:00:13. > :00:16.three American women who survived a decade in cat vividly. -- captivity.
:00:16. > :00:26.These were called to a house in Ohio after one of the women managed to
:00:26. > :00:32.
:00:32. > :00:35.a former school bus driver. Police praised the women's bravery. These
:00:35. > :00:41.three young ladies have provided us with the ultimate definition of
:00:41. > :00:44.survival and perseverance. Officers also said there were many unanswered
:00:44. > :00:48.questions. We will have the latest. Also, David Cameron says he welcomes
:00:48. > :00:52.a debate on Britain's future in the EU, as more senior Conservatives
:00:52. > :00:55.demand the UK's X it. For the first time in 40 years the
:00:55. > :01:01.Queen is to miss a Commonwealth summit as officials review long-haul
:01:01. > :01:09.travel commitments. The Pakistani politician Imran Khan is injured in
:01:09. > :01:15.a fall at an election rally. And, 70 years after thousands of Bevin boys
:01:15. > :01:19.were sent down the mines, a fitting memorial is unveiled.
:01:19. > :01:24.Coming up in Sportsday on the BBC News Channel, Bradley Wiggins
:01:24. > :01:34.finishes down the field in the fourth stage and is dropped down the
:01:34. > :01:50.
:01:50. > :01:53.Good evening. Police in Ohio have praised the perseverance and bravery
:01:53. > :01:56.of three women found alive after vanishing nearly a decade ago. They
:01:56. > :02:01.have apparently been held captive at a house in Cleveland. A former
:02:01. > :02:05.school bus driver and his two brothers have been arrested, but
:02:05. > :02:10.lycee there are many unanswered questions. -- police say there are
:02:10. > :02:14.many unanswered questions. Jubilation last night as word spread
:02:14. > :02:19.of something miraculous. Three women, long presumed to be dead,
:02:19. > :02:23.rescued and apparently well. The disappearance of Amanda Berry and
:02:23. > :02:29.Gina DeJesus just a year apart, ties to the neighbourhood where they both
:02:29. > :02:39.lived. Stunning, then, to hear Amanda's voice a decade later,
:02:39. > :03:00.
:03:00. > :03:06.nuts at the door. I said, what is your problem? If you are stuck, open
:03:06. > :03:12.the door. She said, I can't comment he's got it locked. You could only
:03:12. > :03:18.reach your hand in to grab the mail and close the door. You couldn't pry
:03:18. > :03:24.it open, so we had to kick open the bottom. Luckily, it was aluminium.
:03:24. > :03:29.It was cheap. She came to my house and we called 911. When the police
:03:29. > :03:34.got here, she dared there were three girls there. They were being held on
:03:34. > :03:37.Seymour Avenue, not far from the centre of Cleveland, the city where
:03:38. > :03:41.all three lived and disappeared. Michele Knight vanished into
:03:41. > :03:46.thousand two at the age of 19. Amanda Berry went missing the
:03:46. > :03:49.following year on her way home from work. She was 16. The youngest, Gina
:03:49. > :03:55.DeJesus, was 40 when she disappeared. She was coming home
:03:55. > :03:58.from school. The police have arrested a school bus driver, Ariel
:03:58. > :04:02.Castro, and two of his brothers, accused of kidnapping and holding
:04:02. > :04:07.the women against their will. For the authorities, who pursued
:04:07. > :04:09.numerous leads over the years, there is a lot to understand. We and our
:04:09. > :04:13.law enforcement partners continue to work shoulder to shoulder with the
:04:13. > :04:19.claimant list apartment to answer the many questions that
:04:19. > :04:23.investigators have. Rest assured, the FBI will bring every resource to
:04:23. > :04:28.assist our partners and bring the full weight of justice behind those
:04:28. > :04:32.responsible for this horrific, horrific case. Outside the house on
:04:32. > :04:37.Seymour Street, a mostly Hispanic community is stunned, wondering how
:04:37. > :04:40.they managed to miss the horror behind these shabby walls. It looked
:04:40. > :04:45.suspicious because you could not see through the windows. It was like
:04:45. > :04:49.plastic, boarding or something like that. The door, you couldn't see, it
:04:49. > :04:56.looked like plastic wrapped around the door. It didn't look right. But
:04:56. > :05:00.none of us ever thought something I that was going on in there. There
:05:00. > :05:04.was more, tantalising glimpses of a small child. When I found out there
:05:04. > :05:08.was a little girl up there, I questioned it and they said he
:05:08. > :05:13.shouldn't have a little girl because he doesn't have anybody. So how
:05:13. > :05:17.would there be a five-year-old in that house? You saw a small child?
