28/06/2016 BBC News at Ten


28/06/2016

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, at least ten people have been killed at an airport in Turkey.

:00:12.:00:21.

Around 60 people have been injured, some of them critically. All flights

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at the airport have been suspended. We will have the latest. Also on the

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programme: The Prime Minister is here

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in Brussels and is meeting fellow European leaders now for the first

:00:30.:00:31.

time since the UK He says now is not the time

:00:32.:00:32.

to turn our backs on Europe. I hope we will see the closest

:00:33.:00:44.

possible relationship in terms of trade because that is good for us

:00:45.:00:45.

and for them. The head of the European Commission

:00:46.:00:47.

and Nigel Farage share a quiet word before

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bad-tempered public exchanges. I said that I wanted to lead a

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campaign to get Britain to leave the European Union. You all laughed at

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me. I have to say, you are not laughing now, are you?

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You are fighting for the exit. The British people voted in favour of

:01:10.:01:13.

the exit. Why are you here? Jeremy Corbyn says he won't stand

:01:14.:01:16.

down as Labour leader despite an overwhelming vote of "no

:01:17.:01:18.

confidence" by his MPs. A miserable return home

:01:19.:01:22.

for the England team after one of the most humiliating defeats

:01:23.:01:24.

in their history. And how David Hockney

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has turned to family, friends and acquaintances

:01:30.:01:31.

for his latest exhibition. Coming up in Sportsday on BBC News:

:01:32.:01:35.

Andy Murray wins the battle He's through in straight sets

:01:36.:01:38.

in his first-round match There have been two explosions

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and gunfire tonight at Istanbul's

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Ataturk International Airport. Turkish government officials say

:02:10.:02:10.

at least ten people have been The Foreign Office are seeking

:02:11.:02:25.

further information about the attack.

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one of the explosions was a suicide bomber.

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It's the latest in a string of attacks on Turkey's biggest city.

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Here's our diplomatic correspondent, James Landale.

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Sit down! The scene tonight at Istanbul's Ataturk airport.

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Passengers taking cover after two explosions tore through the

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international departure terminal. Outside, people fled after at least

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one of the attackers reportedly opened fire with a Kalashnikov

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machine-gun before blowing himself up, after being fired on by the

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police. Officials said that at least 60

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people had been wounded. Many waiting outside until the ambulances

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arrived, as others who had been injured emerged.

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Police rushed to set up a perimeter around the airport after the

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attacks. Turkey's Justice Minister said at least ten people have been

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killed. This is only the latest in a series of deadly attacks in Turkey

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this year. Often blamed on either Kurdish separatists or the so-called

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Islamic State group. This is the first time that the International

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Airport has been targeted and, for now, flights in-and-out of the

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airport are suspended. Tonight, as the injured were taken

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to hospital, the question is what more Turkey can do to deal with the

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security situation that is getting worse and not better. James Landale,

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BBC News. Our correspondent, Mark Lowen, is at

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Istanbul's Ataturk airport now. I have landed, about an

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hour-and-a-half ago, we are being kept on board the plane, not allowed

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to disembark because of what is happening inside the airport and the

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carnage there. We are hearing that at least two explosions, possibly

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three, around the international terminal area, one possibly in the

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car park as well, we understand that one of the attackers opened fire

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with a Kalashnikov before blowing himself up with a suicide belt.

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There are reports that one of them was wrestled to the ground by police

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officers as well. We are not being told when we will be allowed to

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leave the aircraft. There has been no claim of responsibility, but as

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James was saying, Turkey has been in the grip of a terrible spiral of

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violence in the last year, some attacks blamed on so-called Islamic

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State, some on Kurdish militants, including a mortar attack at

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Istanbul's second airport back in December that was claimed by Kurdish

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militants. I have lived here for two years and I have often thought

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coming into this airport it is a potentially vulnerable place and

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that an attack could take place here. Cars are not searched very

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often, that said, as you come into the terminal building, there are

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x-ray machines and scanners for anybody coming in. So what appears

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to have happened tonight is that the attackers appear to have breeched

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the perimeter of the airport, and they have set off their attacks with

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such tragic consequences. Mark Lowen, thank you very much for

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joining us. We will bring you the latest on that story as it develops.

