Europe. If we find there is a criminal action, proceedings will
:07:26. > :07:30.follow. This is the French-owned factory where the ready meal was
:07:30. > :07:37.made. Tonight it has emerged that the horsemeat found here originally
:07:37. > :07:40.came from Romania. Findus did its first test at the end of January.
:07:40. > :07:46.Horsemeat was found, they quarantined ought the products and
:07:46. > :07:50.began more extensive tests. On February 4th, it told retailers to
:07:50. > :07:56.take the lasagne off the shelves. Two days later, detailed tests
:07:56. > :08:00.confirmed that some meals had up to 100% horsemeat. Now Aldi has said
:08:01. > :08:06.two of its own-brand frozen meals also contained horsemeat. It used
:08:07. > :08:11.the same supplier and says it will no longer stock its products. First,
:08:11. > :08:16.it was traces of horse DNA in beef burgers, millions have now been
:08:16. > :08:19.destroyed. Now it is frozen ready meals. The government and the
:08:19. > :08:25.authorities are stressing that there is no reason to believe these
:08:25. > :08:29.processed beef products are not safe. Our investigations have not
:08:29. > :08:32.identified any food safety risks, but what we have seen is completely
:08:32. > :08:38.unacceptable, so we are demanding the industry tested beef products
:08:38. > :08:43.as well as us independently testing them. Consumers, though, may need
:08:43. > :08:49.convincing. Four are the green, beef lasagne was a teatime
:08:49. > :08:53.favourite. Not any more. We have been eating them for years, and
:08:53. > :08:57.Findus is the only one way by because of the quality of the
:08:57. > :09:03.product. Will you be eating any more of these? Not know more we
:09:03. > :09:07.won't, definitely not! Findus were still not doing any interviews
:09:07. > :09:10.today's. They apologised on their website. Meanwhile, a leaked
:09:10. > :09:15.document suggested they could have been contamination since last
:09:15. > :09:20.August. This gamble is not just damaging for Findus. Consumer
:09:20. > :09:24.confidence in our food industry has also been dented. It has now been
:09:24. > :09:29.given just one week to run sample tests on all processed beef
:09:30. > :09:35.products. The question is, will it help restore trust in our high
:09:35. > :09:38.streets, or reveal a more widespread problem?
:09:38. > :09:43.The contamination scandal raises wider questions about whether the
:09:43. > :09:47.whole system of testing meat is fit for purpose. Chris Buckler has been
:09:47. > :09:51.looking at how the content of our food is scrutinised between the
:09:51. > :09:54.farm and the fork. There has never been a market for
:09:54. > :09:58.horsemeat within the UK, but beef is big business, and there are
:09:58. > :10:03.strict rules to try to ensure that it is traceable. All the cattle
:10:03. > :10:08.within the UK at birth are given an ear tag, and it contains a unique
:10:08. > :10:12.number. When we have registered them, they send us a passport, so
:10:12. > :10:17.every animal has a unique passport. These safeguards are for cattle,
:10:17. > :10:20.but something is clearly going wrong if horse is ending up in
:10:20. > :10:25.products branded as beef, and some farmers believe retailers are
:10:25. > :10:29.responsible. It has to be the supermarkets, because they are
:10:30. > :10:35.pushing the processor to produce a cheap product. In turn, the
:10:35. > :10:38.processor then has to go and buy a cheap meat. It is not easy to buy
:10:38. > :10:42.cheap meat within the UK because of the fact that we are heavily
:10:42. > :10:46.regulated. In general, British consumers have seen a big
:10:46. > :10:52.difference between eating beef and horsemeat. At the heart of this
:10:52. > :10:55.scandal is not a health scare but questions of taste and culture. Up
:10:55. > :10:57.however, there could be serious implications for processes and
:10:57. > :11:02.suppliers as consumers start to question of the systems in place
:11:02. > :11:06.can really trace meat all the way from farms to their faults. All
:11:06. > :11:11.cattle across the UK should have a passport, stating details including
:11:11. > :11:15.where they are from. That paperwork travels with the animal into the
:11:15. > :11:19.food chain so that at each age meat can be traced back to its origin,
:11:19. > :11:22.even if it is processed. Once animals reached the abattoir, and
:11:23. > :11:27.at points further down the food chain, the Food Standards Agency
:11:27. > :11:32.carries out spot checks. Those tests focus on safety and hygiene,
:11:32. > :11:35.and sometimes check if the meat is what it is stated to be. Suppliers
:11:35. > :11:38.and producers are legally responsible for that labelling.
