:00:00. > :00:16.The end of an era, as BHS stores shut up
:00:17. > :00:23.Former workers call on Sir Philip Green to fix the ?600 million
:00:24. > :00:34.I would like to say that you can only be on one yacht at once, so
:00:35. > :00:37.sell a couple of yachts and use the money to plug the pension scheme.
:00:38. > :00:39.Motorists face further major disruption,
:00:40. > :00:41.as wreckage of the bridge that collapsed onto the M20
:00:42. > :00:50.Work has been going on all night long to reopen this motorway as soon
:00:51. > :00:55.as possible. In the last hour, one last piece of the rich has been
:00:56. > :00:58.lifted off the carriageway and is just about to be driven away. -- one
:00:59. > :01:00.last piece of the bridge. An appeal for the Hinkley Point
:01:01. > :01:03.proposed nuclear power plant to be given the go ahead -
:01:04. > :01:06.ministers are told that Chinese And in the next hour, we'll take
:01:07. > :01:18.a look at this morning's front The Observer quotes a former Tory
:01:19. > :01:37.health Minister calling for a new tax to fund the NHS and social care.
:01:38. > :01:40.Good morning and welcome to BBC News.
:01:41. > :01:43.First, our main story - the last BHS stores will close
:01:44. > :01:47.for the final time today, after 88 years on the high street.
:01:48. > :01:50.The closure of the remaining 22 shops comes after the retailer
:01:51. > :01:52.was placed into administration in March but failed
:01:53. > :01:58.The previous owners, Dominic Chappell and Sir Philip
:01:59. > :02:02.Green, have been heavily criticised by a Parliamentary inquiry
:02:03. > :02:05.for mismanaging the chain and failing to protect
:02:06. > :02:15.Our business correspondent Joe Lynam has the report.
:02:16. > :02:17.From its Brixton origins in 1928, BHS became a fixture
:02:18. > :02:19.on Britain's high streets, but that ends today.
:02:20. > :02:23.The last shops will end up like this.
:02:24. > :02:28.It is a sad end for the retailer, its staff and some customers.
:02:29. > :02:30.The little chef men, I collect all of them.
:02:31. > :02:40.It's mainly the homewares for Christmas, the little
:02:41. > :02:47.I think everybody is sorry to see it go.
:02:48. > :02:50.It is good quality stuff and has always been reasonably priced.
:02:51. > :02:52.British Home Stores have had many owners,
:02:53. > :02:54.but its two most recent, Dominic Chappell and Sir Philip
:02:55. > :02:59.Green, were singled out for blame by a key group of MPs.
:03:00. > :03:02.Sir Philip Green, who owned BHS between 2000 and 2015,
:03:03. > :03:05.was accused of paying himself huge dividends while neglecting
:03:06. > :03:07.the pension scheme and then selling it on for ?1.
:03:08. > :03:10.His appearance before MPs was tetchy at times.
:03:11. > :03:13.The average day in our head office is 11 or 12 years...
:03:14. > :03:16.Sir, do you mind not looking at me like that all the time?
:03:17. > :03:28.You staring at me, it is just uncomfortable, that's all...
:03:29. > :03:30.He sold BHS to twice bankrupt Dominic Chappell,
:03:31. > :03:33.who had no experience in retailing at all.
:03:34. > :03:36.I have made a profit out of this, but I worked
:03:37. > :03:38.in the business continuously during the last 13 months.
:03:39. > :03:40.I also racked up considerable fees on the way through.
:03:41. > :03:43.That inexperience cost the company and its staff dearly.
:03:44. > :03:45.They still do not know if they will get their full pension
:03:46. > :03:52.entitlement and are waiting to see how much Sir Philip Green will pay
:03:53. > :03:57.to clear the ?600 million pensions black hole.
:03:58. > :04:03.I would like to say, you can only be on one yacht at once, so sell a
:04:04. > :04:08.couple of yachts and use the money to plug the pensions black hole. Sir
:04:09. > :04:14.Philip Green has a huge amount of money and I actually believe to plug
:04:15. > :04:18.the scheme by ?700 million wouldn't actually heard him that much and it
:04:19. > :04:20.certainly wouldn't cost him as much as those who have lost their jobs.
:04:21. > :04:23.By close of business today, all 64 BHS stores will have closed down,
:04:24. > :04:28.It is a sad legacy which has cost 11,000 jobs and badly damaged
:04:29. > :04:29.the reputation of one of the high-street's
:04:30. > :04:45.Our business correspondence Joe Lynam is at one of the final 22
:04:46. > :04:51.stores get too close, in St Albans. Where are we with the possibility of
:04:52. > :04:55.a serious fraud investigation? Well, the Serious Fraud Office of course
:04:56. > :04:57.don't say a word, they are very private about their investigations
:04:58. > :05:01.and they will only release information once they have formally
:05:02. > :05:06.press charges against someone. We don't know much on that side of
:05:07. > :05:09.things. We know that there are other investigations including by the same
:05:10. > :05:13.group of MPs who were very critical of Sir Philip Green. We know that
:05:14. > :05:17.Sir Philip Green is in protracted talks with the pensions regulator to
:05:18. > :05:22.find a solution to the pensions black hole. I understand from Mike
:05:23. > :05:27.sources close to Sir Philip Green that that will take months rather
:05:28. > :05:36.than weeks, but that that progress has been made. For the people who
:05:37. > :05:41.used to work for BHS and will be working there last day today at the
:05:42. > :05:44.Golden is, they will be worrying about how much retirement income
:05:45. > :05:48.they will actually get. As things stand right now, without a deal with
:05:49. > :05:55.the pension regulator, they will lose about 10% of their expected
:05:56. > :05:58.retirement income, because BHS put into the pension protection fund,
:05:59. > :06:01.the lifeboat scheme to protect workers in the inventor of the
:06:02. > :06:07.company collapsing. If a deal can be struck they will get 1% of what they
:06:08. > :06:12.expected to get, but that could take months rather than weeks. I was just
:06:13. > :06:17.going to ask when we will know what the outcome of discussions are. --
:06:18. > :06:25.they will get 100%. Is Sir Philip Green just refusing to plug the
:06:26. > :06:28.hole? No, it would not be fair to say that. He is in protracted talks
:06:29. > :06:32.and they have been going on for months and they will continue for
:06:33. > :06:37.months. Tours is close to Sir Philip Green say that substantial progress
:06:38. > :06:41.has been made and a sum will be agreed. The misconception about the
:06:42. > :06:44.pensions black hole being ?600 million, that would be the sum that
:06:45. > :06:49.an insurance company would have to pay to take it on from scratch, take
:06:50. > :06:53.on all the liabilities and build in a certain amount of profit from
:06:54. > :06:56.scratch. That is not the case if you are restructuring and existing
:06:57. > :07:00.pension scheme, which Sir Philip is currently doing with the pensions
:07:01. > :07:04.regulator. Though the agreed sum will be far less than ?600 million,
:07:05. > :07:08.but we don't know what the final sum will be. But some sort of agreement
:07:09. > :07:11.probably will be reached. Joe Lynam, thank you very much.
