21/08/2016 BBC Weekend News


21/08/2016

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Team GB make sporting history in Rio - going one better than London

:00:00.:00:09.

The last comes from Joe Joyce - a silver in the super

:00:10.:00:21.

Mo Farah is going to get gold for Great Britain again.

:00:22.:00:26.

There was a second Rio gold for Mo Farah, the fourth Olympic

:00:27.:00:29.

Across 16 days of competition, Britain's performance is the best

:00:30.:00:34.

We are now one of the superpowers of Olympic sport.

:00:35.:00:41.

Here we are, second in the medal table, above China.

:00:42.:00:45.

With the closing ceremony just a couple of hours away,

:00:46.:00:47.

we'll be looking back at Team GB's achievements at Rio 2016.

:00:48.:00:51.

Turkey says a suicide bomber who killed at least 50 people

:00:52.:00:56.

Support for the Labour leader at a rally tonight

:00:57.:01:05.

but as ballot papers go out, he fails to win

:01:06.:01:08.

And the Proms prepares for music legend Quincy Jones

:01:09.:01:14.

and a special evening celebrating his 60-year career.

:01:15.:01:37.

Team GB are celebrating tonight, after a stunning performance

:01:38.:01:43.

With the closing ceremony just two hours away,

:01:44.:01:49.

Great Britain are second in the medal table, with 27 golds

:01:50.:01:57.

behind the USA on 45 but ahead China and Russia.

:01:58.:02:00.

The last British medal came this evening with

:02:01.:02:02.

Joe Joyce taking a silver in super heavyweight boxing.

:02:03.:02:05.

That followed a second gold for Mo Farah in

:02:06.:02:08.

Our Sports Correspondent, Natalie Pirks, has our first report

:02:09.:02:13.

tonight on the final day of action in Rio.

:02:14.:02:19.

Whilst other athletes have been able to relax, their medals safely around

:02:20.:02:26.

their neck, Joe Joyce has had to wait right to the very end. In the

:02:27.:02:32.

super heavyweight category, Britain has pedigree and as the reigning

:02:33.:02:37.

Olympic champion, Anthony Joshua cheered him on, Joyce set about

:02:38.:02:41.

trying to say a golden goodbye to amateur boxing. It is a brilliant

:02:42.:02:45.

start in thoepg round. The volume of shots was high but they weren't

:02:46.:02:48.

landing as much as the European champion would like. He has to find

:02:49.:02:53.

that one big shot. There was to be no knockout.

:02:54.:02:57.

Well, that was Britain's 67th and final medal of the Rio Games. The

:02:58.:03:01.

question is - will that performance have been good enough for gold?

:03:02.:03:07.

Not today. Lost out on the last medal for the

:03:08.:03:12.

Olympic Games 2016. I thought that gold was mine. I just have to watch

:03:13.:03:17.

it back and see where I went wrong, if I went wrong. That medal rounded

:03:18.:03:22.

off a brilliant weekend for Britain. With the double, double at stake, Mo

:03:23.:03:27.

Farah showed us all that four years on, he still has his trademark

:03:28.:03:33.

bursts of pace in ace last-ever Olympic 5,000m. He has speed in

:03:34.:03:36.

those legs to spare. Like London, there was still that sense of

:03:37.:03:42.

disbelief, followed by elation. This was for his family. Every athlete

:03:43.:03:48.

dreams of becoming Olympic champion but to do it four times it is

:03:49.:03:52.

amazing to. Do it in London and then have another four years and then to

:03:53.:03:57.

do it in Rio, it's been amazing. I have got four kids and all my medals

:03:58.:04:03.

are dedicated to my kids. It seemed Mo had blessed the track for what

:04:04.:04:08.

followed A stunning third-leg run by Emily Diamond in the women's 4x400m

:04:09.:04:12.

relay set things up perfectly for Christine Ohuruogu. The wait for

:04:13.:04:16.

bronze would not be long. She held off all advances to deliver the

:04:17.:04:22.

medal that took Britain past London's 65 medals and officially

:04:23.:04:26.

confirmed Rio as the team's greatest Games in the modern era. From joy to

:04:27.:04:32.

despair and underwear. A machine goalian wrestler's coaches stripped

:04:33.:04:36.

off and refused to leave after their man was docked a crucial point in

:04:37.:04:39.

the final seconds today, to leave his opponent with the bronze. They

:04:40.:04:43.

won gold for the most bizarre protest of the games. No pants, just

:04:44.:04:49.

a party for Brazil. A thumping end to their most successful Games with

:04:50.:04:56.

a volleyballgold today. For Britain, Joe Joyce's silver brought the

:04:57.:05:01.

curtain down. In the marvellous city, a marvellous 67 medals. Team

:05:02.:05:04.

