10/07/2017

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:00:16. > :00:21.Tonight the parents of terminally ill baby Charlie Gard choose the

:00:22. > :00:29.hospital treating him of lying to the judge. They claim trial therapy

:00:30. > :00:33.could help him but the judge re-examining his case claims only

:00:34. > :00:37.dramatic new evidence could convince him that life support should

:00:38. > :00:39.continue. Experts at great Ormond say it will not help.

:00:40. > :00:43.needed. Also tonight: A Conservative MP is suspended from the party after

:00:44. > :00:48.recording emerged of her using a offensive term. More than 40 years

:00:49. > :00:53.later a self-confessed IRA bomb maker admits being part of the group

:00:54. > :00:56.that killed 21 people in the Birmingham pub bombings. We have a

:00:57. > :01:01.special report on China's trillion pound product to build a new silk

:01:02. > :01:07.Road across 60 countries to the UK and beyond. With no other country

:01:08. > :01:14.offering a big idea right now this is the most ambitious bid to shape

:01:15. > :01:18.our century. And history as two Brits make the quarterfinals, but a

:01:19. > :01:24.shock exit for Nadal after a thrilling five set, five hour match.

:01:25. > :01:28.And later we will have Sportsday on the BBC News channel with all the

:01:29. > :01:29.latest reports, results, interviews and features from the BBC sports

:01:30. > :01:58.centre. The parents of the terminally ill

:01:59. > :02:01.baby Charlie Gard have returned to the courts to present evidence of

:02:02. > :02:06.experimental nuclear men in America which they say could help them.

:02:07. > :02:11.Great Ormond Street, who are treating the boy, says the

:02:12. > :02:17.experiments have not been justified. But the parents have accused the

:02:18. > :02:23.judge hearing the case have accused him of lying. Fergus Walsh reports.

:02:24. > :02:27.Charlie Gard's parents have considerable support.

:02:28. > :02:29.It includes the Pope and Donald Trump.

:02:30. > :02:32.And now this pro-life evangelical preacher who was once jailed

:02:33. > :02:35.for anti-abortion protests in the United States and has been

:02:36. > :02:40.If a court, if a judge, if a hospital official can come

:02:41. > :02:44.and tell a parent that they don't have the right or the authority

:02:45. > :02:48.to provide the kind of medical care that their child needs,

:02:49. > :02:54.then parental rights are under attack and around the world

:02:55. > :03:02.Under UK law where parents and doctors cannot agree

:03:03. > :03:05.a judge must decide what treatment is appropriate.

:03:06. > :03:08.Charlie is so weak he cannot move, has serious brain damage

:03:09. > :03:13.Four different courts ruled he should be allowed

:03:14. > :03:16.to die with dignity, but today the case went back

:03:17. > :03:20.to the High Court after hospitals in Italy and the United States said

:03:21. > :03:24.there was fresh evidence an experimental therapy

:03:25. > :03:29.The judge said there was not a person alive who did not want

:03:30. > :03:31.Charlie to get better and he would be delighted

:03:32. > :03:34.to change his ruling, but it had to be on the basis

:03:35. > :03:39.He said he had to consider the hospital's view that every day

:03:40. > :03:43.that passed inflicted more suffering on Charlie.

:03:44. > :03:46.Charlie has a rare inherited condition, mitochondrial

:03:47. > :03:51.Mitochondria are found in nearly every cell

:03:52. > :03:56.But Charlie's do not function so his muscles

:03:57. > :04:01.Nucleoside therapy is a powder given in food which aims to boost

:04:02. > :04:06.mitochondrial function and takes 2-3 months to have an effect.

:04:07. > :04:08.Charlie's parents claim there was new evidence that

:04:09. > :04:13.treatment could have a 10% chance of success.

:04:14. > :04:17.So far 18 patients have been treated but crucially none has

:04:18. > :04:22.Charlie's genetic mutation or his severe brain damage.

:04:23. > :04:24.There are a lot of unknowns here and I think the doctors

:04:25. > :04:26.and nurses who are looking after him, colleagues,

:04:27. > :04:30.they really will have considered all these processes

:04:31. > :04:33.because that is what they do, that is their day job.