:05:17. > :05:21.They had a window, you would open it when he came back from his school
:05:21. > :05:25.bus run. He's a school bus driver. He would open the window and let the
:05:25. > :05:29.little girl look out the window. seems the child was born in the
:05:29. > :05:32.house, the daughter of Amanda Berry. This photograph of the two of them
:05:32. > :05:39.was taken in hospital last night. Mother and daughter are both said to
:05:39. > :05:46.be in good health. Well, let's go straight to
:05:46. > :05:51.Cleveland. I was hoping to talk to Laura. Tell us about these and
:05:51. > :06:00.answered questions we heard about from the police. What are they and
:06:00. > :06:03.what kind of concerns do they have about the narrative so far?
:06:03. > :06:07.basic concern I am hearing from neighbours on Seymour Avenue is how
:06:07. > :06:12.was it that these women were, apparently, hiding in plain sight.
:06:12. > :06:15.They were here somewhere in this neighbourhood for over a decade. The
:06:15. > :06:19.police are coming in for some very tough questions. There is no doubt
:06:19. > :06:23.that the police were on the defensive because they did actually
:06:23. > :06:28.interview Ariel Castro. That is his house behind me that you can see,
:06:28. > :06:32.now an active crime scene. They interviewed him in 2004. He was a
:06:32. > :06:35.school bus driver and a child was left alone in his school bus in an
:06:35. > :06:40.unaccountable manner. He was someone that have come to attention to
:06:40. > :06:44.police. People want to know how these women, all three of them,
:06:44. > :06:49.could have been abducted? Why did it happen? Are these three brothers,
:06:49. > :06:52.who have been arrested but not yet charged, our day behind it? These
:06:52. > :07:02.are the questions that this shocked community is acting tonight. --
:07:02. > :07:04.
:07:04. > :07:06.David Cameron says he welcomes the attention being paid to Britain's
:07:06. > :07:09.future relationships with the European Union, following remarks by
:07:09. > :07:13.the former Conservative Chancellor Lord Lawson, who said that the UK
:07:13. > :07:17.should leave. The Prime Minister has pledged to renegotiate membership
:07:17. > :07:20.terms and has offered a referendum, if he wins the next election, on
:07:20. > :07:26.staying in a reformed queue or leaving.
:07:26. > :07:32.-- EU. David Cameron once warned his party to stop obsessing about
:07:32. > :07:36.Europe. But today's call for Britain to leave the EU, made by a former
:07:37. > :07:42.Tory heavyweight, has made that a forlorn hope. Today, Britain is a
:07:42. > :07:45.winner. Nigel Lawson was Margaret Thatcher's Chancellor in the 1980s,
:07:45. > :07:55.the most prominent conservative to call for Britain to quit. And here
:07:55. > :07:55.
:07:55. > :07:58.is why. The attempt to overregulate and cut down to size the financial
:07:58. > :08:08.services sector, which is extremely damaging to one of our biggest
:08:08. > :08:08.
:08:08. > :08:12.industries. The economic minus is a very big one. Awkward for the Prime
:08:12. > :08:22.Minister, you might think. But today he insisted that this was not a good
:08:22. > :08:25.