GB's mission more than accomplished. There were medals for Team GB in 19

:05:05.:05:09.

sports across the 16 days of competition in Rio,

:05:10.:05:12.

after a build up dominated by concerns about Brazil's capacity

:05:13.:05:14.

to stage the Games and doping Our Sports Editor, Dan Roan,

:05:15.:05:17.

has this assessment Olympic gold for Great Britain by an

:05:18.:05:31.

absolute street. A wonderful World Record. Time, oh my goodness me,

:05:32.:05:38.

57.13. Setting a new standard for British sport.

:05:39.:05:43.

Andy Murray is a double Olympic gold medallist. It's gold. Rio their best

:05:44.:05:49.

performance of the Games for more than a century. An the woman

:05:50.:05:52.

responsible for delivering medal success today told me just how much

:05:53.:05:57.

it meant. We are now one of the superspours of Olympic sport. Here

:05:58.:06:01.

we are, you know, second in the medal table, above China, with more

:06:02.:06:05.

gold medals and I think more silver medals as well, it is an amazing

:06:06.:06:10.

place to be and it shows that we are a force to be reckoned with in world

:06:11.:06:15.

sport. The breadth and depth of Britain's medal success is

:06:16.:06:17.

staggering. From 58-year-old Nick skeleton in his 7th games. Through

:06:18.:06:22.

to 16-year-old gymnast, Amy tink letter. Golds won across 15 ports.

:06:23.:06:29.

-- Amy Tinkler. Some enjoying success for the first time, other

:06:30.:06:33.

aforming their status as great Olympics and Team GB's flag bearer

:06:34.:06:36.

at tonight's closing ceremony says it is a moment to be proud of They

:06:37.:06:40.

have shown how professional, disciplined and dedicated we all

:06:41.:06:44.

are. The worth he etic that goes in, the potion we know, and to stand

:06:45.:06:48.

there and represent those people is a special moment. We have literally

:06:49.:06:52.

smashed records. Surpassed everybody's expectations.

:06:53.:06:57.

Beyond Britain, Olympic legends graced their final Games. On the

:06:58.:07:01.

track and in the pool. ! New stars emerged. Performances

:07:02.:07:10.

reached new heights. This is a new World Record. There was

:07:11.:07:13.

sportsmanship. Nemar scores. And success for the

:07:14.:07:26.

hosts. When it came it the big sporting moments, Rio 2016 certainly

:07:27.:07:30.

delivered to many. It'll go down as a classic Olympics. As well as

:07:31.:07:35.

captivating, the sports Games to be held here in South America will also

:07:36.:07:38.

be remembered as one of the most controversial. Empty seats were a

:07:39.:07:44.

regular sight at various venues. The diving pool turned a mysterious

:07:45.:07:50.

shade of green. Seen area Olympic official Pat Hickey was arrested

:07:51.:07:57.

over illegal sale of tickets -- over alleged illegal sale of tickets.

:07:58.:08:02.

There are security concerns. Those in charge were defiant. Those

:08:03.:08:06.

Games have not been organised in a bubble. These games have been

:08:07.:08:15.

organised in a city where there are social problems, where there are

:08:16.:08:20.

social divides. Where real life continued. Sport's biggest-ever

:08:21.:08:26.

doping scandal cast a shadow over the build-up. At the last moment,

:08:27.:08:31.

Russia was allowed to compete, despite a damning report into

:08:32.:08:34.

state-sponsored cheating but bad blood between athletes was the

:08:35.:08:38.

result I find it difficult to have 15,000 people booing someone. This

:08:39.:08:44.

swimmer the target of booing from her rivals after a previous doping

:08:45.:08:49.

offence was overturned. My dad taught me that competition is like

:08:50.:08:54.

holiday, it is always positive, like you come n you compete. It is really

:08:55.:09:00.

nice. But this one, it was like, really awful. It's not positive.

:09:01.:09:09.

