27/03/2017 BBC News at Ten


27/03/2017

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Police say there's no evidence to link the Westminster attacker

:00:00.:00:00.

But they say Khalid Masood, who was described by IS as one

:00:00.:00:12.

of their soldiers, had clearly been interested in jihad.

:00:13.:00:16.

Masood drove his car at over 70 miles an hour

:00:17.:00:18.

hitting dozens of people in his path.

:00:19.:00:23.

I would more describe him as somebody who's been exploited,

:00:24.:00:28.

and a man who is clearly a lone actor, who has come up

:00:29.:00:31.

from the basement, so to speak, to commit a murderous and cowardly

:00:32.:00:34.

The family of one of the victims - the American tourist Kurt Cochran -

:00:35.:00:40.

say they bear no ill will following the atrocity.

:00:41.:00:44.

He was an amazing individual who loved everyone, and tried

:00:45.:00:46.

And during the day, the attacker's mother has spoken for the first

:00:47.:00:55.

time about the atrocity, expressing her shock and sadness.

:00:56.:00:58.

Nicola Sturgeon and Theresa May hold their first face-to-face

:00:59.:01:04.

talks since the demand for a new independence referendum,

:01:05.:01:07.

and two days before the Brexit process is triggered.

:01:08.:01:13.

In Iraq, as the battle for Mosul intensifies,

:01:14.:01:15.

we report on the plight of thousands of civilians.

:01:16.:01:20.

It might be good for the tempo of the military operation,

:01:21.:01:29.

but it isn't necessarily good for preserving civilian lives.

:01:30.:01:35.

In Northern Ireland, the political parties get extra time

:01:36.:01:39.

to try to reach a deal on forming a new power-sharing executive.

:01:40.:01:44.

And - is this the kind of show that could transform the world of county

:01:45.:01:47.

And coming up in Sportsday on BBC News:

:01:48.:01:53.

England Under-21s continue their preparations for

:01:54.:01:57.

the European Championship this summer, with a comfortable 4-0

:01:58.:01:59.

The Metropolitan Police says there's no evidence of any link

:02:00.:02:26.

between Khalid Masood, the man responsible for

:02:27.:02:27.

the Westminster attack last week, and the Islamic State group

:02:28.:02:32.

Officers said that Masood "clearly had an interest in jihad",

:02:33.:02:39.

and they were still investigating the circumstances that

:02:40.:02:41.

led to the attack, which claimed four lives,

:02:42.:02:42.

Masood's mother has broken her silence today,

:02:43.:02:46.

Our home affairs correspondent Daniel Sandford has the latest.

:02:47.:02:55.

Ploughing across Westminster Bridge at speeds of up to 76 miles an hour,

:02:56.:03:03.

Khalid Masood, using his hired 4x4 as a weapon.

:03:04.:03:08.

Going back through CCTV, detectives have discovered that he

:03:09.:03:12.

drove around Westminster sometime before his

:03:13.:03:16.

attack too, possibly on a reconnaissance mission.

:03:17.:03:19.

Today, Masood's elderly mother, Janet Ajao,

:03:20.:03:23.

Detectives have established that the Westminster

:03:24.:03:41.

attacker had a clear interest in jihad, but have so far found no

:03:42.:03:44.

evidence that Khalid Masood discussed his attack with others or

:03:45.:03:49.

had contact with Al-Qaeda or so-called Islamic State, who had

:03:50.:03:51.

described him as a soldier of the caliphate.

:03:52.:03:53.

I would more describe him as somebody who has been exploited, and

:03:54.:04:05.

a man who was clearly a actor who has come

:04:06.:04:08.

up from the basement, so to speak, to commit a murderous

:04:09.:04:15.

In the last three minutes before the carnage, Masood's

:04:16.:04:19.

phone used to be encrypted messaging service WhatsApp.

:04:20.:04:29.

As the mountain of flowers and wreaths grow,

:04:30.:04:31.

detectives made it clear today that the communications that Khalid

:04:32.:04:33.