:07:12. > :07:14.The M20 in Kent is expected to remain closed until at least
:07:15. > :07:16.lunchtime today, after a footbridge collapsed on the motorway.
:07:17. > :07:19.Police say the bridge was hit by a digger being carried
:07:20. > :07:23.The incident caused severe delays on the main route
:07:24. > :07:29.to the Channel Tunnel and Dover, as Andy Moore reports.
:07:30. > :07:32.Work has been going on through the night to reopen the motorway,
:07:33. > :07:37.but this is no ordinary accident to clear.
:07:38. > :07:40.Two lorries have to be removed, but on top of them are tons
:07:41. > :07:45.And then there is the question of what to do with the half
:07:46. > :07:47.of the bridge left hanging over the other carriageway.
:07:48. > :07:50.Police said the chain of events started on the hard shoulder
:07:51. > :07:53.when a digger on the back of a lorry collided with the bridge.
:07:54. > :07:55.The structure started coming down on the cab of another lorry
:07:56. > :08:05.At the same time, a motorcyclist slid under the falling
:08:06. > :08:08.bridge and was treated in hospital for broken ribs.
:08:09. > :08:11.Police say it was amazing that nobody was seriously injured.
:08:12. > :08:13.We heard the bang, yeah, and we were literally four
:08:14. > :08:21.Obviously we're not expecting that sort of thing to happen!
:08:22. > :08:26.The incident happened on the M20, the main route linking London
:08:27. > :08:34.It was a pedestrian footbridge that came down on the London-bound side
:08:35. > :08:36.of the carriageway, between junctions four and three.
:08:37. > :08:39.But the motorway was shut immediately in both directions,
:08:40. > :08:41.leading to big delays for miles around.
:08:42. > :08:44.Motorists heading out of London today are being advised to use
:08:45. > :08:49.the alternative A2/M2 route towards Dover.
:08:50. > :08:51.Meanwhile, police are appealing for witnesses as they continue
:08:52. > :08:52.to investigate the full circumstances surrounding
:08:53. > :09:01.Highway authorities say they are on track
:09:02. > :09:06.to clear the motorway within the next few hours.
:09:07. > :09:10.We've got a lot of work to do yet - we've got cranes in place, we've
:09:11. > :09:13.We've got a lot more debris to clear yet,
:09:14. > :09:17.and we have to finish moving the bridge.
:09:18. > :09:20.Once we've moved the bridge, then we got to have a look
:09:21. > :09:23.at the road structure underneath and see how the carriageway is affected,
:09:24. > :09:26.but subject to us not having any major problems, we are reasonably
:09:27. > :09:29.confident we should be able to open it by midday or shortly afterwards.
:09:30. > :09:32.And Andy Moore is live at the scene for us now.
:09:33. > :09:37.How is the clear up going, Andy? It's going pretty well. The crews
:09:38. > :09:42.have been working pretty hard all night long. Then me show you what is
:09:43. > :09:47.going on at the moment. You can see on the hard shoulder, the lorry with
:09:48. > :09:52.the back, it is believed that if the digger that caused the problems, the
:09:53. > :09:57.arm hit the bridge for some reason and caused it to collapse. Crews
:09:58. > :10:02.working on attaching the cables, we have got to huge cranes here, one
:10:03. > :10:06.with a lifting capacity of 350 tonnes and another with a capacity
:10:07. > :10:11.of 250 tonnes, and in the last half hour or so they have lifted half of
:10:12. > :10:15.the bridge and taken it off on a low loader. In effect, the bridge is
:10:16. > :10:20.going out as it came in, in sections. On the other side of the
:10:21. > :10:23.carriageway, that is heading down towards Dover, you can see the half
:10:24. > :10:30.of the bridge that is still standing, the road to nowhere,
:10:31. > :10:32.effectively, at the moment. We are told that is structurally sound, or
:10:33. > :10:40.at least engineers believe it is. When the fallen part of the bridge
:10:41. > :10:45.is removed, that part will stay and traffic will pass underneath it. Of
:10:46. > :10:49.course it will need to be checked thoroughly and our motion sensors on
:10:50. > :10:55.it, but the plan is to leave that up for the time being until it is
:10:56. > :11:01.presumably repaired or demolished. But there are problems for this area
:11:02. > :11:05.and the A2/M2 route is being suggested as an alternative down to
:11:06. > :11:08.Folkestone. People are being urged to check for information and plan
:11:09. > :11:13.their journeys carefully. I understand police are at appealing
:11:14. > :11:24.for further information. Has there been any further update? Police
:11:25. > :11:28.finished their investigation on the site here but they are ill appealing
:11:29. > :11:33.for information as to precisely what happened. Perhaps we can go back to
:11:34. > :11:37.the low loader here, as you saw in the report there were initially to
:11:38. > :11:42.lorries under the bridge. The big white lorry has been removed
:11:43. > :11:47.overnight and there is just bits remaining one over here. It is a
:11:48. > :11:55.mystery as to how that they get impacted -- how that digger impacted
:11:56. > :11:59.the bridge. There doesn't seem to be much damage to the arm of it, so it
:12:00. > :12:02.is a bit of a mystery. That is why police are appealing for witnesses.
:12:03. > :12:05.No one has been arrested or charged yet. Thank you.
:12:06. > :12:07.Relatives of the late Labour peer Lord Janner are demanding
:12:08. > :12:09.the inquiry into child abuse postpones its plan
:12:10. > :12:19.They argue civil cases by several alleged victims should be
:12:20. > :12:21.heard in court first, and that the inquiry would not offer
:12:22. > :12:23.the family the chance to fully cross-examine
:12:24. > :12:26.Our home affairs correspondent Tom Symonds has the details.
:12:27. > :12:36.Lord Janner died months after facing child abuse allegations in court.
:12:37. > :12:41.Currently, more than 30 people - now adults - have accused.
:12:42. > :12:44.Currently, more than 30 people - now adults - have accused him.
:12:45. > :12:47.They say he committed sexual offences while a veteran Labour MP
:12:48. > :12:49.in Leicester, during visits to children's homes and schools.
:12:50. > :12:51.When police investigated in 1991, Lord Janner refused to comment,
:12:52. > :12:53.but he denied the claims in the Commons and
:12:54. > :12:58.The independent inquiry into child sexual abuse is now investigating
:12:59. > :13:02.whether institutions turned a blind eye to the allegations.
:13:03. > :13:08.But Lord Janner's son, a senior barrister, wants to fight
:13:09. > :13:11.the accusers in the civil courts, not the inquiry, where he won't be
:13:12. > :13:18.He says the inquiry is unfairly picking on his father.
:13:19. > :13:23.When he is dead, when he cannot answer back, when he has never been
:13:24. > :13:26.convicted of any offence and is entirely innocent.
:13:27. > :13:28.How serious are you about challenging this in the civil
:13:29. > :13:31.courts, if it does go to the civil courts,
:13:32. > :13:43.Our family has decided this is what we want to use such
:13:44. > :13:46.inheritance as there is upon, to clear his name.
