14/08/2016 BBC Weekend News


14/08/2016

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This is BBC News. I'm Gavin Esler.

:00:07.:00:07.

COMMENTATOR: They have succumbed to the inevitable.

:00:08.:00:11.

Bow to his superiority! Mo Farah wins the gold!

:00:12.:00:17.

Not even a fall early in the race could stop Mo Farah -

:00:18.:00:24.

as he becomes the first British track athlete to win

:00:25.:00:27.

It's important, you know, to make my country proud and make history.

:00:28.:00:32.

It's every athlete's dream, so I just want to continue doing

:00:33.:00:34.

what I enjoy because this is what I enjoy.

:00:35.:00:36.

This is what I'm good at. And I really enjoy what I do.

:00:37.:00:40.

And a silver for Jess Eniss Hill, as she hints she could retire.

:00:41.:00:43.

These years have been amazing, so, just really proud.

:00:44.:00:46.

REPORTER: So, are you hinting that this may be the last one?

:00:47.:00:49.

Possibly, yeah. Oh, I don't want to cry!

:00:50.:00:53.

COMMENTATOR: Gold for Great Britain! They've smashed the world record!

:00:54.:00:56.

Laura Trott becomes the first British female to win

:00:57.:00:59.

The feeling we were getting riding round,

:01:00.:01:03.

it just felt like this machine had finally come together.

:01:04.:01:06.

And we put our time, that we knew we could achieve.

:01:07.:01:14.

The Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, dismisses

:01:15.:01:15.

claims by his deputy - Tom Watson - that hard left activists are trying

:01:16.:01:19.

Torrential rain in the US causes flooding in

:01:20.:01:23.

Three people have died and thousand more are rescued.

:01:24.:01:35.

a man was shot dead in a police chase in Milwaukee.

:01:36.:01:40.

we'll take a look at this morning's front pages in The Papers.

:01:41.:01:46.

City executives suggest Britain could remain a member of the EU

:01:47.:01:50.

until late 2019. Good morning and

:01:51.:02:04.

welcome to BBC News. If you missed all the action

:02:05.:02:09.

in the athletics overnight - there was some extraordinary

:02:10.:02:11.

drama in Rio. Team GB won a gold,

:02:12.:02:13.

silver and bronze. Mo Farah successfully

:02:14.:02:15.

defended his 10,000-metre Despite falling during the race

:02:16.:02:19.

he won Gold, joining the ranks There was a silver for

:02:20.:02:23.

Jessica Ennis-Hill in the hepthalon, while Greg Rutherford took

:02:24.:02:29.

bronze in the long jump. There are eight medals on day eight.

:02:30.:02:46.

That secures Team GB's position at third. Our sports editor reports

:02:47.:02:48.

from Rio. Mo Farah has not lost a race since

:02:49.:03:15.

2011. He looked in control. In the tenth lap, came a moment of drama. A

:03:16.:03:25.

little clip. White bike accidentally tripped by his training partner, Mo

:03:26.:03:29.

Farah fell. But the reigning champion would not let that end his

:03:30.:03:33.

race. He quickly recovered to get back among the pack. This Kenyan

:03:34.:03:38.

runner made in charge of the 300 metres to go but then, anyway that

:03:39.:03:42.

has become so familiar now, farmers urged decisively. And he opens those

:03:43.:03:55.

legs and he is sprinting away. They have succumbed to the inevitable.

:03:56.:03:59.

Alto superiority. Mo Farah wins the gold. Mo Farah has done it again. He

:04:00.:04:08.

said he was in the form of his life coming into these games and so it

:04:09.:04:13.

proved. A third Olympic gold, which further elevates him among the

:04:14.:04:17.

sports greats. It is important to make my country proud and make

:04:18.:04:21.

history. It is a very ugly's dream, so I just want to continue doing

:04:22.:04:25.

what I enjoy, because this is what I enjoy. I work hard. I spend a lot of

:04:26.:04:29.

time away from my family. That one moment could become, I just had to

:04:30.:04:37.

believe in myself and get through it. I want to do it for my kids. In

:04:38.:04:41.

2012, Greg Rutherford's called kick-started British politics and at

:04:42.:04:48.

one stage, he looked on course to retain his long jump title. Busily

:04:49.:04:53.

putting a narrowly ahead of the field. Rutherford has taken the

:04:54.:04:57.

lead. In a competition with the standard improved, no one could

:04:58.:05:02.

match the American winner. Rutherford had to make do with

:05:03.:05:06.

bronze. Jessica Ennis-Hill knew she had worked at you in the heptathlon,

:05:07.:05:12.

as she bid to become the first women in British history to retain her

:05:13.:05:16.

British title in athletics. In the form of her life as these

:05:17.:05:20.

21-year-old extended her lead in the javelin. Katarina Johnson-Thompson's

:05:21.:05:27.

chances slipped away. With Jessica Ennis-Hill in second place, talking

:05:28.:05:31.

down to the final 800 metre race. I wish you must meet TM with almost

:05:32.:05:37.

ten seconds to secure a success of gold, the reigning champion gave

:05:38.:05:42.

everything she had. Jessica Ennis-Hill is coming to the home

:05:43.:05:51.

straight. The clock is ticking. The Olympic champion is Thiam. I have to

:05:52.:06:03.

make a decision now. I don't want to cry on TV. But this has been

:06:04.:06:09.

amazing. Are you thinking you may retire? It could be the last one,

:06:10.:06:18.

possibly. I don't want to cry. What will be the defining decision for

:06:19.:06:23.

you? I have to speak to my family and make a decision. It has been

:06:24.:06:25.

incredible. I don't want to cry. Stop making me cry! The night

:06:26.:06:33.

belongs to Mo Farah. He will aim to complete his quest for a second

:06:34.:06:37.

success of double Olympic gold. Another momentous day could lie in

:06:38.:06:39.

store. Laura Trott became the first British

:06:40.:06:50.

woman to win three Olympic titles. The Rovers picked up medals. There

:06:51.:06:54.

was if it's over middle and Andy Murray secured his place in the

:06:55.:06:56.

men's singles final. Written at their best. Now, a chance

:06:57.:07:19.

to show no one comes close. The USA had looked ominously quick, but when

:07:20.:07:24.

it mattered, Laura Trott, Joanna Rowsell and Katie Archibald were in

:07:25.:07:30.

a class of their own. Called for Great Britain! They have smashed the

:07:31.:07:38.

world record. For Laura Trott, this was extra special. The first British

:07:39.:07:49.

woman to win three Olympic golds. To do this alongside the three girls

:07:50.:07:53.

was incredible. The medals did not end there. Becky James had to build

:07:54.:07:58.

her career after health scares and injuries. She took a superb silver.

:07:59.:08:05.