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David Cameron has been attending talks in Brussels with European

:05:50.:05:50.

leaders around the UK's decision to leave the European Union.

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He said it was not the time for Britain to turn its back on Europe.

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When the Prime Minister arrived today, he said he hoped

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the discussions would be constructive, but there's no

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disguising the tension and frustrations here.

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The German Chancellor, Angela Merkel, said Britain

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couldn't cherry-pick the parts of the EU it wants,

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such as access to the single market, and the Ukip leader, Nigel Farage,

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was booed in an acrimonious session of the European Parliament.

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Our political editor, Laura Kuenssberg, has

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David Cameron might have wanted to slip in the back, after his plan

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went so wrong. The Prime Minister made the same grand arrival as ever.

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We are leaving the European Union, we must not be turning our backs on

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Europe. These countries are our neighbours, our friends, our allies,

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our partners and I hope we will seek the closest possible relationship in

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terms of trade and co-operation and security because that is good for us

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and that is good for them. And that is the spirit in which the

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discussions I think will be held today. He told us and them he

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wouldn't quit if he lost and would start the process of leaving

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straightaway. He's doing the opposite. No surprise the President

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of the Commission didn't want to stop and chat. There is genuine

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upset and a desire to get on with it. The day of Brexit I've heard as

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if someone very close to me had left our home. Brexit, it is not only

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about procedures, it is about politics, and interests. It is also

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about our emotions and feelings. He needs to say something to us, not us

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to him. We should not wait until the Conservative Party has solved this

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internal problems. Nothing can happen, though, till Britain is

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ready to start, says Europe's most powerful politician. Sometimes these

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bun fights are all about working out the body language, trying to find

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out what is going on. It is crystal clear this time. Britain feels

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alone, very alone, Europe's leaders are sad and angry, almost in

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disbelief at what has been decided and in no mood to make the exit

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process easy. So many British voters felt the EU didn't listen. Nigel

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Farage wanted to enjoy the warm embrace, delighted at Brussels

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agony. Good morning. Good morning. Mutual loathing in the European

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Parliament today was pretty clear. Funny, isn't it? When I came here 17

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years ago, and I said that I wanted to lead a campaign to get Britain to

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leave the European Union, you all laughed at me. You are not laughing

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now, are you? There is not just upset at the result, but contempt

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for how the referendum was won. TRANSLATION: You lied, you didn't

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tell the truth. You fabricated reality. After six years, David

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Cameron's job is not to make the deal. From the look on their faces,

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he has to explain himself and our democratic decision. This will

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probably be one for the album. It is likely to be his last Brussels

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get-together. There is uncertainty about the basic blocks of our future

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relationship. Commiseration too alongside the deep confusion and

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hard work to do tonight, but David Cameron is no longer here to be the

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one who decides. Laura Kuenssberg, BBC News, Brussels.

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Well, as we've heard, there was at times an angry debate

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in the special session of the European Parliament

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Our Europe correspondent, Damian Grammaticus, reports now

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on the reaction of MEPs from across the European Union

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Across town from where Europe's leaders were meeting,

:10:11.:10:18.

Nigel Farage preparing to savour his moment of triumph over

:10:19.:10:26.

The President of the Commission, Jean-Claude Juncker,

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banned his staff from having any negotiations with British officials

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until the UK gives notice it's exiting the Union.

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Now, after staying silent throughout the referendum,

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Europe's politicians held little back.

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The worst liars can be found amongst Ukip.

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On Friday, Nigel Farage said publicly that the promised

:10:51.:10:56.

?350 million a week would not go to the National Health Service.

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I ask Mr Farage, if you had an ounce of decency in you,

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you would apologise today to the British.

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Most here are, of course, believers in Europe's project.

