:00:00. > :01:43.after condemnation of leaked information appearing
:01:44. > :01:43.Donald Trump makes sure he's centre stage as he calls on Nato members
:01:44. > :02:20.It's 50 years since Celtic became the first British side
:02:21. > :02:20.to win the European Cup. is favourite to take over at Crystal
:02:21. > :02:21.Palace. A minute's silence fell
:02:22. > :02:21.across the UK at 11am this morning to remember the 22 people
:02:22. > :04:23.killed in Manchester. In Manchester, a long minute ended
:04:24. > :04:27.some of those in hospital In Manchester, a long minute ended
:04:28. > :04:27.with In Manchester, a long minute ended
:04:28. > :04:38.it was so nice, everyone coming here and showing
:04:39. > :04:43.showing strength and unity, and our support to loved ones. I have come
:04:44. > :04:47.to pay tribute to those who were so courageous, those who have lost
:04:48. > :04:51.their lives, and those who are still fighting for their lives. Given the
:04:52. > :04:59.morning the Queen visited the Royal Manchester Children's Hospital. Were
:05:00. > :05:03.you the first one? Yes. She thanked the medical staff who attended the
:05:04. > :05:11.scene and spoke to some of those wounded. You had enjoyed the
:05:12. > :05:15.concert? It was really good. I got to beat her before the concert, she
:05:16. > :05:24.was lovely. In one conversation she described the attack as wicked. A
:05:25. > :05:30.big shock. Very wicked. Another patient spoke about her shrapnel
:05:31. > :05:38.wounds. Mine has gone through 15 centimetres at the other side. I am
:05:39. > :05:40.doing surgery later this afternoon. 75 people are still in hospital,
:05:41. > :05:46.some of them will need reconstructive surgery. Today was a
:05:47. > :05:51.reminder of what unites people, a determination not to allow the
:05:52. > :05:55.bombing to define this city and its communities. Even while people are
:05:56. > :05:59.still seeking cancers as to how a young man born here could carry out
:06:00. > :06:05.such an attack. This evening hundreds of people were still laying
:06:06. > :06:05.flowers, a day of solidarity after the deliberate targeting of children
:06:06. > :06:09.and teenagers. In their latest update,
:06:10. > :06:11.Greater Manchester Police say that they have made significant
:06:12. > :06:14.arrests and have found items Since the suicide bombing on Monday
:06:15. > :06:20.night, the police and security services have been trying
:06:21. > :06:23.to establish whether Salman Abedi I'm going to have to
:06:24. > :06:33.move you back, please. This evening the police hunt
:06:34. > :06:38.for Salman Abedi's bomb factory took a new turn,
:06:39. > :06:41.the search of a house in Wigan suddenly escalated
:06:42. > :06:43.with the discovery of suspicious items and the bomb squad
:06:44. > :06:46.were called to the scene. Local families were evacuated
:06:47. > :06:50.as a robot, often used to defuse roadside bombs in war zones,
:06:51. > :06:54.was deployed on a residential home I share a wall with
:06:55. > :07:01.the guy who was arrested. If there's something inside and my
:07:02. > :07:03.things get destroyed... You're literally in
:07:04. > :07:05.the neighbouring room? I didn't expect that
:07:06. > :07:11.something of this sort Police have described
:07:12. > :07:22.their investigation as fast-moving. This morning, as the country stood
:07:23. > :07:25.in silence, armed police officers were shouting at residents
:07:26. > :07:29.in central Manchester to take cover after reports of a suspect package
:07:30. > :07:34.in a block of flats. There was loads of armed police
:07:35. > :07:36.officers in the middle of the grass just squatting down
:07:37. > :07:42.and they were just shouting at everyone, telling them,
:07:43. > :07:45."Don't go near the road." I panicked because my daughter works
:07:46. > :07:49.in the school that's just there. Your first instinct is,
:07:50. > :07:51."I need my child." The city is jittery as
:07:52. > :07:53.counter-terrorism chiefs desperately try to track the movements of Salman
:07:54. > :07:54.Abedi. This is what the search