The most difficult of journeys are often the most satisfying. Britain

:08:06.:08:11.

will definitely win another gold and silver today. Jason Kenny and Calum

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Spinner into the sprint final. For Kenny and his record-breaking

:08:16.:08:20.

partner, Laura Trott, it could be a celebration. And it was a party

:08:21.:08:24.

atmosphere for the final night of swimming at the aquatic centre, with

:08:25.:08:29.

22 gold medals already for the great Michael Phelps, this was the final.

:08:30.:08:34.

For British swimmers, this men's really was the last chance to add to

:08:35.:08:39.

their medals. This has been their most successful games in over a

:08:40.:08:45.

century. The swimmer is added another silver behind the United

:08:46.:08:49.

States and perhaps inevitably, Michael Phelps. Gould, a fitting

:08:50.:08:56.

finish for Michael Phelps, the Olympics, see his like again. On the

:08:57.:09:03.

water, it was a spectacular day for British rowing in Rio. For the men's

:09:04.:09:11.

eights, fight to the front and stay was their approach. The bronze

:09:12.:09:15.

medallists from London now putting in a golden performance. Well done,

:09:16.:09:19.

Great Britain. It was Great Britain's race. Be world champions

:09:20.:09:25.

and Olympic champions. Victory has really tasted so sweet. The women's

:09:26.:09:32.

late search for silver was a moment of sheer joy. Topping the medal

:09:33.:09:37.

table at the rowing for the third successive games, Britain ruling the

:09:38.:09:42.

waves. Andy Murray, who led Team GB at the opening ceremony, continues

:09:43.:09:48.

to lead the way and Olympic tennis. No one has ever won two singles

:09:49.:09:54.

golds but Murray is a man quite used to making history. Our team has done

:09:55.:10:02.

well over the last few days. I am happy I have added a medal to the

:10:03.:10:07.

tally so far. Hopefully, I can make it a gold one. Murray will play

:10:08.:10:13.

Argentina's one marketing del Potro, after a lively victory over Rafa

:10:14.:10:19.

Nadal. More history awaits Murray on a weekend where Team GB is already

:10:20.:10:29.

creating plenty. Team GB are guaranteed at least one medal today.

:10:30.:10:34.

Mike Bushell has the details on who else we should watch out for.

:10:35.:10:41.

Jamaica's defending champion Usain Bolt eased through yesterday's

:10:42.:10:43.

100 metre heats despite describing his performance as sluggish.

:10:44.:10:45.

He's attempting to become the first man to win three back-to-back

:10:46.:10:48.

Great Britain's Justin Rose is leading the men's golf tournament

:10:49.:10:57.

by one shot heading into the final round.

:10:58.:11:01.

He is hoping to win the first golf gold-medal in 112 years

:11:02.:11:05.

after it was reintroduced to the Games.

:11:06.:11:10.

Wimbledon champion Andy Murray will be trying to become the first

:11:11.:11:13.

player to win two Olympic singles titles when he takes

:11:14.:11:17.

on Argentinian Juan Martin del Potro in today's gold-medal match.

:11:18.:11:20.

And there's another guaranteed medal in the windsurfing for Team GB.

:11:21.:11:23.

London 2012 silver-medallist Nick Dempsey has already guaranteed

:11:24.:11:26.

a repeat of his success four years ago.

:11:27.:11:29.

Earlier this week, Matt Whitlock secured bronze to get the first

:11:30.:11:35.

all-round gymnastics Olympics medal for 108 years.

:11:36.:11:39.

Today he will go for gold in the men's floor event alongside

:11:40.:11:43.

teammate Kristian Thomas before he joins Lewis Smith to battle it

:11:44.:11:47.

out for gold on the men's pommel horse.

:11:48.:11:59.

And don't forget you can follow the Olympic action throughout

:12:00.:12:01.

The Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, has used an interview in today's

:12:02.:12:10.

Observer newspaper to dismiss claims by his deputy, Tom Watson,

:12:11.:12:12.

that hard left activists are trying to infiltrate the party.

:12:13.:12:15.

Mr Watson responded by saying there was clear evidence

:12:16.:12:18.

In the article, Mr Corbyn also declines to express confidence

:12:19.:12:22.

in Labour's general secretary, Ian McNichol.

:12:23.:12:26.

With me now is our political correspondent, Ben Wright.

:12:27.:12:33.

It is extraordinary watching this. Everyone in the Labour Party talks

:12:34.:12:40.

about unity. How it going? They seemed to have been a total

:12:41.:12:42.

breakdown in communication between the party's leader and his deputy.

:12:43.:12:48.

They communicate via letters and the media. There has been a bitter

:12:49.:12:54.

breakdown in relationships at the top of the Labour Party. Last week,

:12:55.:12:59.

Tom Watson said he had sent a four page dossier to the leader's offers,

:13:00.:13:03.

saying there was total proof that had been entry is by Trotskyists and

:13:04.:13:08.

the former militant tendency of people in the Socialist Party into

:13:09.:13:12.

the current Labour Party. Jeremy Corbyn has asked about those claims

:13:13.:13:17.

in the current interview and said that he has seen the letter

:13:18.:13:20.

mentioned in the media but he dismisses what it says is complete

:13:21.:13:23.

nonsense. He said 300,000 people joined the Labour Party and they are

:13:24.:13:27.

not sectarian extremists. They adjoining for entirely worthwhile

:13:28.:13:33.

and genuine reasons. He has just slipped away Tom Watson's criticism.

:13:34.:13:37.

He doesn't seem particularly interested in exploring Tom Watson's

:13:38.:13:42.

claims at all. It seems difficult to understand how there can be a good

:13:43.:13:46.

outcome for the Labour Party in the next couple of years, whoever wins

:13:47.:13:49.

the election. They are so fundamentally split. Yeah, there is

:13:50.:13:56.

a bitter and toxic atmosphere in the party. You cannot quite see whoever

:13:57.:14:00.

wins moving beyond this dysfunctionality quickly at all.

:14:01.:14:03.

Certainly, if Jeremy Corbyn wins, and that has to be where the smart

:14:04.:14:07.

money is, if you're the momentum is still with him, you know, he's

:14:08.:14:13.

leading a party, three quarters of whom do not want him to lead it.

:14:14.:14:17.

They have made it quite clear in the no-confidence vote and all the rest

:14:18.:14:20.

of it. If he is returned as leader, what do they do? There is open to

:14:21.:14:26.

now of some sort of split. It is not clear how that would work. A

:14:27.:14:29.

parliamentary party breaking away from the rest of it? It could be a

:14:30.:14:35.

battle as to who call themselves Labour in the future. It is hard to

:14:36.:14:40.

see Labour moving beyond this in the coming months or years. One senior

:14:41.:14:46.

activist made a point to me that whoever is joining the party,

:14:47.:14:50.

whether you call them Trotskyites or those who formally voted Greens, but

:14:51.:14:56.

there are people on the left. You don't win elections by dinner. You

:14:57.:14:59.

win elections by getting people who may have voted Conservative, may

:15:00.:15:04.

have it Ukip, may have voted something else, to the centre-right.