Masood had in the immediate build-up to the attack were a main line of

:04:34.:04:37.

They are asking anybody who heard from him that day

:04:38.:04:40.

to come forward to help them to establish what his state of mind

:04:41.:04:43.

There is little doubt that Khalid Masood had a violent past.

:04:44.:04:47.

Danny Smith got into an argument with him in 2003, when Masood

:04:48.:04:50.

And he just pulled a knife out, and he sort of flinched to see

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I thought, surely he ain't going to stab me for this.

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Full-on punched me, stabbed me straight in the face.

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On Wednesday, one week on from the attack,

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the Westminster coroner will formally begin the inquests

:05:18.:05:19.

into the four people killed before adjourning them for

:05:20.:05:21.

On Thursday, she will do the same for

:05:22.:05:24.

the man who murdered them, Khalid Masood.

:05:25.:05:28.

Detectives trying to work out when Khalid Masood was radicalised have

:05:29.:05:35.

ruled out for now his time in prison and they can't find any link with

:05:36.:05:39.

the extremist group during his time when he was living in Luton. In

:05:40.:05:43.

fact, while he was clearly a very violent young man, he seems to have

:05:44.:05:47.

calmed down at around the time he converted to Islam and it was only

:05:48.:05:50.

much more recently that he descended into a world of jihad on terror.

:05:51.:05:57.

Thank you very much. Daniel Sandford at new Scotland Yard.

:05:58.:06:00.

During the day, the family of an American tourist

:06:01.:06:02.

who was killed in the Westminster attack said they bore no ill will.

:06:03.:06:10.

Kurt and Melissa Cochran, from Utah, were on the final day

:06:11.:06:13.

of a trip to London to celebrate their 25th

:06:14.:06:15.

wedding anniversary when they were hit by the car

:06:16.:06:17.

on Westminster Bridge, killing Mr Cochran.

:06:18.:06:18.

The family said they wanted to focus on Mr Cochran's

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Our correspondent Daniela Relph reports.

:06:22.:06:23.

It had been their first visit out of the USA -

:06:24.:06:26.

a tour of Europe to celebrate their 25th wedding anniversary.

:06:27.:06:30.

But on the final day of their trip, Kurt Cochran was killed

:06:31.:06:33.

His wife, Melissa Cochran-Payne, seriously injured.

:06:34.:06:42.

Today, 13 members of their family spoke publicly for the first time.

:06:43.:06:48.

From Utah, they are a Mormon family, who have found

:06:49.:06:50.

I think it's hard for most of us to imagine here what it must be

:06:51.:06:55.

Can you give us some sense of the impact on the family?

:06:56.:07:00.

I think it's brought us really close together.

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Our family's been always close together, and we've

:07:04.:07:06.

always had some wonderful, wonderful times together.

:07:07.:07:09.

We just love and support each other so much, and I think it's made us

:07:10.:07:13.

Kurt Cochran ran a music studio back home, an enthusiasm

:07:14.:07:16.

Their song was featured and they're about to get going right here...

:07:17.:07:23.

There have been tribute concerts in his honour.

:07:24.:07:27.

His family overwhelmed by the thousands of

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What the Cochran and Payne families have shown today is what happens

:07:29.:07:35.

when you are suddenly affected by an event of this magnitude.

:07:36.:07:39.

It has brought with it trauma, grief and, for them, forgiveness.

:07:40.:07:44.

None of us harbour any ill will or harsh feelings towards this.

:07:45.:07:51.

We love our brother, we love what he brought to the world.

:07:52.:07:56.

That lack of resentment or bitterness - a feeling shared

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We should sort of try and unify through love and compassion,

:08:01.:08:07.

rather than through our hatred and anger about what happened.

:08:08.:08:11.

Today, Tobias Ellwood was in Parliament Square to pay his

:08:12.:08:15.

The Foreign Office Minister had tried so hard to save the life of PC

:08:16.:08:21.

This, a chance for him to remember all of those killed.