:07:55. > :07:57.for a bomb factory looks like. A tip-off, an address,
:07:58. > :08:02.a raid and, on this But the search for that
:08:03. > :08:05.factory still goes on. This raid did not produce
:08:06. > :08:08.the lead they'd hoped for, but the investigation is understood
:08:09. > :08:13.to be making real progress. Two arrests were made in Manchester
:08:14. > :08:17.early today and there was a linked swoop on a property 75 miles south,
:08:18. > :08:21.in Nuneaton, late last night Eight men are now in custody in
:08:22. > :08:26.connection with the arena bombing. I want to reassure people
:08:27. > :08:30.that the arrests that we have made are significant and initial searches
:08:31. > :08:35.of premises have revealed items that we believe are very important
:08:36. > :08:40.to the investigation. Police and counter-terrorism
:08:41. > :08:42.officers are piecing together a picture of
:08:43. > :08:46.Salman Abedi's last movements. It's understood he'd recently left
:08:47. > :08:52.Manchester for Tripoli in Libya, returning to the UK four days
:08:53. > :08:54.before the attack, via Police think in the hours before
:08:55. > :09:01.the bombing he may have been at a property in Granby Row,
:09:02. > :09:03.near Piccadilly railway station, and a short distance
:09:04. > :09:05.from the Manchester Arena, Somewhere near here he'd
:09:06. > :09:16.phoned his mother and said, "Forgive me," according to a Libyan
:09:17. > :09:18.anti-terrorism official. Forensics, CCTV, traffic cameras,
:09:19. > :09:22.interviews every conceivable method for tracking Abedi's
:09:23. > :09:25.movements is being pursued. We've been overwhelmed with support
:09:26. > :09:29.from members of the public and I'd ask for patience to continue
:09:30. > :09:33.from our local communities here in Greater Manchester
:09:34. > :09:35.as we carry out those searches Abedi was known
:09:36. > :09:42.to security services. There had been warnings
:09:43. > :09:44.about his radicalisation. Why wasn't he stopped before
:09:45. > :09:48.he carried out his murderous attack? Since 2013, 18 plots
:09:49. > :09:53.have been thwarted, five since the Westminster
:09:54. > :09:55.attack in March. Could, should this one
:09:56. > :10:04.have been prevented too? Let's get more from our Home Affairs
:10:05. > :10:07.Correspondent Daniel Sandford, who is outside the headquarters
:10:08. > :10:18.of Greater Manchester Police. We saw a series of raids and
:10:19. > :10:28.searches, what is the latest you are hearing? It is worth saying that the
:10:29. > :10:32.raid in Wigan, where the bomb disposal officers were called,
:10:33. > :10:35.appears to be over, people have been allowed to return home, and nothing
:10:36. > :10:40.dangerous seems to have been found, so that seems to have been resolved
:10:41. > :10:45.safely. On the wider investigation, I got the sense in the first 36
:10:46. > :10:49.hours that detectives were struggling to make progress, but
:10:50. > :10:54.that has changed in the last 24 hours, I get the sense they know who
:10:55. > :10:58.the bomber is, when he arrived in the country, where he spent the
:10:59. > :11:01.weekend before the attack, they have an idea about his associates and
:11:02. > :11:06.even maybe who knew what he was planning, and that is looking quite
:11:07. > :11:11.good. The shadow hanging over the whole thing is the threat level,
:11:12. > :11:14.which remains critical, which means an attack is possibly imminent.
:11:15. > :11:26.There is a reason for that, one source said there is a high threat.
:11:27. > :11:29.When I asked, he said we have got what he called outstanding entities,
:11:30. > :11:33.and we can start to issue that might mean there are bits of a bomb or
:11:34. > :11:36.things you might use to put a bomb together that are still missing.
:11:37. > :11:39.All 22 people who lost their lives in the suicide bombing have
:11:40. > :11:44.Ten teenagers and children were among those who were killed,
:11:45. > :11:49.Judith Moritz reports now on the victims and the loss felt
:11:50. > :11:55.They were loved and they are mourned.
:11:56. > :12:00.Taken by the bomb, their names keep coming.