:13:47. > :13:48.He says all of the allegations against Lord Janner are made up
:13:49. > :13:54.But their lawyers say a judge could decide too much time has
:13:55. > :13:57.passed for the courts to rule if the claims are true,
:13:58. > :13:59.making the scrutiny of public inquiry vital.
:14:00. > :14:06.The head of a French energy company hoping to build a nuclear power
:14:07. > :14:09.plant in south-west England has publicly appealed to the British
:14:10. > :14:14.In late July, EDF's board voted to approve the ?18 billion
:14:15. > :14:23.But hours before the contract was to be signed, the Prime Minister,
:14:24. > :14:25.Theresa May, halted it and ordered a security review.
:14:26. > :14:29.Writing in the Sunday Telegraph today, EDF chief executive Vincent
:14:30. > :14:31.de Rivaz has accused critics of ignoring the facts
:14:32. > :14:34.and overlooking the positive impact of the investment for Britain.
:14:35. > :14:48.With me now is Vicky Young. What exactly has the EDF boss been
:14:49. > :14:52.saying? He's obviously making the case for this project to go ahead as
:14:53. > :14:56.you would expect. He wanted to go ahead. It was incredibly dramatic
:14:57. > :15:00.move as Theresa May as Prime Minister, one of the first decisions
:15:01. > :15:04.she made. The contracts were ready to go. She decided she needed more
:15:05. > :15:08.time to look at the detail so she has promised a decision in the
:15:09. > :15:13.autumn so in the coming few weeks, but he's making his case for why he
:15:14. > :15:16.thinks it should go ahead. She's never explained publicly why she
:15:17. > :15:19.wanted to put it on hold apart from to look more at the detail but there
:15:20. > :15:24.had been suggestions because the Chinese are involved, they are
:15:25. > :15:27.putting in billions of pounds, that there is a security issue and that's
:15:28. > :15:33.exactly what is being looked at today. They say they trust and know
:15:34. > :15:41.their Chinese partners and all staff are vetted, a very sensitive place
:15:42. > :15:44.to work. He also says control systems at Hinckley will be isolated
:15:45. > :15:48.from IT systems so any suggestion there could be hacking or anything
:15:49. > :15:54.like that would not be possible. He also makes the case for the economy,
:15:55. > :15:57.for jobs, apprenticeships, and for investment in the south-west of
:15:58. > :16:01.England and says that will all be a very positive things so for Theresa
:16:02. > :16:04.May it's going to be a difficult decision but once we have to make a
:16:05. > :16:08.very soon not least because the needs electricity and we need to
:16:09. > :16:13.have new power stations or an alternative in place because people
:16:14. > :16:18.want to boil their capitals. She will be gathering her Cabinet around
:16:19. > :16:24.here at Chequers on Wednesday. Has there been any response from Downing
:16:25. > :16:29.Street regarding what the EDF boss has been saying? No, their line is
:16:30. > :16:32.still we're going to wait and see. I think it's interesting in light of
:16:33. > :16:37.the Brexit vote, it will dominate what Theresa May does in the coming
:16:38. > :16:41.months and years, and she says very much Britain is open for business so
:16:42. > :16:45.when she put it on hold, critics said this shows the opposite,
:16:46. > :16:49.suggests we are not open for business, so she has some big
:16:50. > :16:52.decisions to make, airport capacity is another one which has been
:16:53. > :16:57.hanging around for several years now and she has had to cabinet ministers
:16:58. > :17:01.before the summer, look at the opportunities that Brexit can give
:17:02. > :17:05.your area, come back, have a meeting on Wednesday, talk about all of
:17:06. > :17:08.that, that many people will be looking for a direction of travel
:17:09. > :17:13.when it comes to Brexit, what are the terms of negotiation going to
:17:14. > :17:17.be? She says Brexit means Brexit but people will be looking for more
:17:18. > :17:23.details in the coming weeks. We believe that therefore now. Thank
:17:24. > :17:24.you very much. -- we will leave that therefore now.
:17:25. > :17:29.The last BHS stores will close for the final time today after 88
:17:30. > :17:32.Former workers are calling on Sir Philip Green to fix
:17:33. > :17:34.the ?600 million pensions black hole.
:17:35. > :17:36.Motorists face further major disruption as wreckage of the bridge
:17:37. > :17:45.that collapsed onto the M20 in Kent is cleared.
:17:46. > :17:47.Highways England is reasonably confident of reopening the motorway
:17:48. > :17:49.this lunchtime. The head of a French energy company
:17:50. > :17:52.hoping to build a nuclear power plant at Hinkley Point has publicly
:17:53. > :17:55.appealed to the British government to approve the project
:17:56. > :17:57.saying its Chinese partners don't Company bosses should be held
:17:58. > :18:09.personally responsible for nuisance That's the view of
:18:10. > :18:12.consumer group Which? Which?
:18:13. > :18:19.says millions of people cold calls and it's now
:18:20. > :18:33.time for tougher action. They are the phone calls many of us
:18:34. > :18:38.dread. Nuisance marketing calls, unwanted calls that tried to sell a
:18:39. > :18:43.product or service to you. Research carried out in May for the consumer
:18:44. > :18:48.group Which? Found that 81% of us had received at least one nuisance
:18:49. > :18:55.call that month. 40% of those said they felt intimidated by the caller.