:08:22.:08:25.

Daniela Relph, BBC News, Westminster.

:08:26.:08:32.

Theresa May has held talks with Nicola Sturgeon, for the first

:08:33.:08:34.

time since the Scottish government demanded a new

:08:35.:08:36.

The First Minister wants a referendum within two years.

:08:37.:08:41.

She says that Brexit has transformed the situation since voters voted

:08:42.:08:44.

But the Prime Minister has restated her view that now is not

:08:45.:08:51.

Our Scotland editor Sarah Smith reports.

:08:52.:08:57.

Theresa May knows this could be awkward.

:08:58.:08:59.

She's here to talk about her Article 50 letter.

:09:00.:09:04.

She's here to press her demand for a referendum on independence.

:09:05.:09:08.

So no handshakes, no press conference, just a couple

:09:09.:09:12.

of souvenir photographs that neither woman looks like they're enjoying.

:09:13.:09:17.

By stark contrast, their first meeting just eight months ago.

:09:18.:09:21.

Then they said they had a good working relationship, not now,

:09:22.:09:24.

as Mrs May says she will reject any request for a vote

:09:25.:09:27.

My position isn't going to change, which is now is not the time to be

:09:28.:09:34.

talking about a second independence referendum, because it wouldn't be

:09:35.:09:38.

fair on the Scottish people to ask them to make that decision

:09:39.:09:41.

Also because now is the time when we need to pull together,

:09:42.:09:47.

to make sure we get the best possible deal for the UK -

:09:48.:09:50.

The meeting, which took place on the 15th floor of this

:09:51.:09:54.

hotel, was, I'm told, businesslike and cordial.

:09:55.:09:56.

Probably the longest meeting between Nicola Sturgeon

:09:57.:09:59.

and Theresa May yet, but very little was agreed.

:10:00.:10:03.

The Scottish Government had been expecting to hear

:10:04.:10:06.

about new powers to be devolved to the Scottish Parliament

:10:07.:10:08.

after Brexit, but there was no detail on that,

:10:09.:10:11.

and when the First Minister told the Prime Minister how she intends

:10:12.:10:14.

to formally request another Scottish referendum she was told simply,

:10:15.:10:17.

The First Minister says Mrs May agreed -

:10:18.:10:24.

the shape of the Brexit deal should be clear in 18-24 months' time,

:10:25.:10:28.

which is when the Scottish Government want to hold that

:10:29.:10:30.

I've said that I want people in Scotland to have an informed

:10:31.:10:36.

choice when the terms of Brexit are clear.

:10:37.:10:38.

She has confirmed to me today that that will be in a period from autumn

:10:39.:10:41.

We both agree, now is not the time to ask people to make that choice,

:10:42.:10:46.

but since we both appear to be in agreement as to when that term,

:10:47.:10:50.

the terms of Brexit will become clear on her timetable,

:10:51.:10:53.

then that would underline my view that that is the right time.

:10:54.:10:58.

Visiting Police Scotland, Theresa May announced a major

:10:59.:11:00.

The message - the importance of coordinating security across the UK.

:11:01.:11:07.

When this great union of nations, England, Scotland, Wales

:11:08.:11:09.

and Northern Ireland, sets its mind on something, and

:11:10.:11:12.

works together with determination, we are an unstoppable force.

:11:13.:11:19.

In a speech to staff at the Department for

:11:20.:11:22.

International Development in East Kilbride, she said she wants

:11:23.:11:24.

But it is Scottish independence on the agenda at the Holyrood

:11:25.:11:28.

Parliament tomorrow, when they'll almost certainly vote

:11:29.:11:31.

Live to Westminster and our political editor Laura Kuenssberg.

:11:32.:11:43.