:12:01. > :12:04.Eilidh MacLeod, 14 years old, from the Outer Hebrides,
:12:05. > :12:09.a vivacious teenager, who played bagpipes
:12:10. > :12:22.19-year-old Courtney Boyle from Gateshead, a university student who
:12:23. > :12:28.had made her family proud. Her mother has suffered double
:12:29. > :12:36.heartache. Her partner, Philip Tron, was also killed. Described as
:12:37. > :12:44.gorgeous and crazy, it is said he made the world a happy place. Also
:12:45. > :12:48.lost, when the foul from Otley, nearly, a mother and a school
:12:49. > :12:54.helper, said to have touched the lives of so many. Wendy and her
:12:55. > :12:59.friend Caroline had been together collecting their children from the
:13:00. > :13:07.concert. Injured herself, Caroline remembers being frantic with worry.
:13:08. > :13:12.I could not see Wendy anywhere. Then there were policeman talking to me,
:13:13. > :13:23.they got me sat up, and they asked if I could walk, we tried, the phone
:13:24. > :13:28.rang and rang. Chloe Rutherford from South Shields for studying music and
:13:29. > :13:34.planned a career in travel. She was at the show with her boyfriend Liam
:13:35. > :13:41.Curry. 19-year-old Liam lost his father to cancer earlier this year.
:13:42. > :13:45.He and Chloe were young sweethearts, described as inseparable. Their
:13:46. > :13:53.families say the teenagers' wings were ready but their hearts are not.
:13:54. > :13:59.And Elaine McIver, a police officer who loved music and had gone to the
:14:00. > :14:03.concert on her night off duty. Flowers have been laid at Cheshire
:14:04. > :14:07.police headquarters for her, she started as a volunteer special
:14:08. > :14:11.constable and rose up to work for the organised crime unit. She spent
:14:12. > :14:16.more than 20 years working for Cheshire police, her colleagues and
:14:17. > :14:21.friends came into work to learn that they had lost one of their own.
:14:22. > :14:26.Cheshire's Chief Constable opened a book of condolence for the officer.
:14:27. > :14:30.It has rocked the core of the organisation. We have been touched
:14:31. > :14:35.by the outpouring of support from the wider police family, from other
:14:36. > :14:41.organisations, and messages from the public of Cheshire, which has been
:14:42. > :14:50.really warming at a difficult time. So many communities are bereft.
:14:51. > :14:53.North of Manchester, hundreds turned out in Bury, writing in convoy into
:14:54. > :14:59.the city centre. They came to remember their friend Olivia
:15:00. > :15:03.Campbell and her family came as well, taking comfort from the
:15:04. > :15:10.tributes left for all of the victims. 22 killed, more than 100
:15:11. > :15:17.injured. We know their names and their harrowing stories. But we will
:15:18. > :15:29.never understand their terrible, unfathomable loss.
:15:30. > :15:31.Today, police in Manchester condemned the continuing leaks
:15:32. > :15:33.in the United States of information about their investigation
:15:34. > :15:38.The publication of images by the New York Times of the scene
:15:39. > :15:39.of the attack prompted Greater Manchester Police
:15:40. > :15:42.to temporarily suspend intelligence sharing between Britain and the US.
:15:43. > :15:45.It was only resumed in the last hour.
:15:46. > :15:52.Theresa May has discussed the issue with the President, who's described
:15:53. > :15:58.Both are attending a Nato summit in Brussels.
:15:59. > :16:05.A flying visit by Theresa May, straight from the British front
:16:06. > :16:09.Here to build alliances with partners and repair them
:16:10. > :16:14.She wanted more co-operation against terrorism and no more damage
:16:15. > :16:20.to investigations, like the leaks of intelligence by American
:16:21. > :16:21.officials after the Manchester attack.
:16:22. > :16:24.We have a special relationship with the USA, it is our deepest
:16:25. > :16:28.defence and security partnership that we have.
:16:29. > :16:31.Of course, that partnership is built on trust, and part of that trust
:16:32. > :16:34.is knowing that intelligence can be shared confidently.
:16:35. > :16:39.I will be making clear to President Trump today that
:16:40. > :16:41.intelligence that is shared between law-enforcement
:16:42. > :16:53.These images of bomb debris after the blast were leaked to US
:16:54. > :16:56.media by American officials, so was the bomber's identity.