It's more about - it was more. At times, the Games may have felt a

:09:10.:09:14.

little chaotic but they were always icon yivenlingt the backdrop as

:09:15.:09:18.

spell binding as some of the sports favoured here. And for Team GB, it

:09:19.:09:20.

was simply the best. So Dan, a great position

:09:21.:09:26.

for Team GB to finish in - How secure is Britain's place now

:09:27.:09:29.

at the top of elite sport? Well, there is no doubt it is going

:09:30.:09:39.

to get tougher, I think in four years' time at the TokyoGames. The

:09:40.:09:42.

hosts, Japan, will be very determined to be strong. China will

:09:43.:09:46.

want to boubs back having been beaten by Britain for the first time

:09:47.:09:49.

since they were involved in the Olympics in 1984. Russia, of course

:09:50.:09:52.

will probably be back to full strength. So it will be very

:09:53.:09:55.

difficult for Team GB to do any better than this. But, of course, we

:09:56.:10:01.

said that, didn't we, four years ago after London 2012 and look what

:10:02.:10:04.

happened. The truth is that Britain has found a very effective strategy

:10:05.:10:08.

when it comes to pursuing medal success. And as long as the hundreds

:10:09.:10:14.

of millions of pounds worth of Lottery funding continues, I think

:10:15.:10:16.

Team GB will be confident this success can carry on into the

:10:17.:10:20.

future. Inevitably there will be questions about what exactly this

:10:21.:10:24.

phenomenal success here achieves, because after 2012, there wasn't any

:10:25.:10:29.

discernible upsurge in participation that. Has proved a stubborn aim. The

:10:30.:10:34.

fact is that issues with school sport w facilities and lifestyle

:10:35.:10:38.

changes, all mean that inspiration and medals simply aren't enough.

:10:39.:10:41.

Having said all that, many will argue that those medals are worth

:10:42.:10:46.

every single penivity ?4 million, on average, each of them costs. --

:10:47.:10:50.

every single penny of the ?4 million. It is hard to believe that

:10:51.:10:55.

when nine people watched that hockey final on Friday. We said it before,

:10:56.:11:02.

we will say it again, we were 36th in the table in the past, tonight

:11:03.:11:05.

2nd, how times change. Other news now, and a suicide

:11:06.:11:10.

bombing which killed at least 50 people at a wedding party in Turkey

:11:11.:11:13.

was carried out by a child That's according to the Turkish

:11:14.:11:16.

President who says so-called Islamic State was responsible

:11:17.:11:20.

for the attack, which happened Our Turkey correspondent

:11:21.:11:22.

Mark Lowen reports. It was meant to be

:11:23.:11:27.

a moment of celebration. A wedding party in Gaziantep,

:11:28.:11:32.

torn apart by a massive bomb. The guests, mainly Kurds,

:11:33.:11:35.

were outside when it hit. A suicide vest was reportedly

:11:36.:11:39.

found at the scene. The Government says

:11:40.:11:47.

the Islamic State group TRANSLATION: Our friends

:11:48.:11:49.

and neighbours were there. A now familiar scene as the injured

:11:50.:11:58.

recover from another attack in Turkey, the country has been hit

:11:59.:12:10.

by a wave of bombings over the past I was standing and then something

:12:11.:12:12.

exploded and I passed out, and then I woke up and

:12:13.:12:20.

looked for my parents. From the Turkish president

:12:21.:12:26.

a shocking detail, he said the suicide bomber

:12:27.:12:29.

was between 12 and 14 years old. Some of those injured, he said,

:12:30.:12:35.

are in a critical condition. This could be a response

:12:36.:12:39.

by IS to recent losses in Syria, the US-led coalition

:12:40.:12:44.

ousted the jihadists Could this bombing of a Kurdish

:12:45.:12:47.

wedding be IS revenge? The Turkish Prime Minister

:12:48.:12:57.

says his country will pay a more are preparing a further

:12:58.:13:09.

offensive into IS territory, to be granted safe passage

:13:10.:13:16.

across the Turkish border. The Gaziantep attack could be

:13:17.:13:18.

a warning shot against Turkey. It has become almost routine

:13:19.:13:22.

in Turkey, the emotions as victims are laid to rest,

:13:23.:13:24.

guests of a joyous wedding party New measures intended to stop prison

:13:25.:13:26.

inmates being radicalised by violent extremists are to be announced

:13:27.:13:34.

by the Government tomorrow. It's understood that they'll include

:13:35.:13:38.

special units at prisons in England Our Home Affairs Correspondent,

:13:39.:13:40.