:04:34. > :04:35.In fact they are some of the most expert people

:04:36. > :04:39.Charlie's parents, Chris and Connie, left saying they hoped to persuade

:04:40. > :04:43.the judge to allow them to take their son abroad when

:04:44. > :04:46.the hearing resumes on Thursday, a case which is attracting

:04:47. > :04:53.Mum and dad say that if Charlie is still fighting,

:04:54. > :04:59.Charlie's parents wish to thank the millions of supporters of baby

:05:00. > :05:07.Meanwhile, Charlie continues to receive round-the-clock care

:05:08. > :05:23.A terribly difficult case, but what will it take for the judge to be

:05:24. > :05:26.persuaded to change his mind? Hard facts, what the judge called

:05:27. > :05:30.dramatic new evidence, that there are signs of this experimental

:05:31. > :05:34.treatment could benefit cuts Charlie, not just the claims we

:05:35. > :05:40.heard today. The judge said he would not allow the lawyers to rake over

:05:41. > :05:43.old facts. In court I sensed great frustration on both sides. The

:05:44. > :05:48.lawyer for the Great Ormond Street said there was no new evidence, we

:05:49. > :05:52.have heard it all before. Both parents cried out, when are you

:05:53. > :05:56.going to stop lying? The parents and the hospital cannot agree on

:05:57. > :06:00.anything any more, there has been a total breakdown on their

:06:01. > :06:01.relationship, especially whether Charlie has irreversible brain

:06:02. > :06:18.damage. The past few months, a sign of brain

:06:19. > :06:23.development not happening. The parents say this is not true. The

:06:24. > :06:27.judge said, I want somebody to take the tape measure and measure his

:06:28. > :06:29.head and report back on Thursday. It is a sign of how acrimonious this

:06:30. > :06:33.It is a sign of how acrimonious this has all become.

:06:34. > :06:35.A Conservative MP, who used racist language at a public meeting

:06:36. > :06:37.on Brexit, has been suspended from the Parliamentary party.

:06:38. > :06:40.The Prime Minister said the comment by Anne Marie Morris was "completely

:06:41. > :06:43.unacceptable" and she was having the whip withdrawn.

:06:44. > :06:46.It comes after the Prime Minister's offer, to opposition parties to work

:06:47. > :06:49.with the Government on major issues, was rebuffed by Labour,

:06:50. > :06:51.who said her party had completely run out of ideas.

:06:52. > :07:01.Here's our political editor, Laura Kuenssberg.

:07:02. > :07:08.The Prime Minister trying to stride out in front. A visit from an old

:07:09. > :07:13.friend, by chance the Australian Prime Minister. An offer to

:07:14. > :07:18.political enemies, asking the opposition to contribute. But then

:07:19. > :07:26.this. Then we get to the real part, the real end in the woodpile. An MP

:07:27. > :07:30.caught on tape using offensive language. It emerged while Theresa

:07:31. > :07:35.May was on her feet in the House of Commons. MPs wise to what was going

:07:36. > :07:40.on were quick to press her, asking if in theory if there had been

:07:41. > :07:46.racism, should the culprits face action? Does she agree that where

:07:47. > :07:51.that happens organisations should take decisive and swift action. It

:07:52. > :07:56.is for all of us to use appropriate language all the time. We are told

:07:57. > :08:03.she decided immediately to suspend her from the Tory party, that it is

:08:04. > :08:07.not yet clear for how long. She has apologised unreservedly. It is the

:08:08. > :08:15.worst word, the most deeply offensive and horrible word anybody

:08:16. > :08:18.can use. I apologise on her behalf because she should never have used

:08:19. > :08:24.that expression and that word, nobody should, it is a horrible

:08:25. > :08:30.word. So for now Theresa May loses even one more from her tiny commons

:08:31. > :08:35.advantage. With no majority to call her own Theresa May is now calling

:08:36. > :08:38.on the opposition to help her out. The government is apparently now