:16:57. > :16:58.British officials were furious by the leaks and the story
:16:59. > :17:16.REPORTER: Can the British trust the Americans with intelligence?
:17:17. > :17:19.No answer yet, but at a ceremony for Nato leaders, he led
:17:20. > :17:23.Innocent little girls and so many others were horribly murdered.
:17:24. > :17:30.It was a barbaric and vicious attack upon our civilisation.
:17:31. > :17:34.All people who cherish life must unite in finding, exposing
:17:35. > :17:36.and removing these killers and extremists and, yes, losers.
:17:37. > :17:44.But leaders were forced to listen as the President gave them a severe
:17:45. > :17:49.telling off over missed targets for defence spending.
:17:50. > :17:55.But 23 of the 28 member nations are still not paying
:17:56. > :17:58.what they should be paying and what they're supposed to be
:17:59. > :18:05.This is not fair to the people and taxpayers of the United States.
:18:06. > :18:11.No doubt about who considers himself the alpha leader here.
:18:12. > :18:13.But Mrs May had mentioned the importance of sharing
:18:14. > :18:20.intelligence, and those Manchester leaks rankled.
:18:21. > :18:22.The President released a statement calling the leaks "deeply troubling"
:18:23. > :18:24.and promising to bring anyone found responsible to justice.
:18:25. > :18:26.Facing terrorism and confronting other challenges, Britain
:18:27. > :18:29.needs its so-called special relationship with America to be just
:18:30. > :18:32.that, but those leaks caused fury, trust was damaged just
:18:33. > :18:35.when it was most needed, and now American promises to do
:18:36. > :18:37.better in future may ease the tension.
:18:38. > :18:53.Mrs May and her ministers have no choice but to accept them anyway,
:18:54. > :18:56.but fully repairing the lost trust and confidence, that'll take time.
:18:57. > :18:58.This evening, solidarity on show, with President Trump centrestage.
:18:59. > :19:00.There will be more help for operations against Islamic State,
:19:01. > :19:02.more British help training troops in Afghanistan.
:19:03. > :19:05.Leaders want to be seen working together, but Theresa May wants
:19:06. > :19:06.more, more co-operation against the threats
:19:07. > :19:13.Our North America editor, Jon Sopel, is in Sicily, where Mr Trump
:19:14. > :19:16.The police here say they've now resumed intelligence
:19:17. > :19:18.sharing with the US, but how serious has
:19:19. > :19:21.this disagreement been between the UK and the US?
:19:22. > :19:28.Serious. I think that Theresa May and the British Government left the
:19:29. > :19:32.Americans in absolutely no doubt just the scale of the fury that they
:19:33. > :19:36.felt that things like that were appearing in American newspapers. I
:19:37. > :19:40.thought the statement from Donald Trump that came out was very strong
:19:41. > :19:45.indeed. Saying, "I'm asking the Department of Justice and other
:19:46. > :19:50.relevant agencies to launch a complete review if appropriate the
:19:51. > :19:54.culprit should be prosecuted to the full state of the law." And then,
:19:55. > :19:58."there is no rerelationship than we cherish more than the special
:19:59. > :20:01.relationship between the United States and United Kingdom." He was
:20:02. > :20:04.not standing up for his security agencies because he believes he has
:20:05. > :20:09.been the victim of their leaks in the past. Now he's saying to Theresa
:20:10. > :20:13.May, infect, you now know how I feel about what's going on in America
:20:14. > :20:18.with all these leaks. That said, there were one or two White House
:20:19. > :20:22.people I spoke to who said - I'm not sure I understand what the fuss is
:20:23. > :20:26.about. That points to a different culture in the US compared to the
:20:27. > :20:31.UK. Our contempt of court laws in Britain are different from America
:20:32. > :20:35.what appears in American newspapers seems to the journalists and the law
:20:36. > :20:39.officers who leaked them pretty unremarkable. We have very different
:20:40. > :20:44.systems of justice. Today, Britain showed that it can really bear its
:20:45. > :20:48.teeth and show its unhappiness and America has responded. Jon Sopel, in
:20:49. > :20:53.Sicily, thank you. There was a partial resumption
:20:54. > :20:55.of campaigning in the general election today as the leader