:18:56. > :18:59.Hello, madam. Can I interest you... A change in the law last April means
:19:00. > :19:02.it's now easier for the information Commissioner, the government
:19:03. > :19:06.watchdog, to fine companies who plague people with solicitors
:19:07. > :19:12.nuisance calls and texts, with fines up to ?500,000, but Which? Says four
:19:13. > :19:17.out of 22 fines given to companies since then have been paid in full
:19:18. > :19:20.and suggests some owners are even closing their companies to escape
:19:21. > :19:26.paying the fines only to open new ones. You could be thousands of
:19:27. > :19:30.pounds better off. So it now wants another change of a law which would
:19:31. > :19:34.mean it is the boss of a company who was held responsible, rather than
:19:35. > :19:36.the business itself. Tougher action, it says, is needed, because millions
:19:37. > :19:54.of people are still being pestered. The men were detained after they
:19:55. > :19:55.arrived to join a scheduled flight to New York for their expected to
:19:56. > :19:58.appear in court tomorrow. A Turkish soldier has been
:19:59. > :20:00.killed in northern Syria. He's the first to die
:20:01. > :20:03.in an intensifying Turkish incursion against Kurdish forces
:20:04. > :20:04.and Islamic State militants There were clashes on Saturday
:20:05. > :20:11.involving Turkish tanks and Kurdish forces near Jarablus,
:20:12. > :20:13.a border town that was recaptured Italy's state museums
:20:14. > :20:22.and archaeological sites will donate all the income they raise this
:20:23. > :20:26.Sunday, including all ticket sales, to the regions affected
:20:27. > :20:29.by Wednesday's earthquake. The Mayor of Amatrice has urged
:20:30. > :20:33.the govenment to learn the lessons of the past and reconstruct
:20:34. > :20:38.the quake damaged villages quickly. Aftershocks continued
:20:39. > :20:39.to rattle the area overnight, The death toll from the earthquake,
:20:40. > :20:47.which struck a mountainous central region, has now reached
:20:48. > :20:53.nearly 300 people. Well, James has spent
:20:54. > :20:55.the day in Amatrice. He explained a little earlier how
:20:56. > :21:05.people are coping three days on. A lot of Amatrice simply is not here
:21:06. > :21:09.any more. The survivors have been moved to tents pitched on the edge
:21:10. > :21:14.of town in a sports field and most of the people you see in the
:21:15. > :21:17.wreckage of the town are rescue workers, firefighters, Alpine
:21:18. > :21:21.rescuers, police officers and even the army as well, and structural
:21:22. > :21:25.experts for that this is essentially become an area which they will still
:21:26. > :21:30.try to recover bodies and where they will essentially in the end have to
:21:31. > :21:35.try to rebuild. You can hear diggers going past which gives you a sense
:21:36. > :21:39.that rescue workers are continuing here but nobody expects anyone else
:21:40. > :21:43.to be found. The most recent body to be pulled out of the rubble was on
:21:44. > :21:46.Wednesday evening and that was several days ago so they don't
:21:47. > :21:51.expect any change to that at the moment. My colleagues and I were at
:21:52. > :21:54.a small village on Friday and they were saying they didn't think there
:21:55. > :21:57.was any future, it would simply be raised to the ground and people
:21:58. > :22:01.would be made to move elsewhere. They are worried, not just about
:22:02. > :22:04.losing their past, but losing their future as well and feel that their
:22:05. > :22:05.memories of now been destroyed in the rubble and they are not sure
:22:06. > :22:08.where they will live in the future. The US Republican Party's
:22:09. > :22:10.presidential candidate Donald Trump has given more details
:22:11. > :22:11.of his controversial He says he'll develop a tracking
:22:12. > :22:16.system that will make it He also reiterated his support
:22:17. > :22:20.for building a wall along From the beginning it
:22:21. > :22:53.became almost his mantra. Donald Trump's hard line on illegal
:22:54. > :22:56.immigration has, for many, been the centrepiece of his campaign
:22:57. > :22:59.for the White House, but what would it actually mean
:23:00. > :23:03.beyond just building a wall? He had promised to spell
:23:04. > :23:06.out his plans in greater detail and at a campaign stop in Iowa,
:23:07. > :23:11.he did just that. We are going to institute
:23:12. > :23:14.nationwide, e-verify, stop illegal immigrants
:23:15. > :23:16.from accessing welfare and entitlements and develop
:23:17. > :23:21.an exit-entry, you know Exit-entry system to ensure
:23:22. > :23:26.that those who overstay their visas We don't enforce our visa expiration
:23:27. > :23:34.dates, then we have open borders On Friday, he met with Latino
:23:35. > :23:41.supporters in Nevada, an attempt perhaps to broaden his
:23:42. > :23:45.appeal and maybe soften his image but if he is moderating his message,
:23:46. > :23:49.some are not happy about it. Sarah Palin, the former Gov
:23:50. > :23:57.of Alaska, one-time Republican vice-Presidential candidate,
:23:58. > :24:01.backed Donald Trump early on. She doesn't want him
:24:02. > :24:04.to retreat on this issue. Can he satisfy his core support
:24:05. > :24:25.without alienating minority voters? Can he build a wall and a winning
:24:26. > :24:37.coalition at the same time? Simone Biles was one of the stars
:24:38. > :24:40.of the Rio Olympics and, after winning four gold medals,
:24:41. > :24:43.her picture graced But it seems that she hasn't had
:24:44. > :24:49.much luck when it comes The gymnast tweeted that she had
:24:50. > :24:54.lost all her pictures Twitter users soon came
:24:55. > :24:58.to her rescue and sent her some Simone will be joining a host
:24:59. > :25:04.of other American Olympians to present a prize at this evening's
:25:05. > :25:13.MTV Video Music Awards in New York. An Australian teenager has become
:25:14. > :25:16.the youngest person to fly solo around the world
:25:17. > :25:19.in a single engine aircraft. 18-year-old Lachlan Smart
:25:20. > :25:22.took almost two months to complete his journey,
:25:23. > :25:26.landing in 24 airfields in 15 54 days after taking off,
:25:27. > :25:37.Lachlan Smart returned home Waving banners, crowds of people
:25:38. > :25:43.gathered at the Maroochydore airport There was lots of applause,
:25:44. > :25:53.some tears and even a brass band. It was from here on July 4th
:25:54. > :25:56.when the 18-year-old took off He now returns a world record
:25:57. > :26:04.breaker, almost a year younger It's so amazing to finally be back
:26:05. > :26:14.here in my home town, the Sunshine Coast and landing back
:26:15. > :26:18.on the runway that I did my initial Lachlan travelled more than 24,000
:26:19. > :26:23.air miles and stopped 24 different Starting on the Sunshine
:26:24. > :26:31.Coast in Australia, He then made stops in the US,
:26:32. > :26:37.Canada, and Europe, where he took a week's break and visited
:26:38. > :26:41.family in London. Then on to North Africa where,
:26:42. > :26:45.in Egypt, he waited hours to fuel up before flying through heavy
:26:46. > :26:49.turbulence to the Middle East. In south-east Asia, Lachlan ran
:26:50. > :26:54.into some problems in Indonesia. He criticised the instructions given
:26:55. > :26:57.to him by local air controllers, saying he would have hit a mountain
:26:58. > :27:00.if he had followed them. He said their radio reception
:27:01. > :27:05.was poor and their attitude blase. He chose his own navigation route
:27:06. > :27:08.out of Indonesia and then flew As well as breaking
:27:09. > :27:14.the record, he hopes it gets So often we are told we're too
:27:15. > :27:19.young, you're not good With enough hard work you can get
:27:20. > :27:23.there and hopefully I've started to prove that as an 18-year-old
:27:24. > :27:26.for two and a half years planning this trip around the world and now
:27:27. > :27:29.having completed it after many hours of hard work, I'm trying
:27:30. > :27:32.to prove the sky is not Lachlan documented his entire flight
:27:33. > :27:37.online, showing every detail of his dream journey around
:27:38. > :27:42.the world but now he says he's Time now for a look at the weather.
:27:43. > :28:08.How is it looking? Not too bad. Considering of the bank
:28:09. > :28:12.holiday across the UK, dry and sunny weather to come. A bit mixed at this
:28:13. > :28:16.moment in time so some of you will have to bear with it. Sunshine
:28:17. > :28:22.breaking out after gloomy start to Sunday but even on this picture you
:28:23. > :28:28.can see a bit of brightness on the horizon just beyond the low cloud.