:08:39. > :08:42.asking other parties for their policy ideas and so if the Prime

:08:43. > :08:48.Minister would like it, I am very happy to furnish her with a copy of

:08:49. > :08:52.our election manifesto. But in her own party Tories want to see not

:08:53. > :08:58.just reaching out to the others, but listening to her own side. You want

:08:59. > :09:02.the opposition to contribute as well as to criticise. What do you say to

:09:03. > :09:08.your own critics, including in your own party, who say it is you that

:09:09. > :09:12.needs to change? The government has got an ambitious agenda which is

:09:13. > :09:16.there to address the big challenges that the country faces. One of those

:09:17. > :09:20.is getting the Brexit negotiations right, but there are other

:09:21. > :09:24.challenges we face of the country. The public will rightly want us to

:09:25. > :09:30.get the broadest possible consensus in looking at those issues. She has

:09:31. > :09:33.a lot of convincing to do. For this Prime Minister, her authority

:09:34. > :09:36.cracked by the election, there are no easy days.

:09:37. > :09:39.A man who's confessed to being an IRA bomb maker has told

:09:40. > :09:42.BBC News that he accepts "collective responsibility" for all

:09:43. > :09:45.of the group's actions in England, including one of the deadliest acts

:09:46. > :09:47.of the Troubles, the Birmingham pub bombings.

:09:48. > :09:50.Mick Hayes, who's never spoken openly about his role,

:09:51. > :09:53.says he was an active volunteer on the November night in 1974

:09:54. > :10:00.The IRA has never officially admitted carrying out the attack.

:10:01. > :10:06.Today, an apology from Mr Hayes was dismissed by relatives as insulting.

:10:07. > :10:12.Our Ireland correspondent, Chris Buckler, reports.

:10:13. > :10:17.The bombs were left in the heart of Birmingham on a Thursday night.

:10:18. > :10:21.Placed inside pubs to cause destruction.

:10:22. > :10:30.In the same year, 1974, Mick Hayes took part in this funeral

:10:31. > :10:37.He was a well-known republican, an admitted IRA bomb-maker,

:10:38. > :10:43.who was convicted of paramilitary offences in the Republic of Ireland.

:10:44. > :10:47.And now, four decades after the murders in Birmingham,

:10:48. > :10:51.Mick Hayes has emerged again to admit he was part of the group

:10:52. > :10:57.I was a participant in the IRA's activities in Birmingham.

:10:58. > :11:04.I was a participant in the IRA's campaign in England.

:11:05. > :11:05.But you're not answering the question.

:11:06. > :11:11.I'm giving you the only answer I can give you.

:11:12. > :11:13.Mick Hayes has, in the past, been questioned and named

:11:14. > :11:16.as a suspect in the bombings, but he's never been charged.

:11:17. > :11:20.Even now, he won't say what role he played in the IRA attack,

:11:21. > :11:25.but he says he takes "collective responsibility" for it.

:11:26. > :11:29.And I apologise, not only for myself.

:11:30. > :11:34.I apologise for all republicans, who had no intention of hurting

:11:35. > :11:42.And the relatives, again, the relatives will say that you have

:11:43. > :11:48.I know they'll say that, and from their point of view,

:11:49. > :11:56.I don't - I don't shirk my responsibility in that direction.

:11:57. > :11:59.A group of men were charged and found guilty of the bombing,

:12:00. > :12:04.but it was a famous miscarriage of justice.

:12:05. > :12:07.And the convictions of the men who became known

:12:08. > :12:10.as the Birmingham Six were eventually overturned.

:12:11. > :12:16.For 16-and-a-half years, we have been used as political scapegoats!

:12:17. > :12:19.West Midlands Police said tonight that the investigation into the 21

:12:20. > :12:25.One of those who died was Maxine Hambleton.

:12:26. > :12:28.Her sister Julie was among a group of relatives

:12:29. > :12:32.who watched the interview with Mick Hayes this afternoon.

:12:33. > :12:37.His words and apology caused nothing but anger.

:12:38. > :12:43.He reckons that he'd rather die than be an informer.