:20:56. > :20:57.of Ukip, Paul Nuttall, launched But it was overshadowed
:20:58. > :21:01.by the party's accusation that Theresa May bore "some
:21:02. > :21:02.responsibility" for The Home Secretary, Amber Rudd,
:21:03. > :21:07.said it was not the time Our political editor, Laura
:21:08. > :21:16.Kuenssberg, reports. But Ukip's manifesto
:21:17. > :21:19.was hardly a quiet affair, the party accusing Theresa May
:21:20. > :21:21.of playing a part in creating the circumstances that
:21:22. > :21:27.led to Monday's attack. The Prime Minister has,
:21:28. > :21:29.during her time in high office, presided over cuts to our police
:21:30. > :21:31.service and reductions It is also a dereliction
:21:32. > :21:38.of duty to allow jihadis He's promising thousands of extra
:21:39. > :21:49.police, soldiers and border guards. But his supporters jeered reporters
:21:50. > :21:53.questioning the party's claims. It sounds like you're nearest damit
:21:54. > :22:03.blaming the Prime Minister for this attack and the circumstances that
:22:04. > :22:06.led to it? Can I ask you - Don't
:22:07. > :22:16.you understand English? But as for blaming her personally
:22:17. > :22:21.for the attack, absolutely not, What I am saying is that
:22:22. > :22:24.the politicians in this country are too cowardly at the moment
:22:25. > :22:27.to actually face up Yet the Deputy Chair did say
:22:28. > :22:30.Theresa May must bear I think all politicians who voted
:22:31. > :22:34.for the reduction of spending in the security services and indeed
:22:35. > :22:37.with the police have to bear some So the Prime Minister, in your view,
:22:38. > :22:41.must bear some responsibility. All politicians you voted
:22:42. > :22:47.for a reduction on spending on the security services and indeed
:22:48. > :22:49.the police, must look Ukip's been struggling to keep pace
:22:50. > :22:55.since the EU vote last year, but in Clacton today -
:22:56. > :22:57.the only place ever to choose a Ukip MP -
:22:58. > :22:59.today's tougher approach I think all the borders need to be
:23:00. > :23:07.closed off at the minute. They're cutting down
:23:08. > :23:10.the polices force, the army Yet for other politicians,
:23:11. > :23:16.it's just too soon. I think it's entirely
:23:17. > :23:18.the wrong approach. What we're trying to do now
:23:19. > :23:20.is support the police, the Intelligence Services and,
:23:21. > :23:22.of course, the victims. We need to make sure that they get
:23:23. > :23:25.all the support they need. This is not a time
:23:26. > :23:27.for making political. You are feeding the fears that
:23:28. > :23:30.are causing the problems Ukip deliberately wants to be seen
:23:31. > :23:36.as the party that's ready Out first on the stump today
:23:37. > :23:42.since the Manchester attack, but challenging extremism has been
:23:43. > :23:44.notably absent from But voters have been
:23:45. > :23:52.moving away from Ukip. Today's figures show
:23:53. > :23:55.immigration is down, mainly due to fewer EU citizens
:23:56. > :23:57.moving here and more packing their bags and, of course,
:23:58. > :24:01.we are all on our way out of the EU. Perhaps, Ukip today
:24:02. > :24:08.is just trying to keep up. Laura, election campaigning is just
:24:09. > :24:19.resuming and already today Well, the context really of all of
:24:20. > :24:23.this has changed. Into this new frame, Jeremy Corbyn will step
:24:24. > :24:26.tomorrow, with his first major campaign as things nationally get
:24:27. > :24:31.back under way. He will make a speech about his values and British
:24:32. > :24:35.values and his own version of patriotism and he will praise the
:24:36. > :24:39.work of the emergency services in Manchester and promise alsos to
:24:40. > :24:43.restore the cuts that have been made to police budgets. He will go
:24:44. > :24:47.further than that. He will talk about foreign policies too. He will
:24:48. > :24:51.state his view that the war on terror has failed and that our
:24:52. > :24:54.foreign policy abroad has rather than reducing the threat here at
:24:55. > :25:00.home, it has actually made it more dangerous. He will absolutely
:25:01. > :25:05.explicity say it does not justify the actions of any individual
:25:06. > :25:12.terrorist, it does not justify the horror of what happened this week.