:28:29. > :28:32.It will take awhile to shift. Low pressure brought storms to start the
:28:33. > :28:35.morning across northern England, trundling into Scandinavia, but it
:28:36. > :28:38.will take awhile before we lose the heavy rain in the far south-east of
:28:39. > :28:43.Scotland and parts of Northumberland, County Durham,
:28:44. > :28:47.Teesside and Tyne Wear. The morning cloud breaks up. Showers in
:28:48. > :28:52.Wales and England but more widespread as they go into the
:28:53. > :28:56.afternoon. Gaps in between. The driest weather in Northern Ireland,
:28:57. > :28:59.temperatures around 20 degrees in the north-west. As for Scotland, the
:29:00. > :29:04.cloud breaks up and there will be some shouters into the afternoon
:29:05. > :29:08.across central areas but western parts of northern England, a bit
:29:09. > :29:13.brighter towards the east, and lots of dry and sunny weather towards
:29:14. > :29:17.Wales and the south-west this afternoon. The Midlands, southern
:29:18. > :29:21.England, East Anglia, one or two passing showers in that Northwest
:29:22. > :29:27.wind, but very few. Hopefully the showers will avoid Notting Hill
:29:28. > :29:31.Carnival today and into tomorrow, not only drier but warmer. This
:29:32. > :29:35.evening and overnight, part of the Midlands, East Anglia, the South
:29:36. > :29:40.will cease and showers continuing, gradually fading away. Partly clear
:29:41. > :29:45.skies tomorrow morning. If you are camping tonight, cooler than it has
:29:46. > :29:49.been overnight. Temperatures in towns and cities, 7-8, so a fresh
:29:50. > :29:54.start to a bank holiday for most of the UK. Low cloud to begin with,
:29:55. > :29:58.isolated showers, East Anglia and the far south-east, and most will
:29:59. > :30:02.have a dry day. Cloud into western Scotland, the odd splash of rain,
:30:03. > :30:06.but, considering it's a bank on a day Monday for most of you, and
:30:07. > :30:08.usually it is a largely dry one. Sunny spells in the afternoon and
:30:09. > :30:29.feeling warmer than it does today. To take a slew into Tuesday and
:30:30. > :30:31.Wednesday, if you are extending your weekend into the week, high-pressure
:30:32. > :30:33.building in from the south-west and we will see some weather fronts
:30:34. > :30:36.clipped the North West of Scotland, producing patchy rain, more cloud in
:30:37. > :30:38.northern and western areas but this will break up of times to let some
:30:39. > :30:41.sunny spells through. The further south and east you are, the sunny
:30:42. > :31:47.and the warmer things will be. Temperatures into the mid-20s.
:31:48. > :32:02.The last BHS stores will close for the final time today, after 88 years
:32:03. > :32:08.on the high street. Former workers are calling on Sir Philip Green to
:32:09. > :32:12.fix the ?600 million pensions black hole. I'd like to say that you can
:32:13. > :32:16.only actually be on one yacht at once! So sell up a couple of yachts
:32:17. > :32:22.and use the money to plug the pension scheme. Motorists face
:32:23. > :32:28.further disruption as wreckage of the bridge that collapsed onto the
:32:29. > :32:30.M20 in Kent has cleared. Highways England says it's reasonably
:32:31. > :32:35.confident of reopening the motorway this lunchtime. The head of a French
:32:36. > :32:42.energy company hoping to build a nuclear power plant at Hinkley Point
:32:43. > :32:47.has publicly appealed to the British government to approve the project,
:32:48. > :32:58.saying its Chinese partners don't present a security risk. Relatives
:32:59. > :33:01.of the late Labour peer Lord Janner are demanding the inquiry into child
:33:02. > :33:06.abuse postponed its plans to investigate him. They argue that the
:33:07. > :33:07.inquiry would not offer the family the chance to fully cross-examine
:33:08. > :33:21.the late peer's accusers. Coming up in the next few minutes,
:33:22. > :33:26.the morning review of the Sunday morning edition of the papers.
:33:27. > :33:28.Before the papers, sport and time for a full round up
:33:29. > :33:38.Good morning. Manchester United and Chelsea have both maintained their
:33:39. > :33:41.winning start to the Premier League season. Teenager Marcus Rashford
:33:42. > :33:49.scored a late goal to give United a 1-0 victory over Hull city. Chelsea
:33:50. > :33:52.beat Burnley 3-0. Jose Mourinho is the first United manager to win his
:33:53. > :34:06.opening three games since Sir Matt Busby. He believes that yesterday's
:34:07. > :34:10.narrow victory was the right result. We deserved it, and we deserved to
:34:11. > :34:16.do it in a more comfortable way, but it is a great feeling when you win
:34:17. > :34:21.points in the last few minutes. The second half was like going to fight
:34:22. > :34:27.against a wall. A good wall, a very well-organised wall with an amazing
:34:28. > :34:33.mentality. But we were very, very strong. Champions Leicester recorded
:34:34. > :34:38.their first win of the season, with a 2-1 victory at home to Swansea.
:34:39. > :34:43.Last season's top scorer Jamie Vardy got his first goal of the new
:34:44. > :34:48.campaign. Good timing, as Sam Allardyce prepares to name his
:34:49. > :34:51.England squad for their opening 2018 World Cup qualifier later today.
:34:52. > :34:56.Arsenal also got their first win of the season with a 3-1 victory over
:34:57. > :35:01.Watford. Mesut Ozil opened his account in his first game since Euro
:35:02. > :35:08.2016, with this header. Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger confirmed his
:35:09. > :35:24.side are set to complete a double deal for Shkodran Mustafi and Perez,
:35:25. > :35:27.with the pair costing around ?50 million.
:35:28. > :35:32.Chelsea and Manchester United lead the way at the top of the Premier
:35:33. > :35:36.League, with three wins out of three, at Manchester City will look
:35:37. > :35:42.to join them later as Pep Guardiola settles into life in England. His
:35:43. > :35:46.side host West Ham, who were knocked out of the Europa League in midweek.
:35:47. > :35:48.That game is at 4pm, after West Brom play Middlesbrough.
:35:49. > :35:59.I will try to implement our point of view, our way to see our game
:36:00. > :36:03.That is why I am so excited to convince our players to play
:36:04. > :36:08.the way we like, but until now, of course, results help.
:36:09. > :36:25.And now the situation for us only regarding injury is not a good one.
:36:26. > :36:28.But we are hoping, and our plan is to have a good game
:36:29. > :36:33.and if we have a good game we can get something out of that game.