:11:38. > :11:41.They all have to trust each other that basically what they are doing
:11:41. > :11:45.is what they say they are doing, and that is the way this system
:11:45. > :11:52.works. Sometimes it breaks down, and we need to pay more attention
:11:52. > :11:54.to sharpening up the edges of it. It was BSE that changed this
:11:54. > :11:57.industry in the 1990s. Animals were destroyed because of the dangers
:11:57. > :12:01.they brought to the human food chain. That is why tight
:12:01. > :12:07.regulations were put in place. think this is a very serious fraud
:12:07. > :12:10.in one part of a complicated food chain. This is not the fault of
:12:11. > :12:15.British farming. The responsibility may live far away from this
:12:15. > :12:19.country's farms, but everyone involved in providing food needs to
:12:19. > :12:23.find a way of reassuring those buying it.
:12:23. > :12:32.A court has heard how the man accused of killing two police
:12:33. > :12:37.officers in Greater Manchester lure them to a house with a bogus 999
:12:37. > :12:40.call. The court heard he fired 30 bullets at the police officers when
:12:40. > :12:43.he opened the front door. He denies their murder.
:12:43. > :12:46.Two man who stabbed to death an innocent student after they were
:12:46. > :12:51.paid to carry out a killing that targeted the wrong house have been
:12:51. > :12:55.jailed for a minimum of 40 years each. 17-year-old Aamir Siddiqi was
:12:55. > :12:59.murdered on the doorstep of his Cardiff home in front of his
:12:59. > :13:09.parents in April 2010. Jason Richards and Ben Hope were told by
:13:09. > :13:12.
:13:12. > :13:16.the judge that few would shed a A woman who was sexually abused as
:13:16. > :13:19.a child by a choirmaster took her own life just days after giving
:13:19. > :13:22.evidence at his trial. Frances Andrade was a gifted violinist at
:13:22. > :13:25.Chetham's School of Music. She was indecently assaulted by Michael
:13:25. > :13:28.Brewer and his ex-wife Hilary between 1978 and 1982. The jury was
:13:29. > :13:32.not told of Mrs Andrade's death until the trial concluded today. Ed
:13:32. > :13:42.Thomas was in Manchester Crown Court and sent this report, which
:13:42. > :13:42.
:13:42. > :13:47.The family said she was a brave, loving mother and talented
:13:47. > :13:51.violinist, but Frances Andrade was abused as a teenager by a man she
:13:51. > :13:57.trusted, and just days after she described her ordeal in court, she
:13:57. > :14:00.took her own life. Her abuser was Michael Brewer, a teacher and
:14:01. > :14:06.musician once described as inspirational. Today, his family
:14:06. > :14:11.watched as he was found guilty of indecent assault, a verdict that
:14:11. > :14:15.came too late for Frances Andrade. Tragically, she is not here to see
:14:15. > :14:19.justice done. Whilst I cannot talk about the circumstances, on behalf
:14:19. > :14:25.of Greater Manchester Police I would like to offer my condolences
:14:25. > :14:29.and sympathy to her family and friends. The abuse started here in
:14:29. > :14:34.1978 when Michael Brewer was director of music. Frances Andrade
:14:34. > :14:38.told the court she was abused for several years. It began here at
:14:38. > :14:42.Chetham's School of Music when she was 14, with a assaults taking
:14:42. > :14:46.place in Michael Brewer's Kumbakonam and his school office.
:14:46. > :14:50.Michael Brewer was forced to leave the school in 1994 after beginning
:14:50. > :14:55.a relationship with another pupil. But the school did not pass on the
:14:55. > :15:00.information, and days later he was told he would receive an OBE. Today,
:15:00. > :15:04.at the school said sorry. Mr Brewer has been found to have committed
:15:04. > :15:08.the most appalling acts which took place during his time at the school.