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Shocked by the outcome, but also by the tone

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What makes it so hard for me, and I think also for

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the other group leaders, and for everybody in this House,

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The absolute negative campaign, the posters of Mr Farage's showing

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I know that virtually none of you have ever done a proper job

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The Chamber had to be called to order.

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The reason you are so angry has been perfectly clear from all the angry

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You, as a political project, are in denial.

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You are in denial that your currency is failing.

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And that drew jeers, but some shared

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TRANSLATION: Our British friends' vote in favour of leaving

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the European Union is by far the most important event

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in our continent since the fall of the Berlin Wall.

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It is a signal of freedom sent out to the entire world.

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Then came this, an impassioned Scottish plea to Europe.

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There is a lot of things to be negotiated.

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We will need cool heads and warm hearts.

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Please, I beg you, do not let Scotland down now.

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The ovation a sign that sentiment has considerable sympathy here.

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For Nigel Farage, this is the culmination of a lifetime's

:13:13.:13:15.

political project, to get the UK out of the EU.

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What we heard from the European side is they want talks now to begin

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as soon as possible and there will be, they say,

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no favours, no cherry-picking, by Britain in those.

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Damian Grammaticas, BBC News, Brussels.

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Our political editor, Laura Kuenssberg, is here

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and our Europe editor, Katya Adler.

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Laura, the talks have broken up, David Cameron has emerged after

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three-and-a-half hours. What has he had to say? It is probably his last

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time that he will sit down with his EU counterparts and chew the fat

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over dinner. The Prime Minister's main job was to smooth the path for

:13:55.:13:58.

whoever his successor is and he has stressed that he wants there to be a

:13:59.:14:02.

constructive period of talks now. In particular, what he said was that

:14:03.:14:07.

the UK and the EU should have as close economic ties as is possible,

:14:08.:14:11.

even with the UK outside the European Union but for that to

:14:12.:14:15.

happen, he's said that the rest of the EU will have to look at changing

:14:16.:14:19.

the rules around freedom of movement, changing the rules around

:14:20.:14:22.

immigration. During the referendum campaign, that was one of the most

:14:23.:14:26.

contentious things that many voters, perhaps wanted to hear from him,

:14:27.:14:29.

during the campaign he wasn't willing to go that far, although

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others did. Tonight, that is what he's laid out almost as a

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pre-condition of the UK's next relationship with the European Union

:14:39.:14:42.

outside the EU. Of course, many people probably sitting around the

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table will have thought, we gave you those special conditions, what right

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do you have to lay down new demands now? Katya, when it comes to hearing

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what the European leaders have had to sarks no-one has given an

:14:59.:15:05.

impression they are keen on agreeing to any new pre-conditions? Yes, the

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atmosphere here was calm, it was polite, nothing like the stormy

:15:13.:15:15.

scenes that we saw in the European Parliament. Yes, that is what EU

:15:16.:15:18.

leaders have been saying to David Cameron. Your country voted out. We

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want to get on with it. It is through gritted teeth that they have

:15:23.:15:26.

said they realise that the UK needs some time because under EU rules,

:15:27.:15:31.

the ball is in Britain's court, it has to notify the EU that it wants

:15:32.:15:35.

to leave and only then negotiations can start. It's called Article 50 in

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EU speak. We heard also from Angela Merkel, the German Chancellor, she

:15:42.:15:47.

said when those talks start, Britain can't cherry-pick its way to a deal.

:15:48.:15:50.

She dismissed the idea that Britain could have good access to the

:15:51.:15:54.

internal market and restrict EU immigration. She said if Britain,

:15:55.:15:59.

like Norway, wants to have access to the single market, it will have to

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accept the freedom of movement. So they were very clear about that and

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about another thing, that in this waiting period, this interim period,

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EU leaders say there will be no cosy backroom chats, that is the only

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pressure they can exert right now on Britain because they do want those

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formal negotiations to start as soon as is practically possible. Thank

:16:22.:16:23.

you both very much. On the financial markets there has

:16:24.:16:32.

been some respite from the turmoil seen in the immediate aftermath of

:16:33.:16:34.

the EU referendum. The value of the pound has risen,

:16:35.:16:37.

as has the FTSE 100 share index, adding more than ?40 billion

:16:38.:16:40.

to the value of companies. The Chancellor George Osborne said

:16:41.:16:45.

tax rises and cuts in public spending are inevitable after the

:16:46.:16:49.