:15:05.:15:09.

Jeremy Corbyn will be hoping to redraw the political rule book. As

:15:10.:15:13.

you say, elections are won by scooping up a large chunk of the

:15:14.:15:18.

centre ground. He rightly says there has been a large swelling of

:15:19.:15:25.

Labour's ranks by people joining up from the Green Party, others,

:15:26.:15:28.

clearly returning to the Labour Party from the left. He thinks this

:15:29.:15:34.

is a winning movement of people who want a new sort of society. He

:15:35.:15:38.

doesn't think there is the electoral potential there for this to

:15:39.:15:44.

translate into seats and victory. He is asked about the dire poll ratings

:15:45.:15:49.

of the party and has said that our message has been complicated and it

:15:50.:15:52.

has not been made easier by the fact that so many MPs have been speaking

:15:53.:15:57.

out against my leadership. He blames Labour MPs for the miserable state

:15:58.:16:01.

labour is in in the polls. There is no sign Jeremy Corbyn is about to

:16:02.:16:05.

change tactics and do something else. Thank you.

:16:06.:16:07.

And we'll have more on this story in our look at this morning's papers

:16:08.:16:10.

after half past with the journalist James Rampton, and Josie Cox

:16:11.:16:12.

The Bank of England has defended its decision to cut

:16:13.:16:18.

interest rates to the lowest rate ever, after criticism from savers.

:16:19.:16:21.

The rate was cut to a quarter of one percentage point earlier this month

:16:22.:16:24.

as the Bank hoped to stimulate the UK economy post Brexit.

:16:25.:16:27.

In an article for the Sunday Times, its Chief economist,

:16:28.:16:29.

Andrew Haldane said he understood savers' frustration but says,

:16:30.:16:32.

had it not acted, hundreds of thousands of jobs

:16:33.:16:34.

Let's have a look at the headlines. Mo Farah gets a gold medal and

:16:35.:16:52.

dedicated to his children. He is the first British track and field

:16:53.:16:55.

athlete to have won three Olympic gold medals. Labour leader Jeremy

:16:56.:17:00.

Corbyn dismisses claims by his deputy that hard left activists are

:17:01.:17:04.

trying to infiltrate. And torrential rain in the United States causes

:17:05.:17:08.

flooding in Louisiana and Mississippi. Three people have died

:17:09.:17:16.

and 1000 more have been affected. We will stay with one of those headline

:17:17.:17:17.

stories. of Louisiana after severe flooding

:17:18.:17:19.

left at least two people dead. More than a thousand

:17:20.:17:22.

people have been rescued. They have seen rain

:17:23.:17:25.

in the Deep South, but they haven't According to one estimate,

:17:26.:17:29.

the equivalent of about three months worth of rain fell in a single

:17:30.:17:35.

night, and there is more to come. Among those rescued,

:17:36.:17:38.

a woman whose car was washed away by the floodwaters

:17:39.:17:40.

while she was inside it. I am drowning, she tells them,

:17:41.:17:47.

before being dragged to safety through the back window, concerned

:17:48.:17:55.

more for her dog than herself. The rescuer even manages

:17:56.:17:59.

to pull her pet to safety. A man whose lorry was swept off

:18:00.:18:09.

the road by floodwaters was rescued after spending eight hours

:18:10.:18:12.

clinging to a fallen tree. He was said to be cold but otherwise

:18:13.:18:14.

none the worse for his ordeal. How high was the water? Three feet

:18:15.:18:32.

in my house. A man whose lorry was swept off

:18:33.:18:35.

the road by floodwaters was rescued after spending eight hours

:18:36.:18:40.

clinging to a fallen tree. He was said to be cold but otherwise

:18:41.:18:42.

none the worse for his ordeal. While all around river levels

:18:43.:18:46.

were rising so quickly, many escaped with just

:18:47.:18:49.

the clothes on their back. We have lost trailers, our

:18:50.:18:57.

apartment, our house has gone under. Altogether, more than 1,000

:18:58.:19:01.

people were rescued. Others may need to be, over

:19:02.:19:03.

the course of the next few days. What we know is we have record

:19:04.:19:07.

levels of flooding along And, because these are record

:19:08.:19:09.

floods, we don't know how wide the water is going to

:19:10.:19:15.

get in those areas. This is unprecedented, so we don't

:19:16.:19:30.

have records to see who might be impacted.

:19:31.:19:31.

Some people are still unaccounted for, and rescuers are tracking

:19:32.:19:36.

the path of the slow-moving storm, searching the devastation that lies

:19:37.:19:38.

Meanwhile, the weather service predicts rain will continue until

:19:39.:19:46.

Monday at least. Police in New York say

:19:47.:19:49.

an Imam has been shot dead He was walking home from a mosque

:19:50.:19:52.

after Saturday prayers. Another man was also shot

:19:53.:19:56.

in the head and is in Police said no motive had been

:19:57.:19:59.

established and there was no reason to believe the men were attacked

:20:00.:20:03.

because of their religion. No one has been arrested

:20:04.:20:05.

in connection with the shooting. There have been violent

:20:06.:20:11.

protests on the streets of the US city of Milwaukee,

:20:12.:20:13.

after a man was shot dead Around one hundred people

:20:14.:20:16.

had gathered to protest the killing of the man,

:20:17.:20:19.

who police said was armed These pictures from the scene show

:20:20.:20:22.

a fuel station and several vehicles on fire and some

:20:23.:20:26.

officers in riot gear. One police officer was hit

:20:27.:20:28.

on the head when a brick was thrown A number of deaths of black men at

:20:29.:20:31.

the hands of the police has sparked The Mayor of Milwaukee

:20:32.:20:37.

had this update. Police spotted a suspicious vehicle

:20:38.:20:51.

and they stopped it. As they stopped the vehicle, to individuals fled

:20:52.:20:56.

from it. One started to head West, the other East. A Milwaukee police

:20:57.:21:03.

officer with six years of experience started to chase the individual

:21:04.:21:07.

running to the east. He ordered that individual to drop his gun. The

:21:08.:21:13.

individual did not drop his gun. He held the gun, or I should say, I

:21:14.:21:19.

don't know that for a fact, but he had begun. And the officer fired

:21:20.:21:24.

several times. The individual was hit in the chest and hid in the arm.

:21:25.:21:33.

He was hit by two bullets, one in the chest and one in the arm. That

:21:34.:21:38.

individual is a 23-year-old man and has died. The mayor of Milwaukee

:21:39.:21:41.