:36:34. > :36:38.Celtic are back on top of the Scottish Premiership after a
:36:39. > :36:44.comfortable win over Aberdeen. The defending champions beat last year's
:36:45. > :36:48.runners up 4-1. Elsewhere, wins for Hamilton and Inverness. Tony Watt
:36:49. > :36:53.scored his first goal for Hearts, as they couple are smooth winner at
:36:54. > :36:56.Partick Thistle. In rugby league, Hull FC came from behind against
:36:57. > :37:04.Warrington to win their first-ever Challenge Cup at Wembley. They were
:37:05. > :37:11.10-0 down but full-back Jamie Shaw helped level things. They kept their
:37:12. > :37:16.cool for a 12-10 victory. The Black-and-white 's had previously
:37:17. > :37:21.failed to win eight Challenge Cup finals. We've come out with a great
:37:22. > :37:24.attitude and we rattled than a bit and we took our chances. Tell me
:37:25. > :37:29.about your thought process as you kicked for victory? Just, get it
:37:30. > :37:34.over! The same thought process as every single one! Luckily it was
:37:35. > :37:40.fairly easy, that last one. England have taken a 2-0 lead in their
:37:41. > :37:45.one-day series against Pakistan with eight forwarded win at Lord's.
:37:46. > :37:51.Pakistan were reduced to 2-3 but recovered to post 251 in their 50
:37:52. > :37:58.overs thanks to a century from Sarfraz Ahmed.
:37:59. > :38:05.England 2-0 ahead with three matches remaining. Lewis Hamilton will start
:38:06. > :38:13.today's Belgian Grand Prix from the back of the grid. He has taken a 50
:38:14. > :38:21.Five Place penalty for using too many engine parts. Nico Rosberg
:38:22. > :38:26.starts in pole position and Max Verstappen stars alongside him on
:38:27. > :38:31.the front row. Laura Muir broke her own record to win last night at the
:38:32. > :38:34.Diamond weight Matt -- Diamond League meeting in Paris. The
:38:35. > :38:42.23-year-old took more than two seconds off her time, to clock
:38:43. > :38:47.3:55.22, setting a 2016 world best time to with the Olympic champion
:38:48. > :38:53.from Kenya finishing second. The star of the night in Paris was
:38:54. > :39:02.Olympic 3000 metre champion -- 3000 metres steeplechase champion Ruth
:39:03. > :39:06.Jebet. Seven seconds quicker than her Rio time, a new world record!
:39:07. > :39:19.Now the Papers. Hello and welcome to our Sunday
:39:20. > :39:32.morning edition of The Papers. With me are this
:39:33. > :39:33.morning's reviewers, the columnist and broadcaster
:39:34. > :39:35.Yasmin Alibhai Brown and former Foreign Correspondent
:39:36. > :39:37.and author Matthew Green. The Observer quotes a former Tory
:39:38. > :39:41.health minister calling for a new tax to fund the NHS
:39:42. > :39:44.and social care. The Sunday Telegraph says
:39:45. > :39:48.Theresa May is asking her ministers for their personal
:39:49. > :39:58.Brexit blueprints. More lives could be lost
:39:59. > :40:01.on Britain's beaches, according to the Sunday Express,
:40:02. > :40:03.which blames cuts for leaving coast The Mail on Sunday claims victory
:40:04. > :40:08.over plans it says are in place to divert tens of millions of pounds
:40:09. > :40:11.in foreign aid to fund Peter Sutcliffe's fears
:40:12. > :40:15.over being transferred from Broadmoor Hospital
:40:16. > :40:17.into a prison is the Sunday And the Sunday Mirror says a brother
:40:18. > :40:29.of four-time Olympic champion Mo Farah faces being forced
:40:30. > :40:38.to move back to Somalia. OK, let's begin. Good morning to you
:40:39. > :40:42.both. We start with the Telegraph. What caught your eye here? The
:40:43. > :40:51.Sunday Telegraph has a front-page story entitled" Made, the Brexit
:40:52. > :40:54.enforcer". Theresa May has asked all the Cabinet ministers to come up
:40:55. > :40:58.with Lou prints of what Brexit is going to look like. The rather
:40:59. > :41:02.sinister part of the story is this claim that pro-EU civil servants are
:41:03. > :41:05.going to thwart the whole enterprise. The story is a little
:41:06. > :41:10.bit like something you would expect to find in some sort of
:41:11. > :41:14.state-sponsored media in the Eastern bloc. "We've Gone after the
:41:15. > :41:19.immigrants, now we've had the vote, it will be the civil servants who
:41:20. > :41:23.stop as league -- stop us from leaving the EU". There is no
:41:24. > :41:26.evidence to back it up, just a rather hysterical Tory MP saying we
:41:27. > :41:31.need emergency legislation if anyone can do this, though they can be
:41:32. > :41:42.fired. It has gone on for a while but it's a very thin story. There is
:41:43. > :41:50.this atmosphere now, why isn't Brexit happening now? It can't
:41:51. > :41:56.happen now! It is the fear in the Cabinet that are essentially at each
:41:57. > :42:03.other's throats. Fear is too good a word, it is hysteria. I don't envy
:42:04. > :42:07.Mrs May at all in this job. She must feel that she is ruling over the
:42:08. > :42:13.most dysfunctional family ever, in her Cabinet. You say dysfunctional,
:42:14. > :42:19.why do you think she is doing this? A lot of her team are probably
:42:20. > :42:25.thinking oh no, what is point of this? Is she trying to unify them
:42:26. > :42:29.all? I think, I don't know what you think, Matthew, but the right wing
:42:30. > :42:34.of the Tory party will never be satisfied. They got their vote, they
:42:35. > :42:39.got their place, but they will never be satisfied. It destroyed Cameron,
:42:40. > :42:44.it destroyed William Hague, it destroyed everybody. You can see the
:42:45. > :42:50.issue here in the first paragraph of the Telegraph story, "May is
:42:51. > :42:55.ordering every cabinet minister to come up with a personal blueprint
:42:56. > :42:59.for Brexit". Guess what? We don't get to decide the personal blueprint
:43:00. > :43:06.for Brexit, that is something we have to decide with the EU. We are
:43:07. > :43:10.living in a fantasyland. Rather than repeating this nonsense, it's time
:43:11. > :43:13.that the media helped politicians to account over it. Interesting to know
:43:14. > :43:18.if she's going to read each account, each blueprint! Who's going to come
:43:19. > :43:21.first in this rather awkward shuffling silence around the table?
:43:22. > :43:27.CHUCKLES We will turn to the Times and on the
:43:28. > :43:32.front page we are going with Theresa May and a bit of Brexit as well.
:43:33. > :43:41.What is the theme of this particular story? Like I said, nobody can do
:43:42. > :43:47.anything that is enough for the Brexit side of the Tory party in the
:43:48. > :43:53.Cabinet, so here this story is that Philip Hammond, the Chancellor, is a
:43:54. > :43:59.quote," resisting plans for other ministers to pull out of the EU
:44:00. > :44:03.single market". If we pull out of the EU single market, where are we
:44:04. > :44:09.going to trade? Where are we going to go with this thing? That is the
:44:10. > :44:12.problem, isn't it? We don't know what Brexit actually means, nobody
:44:13. > :44:17.knows what it means and we can't know what it means until we've had
:44:18. > :44:20.negotiations with the EU. The real headline for this story is actually
:44:21. > :44:23.on the inside page, where Angela Merkel and other European leaders
:44:24. > :44:27.are being very clear, either you stay in the single market and allow
:44:28. > :44:35.free movement of people, which is more or less staying in the EU, or
:44:36. > :44:38.you leave the single market and you start to impose controls on
:44:39. > :44:42.immigration. It's one or the other. We're still talking about this story
:44:43. > :44:46.like we get to choose. Guess what, we don't get to choose! I would just
:44:47. > :44:49.like to see some of these journalists taking some of these
:44:50. > :44:54.statements with a bit more of a pinch of salt.