:12:44. > :12:46.But he's more than happy to take "collective responsibility"

:12:47. > :12:51.for the murder of 21 innocents in Birmingham.

:12:52. > :12:55.Mick Hayes avoided many questions, but he claims mistakes led the IRA

:12:56. > :12:58.to give bomb warnings too late, and that he personally defused

:12:59. > :13:03.a third bomb left in Birmingham city centre that night.

:13:04. > :13:16.When they found out what had happened, we defused the third one,

:13:17. > :13:27.Many in modern-day Birmingham will question why Mick Hayes

:13:28. > :13:31.has come forward now, particularly as no-one has ever been

:13:32. > :13:35.held legally responsible for murdering the 21 people who died

:13:36. > :13:44.The full documentary - Who Bombed Birmingham?

:13:45. > :13:47.is on tonight after the news on BBC Northern Ireland,

:13:48. > :13:55.The Metropolitan Police now say they believe around 255 people

:13:56. > :13:58.managed to escape the fire at Grenfell Tower last month.

:13:59. > :14:01.The official estimate of the dead and missing remains

:14:02. > :14:07.Our home affairs correspondent, Tom Symonds, is at Scotland Yard.

:14:08. > :14:10.It's the first time we've had such a figure.

:14:11. > :14:18.There's been a lot of dispute about how many were there that night?

:14:19. > :14:27.There has. In the days after the fire local people estimated that

:14:28. > :14:31.between 500 and 600 people were resident at Grenfell Tower. Today

:14:32. > :14:36.the police say they believe the true figure is much lower, 350, and they

:14:37. > :14:43.say about 14 of those people were out on the night of the fire. They

:14:44. > :14:49.also say their new figure, 255 people escaping the fire, and 80 or

:14:50. > :14:54.81 having been killed or still being missing, do add up. There is a big

:14:55. > :14:59.investigation continuing, officers working inside the tower in a place

:15:00. > :15:04.where temperatures reached 1000 degrees, looking for human remains.

:15:05. > :15:08.Also a big investigation of the 60 or so companies who were involved in

:15:09. > :15:14.running and refurbishing the tower. They say they are intent on getting

:15:15. > :15:18.to the bottom of it. Stuart Cundy, the commander in charge, says you

:15:19. > :15:21.cannot listen to the families and not want to hold people to account

:15:22. > :15:23.for a fire that should not have happened.

:15:24. > :15:24.In what's become Britain's longest-running extradition case.

:15:25. > :15:28.A Scottish man has lost his legal battle against being sent to the US.

:15:29. > :15:31.Philip Harkins, who's 38, denies shooting a man dead

:15:32. > :15:38.He has been fighting extradition since 2003.

:15:39. > :15:40.Now the European Court of Human Rights has ruled

:15:41. > :15:43.that his rights would not be breached, if he were jailed for life

:15:44. > :15:52.The High Court has ruled that Government arms sales

:15:53. > :15:54.to Saudi Arabia are lawful and shouldn't be halted.

:15:55. > :15:56.It follows a case brought by a pressure group,

:15:57. > :16:05.It argued that the UK had broken international humanitarian law

:16:06. > :16:08.by selling weapons that had been used to kill civilians in Yemen,

:16:09. > :16:13.where the Saudis have conducted air strikes against rebels.

:16:14. > :16:22.The ever The issue of low pay and the quality of our working lives

:16:23. > :16:27.will be addressed tomorrow in a report published by the Government.

:16:28. > :16:31.It's expected to say the ambition should be for all work to be "fair

:16:32. > :16:33.and decent" and provide job satisfaction, including for those

:16:34. > :16:36.Our special correspondent, Allan Little, has been looking

:16:37. > :16:38.at the some of the challenges facing low-paid workers in London.

:16:39. > :16:43.He and his wife share this house in north London with six

:16:44. > :16:47.He gets up at 4:30am every morning to go to the first

:16:48. > :16:51.Saturday I start at five o'clock and finish at two o'clock.