Mayor. Six people are in hospital

:21:42.:21:44.

in Switzerland after a man set fire to a train before attacking

:21:45.:21:47.

passengers with a knife. The suspect, described

:21:48.:21:49.

as a Swiss man aged 27, was also taken to hospital

:21:50.:21:51.

after the incident near Salez, It is an attack that has shocked

:21:52.:22:01.

this quiet part of Switzerland. Blood stains, the railway station

:22:02.:22:07.

platform where the train pulled in, following the attack. Part of the

:22:08.:22:12.

inside carriage is totally gutted. Forensic teams at the station are

:22:13.:22:17.

piecing together what happened, as the train approached Salez station,

:22:18.:22:21.

just after 2pm. Several dozen passengers were on board, where the

:22:22.:22:26.

27-year-old man set some inflammable liquid on fire, before attacking

:22:27.:22:30.

people with a knife. Five people were stabbed or burned, including a

:22:31.:22:34.

six-year-old child and two teenagers. A six person suffered

:22:35.:22:39.

smoke inhalation. Some of the injured are said to have been in a

:22:40.:22:43.

serious condition. Police say they perpetrate it is a Swiss national

:22:44.:22:48.

but they do not know why he carried out the attack. TRANSLATION: We

:22:49.:22:53.

cannot say anything about the motive. We have no motive. Police

:22:54.:22:58.

work is beginning on investigating the perpetrator. The suspect is in

:22:59.:23:03.

hospital and will be remanded in custody once he is released.

:23:04.:23:05.

Rail commuters who endure repeated - but short - delays should be

:23:06.:23:08.

The consumers' organisation Which says it could help rebuild

:23:09.:23:12.

passengers' trust after what it's calling a "summer of discontent"

:23:13.:23:14.

on the network. Alexandra McKenzie reports.

:23:15.:23:24.

It could just be bad luck for the railways. But this summer seems to

:23:25.:23:31.

have been one for strikes and the prospect of further strikes. Leaving

:23:32.:23:36.

many passengers, like those here on Southern trains last week, fed up

:23:37.:23:40.

and disgruntled. Almost 1000 services were cancelled each day of

:23:41.:23:43.

the strike, which was called off early. The RMT is protesting about

:23:44.:23:52.

the role of cards and over drivers taking responsible for train doors.

:23:53.:23:54.

The consumer group, Which?, wants to speed up the system

:23:55.:24:10.

of automatic compensation and a statutory ombudsman that is

:24:11.:24:14.

mandatory for all train companies to join. The Government says it is

:24:15.:24:20.

working with the industry and investing a record amount to fix the

:24:21.:24:23.

issues that cause the delays in the first place.

:24:24.:24:25.

British motorists prefer driving in mainland Europe because the roads

:24:26.:24:27.

are in better condition according to research by the RAC.

:24:28.:24:31.

The survey found that 80% thought there were fewer potholes

:24:32.:24:33.

on continental roads, with three-quarters saying

:24:34.:24:35.

Rhodes plagued by potholes. Cars constantly caught up in congestion.

:24:36.:24:54.

And the cost of filling up at the pumps. It seems many motorists are

:24:55.:24:59.

heading abroad to try and get away from it all. I drove in Germany and

:25:00.:25:04.

therefore the roads were better. Less congested, easier access,

:25:05.:25:12.

better drivers! It was much better. The only thing was we had to pay

:25:13.:25:18.

tolls everywhere. In the Netherlands, there are more people

:25:19.:25:22.

on bikes than in cars. There is less traffic. In a survey by the RAC of

:25:23.:25:28.

more than 1000 people, 80% said they thought there were fewer potholes on

:25:29.:25:32.

the continent than in the UK. 74% said it was less congestion in

:25:33.:25:37.

Europe than at home. 65% for they got a better deal at the pumps

:25:38.:25:42.

abroad. Some motorists say they like their home comfort. They admit that

:25:43.:25:46.

when they go abroad, they struggle with the different rules on the

:25:47.:25:49.

road, particularly changing speed limit and the challenge of driving

:25:50.:25:54.

on the opposite side. Others said the micro crisis in Calais had put

:25:55.:25:57.

them off going to France. The authorities here said they are

:25:58.:26:02.

listening to motorists are making big investments in the road network.

:26:03.:26:05.

In South Africa, a photographer has been using drone technology

:26:06.:26:07.

to demonstrate the gulf between rich and poor in his country.

:26:08.:26:10.

Seen from the air, Johnny Miller's creations show how very wealthy

:26:11.:26:13.

communities co-exist with deprived settlements.

:26:14.:26:16.

We met Johnny before his new exhibition opens later this

:26:17.:26:19.

The unequal scenes project is a series of aerial photographs and

:26:20.:26:36.

video that I have taken with a crown over the most unequal parts of South

:26:37.:26:44.

Africa. While I was either University of Cape Town, I learned a

:26:45.:26:48.

lot about how the city itself was designed with in mind. Those echoes

:26:49.:26:54.

of apartheid, of the past, carry-over. We are still dealing

:26:55.:26:57.

with it today and it is so obvious when you look at the photos, that

:26:58.:27:04.

the images directly, from apartheid. That was only 22 years ago. The

:27:05.:27:11.

first video I took, when I rose up from the ground and the ground

:27:12.:27:17.

changed perspective, I was shocked. I had never seen that perspective

:27:18.:27:20.

before of the separation in South Africa. And I knew that I had a

:27:21.:27:27.

really powerful set of images. I think each of the photos in the

:27:28.:27:33.

unequal scenes project speak to a lot of different assets that are at

:27:34.:27:39.

play, besides just inequality. They speak to homelessness,

:27:40.:27:42.

disenfranchisement, racism, urban planning, art, there are a lot of

:27:43.:27:46.

different ways people have the photographs and they're very

:27:47.:27:51.

transferable in that sense. My main hope is that these photos provoke

:27:52.:27:57.

conversations, get people talking about these issues and then those

:27:58.:28:01.

conversations can lead to solutions for policymakers, through activists,

:28:02.:28:07.

organisations, that is my hope. One of my favourite images and one of

:28:08.:28:10.

the ones I think is the most powerful is an image of an informal

:28:11.:28:15.

settlement located right next to a golf course in Durban. There is a

:28:16.:28:21.

thin fence between them. It just is incredibly poignant, that

:28:22.:28:27.

photograph. To me. Because a golf course is the icon of wealth and

:28:28.:28:36.

Leasure. To some extent. What I want to do going forward with the project

:28:37.:28:41.

is actually take it international. I want to take it outside South

:28:42.:28:45.

Africa. It would be interesting to do a comparative study of unequal

:28:46.:28:48.

scenes in wealthy parts of the world, like America or Europe. There

:28:49.:28:54.

is inequality everywhere. There is inequality and unequal scenes in

:28:55.:28:55.

every country in the world. The photographer there

:28:56.:28:57.

is Johnny Miller. Gary Lineker kept his promise

:28:58.:29:00.

and presented the first episode Last December, the former England

:29:01.:29:03.

captain promised to strip down to his underwear for the programme

:29:04.:29:07.

if his former club, Leicester, Despite a poor start,

:29:08.:29:10.

the team went on to win the title for the first

:29:11.:29:14.

time in their history. New managers, new signings,

:29:15.:29:18.

but nothing much has changed. We have Ian Alan Shearer

:29:19.:29:23.

and Ian Wright in the studio. Yellow like we can only see the top

:29:24.:29:38.

half of you at the moment. A slow process, particularly across

:29:39.:30:00.