:25:13. > :25:16.He will be quite clear, that, in his view, Britain's war abroad has made
:25:17. > :25:19.things more not less dangerous. His team are aware it's a controversial
:25:20. > :25:23.argument to make right now when the reality of what's happened is still
:25:24. > :25:28.so raw. It's not the first time that Jeremy Corbyn has made this case.
:25:29. > :25:32.He's held this belief for quite some time. None the less, they are
:25:33. > :25:36.prepared for a barrage of criticism tomorrow when he gives this speech,
:25:37. > :25:41.but those people around Jeremy Corbyn and Jeremy Corbyn himself, I
:25:42. > :25:45.think, believe that it would be dishonest, perhaps, and certainly
:25:46. > :25:50.not giving a full picture to have a proper debate about why this
:25:51. > :25:54.happened and how it could be prevented in the future without
:25:55. > :25:59.looking at the whole situation. And, for them, that includes Britain's
:26:00. > :26:07.wars abroad. Laura Kuenssberg, at Westminster, thank you.
:26:08. > :26:10.A brief look at some of the day's other news stories.
:26:11. > :26:13.The former ITV weather presenter, Fred Talbot, has been found guilty
:26:14. > :26:15.of indecently assaulting seven boys in the 1970s and 80s.
:26:16. > :26:18.At the time, Talbot was a teacher at a grammar school
:26:19. > :26:21.The assaults occurred during camping and boating trips in Scotland.
:26:22. > :26:23.Talbot, previously jailed for five years for two other assaults,
:26:24. > :26:27.The Court of Appeal has ruled that doctors can stop providing
:26:28. > :26:29.life-support treatment to a nine-month-old baby who has
:26:30. > :26:32.Charlie Gard's parents raised more than ?1 million
:26:33. > :26:35.to take him to America for experimental treatment.
:26:36. > :26:37.But the judges agreed with Great Ormond Street Hospital,
:26:38. > :26:40.in London, that it was in Charlie's best interests to give him
:26:41. > :26:47.Conservative plans to give a free breakfast to every primary school
:26:48. > :26:49.child in England could cost three times more than the
:26:50. > :26:55.Independent experts say the manifesto pledge of ?60 million
:26:56. > :27:03.doesn't take into account all the different costs involved.
:27:04. > :27:05.Back to our main story, and the Manchester attack.
:27:06. > :27:08.The sudden wave of casualties rushed into eight hospitals on Monday night
:27:09. > :27:11.across Greater Manchester put the health service under intense
:27:12. > :27:13.pressure, but off-duty medical staff rushed in to help those already
:27:14. > :27:19.Our reporter, Sima Kotecha, has been speaking to one of the nurses
:27:20. > :27:31.When we found out it was a children's concert, it was...
:27:32. > :27:40.I'm a mum and I've got kids, daughters etc,
:27:41. > :27:44.we've been to concerts, we've been to the MEN.
:27:45. > :27:44.And to know that they were frightened, to know
:27:45. > :27:48.that people were lost, to know that my colleagues
:27:49. > :27:50.in the emergency services that were on the scene,
:27:51. > :27:53.to see what we saw by the time they came here, to know
:27:54. > :27:56.that they were dealing with that at the scene, it makes
:27:57. > :27:59.Charlotte was on duty the night a bomb ripped
:28:00. > :28:03.She was working at Stepping Hill Hospital, one of eight in the region
:28:04. > :28:12.My job on that night is to ensure the safety and wellbeing
:28:13. > :28:14.of the patients and staff, ensuring everybody had
:28:15. > :28:17.what they needed in order to care for the patients that
:28:18. > :28:23.It was only hours later the enormity of what happened began to sink in.
:28:24. > :28:26.I cried a lot when I got home for the people that I knew whose
:28:27. > :28:31.I cried a lot for the people whose lives had been changed in ways
:28:32. > :28:38.that they could never go back to normal after this.
:28:39. > :28:44.I cried for the potential, you know, my children,
:28:45. > :28:49.Do they need to be frightened going to school tomorrow?
:28:50. > :28:50.Hospital staff here have support available.