:08:25. > :08:28.day for UKIP, the only anti-minus party. -- anti-EU party. If elected
:08:28. > :08:32.I will hold an in-out referendum, so that everybody can have not just a
:08:32. > :08:36.voice about Britain's future in Europe, but also a vote about
:08:36. > :08:42.Britain's future in Europe. I welcome the attention that is being
:08:42. > :08:45.placed on this key pledge that I have made. Last week, Nigel Farage
:08:45. > :08:51.celebrated the break to his party made in local elections. Today, she
:08:51. > :08:55.welcomed a convert to his view of the EU. The world feels a less
:08:55. > :08:58.lonely place for me today. I think someone of his magnitude saying,
:08:58. > :09:03.look, this thing is gone, the economic argument is we are better
:09:03. > :09:07.off out of it, and anyway the renegotiation is bound to fail, is a
:09:07. > :09:12.huge boost to the Euro-sceptic cause in the UK. Where Lord Lawson lead,
:09:12. > :09:16.other Euro-sceptics in the Tories followed, saying that they also
:09:16. > :09:22.wanted out of Europe. Tomorrow, the Queen will make their way to
:09:22. > :09:26.Parliament to read out the Queens speech. The list of proposed new
:09:26. > :09:30.laws that the government has provided to her. Many Conservative
:09:30. > :09:34.MPs would love one law in particular to be on that list, a law bringing
:09:34. > :09:38.about a referendum on Britain EU membership. But it is not going to
:09:38. > :09:43.be there. The power minister has told his MPs in a letter that
:09:43. > :09:47.coalition partners would stop any such move. My advice to the
:09:47. > :09:51.Conservative party, as much as they might listen, is to not run after
:09:51. > :09:55.UKIP. It will only strengthen their hand. What I will make sure is that
:09:55. > :10:00.the government remains anchored in the centre ground. Like Harold
:10:01. > :10:04.Wilson, Prime Minister the last time Britain had a referendum, David
:10:04. > :10:12.Cameron's promised to renegotiate Britain's's relationship first.
:10:12. > :10:22.Nigel Lawson told me it would be as pointless in future as it was then.
:10:22. > :10:28.He hyped up what he had done, but he was so piffling that nobody can
:10:28. > :10:33.remember what it was. It is just a figleaf, I'm afraid. What was once
:10:33. > :10:39.unsayable by any senior Conservative has been said. That means the
:10:39. > :10:44.pressure on David Cameron is mounting.
:10:44. > :10:47.For the first time since the early 1970s, the Queen is to Miss a
:10:47. > :10:51.meeting of the Commonwealth summit. It is due to be held in Sri Lanka in
:10:52. > :10:55.December, a choice criticised by some human rights campaigners. The
:10:55. > :11:02.Prince of Wales will attend instead. Buckingham Palace said it was
:11:02. > :11:07.reviewing the amount of long-haul travel the Queen was undertaking.
:11:07. > :11:11.It is a meeting of leaders who, between them, represent nearly a
:11:11. > :11:14.third of the worlds population. For the past 40 years, every one of the
:11:14. > :11:18.Commonwealth summit has been opened by the Queen. She is head of the
:11:18. > :11:22.Commonwealth and is sensitive to the Commonwealth's political currents.
:11:22. > :11:25.When it was announced two years ago after meeting in Perth, Australia,
:11:25. > :11:29.that the next summit would be in Sri Lanka, the Queen will have known it
:11:29. > :11:34.was a controversial choice. The Sri Lanka authorities have been accused
:11:34. > :11:38.of serious violations of human rights, particularly during the long
:11:38. > :11:46.civil war. Human rights campaigners have condemned the government of the
:11:46. > :11:52.Sri Lankan president. It was a wrong decision to go to Sri Lanka. Sending
:11:52. > :11:57.the Queen, who was scheduled to go, gives a royal seal of approval to
:11:57. > :12:00.the host country. You can imagine the president, a number of
:12:00. > :12:04.pro-Minister's have told me how, at the last conference, ADL bowed them
:12:04. > :12:09.out of the way so that he could be pictured with the Queen. -- he
:12:09. > :12:13.elbowed them. Buckingham Palace insists is that the non-attendances
:12:13. > :12:16.because they are reviewing the long haul travel of the now 87-year-old
:12:16. > :12:22.Moloch. Others who follow Commonwealth politics closely say
:12:22. > :12:26.that the Queen is sending a subtle, but deliberate message. I think she
:12:26. > :12:32.is a very canny operator in Commonwealth politics. She knows the
:12:32. > :12:36.leaders, she often new their fathers and grandfathers. She knows how to
:12:36. > :12:40.send a subtle message. Not going in person, I think, will send that
:12:41. > :12:45.message. For their part, the Sri Lankans accept that the Queen's
:12:45. > :12:49.absence is due to age, rather than politics. From our perspective we
:12:49. > :12:52.would have loved to have have Her Majesty there. But we fully respect
:12:53. > :12:57.and fully understand, we are enormously sensitive to, the fact
:12:57. > :13:00.that Her Majesty is 87 years old. The Prince of Wales will attend the
:13:00. > :13:06.summit in place of the Queen. It's an important step for him,
:13:06. > :13:13.deputising for his mother. Roof, officials say, that no snow but is
:13:13. > :13:17.intended. -- snowed. Unusually, this is one Commonwealth meeting that
:13:17. > :13:20.will take place without the Queen. In confirming that, the Palace has,
:13:20. > :13:30.for the first time, acknowledged that her age is having an impact on
:13:30. > :13:37.