:16:52. > :16:59.Sunday I start at ten o'clock and finish at six o'clock.

:17:00. > :17:24.But I have to pay 500 for this room, the rent, and transport and food.

:17:25. > :17:32.Sam Wadicor is 26, he is a mental health support worker.

:17:33. > :17:38.He cycles around London because he can no longer

:17:39. > :17:43.I don't feel that I earn a fair wage for the work that I do.

:17:44. > :17:52.You are constantly told that having any sort of luxury in life is sort

:17:53. > :17:55.of bad and you need to knuckle down and work harder and it

:17:56. > :17:59.That is what I find most difficult about it.

:18:00. > :18:02.It is not just not having enough money each month to maybe go out

:18:03. > :18:05.to the pub once a week, it is being told that is a luxury

:18:06. > :18:11.It used to be thought that work was the surest way out of poverty.

:18:12. > :18:15.That old truth has been demolished in the decade

:18:16. > :18:19.In 2008, more than half those living in poverty

:18:20. > :18:26.Now most are in work and they live alongside very conspicuous wealth.

:18:27. > :18:31.Every day they see a world that they seem to be locked out of.

:18:32. > :18:34.What does that do to their sense that they have a proper

:18:35. > :18:39.Their sense that shared citizenship has any real meaning?

:18:40. > :18:43.The most dangerous feeling we have seen in recent years is that

:18:44. > :18:47.actually our democracy may not be worth fighting for, may not

:18:48. > :18:52.Rule of law is a fiction, educational equality

:18:53. > :18:59.And we have to fight to rebuild that because the belief in the continued

:19:00. > :19:04.openness in our society requires a belief that everyone is part of it

:19:05. > :19:10.I think that we are dealing with a threat to the whole

:19:11. > :19:15.This woman in her 20s was too anxious about her job

:19:16. > :19:26.It is a bit crazy that the thought of not being able to pay my rent can

:19:27. > :19:28.cause such a bad thing for me emotionally.

:19:29. > :19:37.I was upset a lot of the time and I was actually put

:19:38. > :19:39.on antidepressants for how bad my anxiety got.

:19:40. > :19:42.Bills were going up, travel is going up, everything

:19:43. > :19:51.So obviously where you are looking at the bigger picture,

:19:52. > :19:54.where I used to be able to save a little bit

:19:55. > :19:58.Even in a period of economic recovery the working poor know

:19:59. > :20:01.the big truths of their own lives, that wealth is not

:20:02. > :20:09.Our age of rising inequality is also an age of rising popular anger.

:20:10. > :20:17.The New Silk Road stretching from China to the UK and beyond is

:20:18. > :20:20.the Chinese President's project of the century.

:20:21. > :20:23.He plans to spend nearly ?1 trillion on road,

:20:24. > :20:27.rail and infrastructure that will cross 60 countries.

:20:28. > :20:33.But critics say this bid for strategic influence could leave

:20:34. > :20:37.the countries in China's path with costly debt for years to come.

:20:38. > :20:41.To understand China's ambitions, the BBC's China editor,

:20:42. > :20:44.Carrie Gracie, has been travelling the length of the New Silk Road.

:20:45. > :20:48.Her journey begins in Eastern China, where the new rail route to the UK

:20:49. > :20:57.They call them the ships of the desert.

:20:58. > :21:01.For centuries the camel trains of the Silk Road dominated trade

:21:02. > :21:10.Now China wants to recreate the Silk Road.

:21:11. > :21:20.When Wu Xiaodong started here 34 years ago, China sold

:21:21. > :21:29.Now he is a foot soldier for a trading superpower.

:21:30. > :21:41.TRANSLATION: We are under a lot of pressure, expectations are high,

:21:42. > :21:49.We need the train to develop faster and better.

:21:50. > :21:58.Not led by merchants, but by a president.

:21:59. > :22:01.Chinese emperors once claimed to rule all under heaven.

:22:02. > :22:05.With the United States no longer leading on trade,

:22:06. > :22:13.He calls his vision the belt and road.