:44:55. > :45:01.Don't go for the journalists now? As the media, we need to look at
:45:02. > :45:05.ourselves. We have wandered into this Brexit without realising it.
:45:06. > :45:09.How many journalists were surprised by the result? We're all focused on
:45:10. > :45:17.the latest argument taking place in Westminster. Not what's going on in
:45:18. > :45:23.the regions and beyond the M25. Outside of Westminster. We don't
:45:24. > :45:27.know our country. This particular article is pointing to the fact
:45:28. > :45:31.there seems to be a turf war at Whitehall. Exactly, but also within
:45:32. > :45:38.cabinet. Somewhere else, it says Boris Johnson and, what's his name,
:45:39. > :45:45.Liam Fox, are really worried about who is really in charge? What is
:45:46. > :45:50.Labour doing? Never mind the journalists, what is Labour doing
:45:51. > :45:54.here? It is talking about trains. Yes, they should be having a field
:45:55. > :45:58.day. LAUGHTER
:45:59. > :46:03.OK, let's turn to the Mail on Sunday. Going inside the newspaper,
:46:04. > :46:13.page three. This was an astonishing read. I don't know what you thought
:46:14. > :46:20.of this. Good cream tests. -- good Queen tests. The submarine Prime
:46:21. > :46:27.Minister, unlike David Cameron she has not been popping out of number
:46:28. > :46:32.ten every day with a new sound bite. -- Tess. She's given an interview to
:46:33. > :46:38.the Windsor, Maidenhead and as Scot magazine which the Sunday mail has
:46:39. > :46:43.described as astonishingly candid. It's not that candid, actually, talk
:46:44. > :46:48.about not liking snakes and not liking her nose. I don't think we
:46:49. > :46:52.get a really powerful insight into the inner workings of Theresa May's
:46:53. > :46:56.psyche but the Mail on Sunday marks up an image of her looking like a
:46:57. > :47:02.little of the first. Because she's so private, I remember cheering her
:47:03. > :47:09.at a meeting, on women in politics, honestly, she was terrifyingly
:47:10. > :47:14.bright, but also terrifyingly unknowable. You never knew what
:47:15. > :47:18.position she would take. I can see where her power comes from. It is
:47:19. > :47:24.interesting to see she loves her husband. To see a softer side to
:47:25. > :47:30.her. Interestingly, she says the qualities she likes in others is
:47:31. > :47:34.conceit. Any psychologist would tell you the things we like in other
:47:35. > :47:39.people tends to be the things we don't see in ourselves. What about
:47:40. > :47:42.the subject of her nose. Because she's a woman, and all women judge
:47:43. > :47:48.themselves by the way we look. They would never ask a man. We just put
:47:49. > :47:54.it out there. Would they ask a Liam Fox, what part of you would you hate
:47:55. > :47:58.the most? Would he tell us? No, there would be a withering stare,
:47:59. > :48:05.wouldn't there? Perhaps on to more serious matters, the NHS, a rescue
:48:06. > :48:12.plan? A call for a rescue plan. The former Tory health Minister, Doctor
:48:13. > :48:15.Dan Porter, a part-time doctor, who says we need a new tax for the NHS
:48:16. > :48:21.and social care to stop the whole system collapsing. It's been widely
:48:22. > :48:26.reported that the NHS is going to face a ?20 billion funding shortage
:48:27. > :48:30.by 2020. Huge amount of money. He is coming forward saying we need to
:48:31. > :48:33.radically rethink the options here and Conservative Party does not like
:48:34. > :48:39.taxes that maybe we need to think about bringing one in to steer the
:48:40. > :48:46.ship away from the rocks. Yes, absolutely, but there needs to be
:48:47. > :48:50.lose sky thinking now. We have got such a fast growing ageing
:48:51. > :48:56.population, often stuck in hospital beds because they have got nowhere
:48:57. > :49:00.to go, we should spend public money on a halfway house, a really good
:49:01. > :49:04.place where older people in particular with complex problems,
:49:05. > :49:09.can go after hospital. And get social care rather than medical
:49:10. > :49:16.care. We need to do that, think much more about building a sector rather
:49:17. > :49:22.than cutting back. That is going to cost though, isn't it? If we don't
:49:23. > :49:27.do it, the NHS will collapse. Do you think it has a future, though? It
:49:28. > :49:31.has to have a future, it's the one thing which binds everybody in this
:49:32. > :49:34.country, whatever their political persuasions, except the tiny
:49:35. > :49:39.minority who would go to private health care. It means a lot. I think
:49:40. > :49:43.we should do something. A week ago there were reports about how the
:49:44. > :49:48.government had caved in to pressure from the sugar industry, food
:49:49. > :49:53.industry, over plans to reduce the amount of sugar in food, which has
:49:54. > :49:57.shot up over last few decades. One aspect of the NHS is we need to
:49:58. > :50:02.become healthier as a country. If the government is not willing to
:50:03. > :50:05.take a hardline in favour of Public health, as opposed about and down to
:50:06. > :50:10.corporate interests, then we have got a real problem. There is the
:50:11. > :50:16.problem with the Great British Bake Off. Everybody is eating cakes. I'm
:50:17. > :50:23.not with you on that one. I love it, I love it, I love it! We are
:50:24. > :50:28.sticking with the NHS and turning to page two of the Times newspaper. You
:50:29. > :50:36.picked up the bed shortage element. This is what the Times is focusing
:50:37. > :50:44.on. A bed shortage, sending NHS back to the dark days of the 1980s. Yes,
:50:45. > :50:50.and it's the same thing, not that there is a bed shortage, but
:50:51. > :50:54.patients can't go home, especially those on their own, widowers,
:50:55. > :51:00.widows, whose families could be far away, so there is a terrible
:51:01. > :51:03.situation of people who are perhaps physically better but mentally and
:51:04. > :51:09.emotionally in need, who are in hospitals and they should not be
:51:10. > :51:13.there. Hospitals are miserable places for most of us. There has got
:51:14. > :51:19.to be a big rethink on this, I think. It seems there is a breakdown
:51:20. > :51:22.in the social care and the hospitals. You would think they
:51:23. > :51:27.would be working closer together. They keep saying they are going to
:51:28. > :51:31.and the Kings fund think tank, which has been in existence, is a very,
:51:32. > :51:37.very good serious think tank, talking about a kind of United
:51:38. > :51:41.service perhaps of health and social careful survey just seem to have
:51:42. > :51:44.happened. I just don't know why. When you look at the statistics very
:51:45. > :51:49.quickly, the Patients' Association revealing that the total number of
:51:50. > :51:55.people waiting more than 18 weeks for surgery had risen to just under
:51:56. > :52:04.90,000. It's almost doubled from what it was in 2015. 2014, sorry. It
:52:05. > :52:16.was 51000 and it is now almost double. OK, let's turn to the Sunday
:52:17. > :52:22.mail. Page four. This is a story that I think they picked up on the
:52:23. > :52:29.front page. They are claiming victory in their campaign to cut
:52:30. > :52:33.back on foreign aid. This is a fascinating story on many levels.
