25/09/2016 BBC News at Ten


25/09/2016

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As the fighting intensifies in the northern city

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bombing civilian areas. for indiscriminately

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Bunker-busting bombs more suited to destroying military installations

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are now destroying homes, decimating bomb shelters,

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crippling, maiming, killing dozens if not hundreds.

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violence is down to rebel forces. civilians, and says the recent

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TRANSLATION: More than 200,000 people in Aleppo have become

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prisoners of the terrorist group and other terrorist groups.

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They are trying to use women and children as a human shield.

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We'll have the latest from an emergency meeting of the UN,

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Also on the programme. have walked out.

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Let nobody in the Labour Party claim a monopoly of principle.

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Labour MPs are urged to stay in the party

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re-election as leader. after Jeremy Corbyn's

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Olympic cycling champion Sir Bradley Wiggins speaks

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for the first time about his use of steroid injections.

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This was not about trying to find a way to gain an unfair advantage.

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They've killed and injured more people in

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rebel-held eastern Aleppo and made a mockery of this week's diplomatic

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efforts to salvage what was left of a ceasefire agreement.

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Seven days, according to one diplomat, when

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talks failed and barbarism triumphed.

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Britain has accused Vladimir Putin's Russia as well as

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the Assad regime of perpetrating war crimes.

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After five years of conflict, you might think that the

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regime has had its fill of barbarity, that its sick bloodlust

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against its own people has finally run its course.

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But this weekend, the regime and Russia have

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TRANSLATION: More than 200,000 people in Aleppo have become

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prisoners of the terrorist group Jabhat al-Nusra and other terrorist

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They are trying to use women and children as a human shield.

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In this multisided conflict fighters once loyal to Al-Qaeda are playing a

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prominent role in the battle against government forces.

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Humanitarian workers on the ground estimate that

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half of the casualties pulled from the rubble were children.

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No wonder the UN has said the conflict has

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Now during the course of this conflict there have been many

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Security Council meetings, where Western ambassadors have condemned

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the actions of the Syrian Government. What made today so

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different and significant was that Britain, France and the United

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States primarily went after Russia and said that when it comes to the

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bombing of Aleppo, the actions of the Assad regime and Vladimir

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Putin's Russia are one and the same. Now tonight, British diplomats are

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telling us that the talks that led to this ceasefire agreement,

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negotiations between the US Secretary of State, John Kerry and

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his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov r near the end of their life.

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Russia's ambassador said bringing peace to Syria is now

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all-but-impossible. At the end of an intense week of diplomacy here at

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the United Nations, a mood of great anger and great despondency.

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In the wake of Jeremy Corbyn's resounding re-election

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victory as Labour leader, several senior MPs who wanted him

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to step down say they'll remain in the party to fight

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The former Shadow Foreign Secretary Hilary Benn,

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whose sacking led to a wave of resignations from the frontbench,

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has told activists they should rise above the most vile abuse

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being thrown at them by other members of the party.

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Our Political Editor Laura Kuenssberg reports from the Labour

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This is our party and we stay and we fight.

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Packed in, hardly room to stand, in this room Jeremy Corbyn's

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These MPs and activists are the outsiders now.

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So many gathered, they filled the back lane too.

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Let nobody in the Labour Party claim a monopoly of principle.

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But speaker after speaker have said they are distraught

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People are disappointed, but we live in a democracy,

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To those 9 million people who voted for the Labour Party,

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When there is the most vile abuse from people who say they are members

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of the Labour Party directed to other members of the party, all I

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The planned rally upstairs was so packed, this meeting has

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spilled out into the street, an impromptu meeting

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of activists and MPs, many of them distraught

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at yesterday's result, but determined they are going nowhere.

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His detractors say Jeremy Corbyn believes his own hype.

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But his clear double victory put him firmly in charge.

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And what should happen to those MPs who took him on and lost?

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The relationship between an MP and their constituency is complex.

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I think the vast majority of the MPs have no problem whatsoever.

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He delighted some of his vast group of supporters.

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The surprise guest at a rally, fresh from the studio.

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Thanks for giving me a few minutes of your time.

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He might please them even more with plans to give members much more

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I want to see much greater democracy within the party,

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and unleashing and unlocking ideas and potential.

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For his supporters, this conference is a chance for a show of strength.

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They have cast their villains as well in the drama

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Lots of right-wing Labour MPs were constantly stabbing

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It seemed that the first thing they must do when they wake up

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of a morning is think, "What stick can I hit

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Tonight, the former leader tried to reassure.

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I don't believe these people that write us off all the time.