:22:14. > :22:17.China's belt and road vision is so vast it may be decades before

:22:18. > :22:23.we can tell whether it is a worthy successor to the ancient Silk Road.

:22:24. > :22:27.But what we can say is that with no other country offering

:22:28. > :22:32.a big idea right now, this is the most ambitious bid

:22:33. > :22:40.Already China shapes our material lives.

:22:41. > :22:43.This is one of the biggest markets in the world.

:22:44. > :22:47.But selling abroad and building at home is no longer enough to keep

:22:48. > :23:05.But when the talking is done, Chinese traders

:23:06. > :23:14.The world buys much more from them than the other way around.

:23:15. > :23:16.Red tape can make importing a nightmare.

:23:17. > :23:18.The government can change the law at any time,

:23:19. > :23:23.It is a very grey area at the moment.

:23:24. > :23:27.If the government made it a little bit more clear

:23:28. > :23:30.on how to go about it, it would be a bit easier.

:23:31. > :23:34.But the new Silk Road is China solving China's problems,

:23:35. > :23:39.money and muscle heading west on a journey across three

:23:40. > :23:51.continents, bidding to redraw the map and command the century.

:23:52. > :24:00.So I'm now at the camel enclosure in the Silk Road oasis town, it's just

:24:01. > :24:04.before dawn. The camels are gathering for the tourists of the

:24:05. > :24:09.day come to see sun rise. What's important to understand about this

:24:10. > :24:14.project is that for the best part of the past 70 years China's felt

:24:15. > :24:17.disadvantaged by what it sees as a Western international order. Now

:24:18. > :24:23.with the West preoccupied by problems at home and lacking a

:24:24. > :24:28.coherent message abroad, China sees a moment of opportunity and hence,

:24:29. > :24:34.this idea for what it calls the new era of globalisation. It's already

:24:35. > :24:40.been building the military muscle to match its trading might. Now this,

:24:41. > :24:48.in a way, the new Silk Road, is the carrot to go with that stick. It's a

:24:49. > :24:53.huge stack of cash to spend on Chinese infrastructure across Asia,

:24:54. > :24:58.Europe and Africa. Now China's regional rivals are suspicious. They

:24:59. > :25:04.fear this is a bid for strategic dominance in Asia and beyond. That

:25:05. > :25:07.China will control key assets and enslave neighbours through debt.

:25:08. > :25:12.China says that's nonsense, that this is merely to boost trade, that

:25:13. > :25:16.it's a revival of the ancient Silk Road that, of course, was going on

:25:17. > :25:19.here. But I think what's important to remember is that the big

:25:20. > :25:25.difference between the ancient Silk Road and the new version is that

:25:26. > :25:38.this is not private traders, private Americanants dealing amongst them --

:25:39. > :25:41.merchants dealing amongst themselves, this is Chinese money.

:25:42. > :25:44.More from Carrie throughout this week, as she continues to follow

:25:45. > :25:48.The White House has tried to play down the revelation that

:25:49. > :25:51.Donald Trump's son had a meeting last year with a Russian lawyer,

:25:52. > :25:53.who said she had damaging material about Hillary Clinton.

:25:54. > :25:55.It took place during the presidential campaign and plays

:25:56. > :25:57.into concerns that the Trump's inner circle had developed

:25:58. > :26:05.Our chief correspondent, Gavin Hewitt, reports.

:26:06. > :26:14.Last June, after his father's nomination, he met with a Russian

:26:15. > :26:16.lawyer ,who promised damaging material on Hillary

:26:17. > :26:20.The meeting was here at Trump Tower in New York.

:26:21. > :26:23.Until this weekend, Trump Jr hadn't mentioned it,

:26:24. > :26:30.He brought along Trump's campaign manager and his son-in-law.

:26:31. > :26:34.On Saturday he said, "We primarily discussed

:26:35. > :26:37.a programme about the adoption of Russian children."

:26:38. > :26:39.By the following day he said, "The woman lawyer stated

:26:40. > :26:42.that she had information that individuals connected

:26:43. > :26:46.to Russia were funding the Democratic National Committee

:26:47. > :26:51.He was told there would be information that may be

:26:52. > :26:58.Again, I want to ask you a question, if we are going to use

:26:59. > :27:00.the word "collusion", where is the evidence of collusion?