UK's decision to leave the EU, and said decisions about the impact on

:16:50.:16:54.

finances have started to be borne out by events but said the country

:16:55.:16:59.

will be poorer. In the United States.

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President Barack Obama has said there was no need for a hysterical

:17:02.:17:04.

reaction to Britain's vote to leave the European Union.

:17:05.:17:08.

Mr Obama said "a pause button had been pressed on the project of full

:17:09.:17:11.

And cataclysmic changes are unlikely.

:17:12.:17:20.

That is it from Brussels to night. There is much more about Brexit and

:17:21.:17:25.

referendum details on the website at bbc.co.uk/ news. From Brussels this

:17:26.:17:34.

evening, it's back to you, Sophie. Fiona, thank you. We have an update

:17:35.:17:41.

on the airport in Istanbul, Ataturk, the governor of Istanbul has said at

:17:42.:17:46.

least 28 people have been killed. Around 60 have been injured, some

:17:47.:17:50.

critically, and the authorities are now saying they believe three

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suicide bombers carried out the attack at the airport this evening.

:17:54.:17:58.

We will, of course, come back to that story at the end of the

:17:59.:18:03.

programme. Jeremy Corbyn insisted he will not step down as Labour leader

:18:04.:18:07.

despite losing an overwhelming vote of no-confidence by 172-40 votes. A

:18:08.:18:13.

secret ballot of Labour MPs was held this afternoon following the

:18:14.:18:16.

resignation of more than 50 of his most senior colleagues over the last

:18:17.:18:19.

two but Mr Corbyn said resigning would be a betrayal of all of the

:18:20.:18:23.

party members who voted for him last year. I Deputy Political Editor John

:18:24.:18:26.

Pienaar reports. Jeremy Corbyn's uncomfortable,

:18:27.:18:29.

defiant but under siege, a Shadow Cabinet patched together

:18:30.:18:32.

after mass resignations. Just look at his deputy,

:18:33.:18:34.

Tom Watson, on the right. Everyone knows he's not

:18:35.:18:47.

truly backing his leader, But later, most of his MPs

:18:48.:18:49.

were officially against him, leaving his team, empty

:18:50.:18:59.

chairs and unfilled for the leadership challenge that

:19:00.:19:01.

will now surely come. And is not just MPs, the revolt has

:19:02.:19:10.

spread to Scotland's too. If I had just lost 80% of my

:19:11.:19:15.

parliamentary colleagues, quite simply could not do my job, and I

:19:16.:19:18.

think it is difficult for Jeremy But Mr Corbyn has strong

:19:19.:19:21.

support in the country. Young members turned up today

:19:22.:19:25.

to urge rebels to back off. I do not think in any way

:19:26.:19:28.

that the public will understand why we have chosen

:19:29.:19:31.

to turn in on ourselves at a time when we should be attacking

:19:32.:19:34.

this government for the chaos Angela Eagle resigned

:19:35.:19:37.

yesterday as Shadow Business Now she is weighing up

:19:38.:19:44.

a leadership challenge, and even though she will face a battle

:19:45.:19:49.

with the local party members, she believes she may be better able

:19:50.:19:53.

than Tom Watson to unify the party In the coming Labour

:19:54.:19:56.

leadership contest, a challenger needs backing from 50

:19:57.:20:00.