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Some of our biggest gains and most-famous victories have been

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I said yesterday we needed to unify behind Jeremy,

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Labour has been noisy, angry and passionate.

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For peace, both sides believe there is much to forgive.

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The Olympic cycling champion Sir Bradley Wiggins has

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defended his use of medical certificates allowing him

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to take otherwise-banned substances to treat asthma.

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Online hackers calling themselves Fancy Bears leaked his confidential

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Last month, Sir Bradley Wiggins became Britain's most

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Today, he was defending his reputation.

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The cyclist is one of many leading athletes who have

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had their therapeutic use exemptions, or TUEs,

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These allow the use of banned treatments, if there

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The hack revealed Sir Bradley received TUEs for powerful steriod

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injections, days before the Tour de France in 2011

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But in his first interview since the controversy erupted,

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ten days ago, Sir Bradley told the BBC's Andrew Marr programme,

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that he took the drug to treat his asthma.

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This was to cure a medical condition and was...

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The governing body, the World Anti-Doping Agency,

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everyone said this guy - this wasn't about trying to find

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a way to gain an unfair advantage, this was about putting myself back

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on a level playing field in order to compete at the highest level.

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What's to become of a cycling superhero?

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The interview was recorded before a former team doctor

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of Sir Bradley's told BBC's Newsnight that he was surprised

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the cyclist was allowed to use the corticosteroid, triamcinolone,

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In his autobiography, Sir Bradley wrote he'd

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I was writing it with a cycling journalist who was very

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knowledgeable on the sport and had lived through the whole

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So from your point of view, "needles" meant -

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All the questions at this time were very much loaded

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Having finally broken his silence, Wiggins will now be hoping that this

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The problem is, it doesn't address all the issues.

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For example, why is it that if he was struggle with illness

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in the build-up to the 2012 Tour de France, does he say in his book

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that he was in good health and fine form.

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the use of such medication. and why they backed

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Wiggins' former team, competing in Belgium today,

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have always claimed a strong ethical stance on doping and in

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a short statement have defended their use of TUEs.

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Opinion is divided on whether trimcinolone

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is performance-enhancing and although there's no

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have broken any rules, some aren't happy the

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I think a lot of people will be very disappointed that they have, sort

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of, perhaps crossed an ethical line, if not a legal line.

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I think for a lot of people, the drug that Bradley Wiggins used,

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All this has raised questions over whether the system of medical

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exemptions now needs reform but with his legacy on the line,

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one of British sport's greatst figures insists he has stayed

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within the letter and the spirit of the sport.

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Police in the American city of Charlotte in North Carolina have

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released their own video of the controversial

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shooting of a black man, Keith Lamont Scott, last Tuesday.

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It's not clear whether he's carrying a gun in the footage,

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though the city's police chief says Mr Scott was armed.

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The shooting has led to several days of protests and riots.

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The former Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith has

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rounded on one of David Cameron's senior aides for criticising

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Theresa May's conduct during the EU referendum campaign.

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Sir Craig Oliver, who was director of communications for Mr Cameron,

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said the former Prime Minister felt badly let down by Mrs May,

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because she repeatedly refused to back him over Europe.

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Mr Duncan Smith accused Sir Craig of pinning the blame

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Health problems related to the way we live -

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diet, drinking, smoking and a lack of exercise -

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Health experts say unless we tackle them more effectively,

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they pose a threat to the future of the entire health service.

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Now, one GP in the former fishing town of Fleetwood in Lancashire

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is trying to bring a different approach to solving the problem,

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by bringing together not just health professionals,

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but sports clubs, housing associations and even the police.

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Our health correspondent Dominic Hughes has been given

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Here's the first in a series of special reports.

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A seaside town struggling with physical and mental health problems.

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After every up I have an inevitable down.

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The new threats are now things like diabetes,

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like chronic bronchitis, for which there is no cure

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And a community trying to heal itself.

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What we need to give to the people of Fleetwood is some hope.

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Aged 36, Jonathan hasn't worked for a decade.

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Crippled by mental, as much as physical ailments,

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I said to my wife about a week ago, I can see this low side coming back

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and she went to bed one night and I started self-harming.

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I really, really wanted to die, you know.

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But I hadn't got the nerve to take my life.

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On bad days, all Jonathan can manage is watching TV, smoking

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Diabetes, depression and despair are all-too-common in an area

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where life expectancy for men, is around seven years lower

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The collapse of the fishing industry in Fleetwood in the 1970s and '80s,

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combined with a closure of a big local factory

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and the main ferry terminal, hit the town hard.

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Unemployment levels rose, poverty levels soared

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and there was a devastating impact on the health of this community.