:27:01. > :27:04.Trump Jr pushed back sarcastically on Twitter today to say,

:27:05. > :27:06."Obviously I'm the first person on a campaign to ever

:27:07. > :27:12.take a meeting to hear information about an opponent."

:27:13. > :27:15.On Friday, President Trump met President Putin and asked him

:27:16. > :27:19.directly about meddling in the American election campaign.

:27:20. > :27:24.It's not clear how forcefully President Trump pursued this,

:27:25. > :27:27.but there was an agreement between the two leaders

:27:28. > :27:34.News of Trump Jr's Russian meeting doesn't put President Trump

:27:35. > :27:42.It keeps open the central question that has dogged this administration.

:27:43. > :27:45.Was there collusion between the Trump campaign

:27:46. > :27:51.It promises months of further investigations.

:27:52. > :27:55.Trump Jr called the latest revelations a big yawn.

:27:56. > :27:58.But it is the first confirmed meeting between members of the Trump

:27:59. > :28:05.The Senate Intelligence Committee says it wants to committee

:28:06. > :28:10.For the president, it's a reminder that not everything goes his way.

:28:11. > :28:17.For the first time in 44 years, a British man and a British woman

:28:18. > :28:21.are both through to the last eight at Wimbledon, with Andy Murray and

:28:22. > :28:26.But there was shock tonight as Rafa Nadal crashed out

:28:27. > :28:30.of the Championships in a dramatic five-set, five-hour match.

:28:31. > :28:36.Monday morning, keep moving if you want to see everything.

:28:37. > :28:40.What unites everyone here is what Wimbledon calls

:28:41. > :28:47.It's been expected of him, motivates her and still entices him.

:28:48. > :28:53.Johanna Konta at the top of the screen was up

:28:54. > :28:56.against Caroline Garcia, in a match of small margins.

:28:57. > :29:05.Garcia supporters saw her take the second set.

:29:06. > :29:13.This was Wimbledon and this a critical mistake.

:29:14. > :29:17.Give Johanna Konta an occasion, she'll rise to it.

:29:18. > :29:20.It's those situations that I jumped on when I was a little girl.

:29:21. > :29:23.And even now to be part of those battles on big stages.

:29:24. > :29:26.You're now the first British woman into a quarter final at Wimbledon

:29:27. > :29:30.since Jo Durie in 1984, what does that mean to you?

:29:31. > :29:37.The last British woman to win Wimbledon was Virginia Wade in 1977.

:29:38. > :29:40.Imagine if there were two British champions this year,

:29:41. > :29:46.Andy Murray was playing Benoit Paire of France, 46 in the world.

:29:47. > :29:52.At Wimbledon, Murray had never lost to a player ranked so low.

:29:53. > :29:54.Tie-break in the first, 6-4 in the second.

:29:55. > :30:03.In the third set, Murray got heated with the umpire over a challenge

:30:04. > :30:09.No matter, Murray said it was the best he'd hit the ball

:30:10. > :30:12.in the tournament so far and Paire ultimately couldn't match it.

:30:13. > :30:21.Rafael Nadal walked out onto Number 1 Court,

:30:22. > :30:24.limbering up without head room - ouch.

:30:25. > :30:28.Soon he found himself in a phenomenal struggle

:30:29. > :30:33.This point made it 10-10 in the fifth set.

:30:34. > :30:36.At 34, Muller is suddenly in the form of his life, seeded

:30:37. > :30:48.Nadal kept facing match points and kept saving them.

:30:49. > :30:59.Pursuing greatness takes everything you've got.

:31:00. > :31:16.The next goal is to clear them from Raqqa in Syria.

:31:17. > :31:19.Tonight, we have a remarkable film about the forces leading that

:31:20. > :31:23.struggle and the things they've found in territory they've taken.

:31:24. > :31:27.We meet the Kurdish woman who is commander