Labour MPs, or MEPs from the The contest results

:20:01.:20:03.

are announced at the autumn conference or emergency

:20:04.:20:09.

conference beforehand. It is still unclear

:20:10.:20:12.

whether Jeremy Corbyn would get on the ballot without

:20:13.:20:15.

needing nominations. Voting is by party members,

:20:16.:20:17.

registered supporters who have paid ?3 each,

:20:18.:20:19.

and affiliated Are party members like these

:20:20.:20:21.

in Croydon beginning to I ended up voting for

:20:22.:20:27.

him in the leadership election because I felt that we

:20:28.:20:32.

needed a change, and we needed to But increasingly, I have become

:20:33.:20:35.

disillusioned and disappointed with There are so many

:20:36.:20:40.

people who say the same thing, he is a really

:20:41.:20:45.

lovely guy, a nice guy, It is almost irresponsible

:20:46.:20:47.

for them to advocate for a new leader when he has

:20:48.:20:57.

the vote of the people. They were wrong then and they are

:20:58.:21:03.

wrong now! It is this kind of support

:21:04.:21:06.

that keeps on going. Some MPs are clinging to the hope

:21:07.:21:10.

that he may yet be forced out

:21:11.:21:12.

by a collapse of trade union backing, say,

:21:13.:21:14.

but his most fervent admirers,

:21:15.:21:16.

like Jeremy Corbyn himself, seem determined to fight

:21:17.:21:18.

on, whatever the cost. The country is mired in doubt and

:21:19.:21:28.

confusion, a government lacking direction and an economy at risk, on

:21:29.:21:33.

a rain sodden pro-EU master menstruation in Parliament Square

:21:34.:21:38.

broke up a short time ago but the Labour Party has must cease to

:21:39.:21:42.

function as a coherent force in British politics and the realisation

:21:43.:21:44.

is dawning on both sides of the great Labour divide that they may

:21:45.:21:49.

just not recover at all from the civil war which now seems to be

:21:50.:21:53.

entirely unstoppable. STUDIO: Labour is not the only party

:21:54.:21:58.

with a leadership battle now. Prutton's future relationships with

:21:59.:22:02.

Europe and the wider world are in a state of suspension until the new

:22:03.:22:05.

leader is chosen and the Tory party membership aren't just choosing a

:22:06.:22:08.

new leader for their party, but a new Prime Minister for the country

:22:09.:22:12.

so the whole process has been put on fast forward, there will be a

:22:13.:22:15.

line-up of candidate is by noon on Thursday and a new Prime Minister by

:22:16.:22:20.

September nine. As for the runners, Boris Johnson and to Reza make look

:22:21.:22:23.

like the front runners but it could be a crowded field. Stephen Crabb,

:22:24.:22:26.

Work and Pensions Secretary, looks like declaring tomorrow and other

:22:27.:22:30.

names like Jeremy Hunt, Health Secretary, Liam Fox from the right

:22:31.:22:34.

of the party. -- Theresa May. Whoever comes out in front of the

:22:35.:22:38.

field and wins the contest, it will set a new direction for Britain in

:22:39.:22:42.

light of the European Referendum result.

:22:43.:22:45.

What about the questions about an early election?

:22:46.:22:49.

Those suggestions are real and they are active. Why is that? The new

:22:50.:22:53.

Prime Minister will bring in a new programme with a wafer thin

:22:54.:22:56.

majority. If the Labour Party is much weakened after their contest

:22:57.:22:59.

for the leadership a snap election may turn out to be absolutely

:23:00.:23:02.

irresistible. It's worth noting Boris Johnson said he wouldn't be

:23:03.:23:06.

interested in a snap election but premise does, if he is the Prime

:23:07.:23:10.

Minister, can change their mind and these Tory leadership contests down

:23:11.:23:14.

the decades have had a strange way of defying the betting at the outset

:23:15.:23:17.

of the contest. STUDIO: John Pienaar at Westminster,

:23:18.:23:18.

thank you. England's football team have flown

:23:19.:23:21.

home after they crashed out of Euro 2016 following their shock

:23:22.:23:23.

defeat against Iceland. Roy Hodgson - who resigned

:23:24.:23:25.

immediately after the match - described last night's performance

:23:26.:23:28.

as a "one-off event". Our sports editor, Dan Roan,

:23:29.:23:30.

asks what went wrong - and who the next England

:23:31.:23:32.

manager could be. REPORTER: Got a message

:23:33.:23:35.