:15:08. > :15:12.On behalf of the current school staff, I wish to express my
:15:12. > :15:18.profound and sincere apology and regret. Michael Brewer's former
:15:18. > :15:21.wife, Hilary Kay Brewer, on the right, was also found guilty of
:15:21. > :15:26.indecent assault. And tonight, Frances Andrade's son said that his
:15:26. > :15:31.mother was kind and full of life, but the impact of being called a
:15:31. > :15:35.liar and fantasist in court was more than she could bear.
:15:35. > :15:38.Coming up: Shot dead, days after performing at
:15:38. > :15:48.Obama's inauguration - a high school student's murder and the
:15:48. > :15:49.
:15:49. > :15:53.huge scale of gun crime in urban America. It is easier to get a gun
:15:53. > :15:57.in Chicago than it is to get the job out here.
:15:57. > :16:00.There have been clashes in Tunisia, as thousands turned out for the
:16:00. > :16:02.funeral of the opposition politician who was shot dead on
:16:02. > :16:06.Wednesday. Chokri Belaid was an outspoken critic of the government.
:16:06. > :16:09.His death has plunged the country into political turmoil, two years
:16:09. > :16:12.after the start of the Arab uprisings in Tunisia. As his coffin
:16:12. > :16:15.was carried through the capital, Tunis, the funeral became a mass
:16:15. > :16:25.protest against the ruling Islamists. From there, Wyre Davies
:16:25. > :16:31.reports. There was genuine anguish across
:16:31. > :16:35.Tunisia today. There were -- nowhere more so than in the home of
:16:35. > :16:40.Chokri Belaid. His wife, father and wider family sitting, dignified at
:16:40. > :16:44.the foot of his coffin. Whispered words of support to a daughter
:16:44. > :16:48.whose father was assassinated on Wednesday, a political murder that
:16:48. > :16:53.threatens to undermine Tunisia's fledgling revolution.
:16:53. > :16:58.TRANSLATION: My husband loved Tunisia. He wanted it to be
:16:58. > :17:01.democratic, with a bright future. He always said this country was
:17:01. > :17:09.full of potential and good things. He always believed political
:17:09. > :17:13.progress was possible here. As the coffin was carried through the
:17:13. > :17:18.narrow alley ways of this modest, working-class neighbourhood, a huge
:17:18. > :17:23.crowd started chanting his name. They blame the Islamist-led
:17:23. > :17:29.government for his murder. Chokri Belaid had been its most outspoken
:17:29. > :17:33.and constant critic. Amid the grief and anger, there is a real sense
:17:33. > :17:38.that tensions have been bubbling under the surface for months.
:17:38. > :17:41.Tunisia was the birthplace of the Arab Spring, and all of these
:17:41. > :17:47.mourners are determined it will not meet a premature end here as well.
:17:47. > :17:51.At the cemetery this afternoon there was sustained a -- there were
:17:51. > :17:59.sustain volleys of tear gas from riot police. As the wider region
:17:59. > :18:03.looks on, Tunisia is in turmoil. Chokri Belaid's family hold this
:18:03. > :18:09.man directly responsible for his death. Rachid Ghannouchi is the
:18:09. > :18:13.leader of the governing party. It denies giving free rein to more
:18:13. > :18:16.radical Muslims, Salafists, too violently impose their will on the
:18:16. > :18:23.country. I do not think the Government is allowing things to
:18:23. > :18:27.happen. It is not only Salafists crew are committing, if we can say,
:18:27. > :18:33.crimes in Tunisia. There are different parts in Tunisia trying
:18:33. > :18:37.to commit crimes and trying to push this experience into extremes.
:18:37. > :18:42.capital is reminiscent of the 2011 uprising which overthrew the
:18:42. > :18:47.previous regime. Riot police and militia armed with clubs patrol the
:18:47. > :18:52.streets. Tonight, the government said it would create a neutral
:18:52. > :18:55.administration of technocrats. An appeal for calm that might not be
:18:55. > :18:58.heeded. The ex-wife of the disgraced former
:18:58. > :19:01.energy secretary Chris Huhne has said she felt "shocked and
:19:01. > :19:04.horrified" after a newspaper published a story about her taking
:19:04. > :19:07.speeding points on behalf of her former husband. Vicky Pryce was
:19:07. > :19:11.giving evidence in her trial for perverting the course of justice, a
:19:11. > :19:21.charge she denies. Mr Huhne resigned as a Lib Dem MP this week.