:52:34. > :52:38.The Mail on Sunday has been running a whole series of Expose is over the
:52:39. > :52:42.last few months about aid being wasted in many compelling ways,
:52:43. > :52:47.actually, and there is a whole spread of examples on the inside
:52:48. > :52:49.pages. And now the government is essentially saying it's going to
:52:50. > :52:57.divert tens of millions of pounds that was in the aid budget to fund
:52:58. > :53:02.the war on terror, now I've worked abroad for many years and I've seen
:53:03. > :53:05.how a lot of aid goes to waste and I think there is absolutely a case for
:53:06. > :53:11.reform in the way Britain distributes foreign aids. How? I
:53:12. > :53:19.worked in Afghanistan for three years. I mean, the charities working
:53:20. > :53:23.with the military in Helmand province creating projects which
:53:24. > :53:26.were within a few months overrun by the Taliban and we've seen what
:53:27. > :53:31.happened in Helmand province in the last few weeks, it virtually fallen
:53:32. > :53:36.to the insurgents, so there's endless examples of money going to
:53:37. > :53:44.waste but they are not hard to find. But the idea you can somehow take
:53:45. > :53:52.that money and spend it on, you can sort of retool aid or submitted to
:53:53. > :53:57.foreign policy objectives is wrong. There are bad examples and I know
:53:58. > :54:02.there are, but also, in many, many areas, the aid is essential. The
:54:03. > :54:07.smaller projects are really good and they work and they send out
:54:08. > :54:12.independent evaluators. This is just crazy, so we are going to spend the
:54:13. > :54:17.money, the war on terror, killer using weapons to kill people and
:54:18. > :54:20.creating a bigger situation? It's total nonsense. Priti Patel has been
:54:21. > :54:27.at the forefront of wanting this department closed. Very quickly,
:54:28. > :54:33.about 40 seconds on the express. Hanging onto our inheritance. What
:54:34. > :54:39.do you think about this? The coronet. I really could not care
:54:40. > :54:50.less. There is your answer. It's clearly an excuse to but a picture
:54:51. > :54:52.of Aidan Turner doing his work. It's clearly justification for the Sunday
:54:53. > :54:56.express to talk about the coronet which has been blocked from being
:54:57. > :55:02.sold abroad. Our inherited is safe. LAUGHTER
:55:03. > :55:05.Thank you both very much indeed. Just a reminder we take a look
:55:06. > :55:10.at tomorrow's front pages every Coming up on BBC One after this
:55:11. > :55:31.programme is Sunday Morning Live. With the details we say good
:55:32. > :55:39.morning to Naga Munchetty. Good morning. Yes, on Sunday morning
:55:40. > :55:48.live, we are asking does destruction of a cultural monument count as a
:55:49. > :55:52.war crime? The French ban on the bikini has been overturned but do
:55:53. > :55:56.the prejudices exist in the UK or so? Nick Robinson is talk about his
:55:57. > :55:57.biggest battle against cancer. Join us at 10am.
:55:58. > :56:00.That's almost all from us here on BBC One.
:56:01. > :56:03.We'll be back with the lunchtime news at one o'clock.
:56:04. > :56:06.More news continues, of course, on the BBC News Channel.
:56:07. > :56:13.We leave you now with Matt Taylor and a look at the weather.
:56:14. > :56:20.Thank you. Good morning to you. You may need to sit down for this next
:56:21. > :56:24.bit but we are into the bank on a day weekend across most parts of the
:56:25. > :56:28.UK and, can you believe, the forecast for Monday at least looks
:56:29. > :56:33.largely dry with sunny spells. A big improvement on what many of you have
:56:34. > :56:38.at the window at the moment. A great start. Some sunshine in our weather
:56:39. > :56:43.watcher pictures from the Western Isles of Scotland. Lovely blue skies
:56:44. > :56:46.to start the day. Most of you will see an improvement as we go through
:56:47. > :56:51.the day. Sunny spells winning through but for much of Scotland,
:56:52. > :56:55.England and Wales, a low pressure system dominating. Storms across
:56:56. > :56:58.England yesterday. The back edge brought storms to northern England
:56:59. > :57:01.in particular and we have some persistent rain in the North East
:57:02. > :57:06.which will gradually ease away but it will take a while before things
:57:07. > :57:09.brighten up. Away from that, the morning cloud breaks through and
:57:10. > :57:13.with the season sunny spells. A scattering of showers across
:57:14. > :57:16.England, Wales and Scotland into the afternoon. Across Scotland, mainly
:57:17. > :57:23.like with the odd heavy shower toward eastern areas. Northern
:57:24. > :57:26.Ireland, fine day, temperatures in the high teens. In the breeze,
:57:27. > :57:31.wherever you are, feeling fresher than has done of late. The cloud
:57:32. > :57:34.lingering in the far north of England. And south-east of Scotland.
:57:35. > :57:39.The south-east of England brightens up. Not a bad afternoon across Wales
:57:40. > :57:42.in the south-west. The showers shifting Easter with so East Anglia
:57:43. > :57:46.and southern England having some potentially thundery showers, at
:57:47. > :57:50.some places will avoid them altogether. That's good news for
:57:51. > :57:54.those heading off to the Notting Hill Carnival. Tomorrow, even
:57:55. > :58:00.sunnier and warmer. Tonight, into the bank holiday, showers gradually
:58:01. > :58:04.fading away from central and eastern parts of England. It should be a dry
:58:05. > :58:08.night for most of you with some mist and low cloud here and there.
:58:09. > :58:13.Temperatures in the towns and cities in double figures, but into the
:58:14. > :58:17.countryside, unsettled to start bank on a day Monday. 7-8. Low cloud in
:58:18. > :58:22.central and eastern parts, a small chance of a shower, but they will
:58:23. > :58:27.fade away. Later one, the cloud in Northern Ireland, the odd splash of
:58:28. > :58:31.rain, but eventually in Scotland, but for most of you, a bank holiday
:58:32. > :58:35.Monday which is predominantly dry, reasonably sunny and feeling very
:58:36. > :58:42.pleasantly warm as well. Temperatures in the south, 20-24.
:58:43. > :58:45.Into the week, following the bank on a day weekend, high pressure builds
:58:46. > :58:49.in from the south-west. We will see some cloud in the north and west of
:58:50. > :58:53.the country with the odd spot of rain and drizzle every now and
:58:54. > :58:56.again, breezy in Scotland and Northern Ireland but most will be
:58:57. > :59:01.dry on Tuesday and Wednesday and the warmest and sunniest parts will be
:59:02. > :59:02.England and Wales with temperatures of 20-25. Updates