for the fans, Roy? It was a new low -

:23:36.:23:37.

defeated, deflated, humiliated. England left Nice this morning

:23:38.:23:42.

a national embarrassment, still reeling from the most infamous

:23:43.:23:45.

loss in their history. Hours later, the team's

:23:46.:23:49.

underachieving millionaires returning to their luxury hotel

:23:50.:23:52.

in Chantilly for the final time, out of Euro 2016, headphones

:23:53.:23:56.

on and with nothing to say. Roy Hodgson, who quit as manager

:23:57.:23:59.

in the immediate aftermath of the defeat to Iceland,

:24:00.:24:02.

reluctantly facing the media. I don't think I have got anything

:24:03.:24:06.

to say to you that is any different to what you know already,

:24:07.:24:12.

or that you are writing already. I did so because I have never

:24:13.:24:15.

shirked a press conference, I have never run away from anybody,

:24:16.:24:21.

I have answered questions We are sorry that we couldn't give

:24:22.:24:24.

them the results that At times, struggling

:24:25.:24:28.

to contain his emotions, One particularly bad game has caused

:24:29.:24:31.

a lot of damage to me, personally, to the team,

:24:32.:24:40.

and even to the team going forward because now they have got a major

:24:41.:24:45.

bridge to repair which, had we played better last night,

:24:46.:24:50.

would not have needed repairing. England's abject performance

:24:51.:24:54.

against rank outsiders Iceland, who have lit up their

:24:55.:24:57.

first-ever major tournament, The 2-1 winners' togetherness

:24:58.:24:59.

putting shambolic England to shame The worst England performance

:25:00.:25:04.

I have ever seen. The ability to perform

:25:05.:25:08.

under pressure, Here is why last night

:25:09.:25:16.

was such a shock. England's population dwarfs

:25:17.:25:23.

tiny Iceland's 330,000. Hodgson earned ?3.5 million a year,

:25:24.:25:27.

that's ten times more than counterpart, Heimir Hallgrimsson,

:25:28.:25:29.

a part-time dentist. And while the Premier League

:25:30.:25:34.

is the world's richest, the Icelandic top-flight has no

:25:35.:25:38.

fully professional teams. Footage has emerged on social media

:25:39.:25:42.

of England's defeat being wildly celebrated by the Welsh squad,

:25:43.:25:47.

who later said they were merely Wales are now the only home

:25:48.:25:50.

nation left at the Euros, so why do England always fail

:25:51.:25:56.

when it matters most? England wanted for nothing here

:25:57.:25:59.

in France, but they leave having The FA say they are prepared

:26:00.:26:02.

to consider a foreign coach as Hodgson's successor,

:26:03.:26:08.

but after a failure that no longer comes as any surprise,

:26:09.:26:11.

the sense is that it will take a lot more than a new manager if England

:26:12.:26:15.

is ever to have a team When it comes down to the games that

:26:16.:26:18.

matters, we haven't delivered, and that is not just a recent thing,

:26:19.:26:23.

that's been a 50-year thing, It is more than I think purely

:26:24.:26:27.

the skill and the tactics that... To my mind, there is something

:26:28.:26:34.

around the psychological preparation and resilience, which

:26:35.:26:37.

is also important. Until last night, this loss

:26:38.:26:41.

to the part-timers of the United States in 1950 had been

:26:42.:26:43.

the benchmark for England Two years ago, Hodgson was in charge

:26:44.:26:46.

when his team crashed out of the Brazil World Cup

:26:47.:26:52.

in just five days. But now this chastened team

:26:53.:26:55.

has outdone them all, back on home soil this evening

:26:56.:26:58.

after a defeat they A report into Islamophobia in the UK

:26:59.:27:00.

has found that Muslim hate crime is most likely to be carried out

:27:01.:27:12.

by teenagers - and that women are more likely

:27:13.:27:15.

to attacked than men. The report - to be launched tomorrow

:27:16.:27:17.

by the monitoring group Tell Mama - Our special correspondent,

:27:18.:27:20.