With just two days until the start of the Brexit process, was any

:11:44.:11:50.

realistic prospect of meaningful progress today? I think these two

:11:51.:11:54.

leaders are at a stand-off. It might not be personally bad-tempered but I

:11:55.:11:58.

think it has become politically bad tempered. There has even been spat

:11:59.:12:02.

tonight over what was or wasn't agreed between the two behind closed

:12:03.:12:07.

doors at their meeting. Number ten has disputed the SNP and Scottish

:12:08.:12:11.

Government's suggestion that somehow the Prime Minister accepted their

:12:12.:12:14.

version of what would be reasonable timetable. I think what we're

:12:15.:12:18.

seeing, just a few weeks since Nicola Sturgeon put forward her

:12:19.:12:23.

demand to press ahead with a second referendum, it seems abundantly

:12:24.:12:27.

clear that in the first ages at least of this whole process, this

:12:28.:12:31.

complicated path of taking us out of the European Union, that the

:12:32.:12:34.

tensions between the Scottish Government and Westminster

:12:35.:12:36.

government are going to be a constant feature of that as it

:12:37.:12:41.

unfolds. This potentially that adds an extra layer to every decision

:12:42.:12:47.

taken in this particular process, how will that decision go down in

:12:48.:12:50.

Scotland? Also a reminder of how much this is not just a conversation

:12:51.:12:55.

between us and the rest of the continent, it's conversation as well

:12:56.:12:59.

between the shape of our country, how will decisions be seen in

:13:00.:13:05.

Cardiff, in-store Mont, how will decisions be taken in the south-west

:13:06.:13:09.

or right around the country? I think this whole issue between Nicola

:13:10.:13:13.

Sturgeon and Theresa May is a very timely reminder of that. If they had

:13:14.:13:18.

been in any doubt, for Downing Street the consequences of the

:13:19.:13:21.

decisions they take, the path they navigate, which starts formally,

:13:22.:13:25.

finally you might think, on Wednesday, will have consequences in

:13:26.:13:30.

every corner of our country, not just around the EU. Laura, thank you

:13:31.:13:34.

very much. Laura Kuenssberg at Westminster.

:13:35.:13:36.

The Pentagon says it places the "highest priority"

:13:37.:13:38.

on investigating claims that coalition air strikes,

:13:39.:13:40.

led by the US, killed large numbers of civilians in the Iraqi city

:13:41.:13:43.

In western Mosul today, Iraqi forces have been

:13:44.:13:48.

intensifying their assault against so called Islamic State.

:13:49.:13:52.

But thousands of people are fleeing the city,

:13:53.:13:58.

and they're warning that many civilians are still at risk.

:13:59.:14:00.

With the city still divided between IS and the Iraqi army,

:14:01.:14:03.

our Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen reports from the front

:14:04.:14:05.

This is the Iraqi solution to an offensive that's

:14:06.:14:14.

stalled over the last week or so - attack again.

:14:15.:14:24.

It feels as if the air war over Mosul is intensifying.

:14:25.:14:27.

They seem confident they won't get shot down.

:14:28.:14:36.

And every day, a few thousand more people come walking out of the areas

:14:37.:14:42.

of Mosul still held by the jihadists who call themselves Islamic State.

:14:43.:14:48.

Many said IS used them as human shields, shooting out from the cover

:14:49.:14:52.

of their homes and streets, but the response -

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TRANSLATION: They destroyed our homes, our cars, everything.

:14:57.:15:07.

Entire families are gone, they are under the rubble.

:15:08.:15:18.

TRANSLATION: A lot of people died, children, women and men.

:15:19.:15:25.

Some very sophisticated modern weapons are in this

:15:26.:15:38.

fight, and so are these - locally made rockets

:15:39.:15:41.

over a short range - a blunt instrument.

:15:42.:15:47.

It might be good for the tempo of the military operation,

:15:48.:15:53.

but it isn't necessarily good for preserving civilian lives.

:15:54.:15:59.

But they want to win this battle, and they're

:16:00.:16:02.

This family's saved some of their favourite things

:16:03.:16:11.

now that the jihadists have been forced out of their area.

:16:12.:16:16.

IS banned television and made them stay through the worst

:16:17.:16:18.