:19:21. > :19:23.
:19:23. > :19:27.This report from Tom Symonds Friday, and another day in the
:19:27. > :19:32.witness box for Vicky Pryce, hours more examination of her role in the
:19:32. > :19:37.saga that resulted on Monday in her husband's resignation. A key
:19:37. > :19:41.section of today's evidence focused on the moment in 2003 when Vicky
:19:41. > :19:46.Pryce signed the forms to falsely claimed she was the driver of Chris
:19:46. > :19:51.Huhne's car. She does not deny it. She says she had no choice. Chris
:19:51. > :19:56.Huhne was standing over with a pen. The defence is known to lawyers as
:19:56. > :19:58.one of marital coercion, a law dating back to 1925, saying she is
:19:58. > :20:02.innocent if the offence was committed in the presence of banned
:20:02. > :20:06.under the coercion of her husband. In other words, if Chris Huhne was
:20:06. > :20:11.there and he forced her to sign. But the prosecutor questioned
:20:11. > :20:14.whether that was the case. You have made that up, he said, because you
:20:14. > :20:19.have been advised this defence only applies if the husband is present
:20:19. > :20:24.at the time. That is why you have made this story up. Vicky Pryce
:20:24. > :20:29.said, no, it is one of my strongest memories, it is absolutely true.
:20:29. > :20:32.Again, the case delved into their darkest moments, again with the aim
:20:32. > :20:36.of helping the jury decide whether they could have been coercion.
:20:36. > :20:41.Yesterday, Vicky Pryce said Chris Huhne had got her to have an
:20:41. > :20:45.abortion. Today, she revealed there was another pregnancy, another
:20:46. > :20:50.abortion book, but on the day, she pulled out. She said she could not
:20:50. > :20:56.go through with it. The prosecutor said this was an occasion when she
:20:56. > :20:59.had stood up to her former husband and not been bullied by him. And
:20:59. > :21:03.Andrew Edis had earlier described her as an experienced, clever,
:21:03. > :21:07.powerful woman. She responded that she was not powerful and her family
:21:07. > :21:11.always came first. Chris Huhne's guilty plea on Monday means that
:21:11. > :21:16.this trial is now much shorter than it could have been. Vicky Pryce was
:21:16. > :21:26.the final witness. After legal argument and summing up next week,
:21:26. > :21:26.
:21:26. > :21:28.the jury will consider its verdict. The parents of a teenage girl shot
:21:29. > :21:32.dead just days after appearing in President Obama's inauguration
:21:32. > :21:35.celebrations have told the BBC that American gun laws have to change.
:21:35. > :21:38.15-year-old Hadiya Pendleton was killed in a park in Chicago in what
:21:38. > :21:41.police believe was a case of mistaken identity. Michelle Obama
:21:41. > :21:44.will attend her funeral tomorrow. Despite the soul searching in
:21:44. > :21:47.America following the Sandy Hook school massacre, January was the
:21:47. > :21:54.deadliest month for gun crime in Chicago for a decade. Steve
:21:54. > :21:58.Kingstone sent this report from the city.
:21:58. > :22:01.Majorettes from a Chicago high- school on a visit to Washington for
:22:01. > :22:07.the presidential inauguration. In the middle, 15-year-old Hadiya
:22:07. > :22:11.Pendleton, who had appeared in a video denouncing gun violence.
:22:11. > :22:16.commercial is information for you and your future children. It was a
:22:16. > :22:20.gun that ended her life in this Chicago Park 10 days ago as she
:22:20. > :22:26.sheltered from the rain, the killer apparently mistaking her for a
:22:26. > :22:30.rival gang member -- gang member. Never in a million years did I
:22:30. > :22:35.think I would be called about a gunshot to my child. She was not
:22:35. > :22:40.that type of kid. Do you think something can come of this, in
:22:41. > :22:47.terms of change? My hope is that my daughter's death is not in vain.