:28:51. > :28:55.Someone to talk to when it gets too much.
:28:56. > :28:59.Even though this is what they're hired to do,
:29:00. > :29:02.the full impact of what they've witnessed is yet to be felt.
:29:03. > :29:08.The atrocity that they saw that night, I know they close their eyes
:29:09. > :29:15.and they see those pictures, as do I, and trying to get that out
:29:16. > :29:17.of your head when you need to come back to work
:29:18. > :29:21.That was Charlotte Brownhill speaking to our
:29:22. > :29:27.And finally, 50 years ago today, Celtic became the first British
:29:28. > :29:30.football club to win the European Cup.
:29:31. > :29:33.The team became known as the Lisbon Lions.
:29:34. > :29:35.As our special correspondent Allan Little reports,
:29:36. > :29:37.that victory in Portugal still carries a symbolic importance
:29:38. > :29:48.The home movie is 50 years old, it captures
:29:49. > :29:50.a moment in history, far, far weightier than
:29:51. > :29:55.I had to go and get a temporary passport.
:29:56. > :29:59.Jim McGugan was at the match, he shot these pictures.
:30:00. > :30:02.Celtic was founded 130 years ago as the team of Glasgow's large
:30:03. > :30:07.It still finds its most loyal support there.
:30:08. > :30:11.For decades, that community suffered systematic workplace discrimination
:30:12. > :30:15.in a Scotland still shaped by its Protestantism.
:30:16. > :30:18.It was like Scotland's dirty little secret,
:30:19. > :30:22.that was never quite spoken about, but everybody knew
:30:23. > :30:26.The 1967 European Cup Final coincided with a moment
:30:27. > :30:33.when Scotland and this community's place in it began to change.
:30:34. > :30:36.This is a narrative throughout a whole generation of young Celtic
:30:37. > :30:42.supporters who grew up and said those men there are symbols,
:30:43. > :30:45.you know, and we look up to them and say -
:30:46. > :30:47.we can be - and not certainly as football players -
:30:48. > :30:50.but we can emulate them in other ways and in other walks of life,
:30:51. > :30:56.and that's all what we all grew up wanting to do.
:30:57. > :30:58.COMMENTATOR: Inter Milan kick off, and in a continental
:30:59. > :31:08.Celtic went to Lisbon to take on the mighty Inter Milan,
:31:09. > :31:13.the team carried the hopes of a community shaped
:31:14. > :31:14.50 years on, this place, Celtic Park, remains a focus
:31:15. > :31:19.I was born nine months and three days later.
:31:20. > :31:21.So, you know, read into that what you may.
:31:22. > :31:25.I am absolutely a child of Lisbon and I feel really proud
:31:26. > :31:29.about that because our family, our environment, our community
:31:30. > :31:32.was very much based around that platform.
:31:33. > :31:36.You know, so I look at footage of Lisbon and I almost feel part
:31:37. > :31:39.of it, even though I know I wasn't there, but I look at it
:31:40. > :31:44.At the final whistle the score was 2-1, Celtic became the first
:31:45. > :31:47.British club to win the European Cup.
:31:48. > :31:50.In the decades that lay ahead, Scotland's Irish Catholics
:31:51. > :31:54.would emerge from their entrenched disadvantage and inequality.
:31:55. > :31:56.Scotland's leading historian is himself from an Irish
:31:57. > :32:02.We weren't exactly an underclass, but we were pretty close to it.
:32:03. > :32:05.This team was the sporting champion of that ethnicity.
:32:06. > :32:09.That was probably almost as significant as the visit
:32:10. > :32:11.of the Pope to Scotland, first ever visit
:32:12. > :32:17.It was, if you like, a stage in their emancipation.
:32:18. > :32:19.That is why these flickering images resonate so powerfully,
:32:20. > :32:40.Tonight, Jeremy Corbyn restarts the election campaign with an attack
:32:41. > :32:43.on foreign policy which he says fuels rather than fights terrorism.
:32:44. > :32:46.The war on terror is not working, according to the Labour leader.
:32:47. > :32:47.We're examining that now, on BBC Two.
:32:48. > :32:50.Here, on BBC One, it's time for the news where you are.