Hassan Abdelfatah showed how their flat, still near the front

:16:19.:16:29.

line, was virtually destroyed with them in it.

:16:30.:16:36.

He said that men from IS stopped his neighbour taking six

:16:37.:16:39.

daughters to safety, threatening to hang him

:16:40.:16:41.

The people of Mosul have been left with impossible choices -

:16:42.:16:52.

risk death by staying in their own homes, or risk death

:16:53.:16:54.

taking their children across a front line.

:16:55.:16:59.

The Iraqi authorities advised them to stay put.

:17:00.:17:02.

Yassir Mohamed Ahmed brought his family onto their front

:17:03.:17:07.

doorstep to watch the battle a couple of hundred metres

:17:08.:17:10.

Euphoria at liberation from IS had stripped away his sense of danger.

:17:11.:17:24.

Most of the people arriving in government-held territory

:17:25.:17:28.

Many said IS fighters forced themselves into their homes.

:17:29.:17:39.

But Hamoud Suleiman said "Don't bomb them with us there".

:17:40.:17:50.

Nine of this woman's family were killed in the big raid on the 17th.

:17:51.:17:55.

She said she wasn't escaping the jihadists, but air strikes

:17:56.:17:59.

that use tonnes of bombs on a single sniper.

:18:00.:18:05.

TRANSLATION: They destroy the houses when there are one or two or three

:18:06.:18:09.

so-called Islamic State men inside them.

:18:10.:18:13.

My children, nine of my family killed.

:18:14.:18:26.

They call them smart bombs, but this is stupid.

:18:27.:18:32.

Using more firepower may well speed up victory over

:18:33.:18:36.

the jihadists in Mosul, but it is bad.

:18:37.:18:38.

Killing civilians is bad for the future of Iraq.

:18:39.:18:43.

These people are Sunni Muslims and they already feel like victims

:18:44.:18:46.

If Iraqis are to have any chance of better lives,

:18:47.:18:54.

then all of them need to feel as if their lives matter,

:18:55.:18:57.

Iraq has been shattered by the years of wars and sectarian conflict

:18:58.:19:05.

that followed the US and British invasion.

:19:06.:19:08.

Even when this war against IS is over, it might be too late to put

:19:09.:19:11.

In Northern Ireland, the political parties have

:19:12.:19:23.

been given more time to try to form a power-sharing

:19:24.:19:25.

government after failing to meet today's deadline.

:19:26.:19:27.

After three weeks of talks, there's still no sign

:19:28.:19:31.

of agreement between the Democratic Unionist Party

:19:32.:19:32.

The Northern Ireland secretary James Brokenshire said he believes

:19:33.:19:42.

there is no appetite for yet another election, as our

:19:43.:19:44.

Ireland correspondent Chris Buckler reports.

:19:45.:19:46.

There's been a lot of talk in Northern Ireland

:19:47.:19:48.

about restoring power-sharing, but at times it's felt

:19:49.:19:50.

like Sinn Fein and the DUP have been speaking a very different language.

:19:51.:19:59.

Much of the funding for this class for migrant workers in Dungannon

:20:00.:20:02.

comes through Stormont, but with no government, there's no budget.

:20:03.:20:07.

can't be sure how much money they'll have once the new financial year

:20:08.:20:11.

If there's no funding, it would mean imminent closure

:20:12.:20:19.

Those concerns about budgets stretch across all departments including

:20:20.:20:25.

But at four o'clock, the deadline for an agreement,

:20:26.:20:32.

the politicians weren't electing a First and Deputy First Minister.

:20:33.:20:35.

I think there are a short few weeks in order to resolve matters.

:20:36.:20:44.

The reason I say that is because of this issue,

:20:45.:20:47.

the stark issue in relation to public services here

:20:48.:20:49.

and the lack of a budget having been set.

:20:50.:20:56.

The Northern Ireland Secretary has a limited number of options.

:20:57.:20:58.

He can call another election, but he's indicated that there

:20:59.:21:01.