:22:47. > :22:51.Maybe there are some different laws that can be put in place. You know,
:22:51. > :22:55.perhaps... To be quite honest, that is the whole purpose of this
:22:55. > :22:59.interview, that maybe some things can change. But right now, it is
:22:59. > :23:04.changed for the worse. There were 42 gun murders in Chicago last
:23:04. > :23:09.month, the bloodiest January here in over a decade. Who knows someone
:23:09. > :23:13.who has been shot? The shocking response, but not if you were
:23:13. > :23:16.raised on the south side of Chicago. For these young people, gun
:23:16. > :23:22.violence has been a fact of life. They are back in school, but
:23:22. > :23:27.previously most were gang members. People get killed like crazy.
:23:27. > :23:31.City is known for its tight gun laws, but 21-year-old Jessicia
:23:31. > :23:36.describes the reality. It is easier to get a gun in Chicago vanities to
:23:36. > :23:39.get a job. That is crazy. Just because the gun laws are different
:23:39. > :23:42.in a different state, they bring them from the States where it is
:23:42. > :23:47.legal and they bring them back here. That is what is causing all this
:23:47. > :23:51.crime. Altering the gun laws is a challenge for a President who three
:23:51. > :23:57.decades ago was a community organiser on the south side, the
:23:57. > :24:01.kind of work Bob Jackson does today. We had two people were killed, one
:24:01. > :24:06.IKEA and one there. He points out entire streets abandoned by their
:24:06. > :24:10.owners and now used by heroin addicts, prostitutes and gangs. He
:24:10. > :24:17.is here to help reduce the violence but he thinks the focus should be
:24:17. > :24:22.on people, not on guns. Guns do not kill, people kill. We have illegal
:24:23. > :24:28.gun right here. It is not going to shoot either of us. They need jobs,
:24:28. > :24:32.education, training, mental health experts. The debate about gun laws
:24:32. > :24:37.was prompted by the school shooting in Newtown. But in a very different
:24:37. > :24:42.way, what we found here is just as troubling, a constant stream of
:24:42. > :24:45.murders in a city awash with guns. There's been disappointment for
:24:45. > :24:49.England's women cricketers in the World Cup in India. The defending
:24:49. > :24:52.champions needed 148 to win against Australia but fell two runs short
:24:52. > :25:01.of their total. It means England face an uphill task if they're to
:25:01. > :25:06.progress to the final. Joe Wilson reports from Mumbai.
:25:06. > :25:11.On India's western edge, a Mumbai morning, 20 million people with
:25:11. > :25:16.their daily routines. Exercise can be social for some, but not if you
:25:16. > :25:19.are playing in cricket's classic confrontation. England were here to
:25:19. > :25:23.meet their ultimate opponents, Australia. They had them at their
:25:23. > :25:27.mercy. Anya Shrubsole was unstoppable, with England taking
:25:27. > :25:33.five wickets in the first hour. The bowlers made the best of the
:25:33. > :25:39.conditions. Only a mid-innings rally took Australia to 147 all out.
:25:39. > :25:43.A total that soon seemed mountain has, as England folded. There was a
:25:43. > :25:49.tough LBW call against Charlotte Edwards, but England did not help
:25:49. > :25:53.themselves. Sarah Taylor, big reputation, out first ball. Panic
:25:53. > :25:58.gripped the batting. England were 39 for six. The skipper sensed that
:25:58. > :26:03.the game was up, but not yet. Lydia Greenway built an innings of 49,
:26:03. > :26:09.giving England hope, again, until she was out. When the last woman
:26:09. > :26:14.came in, 34 runs were needed. Was Anya Shrubsole nervous? No chance.
:26:14. > :26:19.She took England to the brink, just two behind when they were denied,
:26:19. > :26:23.Court, all-out, all over. Not the end of the World Cup for England,
:26:23. > :26:26.but it almost felt like it. Colvin and Shrubsole were probably the
:26:26. > :26:32.most calm people at the wicket, so we were always confident that they
:26:32. > :26:36.were capable of getting the runs. It just was not to be. Two emphatic
:26:36. > :26:40.victories in their next two games and England could still reach the