Northern Ireland and Scotland. Very few places will miss out on my

:30:01.:30:06.

sunshine altogether. Temperatures ranging from the high teens across

:30:07.:30:10.

the north of the UK to the low 20s in the cell. Overnight, much of that

:30:11.:30:17.

cloud will melt away. Winds will be light. Temperatures will drop away.

:30:18.:30:24.

Rural areas getting down into single figures. A nice looking day for

:30:25.:30:37.

Monday. Like Clinton most areas. It will feel particularly warm in the

:30:38.:30:47.

sunshine. Warmer for many of us through Tuesday and Wednesday.

:30:48.:30:57.

They should come to the inevitable, they should bow to his superiority,

:30:58.:31:13.

Mo Farah! He took a tumble early

:31:14.:31:21.

on in the race but nothing could stop from Mo Farah from making

:31:22.:31:24.

history as the first British track It's important, you know, to make my

:31:25.:31:27.

country proud and make history. It's every athlete's dream,

:31:28.:31:31.

so I just want to continue doing what I enjoy because

:31:32.:31:34.

this is what I enjoy. This is what I'm good at.

:31:35.:31:36.

And I really enjoy what I do. Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn says

:31:37.:31:39.

claims by his deputy Tom Watson that hard left activists are trying

:31:40.:31:42.

to infiltrate the party Three people have died and thousands

:31:43.:31:44.

more have been rescued as torrential rain in the US causes flooding

:31:45.:31:48.

in Louisiana and Mississippi. Anger over the fatal shooting

:31:49.:31:51.

of a man by police has erupted into violence in the US city

:31:52.:31:53.

of Milwaukee. Meanwhile in New York,

:31:54.:31:57.

a Muslim preacher and his assistant have been shot dead in what's

:31:58.:32:00.

being branded as a hate crime. Coming up in a few

:32:01.:32:05.

minutes our Sunday morning edition of the papers -

:32:06.:32:09.

this morning's reviewers are journalist James Rampton

:32:10.:32:11.

and Josie Cox from the Wall Street Before the papers, sport

:32:12.:32:14.

and for a full round up, from the BBC Sport Centre,

:32:15.:32:29.

here's Mike Bushell. We are catching our breasts after an

:32:30.:32:38.

extraordinary night of Olympics after Mo Farah kept his 10,000

:32:39.:32:45.

metres title despite a fall early on.

:32:46.:32:50.

He continued his domination of long distance running,

:32:51.:32:52.

but he had to recover quickly after he was accidentally

:32:53.:32:54.

tripped by his training partner, Galen Rupp.

:32:55.:32:57.

He overtook Kenya's Paul Tanooee, on the home straight,

:32:58.:33:02.

to cross win gold again - it's a victory, which puts Farah

:33:03.:33:05.

among the Olympic greats, and it was an emotional

:33:06.:33:06.

It is important to make my country proud, this is what I enjoy. I work

:33:07.:33:20.

hard and I spent a lot of time away from my family and everything and

:33:21.:33:25.

that one moment, it is not in your control. I just had to believe in

:33:26.:33:30.

myself and get through it, I wanted to do it for my kids. Rhianna has

:33:31.:33:35.

not got a medal, that medal is for her. I just have to recover now and

:33:36.:33:43.

get some time with the family, relax a little bit. That is some souvenir

:33:44.:33:50.

to bring home. It was heptathlon silver

:33:51.:33:52.

for Jessica Ennis Hill. She led going into the day's,

:33:53.:33:54.

final events, but an impressive long jump and then javelin,

:33:55.:33:59.

by Nafissatou, Teeam, gave the Belgian

:34:00.:34:01.

a significant advantage. Ennis Hill needed to beat her rival

:34:02.:34:02.

by almost ten seconds in the 800-metres -

:34:03.:34:05.

and although she won the race, Katerina Johnson Thompson

:34:06.:34:07.

finished sixth. Afterwards Ennis Hill, suggested

:34:08.:34:10.

this Games could be her last. I have to go away now and make a big

:34:11.:34:12.

decision as to what I do. I don't want to cry on TV but, yeah,

:34:13.:34:16.

these years have been amazing. Do you think this

:34:17.:34:20.

could be your last one? What would be the defining

:34:21.:34:23.

decision for you? Just to go away and have time

:34:24.:34:29.

with my family and make a decision. But it has just been

:34:30.:34:33.

incredible and... There was disappointment

:34:34.:34:34.

for defending champion He was in fourth place,

:34:35.:34:46.

until the last jump, when he produced his best effort

:34:47.:34:49.

of 8.29 metres, which secured him a bronze medal, behind

:34:50.:34:52.

the American Jeff Henderson It is very frustrating than you do

:34:53.:35:08.

not feel you have done yourself justice, there was no one who was

:35:09.:35:12.

unbeatable tonight. I come out and get myself a medal still, but I came

:35:13.:35:16.

to the Championships to win, I am not here to finish third and it is

:35:17.:35:18.

very frustrating. In the swimming pool,

:35:19.:35:26.

Michael Phelps waved goodbye on the final night of competition,

:35:27.:35:28.

and Great Britain That was Team GB's sixth

:35:29.:35:30.

medal in the pool - the best Olympics for our

:35:31.:35:33.

swimmers since 1908. Phelps won his 23rd Olympic gold,

:35:34.:35:35.

in his last race, before retirement. An emotional moment for him,

:35:36.:35:38.

and his family. Laura Trott became the first

:35:39.:35:43.

British woman to win three Olympic gold medals,

:35:44.:35:46.

following an emphatic victory for the women's

:35:47.:35:53.

team pursuit quartet. Trott, along with

:35:54.:35:56.

Joanna Rowsell-Shand, Katie Archibald and Elinor Barker,

:35:57.:35:58.

broke the world record twice in reaching the final, and again,

:35:59.:36:00.

as they swept aside the American team, to successfully

:36:01.:36:03.

defend their title. Stepping on the start line that was

:36:04.:36:09.

what I wanted to achieve and standing with these three girls it

:36:10.:36:12.

was incredible, the feeling on the line it felt like this machine had

:36:13.:36:16.

come together and we put out the time we knew we could achieve.

:36:17.:36:18.

There was also a silver for Becky James in the women's

:36:19.:36:21.

Keirin a medal looked unlikely as the riders came

:36:22.:36:23.

But James came from the back of the pack to power

:36:24.:36:27.

She couldn't catch Elis Ligtlee of the Netherlands, but just edged

:36:28.:36:30.