However, because he only has to call a vote

:21:02.:21:08.

within a reasonable time period, that does allow more time

:21:09.:21:10.

The other option is what's known as direct rule,

:21:11.:21:15.

where the Westminster government would take control of the running

:21:16.:21:17.

of Northern Ireland, at least for a time.

:21:18.:21:25.

Last week at Martin McGuinness's funeral, the leaders of the DUP

:21:26.:21:28.

and Sinn Fein did reach out to each other.

:21:29.:21:30.

But any signs of friendship were missing at Stormont

:21:31.:21:32.

today when Arlene Foster and Michelle O'Neill

:21:33.:21:34.

There's a gulf between the parties on a whole range of issues,

:21:35.:21:39.

from Sinn Fein's demands for legislation to give official

:21:40.:21:42.

status to the Irish language to that thorny old problem of how

:21:43.:21:45.

to recognise and deal with Northern Ireland's

:21:46.:21:47.

That all leaves major worries about the future of power-sharing,

:21:48.:21:53.

and in places like this Dungannon community group,

:21:54.:21:55.

another generation affected by Northern Ireland's old divides.

:21:56.:21:57.

Hundreds of Syrian rebels and their families have

:21:58.:22:06.

left their last stronghold in the city of Homs.

:22:07.:22:09.

They left the district of al-Waer under an evacuation deal

:22:10.:22:11.

Rebel fighters boarded buses out of the city,

:22:12.:22:14.

bound for another rebel-held area in the north,

:22:15.:22:17.

Our chief international correspondent Lyse Doucet is in Homs

:22:18.:22:20.

They held out as long as they could, fighters now leaving their last

:22:21.:22:31.

Their families go with them, taking whatever they can carry.

:22:32.:22:39.

Forced to leave behind the only homes they've ever known, it's hard.

:22:40.:22:51.

And the rebels have to leave behind their biggest weapons.

:22:52.:22:54.

Russia's military police also keep a close eye today.

:22:55.:23:03.

This agreement was negotiated with Moscow's help.

:23:04.:23:05.

In the weeks to come, thousands more will board these

:23:06.:23:07.

buses and head to an opposition area in the north.

:23:08.:23:14.

Despite the deal, a government cleric suddenly shows up...

:23:15.:23:18.

pleading with a Muslim leader from the other side.

:23:19.:23:23.

If you go, you'll end up like a refugee in a tent.

:23:24.:23:31.

The governor insists this is a good deal for Homs.

:23:32.:23:45.

TRANSLATION: The rebels had such a terrible impact

:23:46.:23:51.

Once the armed men have gone, the city will be stable.

:23:52.:23:55.

Restoring safety here will make all of Homs safe again.

:23:56.:23:58.

Time and again over the course of Syria's war, this is how

:23:59.:24:01.

battles have been ending, in these local deals.

:24:02.:24:04.

The government calls them reconciliations which they say

:24:05.:24:07.

But for the rebels, this amounts to surrender

:24:08.:24:20.

and a forced displacement, many of them leaving their homes.

:24:21.:24:23.

Thousands of people will remain here.

:24:24.:24:25.

These pictures were filmed for us inside the rebel enclave.

:24:26.:24:29.

It's still encircled by troops, so we can't go in.

:24:30.:24:37.

What was once a vibrant community of 75,000 has been hollowed out

:24:38.:24:40.

by nearly four years of bombardment and siege.

:24:41.:24:42.

Food and medicine are scarce, but life goes on.

:24:43.:24:52.

Abdul Hafiz tells stories to young schoolchildren.

:24:53.:24:55.

"Will you be the mouse or the fox", he asks, "or the tiger?"

:24:56.:25:03.

He has been teaching in Al Wa'r since 1964.

:25:04.:25:05.

TRANSLATION: Forced evacuation is a war crime.

:25:06.:25:15.

People have been forced to surrender because of the siege,

:25:16.:25:17.

which has lasted for months. Even baby milk couldn't get through.