Daniel Sandford, is here. What is the thinking behind this,

:13:41.:13:50.

Daniel? A report earlier this year concluded that there was a growing

:13:51.:13:54.

problem of Islamist extremists trying to radicalise other prisoners

:13:55.:13:58.

and that there had been complacency at the highest level in the Prison

:13:59.:14:01.

Service about it and also institutional timidity, with staff

:14:02.:14:04.

being too frightened to clampdown on extremism for fear of being accused

:14:05.:14:09.

of being racist. Tomorrow Liz Truss, the new Justice Secretary l announce

:14:10.:14:13.

for the fist time that she's setting up what are effectively prisons

:14:14.:14:16.

within prisons. Special units inside high security prisons which will be

:14:17.:14:19.

designed to hold those considered the most dangerous, the most likely,

:14:20.:14:26.

to try and radicalise other inmates with their Al-Qaeda or so-called

:14:27.:14:31.

Islamic state ideology. They'll be kept separately from other

:14:32.:14:34.

prisoners. The idea is it should stop them spreading ideas. It is not

:14:35.:14:38.

without risks. Putting the most dangerous people in a few small

:14:39.:14:41.

units can have problems but that's the decision and we'll get more

:14:42.:14:44.

details in a formal announcement tomorrow.

:14:45.:14:49.

Coastguards are urging people to be wary of treacherous conditions

:14:50.:14:52.

after the deaths of six people in stormy waters around

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In Aberdeen, a mother and her six-year-old child

:14:56.:15:00.

At Newquay in Cornwall, a man drowned when he and his family

:15:01.:15:05.

and in Jersey, a 32-year-old woman died after getting

:15:06.:15:12.

With ballot papers for the Labour party's leadership contest

:15:13.:15:14.

being sent out from tomorrow, the Mayor of London Sadiq Khan has

:15:15.:15:21.

Said he is casting his vote for Mr Corbyn's challenger, Owen Smith. He

:15:22.:15:26.

said. he had "failed to win

:15:27.:15:33.

the trust and respect The venue has hosted the Beatles and

:15:34.:15:41.

Frank Sinatra. Tonight people turned up to see Jeremy Corbyn. These

:15:42.:15:46.

events don't happen by accident or by chance and when we put this event

:15:47.:15:54.

up on Facebook only a few days ago, people started responding immediate

:15:55.:15:57.

lane we have this enormous crowd here tonight. Most of his MPs might

:15:58.:16:02.

not support him, but he plenty of others do and that's why Jeremy

:16:03.:16:06.

Corbyn is the runaway favourite to win the Labour Leadership again. If

:16:07.:16:11.

he can pack out venues like this in city after city. And yet this man,

:16:12.:16:16.

Labour's most senior politician actually in power, the

:16:17.:16:18.

recently-elected Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan, says Mr Corbyn has to be

:16:19.:16:22.

beaten. He's failed to win the trust and

:16:23.:16:27.

respect of the British people. He's failed to organise and effective

:16:28.:16:32.

team. We've seen the EU referendum, when he failed to provide the

:16:33.:16:36.

leadership to persuade people to vote to Remain, demonstrates to me

:16:37.:16:40.

why Owen Smith is the right leader for our party andy think he is the

:16:41.:16:44.

best chance we have got to win the next election. But, do endorsements

:16:45.:16:49.

matter, when Owen Smith struggles to fill a small room at his campaign

:16:50.:16:53.

events? Mr Smith's supporters clament numbers here don't tell the

:16:54.:16:57.

whole story. So, let's meet three of the two-thirds of a million people

:16:58.:17:02.

who will write the next chapter of Labour's story and elect its leader.

:17:03.:17:07.

Daniel, Jonathan and Lauren, are from North Shields on Tyneside.

:17:08.:17:11.

There isn't just London. It might be all well that Sadiq has come out for

:17:12.:17:16.

Jeremy but for Owen but the northern region is very important. The best

:17:17.:17:20.

important for the job is Corbyn. He should

:17:21.:17:22.

# Number ten. He inspires people up and down the country. People respect

:17:23.:17:28.

him. I'm sorry but you are talking absolute rubbish here, Jeremy Corbyn

:17:29.:17:32.

is hated by the public. We can develop the politics that

:17:33.:17:35.

redistributes the wealth. So no community and nobody is ever left

:17:36.:17:40.

behind again. Thank you very much. Back in North London, Jeremy Corbyn

:17:41.:17:46.

is treated like a rockstar and calls for an encore.