It was another successful day for Team GB on the rowing lake.

:36:31.:36:38.

And the Men's Eight were dominant in winning Olympic

:36:39.:36:40.

Britain topped the rowing medals in Rio with three

:36:41.:36:47.

The last of those silvers came for the Women's Eight -

:36:48.:36:54.

they were last in the field at the halfway stage but a late

:36:55.:36:57.

surge in the closing stages saw them snatch second spot from Romania

:36:58.:37:00.

Let's have a quick look at the medals table after another

:37:01.:37:09.

We're still in third position behind the United States and China.

:37:10.:37:13.

Team GB has 10 golds, 13 silver and 7 bronze

:37:14.:37:16.

And those numbers will definitely be higher by the end

:37:17.:37:19.

of day 9, with at least four medals guaranteed.

:37:20.:37:21.

Here's what we can look forward to today.

:37:22.:37:33.

Jamaica's defending champion Usain Bolt eased through yesterday's

:37:34.:37:36.

100 metre heats despite describing his performance as sluggish.

:37:37.:37:41.

He's attempting to become the first man to win three back-to-back

:37:42.:37:43.

Great Britain's Justin Rose is leading the men's golf tournament

:37:44.:37:51.

by one shot heading into the final round.

:37:52.:37:56.

He is hoping to win the first golf gold-medal in 112 years

:37:57.:37:59.

after it was reintroduced to the Games.

:38:00.:38:03.

Wimbledon champion Andy Murray will be trying to become the first

:38:04.:38:06.

player to win two Olympic singles titles when he takes

:38:07.:38:09.

on Argentinian Juan Martin del Potro in today's gold-medal match.

:38:10.:38:14.

And there's another guaranteed medal in the windsurfing for Team GB.

:38:15.:38:19.

London 2012 silver-medallist Nick Dempsey has already guaranteed

:38:20.:38:21.

a repeat of his success four years ago.

:38:22.:38:33.

Earlier this week, Max Whitlock secured bronze to get the first

:38:34.:38:35.

all-round gymnastics Olympics medal for 108 years.

:38:36.:38:37.

Today he will go for gold in the men's floor event alongside

:38:38.:38:40.

teammate Kristian Thomas before he joins Lewis Smith to battle it

:38:41.:38:48.

teammate Kristian Thomas before he joins Louis Smith to battle it

:38:49.:38:51.

out for gold on the men's pommel horse.

:38:52.:38:54.

And don't forget you can follow the Olympic action throughout

:38:55.:38:56.

And Five Live will have live commentary.

:38:57.:39:00.

You can watch a choice of sports on the BBC website.

:39:01.:39:08.

Away from the Olympics, and Manchester City manager

:39:09.:39:09.

Pep Guardiola, says he has no problem with Joe Hart,

:39:10.:39:12.

despite leaving the England goalkeeper, on the bench

:39:13.:39:14.

for their opening Premier League match, against Sunderland.

:39:15.:39:20.

City won it 2-1, but they left it late.

:39:21.:39:22.

After going ahead through a Sergio Aguero penalty,

:39:23.:39:24.

Jermain Defoe equalised for Sunderland with 20 minutes left.

:39:25.:39:26.

And a Paddy McNair own goal gave City victory, three

:39:27.:39:28.

For the first time in Premier League history, the defending champions

:39:29.:39:43.

were beaten on the opening day of the season.

:39:44.:39:45.

Leicester City lost 2-1 at newly-promoted Hull City,

:39:46.:39:47.

who are without a permanent manager and favourites for relegation.

:39:48.:39:53.

In the Scottish Premiership, Rangers secured their first win

:39:54.:39:55.

after their return to the top flight, beating Dundee

:39:56.:39:57.

2-1, Harry Forrester and Kenny Miller with the goals.

:39:58.:40:00.

Details of all yesterday's football results are over

:40:01.:40:01.

And England's cricketers will need something special to rescue

:40:02.:40:05.

That's after the tourists scored 542, thanks largely

:40:06.:40:12.

to a double century from Younis Khan.

:40:13.:40:20.

Pakistan then reduced England to 88-4 in their second innings,

:40:21.:40:22.

leaving them trailing by 126 runs going into day 4.

:40:23.:40:26.

If Pakistan win this match, the series will be drawn 2 all.

:40:27.:40:34.

That is the action to come at the Oval, commentary on radio five live

:40:35.:40:41.

as well as a video highlights screenplay on the BBC website. That

:40:42.:40:48.

is all the sport, now it is time for the papers.

:40:49.:40:56.

Hello and welcome to our Sunday morning edition of The Papers.

:40:57.:41:01.

With me are James Rampton and Josie Cox.

:41:02.:41:03.

The Observer features an interview with Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn,

:41:04.:41:10.

in which he criticises his deputy Tom Watson.

:41:11.:41:14.

Prime Minister Theresa May is Britain's most popular

:41:15.:41:18.

politician, and is even regarded positively by 20 per cent

:41:19.:41:20.

seen a leaked letter from the International

:41:21.:41:27.

Trade Secretary Liam Fox, which suggests he and Boris Johnson

:41:28.:41:30.

are arguing about who controls key parts of foreign policy.

:41:31.:41:37.

a royal wedding next year - in a special report it says

:41:38.:41:41.

is about private briefings by government ministers to City

:41:42.:41:50.

executives that Britain could remain a member of the EU until late 2019,

:41:51.:41:53.

a year later than previously anticipated.

:41:54.:41:56.

by the Mail on Sunday after he recovered from a fall

:41:57.:42:00.

Let's begin. Jeremy Corbyn, my deputy is talking nonsense and he

:42:01.:42:14.

knows it. That is all in the Observer, trots and plot, what you

:42:15.:42:25.

make of it? Laughing. This really looks like all-out war. It is hard

:42:26.:42:31.

to see how any cohesiveness can be returned to the party within the

:42:32.:42:35.

next few weeks even in the next few months. A couple of decades!

:42:36.:42:44.

Rhetoric is becoming very strong. The claims that have been thrown

:42:45.:42:48.

against the party by Tom Watson last week in this apparent letter, they

:42:49.:42:54.

were punchy. It is perhaps not surprising that Jeremy Corbyn is

:42:55.:42:59.

coming out and saying this. What do you make of it? There is no

:43:00.:43:03.

observable good outcomes of the Labour Party at least in the next

:43:04.:43:07.

year or two. I am metaphorically sitting here with my head in my

:43:08.:43:12.

hands, I would naturally be a Labour supporter, but it seems like a

:43:13.:43:15.

suicide cults. The inter-warfare that is going on, even if Jeremy

:43:16.:43:22.

Corbyn does win, what happens to the 80% of the Parliamentary Labour

:43:23.:43:25.