:25:18.:25:23.

The rebels could have stayed, but they don't trust

:25:24.:25:25.

the government's offer of an amnesty, fearing

:25:26.:25:26.

that they would end up in detention or serving the army

:25:27.:25:29.

They leave behind the city they once called the capital

:25:30.:25:35.

Syria is moving away from war, but it's no closer to peace.

:25:36.:25:41.

A brief look at some of the day's other news stories.

:25:42.:25:49.

The Qatari government is investing ?5 billion

:25:50.:25:51.

in the British economy, mainly in property

:25:52.:25:53.

It says the vote to leave the EU doesn't affect its optimistic

:25:54.:25:57.

Thames Valley Police are to install new security barriers

:25:58.:26:03.

around Windsor Castle ahead of the next Changing of the Guard

:26:04.:26:07.

Officers said the measures weren't in response

:26:08.:26:11.

to specific intelligence, but followed a review in light

:26:12.:26:13.

A leading surgeon has denied carrying out unnecessary breast

:26:14.:26:19.

surgery operations in order to make money.

:26:20.:26:24.

Ian Paterson is said to have exaggerated the risks of cancer

:26:25.:26:28.

and faces 20 counts of wounding with intent against

:26:29.:26:30.

He's on trial at Nottingham Crown Court.

:26:31.:26:39.

Russia's opposition leader Alexei Navalny has been sentenced

:26:40.:26:43.

to 15 days in prison for organising the biggest

:26:44.:26:46.

anti-government protests in the country for several years.

:26:47.:26:48.

Tens of thousands of people attended the anti-corruption rallies

:26:49.:26:51.

The Kremlin said the demonstrations were illegal, describing them

:26:52.:26:54.

Our correspondent Steve Rosenberg reports from Moscow.

:26:55.:27:01.

It wasn't difficult to guess what this verdict was going to be.

:27:02.:27:04.

The police bus, ready and waiting to take Russia's main

:27:05.:27:07.

Inside the courtroom, Alexei Navalny was upbeat.

:27:08.:27:15.

He had called Russians onto the streets yesterday.

:27:16.:27:17.

There'd been tens of thousands of protesters, he told me,

:27:18.:27:20.

but there were millions of Russians who backed the fight

:27:21.:27:22.

When the verdict came, he was guilty.

:27:23.:27:29.

The crime - disobeying police orders.

:27:30.:27:33.

As Mr Navalny emerged, his supporters held up good luck

:27:34.:27:42.

messages, hoping he'd see them through the window.

:27:43.:27:47.

The police saw them and took them away.

:27:48.:27:52.

Yesterday's anti-corruption protests were the largest

:27:53.:27:54.

In Moscow, riot police moved in to clear the crowds.

:27:55.:28:02.

More than 1,000 people were detained.

:28:03.:28:05.

But why had they come out in the first place?

:28:06.:28:11.

One reason is this film, posted online.

:28:12.:28:17.

In it, Alexei Navalny accuses Russia's Prime Minister of

:28:18.:28:20.

He alleges that Dmitry Medvedev had used charities

:28:21.:28:26.

to conceal vast assets, mansions, yachts, even a vineyard.

:28:27.:28:36.

Propagandist attacks, says the Prime Minister's office,

:28:37.:28:37.

but the film has gone viral, with 13 million views.

:28:38.:28:40.

Mr Navalny called the protests to demand an official investigation.

:28:41.:28:44.

Today, the Kremlin complained that many of yesterday's protests had

:28:45.:28:48.

been unsanctioned and were therefore illegal, but the fact that one man,

:28:49.:28:55.

one Kremlin critic, had been able to bring so many protesters

:28:56.:29:00.

onto the streets, shows that Alexei Navalny is now a force

:29:01.:29:03.

Mr Navalny has been opening campaign offices across Russia.

:29:04.:29:08.

He's under pressure, though, from the authorities,

:29:09.:29:22.

and he's come under attack, here sprayed with green ink.