:13:37. > :13:41.murdering Tia sharp, the 12-year-old girl whose body was found last
:13:41. > :13:48.summer. The prosecution told the jury at the Old Bailey that Stuart
:13:48. > :13:52.Hazel had been sexually attracted to the schoolgirl. He denies murder.
:13:52. > :13:57.Arriving at court, the relatives of Tia sharp, including her step-father
:13:57. > :14:00.and her mother, Natalie Sharp. She was later to leave the courtroom
:14:00. > :14:05.several times in tears, because of the harrowing nature of the
:14:05. > :14:11.evidence. They were hear for -- here for the trial of Stuart Hazel,
:14:11. > :14:15.accused of murdering her and hiding her body in the loft of a house he
:14:15. > :14:19.shared with her grandmother. Last August, the police and the community
:14:19. > :14:23.spent a week searching for her. Stuart Hazel was the last person to
:14:23. > :14:28.see her alive. The court was shown a TV interview he gave in the house, a
:14:28. > :14:32.day before police found her body there. I know deep down in my heart
:14:32. > :14:36.that Tia walked out my house. She walked out there and I know damn
:14:36. > :14:43.well because she was seen walking down the pathway. I know she made
:14:43. > :14:47.her way. What happened, I don't know after that. The prosecution told the
:14:47. > :14:50.jury that Stuart Hazel had a sexual attraction for Tia sharp, that there
:14:50. > :14:56.was some form of sexual assault, something of that kind and that was
:14:56. > :14:59.the reason he killed her. The jury was warned it would see and hear
:14:59. > :15:05.distressing evidence. It was told that images of child abuse had been
:15:05. > :15:09.found on Stuart Hazel's phone, as had videos of Tia sharp, which the
:15:09. > :15:13.prosecution alleges Stuart Hazel had secretly recorded without her
:15:13. > :15:20.knowledge. Finally, the court was shown a violent and graphic image,
:15:20. > :15:24.which the prosecution says was Tia sharp after she was murdered. Tia's
:15:24. > :15:33.family will return tomorrow to hear evidence. Stuart Hazel denies
:15:33. > :15:43.murder. Jimmy Tarbuck has been arrested over an allegation of child
:15:43. > :15:44.
:15:44. > :15:51.sex abuse dating back to the 1970s. He was released on bail pending
:15:51. > :15:56.further enquiries, as June Kelly now reports. He's one of the most
:15:56. > :16:00.enduring names in light encontaiment in this country and here with Jimmy
:16:00. > :16:05.Tarbuck, some of his contempories, who were also part of the showbiz
:16:05. > :16:09.establishment. In 1994, the Queen appointed him an OBE, partly for his
:16:09. > :16:19.charity work. Now, it's been confirmed that he was arrested more
:16:19. > :16:32.
:16:33. > :16:36.than a week ago. In a statement, there's been no sign today. The
:16:37. > :16:40.police didn't name him, nor did they announce his arrest. All adding to
:16:40. > :16:44.the debate over publicity and whether suspects should be
:16:44. > :16:48.identified. By putting a name out there, whoever it might be, whether
:16:48. > :16:52.it's a celebrity or a non--celebrity, sometimes that gives
:16:52. > :16:59.victims an opportunity to come forward and have they suffered at
:16:59. > :17:03.the hands of the alleged abuser? got his big bake when he was in his
:17:03. > :17:07.20s. Good evening. My name's Jimmy Tarbuck. I ought to tell you this,
:17:07. > :17:11.because I'm the only one on here tonight you've never heard of.