Party MPs who voted no confidence in him just a few weeks ago. There must

:43:26.:43:31.

be a split, there must be two parties, that is disastrous at a

:43:32.:43:36.

moment where the Labour Party has a massive responsibility in my view to

:43:37.:43:40.

tackle the iniquities of the Tory government, it is fighting itself.

:43:41.:43:46.

For democracy, that is a disaster. Also I'd talk about unity and taking

:43:47.:43:50.

the fight to the Tories, but when they have had a few open goals, the

:43:51.:43:57.

question of the resignation honours with David Cameron, the resignation

:43:58.:43:59.

of Iain Duncan Smith, people were asking where was the fight. -- sides

:44:00.:44:09.

talk about. There are two completely different ideologies and what the

:44:10.:44:12.

Labour Party should be in this day and age, if there is no cohesiveness

:44:13.:44:17.

and agreement on that, where is the credible opposition? Interesting

:44:18.:44:23.

question. When the open goal appears, they do not run over and

:44:24.:44:28.

capable, they ran over and kick themselves! LAUGHTER

:44:29.:44:33.

Labour blacklist 1000 today, Labour officials have been identifying

:44:34.:44:39.

entries as they try to stop members of rival parties and hard left

:44:40.:44:42.

factions influencing the party leadership. This is more if you like

:44:43.:44:51.

trots. This is the question of what is an interest. This 1000 today, it

:44:52.:44:56.

is such a huge number that I cannot begin to imagine where they are

:44:57.:45:01.

finding these people and begin to imagine how much trawling through...

:45:02.:45:03.

They trailed through social media accounts. What qualifies? It is like

:45:04.:45:17.

McCarthyism! Also, why not? If you were a Conservative Party member and

:45:18.:45:22.

you had felt that the Labour Party was for you, what is the reason why

:45:23.:45:27.

you cannot join? By Labour Party rules you cannot be a member of

:45:28.:45:33.

another party. Someone with a militant tents and see from the

:45:34.:45:38.

1980s had said I may be readmitted. -- tendency. Leon Trotsky said that

:45:39.:45:48.

they should secretly join to form a Trotskyite cult within the Labour

:45:49.:45:52.

Party. That is where the phrase entries comes from. If that happens

:45:53.:45:57.

we have two totally separate parties fighting each other rather than the

:45:58.:46:02.

Tories. Let's move on to the other front-page story in the Sunday

:46:03.:46:07.

Times. Brexit will be delayed until the end of 2019, Whitehall is not

:46:08.:46:12.

ready for talks. In a sense you think we kind of know that. Article

:46:13.:46:17.

50 has not impressed, it takes two years, do the maths. Two years from

:46:18.:46:23.

say Christmas would take you up to 2019. This is not brand-new in the

:46:24.:46:29.

sense that I think it is something Sadiq Khan referred to last week and

:46:30.:46:34.

he was saying we need to... He used the phrase square the circle on

:46:35.:46:39.

issues like migration, trade, rushing into anything would lead to

:46:40.:46:44.

more panic and could lead to the brain drain which people have been

:46:45.:46:47.

talking about, people relocating away from the city to places like

:46:48.:46:51.

Dublin, Frankfurt and Paris. We need to avoid that. You have a calming

:46:52.:46:57.

influence of Philip Hammond trying to say look, we will still be able

:46:58.:47:01.

to pay the farmers, we will be able to pay the scientists, we will be

:47:02.:47:08.

able to do things until 2020. You have that pool, on the other hand we

:47:09.:47:12.

have people saying why aren't we still in the EU? -- why are we still

:47:13.:47:19.

in the EU? There are two different factions in the Tory party, there

:47:20.:47:23.

are the moaning Remainers who are furious about how it has turned out

:47:24.:47:26.

and the head-bangers have said let's get a move on! What I find

:47:27.:47:32.

interesting is insiders are saying they are setting up two new

:47:33.:47:38.

departments. Liam Fox is trying to recruit 1000 trade policy experts,

:47:39.:47:41.

but he is only found fewer than 100. We have not negotiated his 1973.

:47:42.:47:48.

There is no one with that expertise out there unless they go to

:47:49.:47:51.

Brussels! You can find them all there! Let's go to the Sunday

:47:52.:47:59.

Telegraph. Boris and Liam Fox in a bitter feud, we have done the Labour

:48:00.:48:03.

Party, let's do the Conservative Party. The only thing missing is

:48:04.:48:08.

David Davis's name. He has a slice of this pie as well. That is

:48:09.:48:13.

mentioned in the Sunday Times story. David Davis 's role is also to be

:48:14.:48:19.

defined and the resources that he has has not been made clear. He is a

:48:20.:48:27.

big person in the party. Absolutely. This is classic turf war and what we

:48:28.:48:31.

are risking here is losing sight of the bigger issue at hand which is

:48:32.:48:36.

basically what the Times article writes about. Not having the

:48:37.:48:40.

resources available, this is not a time where we need in fighting like

:48:41.:48:44.

in the Labour Party. We need a united front. I am just guessing

:48:45.:48:50.

here, but I suspect Theresa May has very little interest in hearing her

:48:51.:48:53.

ministers bicker about something like a turf war when you are looking

:48:54.:49:00.

at Brexit. There is a nanny knows best put-down, she said she is

:49:01.:49:04.

unimpressed with this sort of carry on. She is absolutely right. There

:49:05.:49:10.

is a lovely Matt cartoon. David Cameron turn to it every morning.

:49:11.:49:16.

Wife says to the husband, is that borrowers and Liam Fox discussing

:49:17.:49:22.

Brexit or Olympic judo? -- Boris. This is a massive ego battle.

:49:23.:49:27.

Michael Gove did brilliantly destroying his two supposedly best

:49:28.:49:31.

friends in politics, Johnson only temporarily and it became a huge

:49:32.:49:37.

battle of ego waving. This is the same thing, three very alpha males,

:49:38.:49:43.

Davies, Johnson and Liam Fox or having to share the same house, that

:49:44.:49:47.

would be a great reality TV show, the Big Brother house! Very much

:49:48.:49:55.

Brexit ears! Theresa May may have played a blinder. -- Brexit

:49:56.:50:07.

supporters. I wonder if either of you reflecting on what is going on

:50:08.:50:12.

in labour and Conservatives and the magnitude of what is ahead, we have

:50:13.:50:16.

a PM who is very popular according to polls we have today, but she has

:50:17.:50:21.

not got a personal mandate, she may be tempted to have an election

:50:22.:50:25.

sometime in the next year, there are difficulties, but politically it may

:50:26.:50:30.

make sense. Especially if she sees herself at a dead end with

:50:31.:50:34.

everything that is going on around her. Just going back to the

:50:35.:50:38.