:29:23.:29:25.

But he remains determined, he says, to clean up Russia.

:29:26.:29:27.

He may be spending tonight in jail, but these protests have reinforced

:29:28.:29:30.

Alexei Navalny's reputation as Vladimir Putin's

:29:31.:29:32.

More details have emerged about a new 2020 competition to be

:29:33.:29:39.

introduced into domestic cricket in England and Wales.

:29:40.:29:46.

It's hoped the tournament would rival the popularity of T20

:29:47.:29:48.

competitions in Australia and India and feature fewer

:29:49.:29:50.

But critics fear it could spell the end of 130

:29:51.:29:57.

For more than a century, English cricket's been built

:29:58.:30:11.

on the foundation of the counties, but a brand-new tournament

:30:12.:30:13.

that does not involve them is getting closer.

:30:14.:30:15.

With its glitz and glamour, the soaring success

:30:16.:30:18.

of the Indian Premier League and Australia's Big Bash have shown

:30:19.:30:23.

just how popular the shortened Twenty20 format of the game can be,

:30:24.:30:25.

and today the man who's masterminding English cricket's

:30:26.:30:27.

equivalent told me why there now needs to be a revolution.

:30:28.:30:31.

The evidence that we have suggests that cricket exists

:30:32.:30:34.

in a bubble and we've got to get outside this bubble

:30:35.:30:37.

to be relevant to the broader consumer and actually say,

:30:38.:30:45.

to cricket fans, we have the ability to make that

:30:46.:30:47.

proportion of cricket fans that care about our sport much,

:30:48.:30:50.

We need to be more open, we need to be more representative,

:30:51.:30:54.

and we need to connect more with more people.

:30:55.:30:56.

This is how the new tournament may look.

:30:57.:30:58.

From 2020, there will be eight teams, as yet unnamed,

:30:59.:31:01.

based around regions instead of counties.

:31:02.:31:02.

Each will field a squad of 15 players, including

:31:03.:31:04.

three from overseas, and in a crowded schedule

:31:05.:31:06.

the competition will consist of 36 games over the 38 days,

:31:07.:31:09.

The counties, meanwhile, are preparing for the new season -

:31:10.:31:12.

Yorkshire taking on Lancashire in a friendly this week

:31:13.:31:14.

These two clubs know they'll at least host matches

:31:15.:31:22.

of the new tournament at their grounds.

:31:23.:31:25.

Others, however, will miss out.

:31:26.:31:27.

I think they might be quite disappointed that they've

:31:28.:31:29.

not got a franchise, say it is one of the smaller

:31:30.:31:32.

grounds, but on the other hand, I think I'll be getting quite

:31:33.:31:35.

a hefty severance package anyway, so at the end of the day

:31:36.:31:38.

Tomorrow, here at Lord's, the ECB's board will formally begin

:31:39.:31:44.

the process of changing their own rules to allow this tournament,

:31:45.:31:46.

with final ratification possible as early as next month.

:31:47.:31:48.

Such is the sensitivity around it, the counties have been told not

:31:49.:31:51.

to comment at this stage, but some traditionalists

:31:52.:31:58.

are concerned that it could do lasting damage to the status

:31:59.:32:00.

I think what we're doing here is future-proofing county

:32:01.:32:07.

Cricket has been a sport which has always had the ability to evolve,

:32:08.:32:14.

to actually innovate and change where it's needed to.

:32:15.:32:17.

With most of the counties struggling financially,

:32:18.:32:20.

resistance has been eased by the promise of more

:32:21.:32:24.

than ?1 million per season to each in extra revenue.

:32:25.:32:26.

The ECB says this is the biggest project it's ever undertaken,

:32:27.:32:28.

but it's also a gamble that will change the cricketing

:32:29.:32:31.

Tonight, we have the UK television exclusive, with the black activist

:32:32.:32:46.

who turned out to be white. Here on BBC One, it's time

:32:47.:32:48.

for the news where you are.

:32:49.:32:58.

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