:17:11. > :17:15.came out of Liverpool with the Beatles. The start of a career which
:17:15. > :17:21.has lasted 50 years. He p hasn't been charged with any offence. He's
:17:21. > :17:25.on bail as the police investigation continues.
:17:25. > :17:28.Somalia is making real progress in trying to end more than two decades
:17:28. > :17:32.of conflict, according to David Cameron. He was hosting a conference
:17:32. > :17:36.in London today, with the Somali President, to help rebuild the east
:17:36. > :17:43.African state. Somalia hasn't had a functioning Government since war
:17:43. > :17:48.broke out in 1991 and although Government forces have taken back
:17:48. > :17:55.the capital, Mogadishu, the group, Al-Shabab control significant areas
:17:55. > :18:00.of the country. David Cameron has alleged nearly �80 million in aid
:18:00. > :18:05.for the country for the next two years. Much of it still looks like a
:18:05. > :18:09.war zone, but Mogadishu is changing fast these days. Relative peace has
:18:09. > :18:14.prompted a building boom. After years of anarchy, a new Somali
:18:14. > :18:23.Government is in place here too, promising to restore order in this
:18:23. > :18:28.famously failed state. Today, that new government came to London,
:18:28. > :18:33.hoping to convince foreign donors that it has a cred crible plan to
:18:33. > :18:37.fix Somalia and that the huge sums of money required won't be stolen.
:18:37. > :18:41.If we act now to receive the support from the international community,
:18:41. > :18:48.the Government will definitely deliver the expectations of thesome
:18:48. > :18:53.Mali people and the international community. Britain seems convinced.
:18:53. > :18:59.David Cameron arguing that without help, Somalia will remain a
:18:59. > :19:02.dangerous breeding ground for militants. Radicalism is poisoning
:19:02. > :19:06.minds and breeding terrorism and extremism. This is a threat to our
:19:06. > :19:16.security and if we ignore it we'll be making the sill mistakes in
:19:16. > :19:17.
:19:17. > :19:23.Somalia that we made in Afghanistan in the 1990s. Al-Shabab has been
:19:23. > :19:27.pushed out. Foreign military support has been crucial. Off the coast,
:19:27. > :19:31.piracy is also becoming less of a menace, with armed guards now on
:19:31. > :19:38.many ships and there have been no successful attacks reported this
:19:39. > :19:45.year. Britain promised more help today. And so, at a cafe this
:19:45. > :19:50.afternoon, we found plenty of optimism. It's getting better. It's
:19:50. > :19:58.getting a little bit better. I know the generosity of the British people
:19:58. > :20:01.and the leadership of the British people and the whole of the
:20:01. > :20:06.international community. We are very much positive and I do believe that
:20:06. > :20:12.it will be the beginning of a new era for Somalia. There is a lot that
:20:12. > :20:17.can still go wrong here in Somalia. Full storms are something of a local
:20:17. > :20:21.speciality, but a credible government backed by sustained,
:20:21. > :20:27.massive international support just might keep the ruined nation on
:20:27. > :20:30.right track. The jury in the trial of Mark
:20:30. > :20:34.Bridger, who denies kidnapping and murdering April Jones last October,
:20:34. > :20:40.has heard from a friend she was playing with, just before she went
:20:40. > :20:44.missing. We have this report. On the day she disappeared, April Jones had
:20:44. > :20:49.been to school, been to swim and moments before she went missing, was
:20:49. > :20:55.playing on her bike. Only one person was with her to see what happened
:20:55. > :20:59.next. Comforted by her teddy, April's seven-year-old friend gave
:20:59. > :21:09.her evidence via a videolink. She can't be identified for legal
:21:09. > :21:23.