Ed Thomas, has more. His report contains language

:27:21.:27:26.

which some viewers A campaign she never finished. We

:27:27.:27:41.

just had a really exciting conversation about what I can do to

:27:42.:27:47.

help tackle Islamophobia. Tomorrow, Jo Cox would have spoken up for

:27:48.:27:52.

British Muslim women to say that too many face racial abuse. I don't

:27:53.:27:58.

think I should be refused entry to a shop, or be abused for the way I

:27:59.:28:03.

look. Two generations of the same family, a dentist, a politics

:28:04.:28:11.

student, and an artist. And they have all faced hate. What has this

:28:12.:28:15.

done to you? Done to me now, I feel I can laugh off an incident, someone

:28:16.:28:21.

else told me to come back where I came from, somebody says I stink,

:28:22.:28:28.

somebody says I'm a dirty lackey, summary said I was Bin Laden's Nice.

:28:29.:28:37.

This man barged into me and he said, you are Bin Laden's Denise, a bloody

:28:38.:28:42.

terrorist. That's my problem with racism and hatred and Islamophobia

:28:43.:28:46.

and bigotry, it's the easy targets, and they are women, children and

:28:47.:28:52.

older men and women. Veils being pulled off, women being told get out

:28:53.:28:55.

of the country. This man worked with Jo Cox and tomorrow both would have

:28:56.:28:59.

presented a report in Parliament to warn of the damage being done. It

:29:00.:29:03.

has impacts on their families, it has impacts on the way their sons

:29:04.:29:07.

perceive what is going on with their mother and creates an environment

:29:08.:29:11.

where a victim mentality can take root. And once that happens I'm a

:29:12.:29:16.

Islamist narratives can also take root. Those most at risk, the report

:29:17.:29:21.

says, are Muslim Women's Network wearing Islamic dress. Some here say

:29:22.:29:26.

it is changing how they live. When I'm picking the children up from the

:29:27.:29:29.

mosque I would rather they come in the car rather than walking. I have

:29:30.:29:34.

to think twice about going into town at certain times. What have you read

:29:35.:29:39.

on social media? That Muslims are to blame, if wasn't for them, if they

:29:40.:29:43.

were not in our country things would be different. This report focused on

:29:44.:29:47.

Muslims but many face intolerance. Police say a hate crime for all

:29:48.:29:51.

religions across England and Wales has risen by more than 40% in a

:29:52.:29:57.

year. And for those living with that hate, the question, why? I do know

:29:58.:30:03.

how people can treat me that way, I haven't done anything to these

:30:04.:30:11.

people. They just hate me. SOBS. I don't think it's fair for

:30:12.:30:18.

people to make people feel like this because we are all human beings and

:30:19.:30:21.

we are all here to make the world a better place.

:30:22.:30:22.

Ed Thomas, BBC News. The Queen has visited the famous

:30:23.:30:29.

stones of the Giants Causeway as part of her 90th birthday tour of

:30:30.:30:30.

Northern Ireland. The visit marks her first public

:30:31.:30:33.

engagements since the UK The Queen held a number

:30:34.:30:35.

of political meetings, although all parties refused

:30:36.:30:38.

to confirm whether Tennis now, and world number two

:30:39.:30:40.

Andy Murray has progressed safely to the next round of Wimbledon

:30:41.:30:47.

defeating Liam Broady Joe Wilson reports. There is the

:30:48.:31:00.

flag as clear as you will get. But today there was Britain on both

:31:01.:31:06.

sides of the net. They may look similar, that's Liam Broady, the

:31:07.:31:09.

wildcard, here is Andy Murray, the ace. You can tell them apart because

:31:10.:31:16.

Murray is right handed and he was the one in control. Expending as

:31:17.:31:20.

little energy as possible is the key to the first week. 6-2 the first

:31:21.:31:27.

set. 6-3 the second. Ranked 235 in the world, but here is a glimpse of

:31:28.:31:33.

what Broady can do. Facing a British opponent here was new for Murray,

:31:34.:31:38.

but he's never lost a first-round match at Wimbledon. 6-4 in the

:31:39.:31:46.

third, so far, so familiar. When you study the order of play for

:31:47.:31:49.

today, there may be something that reminds you of the past. Not him!