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Illnesses linked to lifestyle, threaten to overwhelm

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Things like smoking, like being overweight,

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lead into illnesses like chronic bronchitis and diabetes.

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They are illnesses for which there is no cure and cost the NHS more

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So in Fleetwood they've decided to act.

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A coalition of local people and health professionals,

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determed to break a damaging cycle of sickness.

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If we can give the the residents hope and a sense of purpose,

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that's when the whole of the health of the town starts to improve,

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Plans for more open spaces, cooking classes for kids,

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It's early days, but for Jonathan, defining success is simple.

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I'm not on about something miraculously better,

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like living in a mansion with Ferraris outside.

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Just with getting out once a week and starting to look

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forward to the future, instead of dreading it.

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This is an ambitious plan, to change behaviour that's damaging

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health and to win back the years of life currently being

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And Dominic will be following Fleetwood's health drive

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Tomorrow night, Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton will go head

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to head in the first of three hotly-anticipated televised debates.

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With the two US Presidential candidates running neck and neck

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in the polls, their performances will be heavily scrutinised,

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Our North America Editor Jon Sopel has been looking back at the key

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moments in previous TV debates, and analysing what can make

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the difference between a winning and a losing performance.

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NEWS REEL: The candidates need no introduction.

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The Republicanp candidate, Vice-President Richard M Nixon

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and the Democratic candidate, Senator John F Kennedy.

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The moment that politics changed in America and around the world.

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I should make it very clear that I do not think

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56 years ago, it felt like a revolution, as personality

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became as important as policy, perception as important as reality.

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And a sweaty, old-looking Richard Nixon, bested,

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by the handsome young, John F Kennedy.

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Over the years, the fascination hasn't dimmed and it's expected

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the audience for Monday's debate will break all records,

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Gerald Ford never recovered from this in his 1980 encounter

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There is no Soviet domination of Eastern Europe and there never

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There are the zingers, 73-year-old Ronald Reagan

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old to run for president, against the Democrat Walter Mondale,

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I will not make age an issue of this campaign.

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I am not going to exploit - for political purposes -

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my opponent's youth and inexperience.

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Senator Dan Quayle was blown away by this from Lloyd Bentson

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And then there have been the failed attempts at intimidation,

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The big moments in US politics have all been emotional and visual.

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How Reagan's team was at ease and Jimmy Carter didn't.

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How Rick Perry looked when he made an error and that's why the law

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among the former speech writers is, if you want to know who is going

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to be seen as winning or losing, you watch this thing

:19:51.:19:53.

So can you win the White House off the back of a great

:19:54.:19:58.

But could you lose it by doing badly, almost certainly.

:19:59.:20:03.

And that's why the stakes are so high for these two

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And why the TV audience promises to be huge.

:20:06.:20:20.

Some football news, and Manchester City's women have

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been crowned Women's Super League champions for the first time.

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They secured the title with a second-half penalty

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from Toni Duggan, which sealed a 2-0 win over Chelsea this afternoon.

:20:27.:20:30.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have arrived in Canada

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for their first royal tour with both their children.

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The couple, along with three-year-old Prince George

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and 16-month-old Princess Charlotte, were greeted by Prime Minister

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This hovercraft is the latest form of royal transport which will be

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used to navigate these coastal cities. Five years ago when Prince

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William and his wife were in Canada, they came as newlyweds. They've

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returned as a family of four. The Cambridges in Canada,

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and a brief taste for Prince George and Princess Charlotte of the royal

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life they have been born It is early evening on the Canadian

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west coast, but this time-zone travelling toddler's body clock

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is telling him it is way On the tarmac, a tired George needed

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the support of his father. Now was not the time to tell him

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that, as things stand, both will one day be

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Kings of Canada. For Charlotte, the teething

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16-month-old, this is her first And on bended knee, a rare

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defeat for Canada's Prime Well versed in kissing

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babies, he was stumped Away from the airport

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and away from public view for George and Charlotte,

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their parents are determined Nous sommes tres heureux

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d'etre de retour... His destiny means William will have

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to brush up on his French In this part of the world,

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this is an ideal way to travel. While George and Charlotte

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stayed with their nanny, their parents took a plane

:22:31.:22:38.

from Victoria to another of British Columbia's

:22:39.:22:40.

coastal cities, Vancouver. Once again, plenty of people were on

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hand to see for themselves the future of the British and Canadian

:22:50.:22:53.

monarchy. Here the couple will visit one of Canada's poorest

:22:54.:22:55.

neighbourhoods and meet some Syrian refugees.

:22:56.:23:02.

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