:21:23. > :21:28.reasons. In her police interview the accidently ran over April and that
:21:28. > :21:33.he had to pick her up from under its wheels. He listened to court as the
:21:33. > :21:37.seven-year-old was asked if she was certain of what she had seen, hadn't
:21:37. > :21:42.April been lying on the ground. She was sure, she replied, April was
:21:42. > :21:46.standing up and talking to the man. The jury then heard from the girl's
:21:46. > :21:49.mother, who described how April's mother had dropped to her knees when
:21:49. > :21:54.she learnt of her daughter's disappearance. She said she was in a
:21:54. > :22:00.complete state of panic and gasping for air. The search that followed
:22:00. > :22:05.became the largest in UK police history. Officers found blood
:22:06. > :22:11.matching April's DNA in his home and fragments of skull in the fire
:22:11. > :22:17.place. He denies the charges of abduction, murder and perverting the
:22:17. > :22:21.course of justice. The trial will continue in the morning. Imran Khan,
:22:21. > :22:28.one of Pakistan's most prominent politicians is recovering in
:22:28. > :22:36.hospital after being injured at a rally. He suffered a head injuriy,
:22:36. > :22:40.after falling from a -- injury after falling from a platform. He makes
:22:41. > :22:50.his ascent and he balances on an overcrowded platform, ringed by
:22:51. > :22:53.
:22:53. > :23:00.security guards. Then this - he tumbles head-face in full view of
:23:00. > :23:05.shocked supporters. The cricketing hero was crushed away, bleeding from
:23:05. > :23:12.the head. And apparently unconscious. He was taken to the
:23:12. > :23:18.hospital he founded. Doctors say he's in no danger. From his hospital
:23:18. > :23:23.bed, he appealed directly to the voters, sounding weak and looking
:23:23. > :23:32.exhausted. On election day, he said, remember what the Koran says - God
:23:32. > :23:37.helps those who help themselves. Go out and vote for change. Khan's main
:23:37. > :23:41.rival has sent his sympathies and his prayers for a speedy recovery.
:23:41. > :23:49.The front-runner to be Pakistan's next Prime Minister has cancelled
:23:49. > :23:53.his election rallies tomorrow. But this was another day of bloodshed in
:23:53. > :24:00.an increasingly deadly campaign. Bomb attacks in the north-west
:24:00. > :24:04.claimed 17 more lives. Tonight, many here are gripped by concern about
:24:04. > :24:08.Imran Khan's condition. He's a national hero, as well as a key
:24:08. > :24:12.candidate in the election. Doctors say he's in good spirits and can
:24:12. > :24:22.move all his limbs. They are keeping him for observation, but they want
:24:22. > :24:24.
:24:24. > :24:28.him to rest. Aids -- aides say he won't want to do that for long.
:24:28. > :24:32.Years after the Bevin boys were sent down the mines, a memorial has been
:24:32. > :24:40.dedicated to them. Thousands of young men were concrypted to work in
:24:40. > :24:45.the mines. The new Mel -- concrypted to work in the mines. They gathered
:24:45. > :24:50.today as old men, but with clear memories of when they were Bevin
:24:50. > :24:55.boys, named after the minister of labour. Like the rest of the
:24:55. > :25:05.generation, they were ordered to serve. Their duty was to bring
:25:05. > :25:06.
:25:06. > :25:13.little glory or recognition. Young men are drafted into the mines.
:25:13. > :25:19.1943, 10% of those called up, some 48,000 young men, were ordered to
:25:19. > :25:22.serve not in uniform, but in the coal mines. The rashal was simple -
:25:22. > :25:29.without coal there could be no war production and without guns or
:25:29. > :25:39.fighter planes, there could be no victory. Today then, finally, the
:25:39. > :25:39.
:25:39. > :25:44.unveiling of a memorial. For Harry Parks a triumphant moment. He's been
:25:44. > :25:48.a leading voice calling for his fellow Bevin boys to be recognised
:25:48. > :25:54.for their service. Today he felt the embrace of a grateful nation.
:25:54. > :26:00.Countess of Wessex is doing us the great honour to dedicate the
:26:00. > :26:07.memorial I designed. She will give us back our dignity, that says we
:26:07. > :26:12.served our country and that's what has been lacking. It was all smiles
:26:12. > :26:17.for the war-time newsreels. In truth, it was desperately hard,
:26:17. > :26:25.dirty work. Dangerous too, with an estimated 700 deaths in the first
:26:25. > :26:29.year alone. Essential zuTy, but a thankless task. -- duty, but a
:26:29. > :26:37.thankless task. Being called cowards was very hard to take, because we
:26:38. > :26:41.weren't. It wasn't our fault. We had a hard hat and a pair of
:26:41. > :26:46.steel-toe-capped boots. Today has been about the restoration of pride
:26:46. > :26:50.and many former Bevin boys take quiet satisfaction that their