Telegraph. What is interesting is that in this case and I do not know

:50:39.:50:42.

whether this is just the way it is written, Liam Fox looks like he has

:50:43.:50:46.

taken the aggressive stance and there is a sentence towards the end

:50:47.:50:49.

of the article where it says Boris would theoretically agree to suck on

:50:50.:50:56.

some resources from his camp into the Fox's camp which is not

:50:57.:51:00.

something that we know of Boris on stock that is quite

:51:01.:51:06.

uncharacteristic. One said that Liam Fox's letter is very strong

:51:07.:51:09.

language. It does make you think, where is all this heading? This

:51:10.:51:15.

massive ego clash is going on, we have a country to run and Theresa

:51:16.:51:19.

May may say unlike Gordon Brown who bottled it soon after becoming Prime

:51:20.:51:24.

Minister, if I run for election now, serve this tide of popularity,

:51:25.:51:30.

Gordon Brown act out of that, I could get a bigger mandate and

:51:31.:51:38.

change the terms. -- backed out. They could say we do not want the

:51:39.:51:42.

hard Brexit that some people are advocating, we have had a full

:51:43.:51:46.

general election campaign where we have discussed the issues

:51:47.:51:49.

comprehensively and you cannot avoid Brexit entirely, but you could

:51:50.:51:53.

soften it. Interesting. Here is an answer to all the party problems,

:51:54.:52:02.

how to avoid a Brexit break-up. Relate's advice to couples. LAUGHTER

:52:03.:52:07.

What puzzles me about this is how many couples do you know that all

:52:08.:52:12.

both sides of this debate, are there many? I know parents and children

:52:13.:52:15.

both sides of this debate, are there who are at war, I interviewed a

:52:16.:52:19.

comedian the other day who says he calls his parents Lord and Lady

:52:20.:52:23.

snob, I will not tell you who it is. They are at the adamant that Leave

:52:24.:52:29.

is the right thing to do and he said they very selfish, they said they

:52:30.:52:33.

are worried about pensions and we do not want to get involved in a Greek

:52:34.:52:39.

financial crisis with the Euro. We want to cut ourselves off from the

:52:40.:52:43.

world and in so late ourselves from the trouble and we voted for the.

:52:44.:52:52.

This comedian is an open-minded, Euro minded person. He is furious.

:52:53.:53:00.

My daughter was abroad when this happened and she said she was the

:53:01.:53:03.

areas, the older generation have stolen my future. When you look at

:53:04.:53:09.

the breakdown of who voted what and their attitudes to various things,

:53:10.:53:14.

they tend to be different, that is according to the polls, I just

:53:15.:53:17.

wondered if there were many cases for Relate's advice. I know one

:53:18.:53:23.

couple who is definitely on polar opposites sides of the debate. Are

:53:24.:53:33.

they seeing Relate? They do not talk about it, that is maybe the only way

:53:34.:53:37.

forward for a lot of people for the top of the Sunday express has

:53:38.:53:43.

Princess Eugenie to marry. Over to you on this one. Here is a ticking

:53:44.:53:52.

time bomb false. My little knowledge of the Royal family, Eugenie could

:53:53.:54:00.

be to marry in 2017 or not. I am glad you cleared that one up!

:54:01.:54:03.

LAUGHTER Mighty Mouse Farrah, The Mail on

:54:04.:54:09.

Sunday, the Daily Express point out they are 30 PG further The Mail on

:54:10.:54:17.

Sunday. -- 30p cheaper than The Mail on Sunday. This is a proper news

:54:18.:54:25.

story. Congratulations to them to get it on the front page at three in

:54:26.:54:29.

the morning. People working through the nights to make sure that was on

:54:30.:54:33.

the front page. What is extraordinary is he fell over, he

:54:34.:54:36.

was tripped accidentally by his training partner who was covered in

:54:37.:54:41.

blood, he got up and he beat his rival in the spring to the line. He

:54:42.:54:49.

is the most decorated British athlete, he is a total hero. We will

:54:50.:54:53.

have to believe it's there, Mighty Mouse Farrah full is top. -- Mighty

:54:54.:55:07.

Mouse Farrah. Coming up on BBC1 after this

:55:08.:55:18.

programme is Sunday Morning Live, with the details we say good morning

:55:19.:55:23.

to Sian Williams. The priest in this iconic picture

:55:24.:55:30.

who became a bishop has died at the age of 82, we look at his legacy. We

:55:31.:55:42.

also look at Paul Pogba's record ?89 million fee and singer Tony Christie

:55:43.:55:45.

is still looking to Amarillo, don't you know. I think you will find it

:55:46.:55:49.

in Texas. Here is the weather. Not looking too bad, lots of

:55:50.:56:00.

sunshine on the way. Today we have a lot of cloud to start the day,

:56:01.:56:04.

across many parts of the UK. A lovely example of the Ancelotti and

:56:05.:56:09.

is in the cloud. It is relatively thin. -- of the changes in the

:56:10.:56:19.

cloud. The process has already started across south-west England,

:56:20.:56:24.

it will continue across Wales, maybe take longer across the Midlands,

:56:25.:56:30.

essentially it is dry day. Temperatures in the 20s, maybe a bit

:56:31.:56:34.

lower than that. The sunshine will take a bit longer to come through to

:56:35.:56:37.

Northern Ireland and northern Scotland. It should feel a bit

:56:38.:56:42.

warmer in Scotland with temperatures getting to be highly teens. Light

:56:43.:56:57.

wind for us tonight with clearing skies, it will turn a bit cold in

:56:58.:57:01.

rural spots, not so much in towns and cities, the warmth from

:57:02.:57:04.

buildings keeping the temperature is a bit higher. I would not be

:57:05.:57:10.

surprised to get down to 5 degrees through some Scottish Valens by the

:57:11.:57:15.

end of the night. The outlook is quite settled, generally dry, lots

:57:16.:57:19.

of sunshine, and a bit warmer as well. On Monday, a dry day

:57:20.:57:27.

everywhere. A bit of patchy cloud, that is drifting through.

:57:28.:57:30.

Temperatures do not look particularly high. 19 to 22 degrees

:57:31.:57:35.

in the strong sunshine at this time of year with the light wind and that

:57:36.:57:37.

will feel like a pleasant summers day. By Tuesday a bit more cloud

:57:38.:57:44.

around will stop warmer air coming in from the south-east. -- a bit

:57:45.:57:51.

more cloud around. Warmer air coming in from the south-east. The warmth

:57:52.:57:55.

extending up to Scotland and Northern Ireland. As the week goes

:57:56.:58:00.

on there will be an increasing chance of seeing something a bit

:58:01.:58:04.

more unsettled coming in from the West, but it will take a bit of

:58:05.:58:08.

time. Some uncertainty about what we will seize on the middle and second

:58:09.:58:13.

part of the week. Overall we should keep a lot of fine weather going for

:58:14.:58:18.

many areas. Temperatures on the high side where we get the sunshine, but

:58:19.:58:22.

turning cooler across northern and western areas as the weather fronts

:58:23.:58:26.

begin to move in from the West, that is your forecast

:58:27.:58:37.

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