:31:50.:31:55.

For the first time since the mid 1980s there is a female British

:31:56.:32:02.

player who is seeded at Wimbledon. Johanna Konta stormed to the first

:32:03.:32:08.

set, taking it 6-1. She was 2-1 up in the second and guess what

:32:09.:32:12.

happened. Play is suspended. There is no roof on Court 1, yet. Joe

:32:13.:32:15.

Wilson, BBC News, Wimbledon. One of Britain's most distinguished

:32:16.:32:17.

artists, David Hockney, presents a new body of work

:32:18.:32:19.

at the Royal Academy of Arts Hockney has captured friends,

:32:20.:32:22.

family and acquaintances Our arts editor, Will Gompertz,

:32:23.:32:28.

met him at the show. In the last three years

:32:29.:32:31.

he's produced these 82 They are all the same size,

:32:32.:32:35.

painted in the same LA studio, with the subjects all

:32:36.:32:41.

sitting on the same chair. As a group, what do you think

:32:42.:32:45.

they tell us? That we are different

:32:46.:32:49.

on the outside and we are I mean, it's about a 20,

:32:50.:32:57.

21-hour exposure. Do you think you are getting

:32:58.:33:08.

better as an artist? When you're going deaf,

:33:09.:33:12.

you compensate. I think my vision

:33:13.:33:20.

got better, I think. I was seeing sharper and clearer

:33:21.:33:25.

and I put that down This is the first portrait

:33:26.:33:31.

in the series. It depicts the disconsolate figure

:33:32.:33:37.

of JP Goncalves de Lima who, like David Hockney, was devastated

:33:38.:33:40.

by the death of a young assistant That was a terrible shock

:33:41.:33:44.

and a terrible thing. I mean, I didn't do

:33:45.:33:50.

much work for a while. The exhibition is something

:33:51.:33:54.

of an album featuring David Hockney's inner circle,

:33:55.:34:09.

among whom is Celia Birtwell, a textile designer he has been

:34:10.:34:12.

painting for over 40 years. Well, you can always

:34:13.:34:16.

criticise the way you look. He always says he doesn't

:34:17.:34:22.

paint to flatter, so he No, is clearly the answer

:34:23.:34:25.

because when it comes to portraiture, the artist always

:34:26.:34:37.

has the last word. Let's go back to our main story, at

:34:38.:34:52.

least 28 people are now known to have been killed in the suicide bomb

:34:53.:34:56.

attacks at Ataturk airport this evening. Mark Lowen is on a plane

:34:57.:35:00.

that landed there a few hours ago. What more can you tell us? The

:35:01.:35:09.

casualty numbers have gone up, 28 dead now, 60 injured, that is what

:35:10.:35:12.

we are being told by the local authorities, and there were indeed

:35:13.:35:19.

three suicide bombers. Initial indications are that this was an

:35:20.:35:23.

attack by so-called Islamic State. If that is the case, there will be

:35:24.:35:38.

huge recriminations against President Erdogan. His supporters

:35:39.:35:48.

say IS struck around the world and you can't see when this is going to

:35:49.:35:52.

happen and the government is facing multiple terror threats and the

:35:53.:35:54.

international community needs to stand with them. Turkey has seen a

:35:55.:35:59.

huge tourism hit, 45% down across the country. This country will be

:36:00.:36:03.

left reeling from tonight's deadly attack. Mark Lowen, thank you. Also,

:36:04.:36:09.

David Cameron has been speaking after his meeting with EU leaders

:36:10.:36:13.

this evening. He has said he has no regrets over his decision to call a

:36:14.:36:17.

referendum. He says he threw everything into the Remain campaign.

:36:18.:36:21.

More on that story on the BBC News Channel and on Newsnight, which is

:36:22.:36:26.

under way now on BBC Two. Now, it is time for the news

:36:27.:36:28.

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