:17:47.:17:49.

. Music, music, bring on the music. But, for all the love for him here,

:17:50.:17:55.

there are plenty within his party who fear he is taking them to

:17:56.:17:57.

oblivion. He's one of the most

:17:58.:18:02.

influential figures in the history of modern music,

:18:03.:18:05.

with a career spanning six decades Now, some of Quincy Jones' most

:18:06.:18:07.

famous work is to be celebrated at the Proms

:18:08.:18:12.

and he's been speaking Quincy Jones, at the rehearsal for

:18:13.:18:25.

the BBC Prom of his music tomorrow night. The composer, arranger,

:18:26.:18:31.

conductor, producer and to many all round musical legend has worked for

:18:32.:18:36.

everybody from Miles Davis and camp Basy to Michael Jackson and Snoop

:18:37.:18:44.

Dog. What makes a great musician? ? Being humble with your creator and

:18:45.:18:48.

gracious and brave with your success. Some don't want to work,

:18:49.:18:56.

you have to work. # It's close to midnight

:18:57.:19:01.

# Something evil's lurking from the dark...#

:19:02.:19:03.

Even Thriller I didn't think about money. I thought about something

:19:04.:19:07.

that moves you and gives you goose bumps and it works.

:19:08.:19:14.

And the people who are after money and fame, well God walks out of the

:19:15.:19:18.

room. # Fly me to the moon

:19:19.:19:24.

# Let me play up there with those stars...#

:19:25.:19:27.

And what was it like going back, working with, I don't know, Sinatra?

:19:28.:19:32.

Oh, come on, man. I'll never take this off. He left me that. He worked

:19:33.:19:41.

40 years and he left this to me when he left this. Back in the day, at

:19:42.:19:46.

the time I started, a singer was not even considered unless he could sing

:19:47.:19:51.

like a jazz saxophone player and Frank had that.

:19:52.:19:55.

# Do you know I've got a lot to learn... #

:19:56.:20:02.

Now here is a Quincy Jones original. You have achieved so much. The first

:20:03.:20:08.

African-American to do this, the first African-American to do that.

:20:09.:20:12.

What do you think it is like now for African-Americans? The confrontation

:20:13.:20:15.

is bigger than it ever was before. Something has to be done now. What

:20:16.:20:19.

do you mean? Something has to be done. You can't just ignore it. In

:20:20.:20:24.

the North, you know, they always pretended there was no segregation.

:20:25.:20:27.

It is not true. Now we have got to really do something about it. They

:20:28.:20:31.

are killing the young black kids every day. I can't stand T they were

:20:32.:20:35.

doing that in the '30s more than ever but it is still happening. And

:20:36.:20:43.

I'll fight that until I die. Quincy Jones maybe 83, but he has

:20:44.:20:47.

absolutely no intention of slowing down. He has new albums planned and

:20:48.:20:51.

is currently writing his first opera.

:20:52.:20:56.

Coverage of the Olympic closing ceremony begins

:20:57.:21:08.

We'll leave you with some of the most memorable images

:21:09.:21:14.

Adam Peaty takes Olympic gold for Great Britain by a street. Enjoying

:21:15.:21:23.

every minute of it. Double straight with half turn. Look at this,

:21:24.:21:26.

extraordinary. His 26th Olympic medal. They are fearless. They are

:21:27.:21:28.

without equal. They are history-makers. Really difficult

:21:29.:21:35.

work on the one pommel handle. Max Whitlock has made history. The gold

:21:36.:21:40.

medal is going to go to Laura Trott. Jason Kenny has got T what a ride.

:21:41.:21:47.

Mo has fallen. He is quickly up. Mo Farah wins the gold A gold and

:21:48.:21:52.

silver for the Brownlee brothers. U stain bolt gets it, running away

:21:53.:21:56.

from everybody -- Usain Bolt gets it. It is gold again, the triple,

:21:57.:22:02.

triple. He has done it. # Turns. That's the golden goal. Great

:22:03.:22:06.

Britain have won the Olympic gold medal.

:22:07.:22:12.

An absolutely sensational performance. Mo Farah is going to

:22:13.:22:19.

get gold for Great Britain again. The double, double.

:22:20.:22:22.

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