30/10/2016 BBC Weekend News


30/10/2016

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Tonight at Ten, in the race for the White House,

:00:00.:00:08.

pressure mounts on the FBI to explain what it knew, and when,

:00:09.:00:10.

over Hillary Clinton's e-mail investigation.

:00:11.:00:15.

Democrats say the timing of a fresh inquiry is politically motivated,

:00:16.:00:18.

But Mrs Clinton says her message won't be derailed.

:00:19.:00:25.

There's a lot of noise and distraction but it really comes down

:00:26.:00:29.

to what kind of future we want and who, as our president,

:00:30.:00:32.

We'll have the very latest from the campaign trail,

:00:33.:00:39.

with little more than a week to go before polling day.

:00:40.:00:42.

The Business Secretary reveals more about the Brexit assurances,

:00:43.:00:46.

that helped convince the firm to invest in Britain.

:00:47.:00:53.

Another earthquake rocks central Italy -

:00:54.:00:55.

the biggest in nearly 40 years and the fourth since August.

:00:56.:01:00.

As the Government prepares to respond to calls for an inquiry,

:01:01.:01:07.

we hear from a policeman who says he was told what to

:01:08.:01:10.

These phrases, these sentences, must go into every statement

:01:11.:01:16.

A number of us, including myself, said,

:01:17.:01:18.

"What's going on here, this isn't how we do things."

:01:19.:01:27.

10 wickets gone for just 64 runs, as England lose against Bangladesh

:01:28.:01:31.

There's growing pressure on the FBI tonight to explain

:01:32.:02:00.

the circumstances surrounding its decision, to examine new evidence,

:02:01.:02:04.

in relation to Hillary Clinton's use of a private email server,

:02:05.:02:06.

It's now believed investigators were aware of the new information up

:02:07.:02:10.

to a month ago, but only went public on Friday,

:02:11.:02:13.

with little more than a week to go before the Presidential election.

:02:14.:02:16.

Mrs Clinton's team say the timing is politically motivated.

:02:17.:02:18.

Today she was in the crucial swing state of Florida

:02:19.:02:20.

and our chief correspondent Gavin Hewitt is travelling with her.

:02:21.:02:31.

With the polls tightening, the Clinton campaign

:02:32.:02:32.

is mounting a fierce fight back against the FBI's decision to reveal

:02:33.:02:37.

it was looking at a fresh batch of e-mails relating

:02:38.:02:39.

to their investigation into Hillary Clinton's private server.

:02:40.:02:41.

Her officials are pointing to the fact that the Department

:02:42.:02:44.

of Justice warned the FBI against disclosing they were looking

:02:45.:02:48.

Hillary Clinton believes it is both strange and troubling to talk

:02:49.:02:54.

about a new inquiry so close to polling day.

:02:55.:02:59.

There is a lot of noise and distraction, but it really comes

:03:00.:03:03.

down to what kind of future we want and who as our President can help

:03:04.:03:07.

The Democrats are pointing out no-one knows whether this latest

:03:08.:03:11.

batch contains new e-mails or classified information.

:03:12.:03:13.

There are reports that as the FBI has not got a warrant to examine

:03:14.:03:18.

the material, they don't yet know what they are dealing with.

:03:19.:03:21.

The FBI director has been attacked by the Republicans for closing

:03:22.:03:25.

the Clinton case in July, despite describing her handling

:03:26.:03:28.

The Clinton campaign is demanding that the FBI explain its decision

:03:29.:03:34.

to reveal that it was, in effect, re-opening the investigation.

:03:35.:03:36.

Why would you break these two protocols, why would you release

:03:37.:03:50.

information that is so incomplete when you haven't seen

:03:51.:03:52.

the material yourself, 11 days before an election?

:03:53.:03:54.

Why would you talk about an ongoing election?

:03:55.:03:57.

Ladies and gentlemen, the next and first female President

:03:58.:04:00.

of the United States, Hillary Clinton.

:04:01.:04:05.

Hillary Clinton, like her opponent, is investing large swathes

:04:06.:04:07.

Last night, with an eye to appealing to the Hispanic

:04:08.:04:13.

community, she shared a stage with Jennifer Lopez in Miami.

:04:14.:04:16.

But there are early indications this new investigation is chipping away

:04:17.:04:18.

at Hillary Clinton's lead in the polls.

:04:19.:04:24.

The Clinton campaign's complaint is that the FBI statement was long

:04:25.:04:27.

And it's opened the doors for Donald Trump to accuse her

:04:28.:04:32.

These are anxious days for Hillary Clinton.

:04:33.:04:39.

Just two days ago, her team believed victory was almost in its grasp.

:04:40.:04:44.

Our North America editor, Jon Sopel, is outside the FBI's

:04:45.:04:51.

Jon, how intense is the pressure on the bureau to explain more about all

:04:52.:05:05.

this? Well, we know that the Justice Department advised against releasing

:05:06.:05:08.

this letter, we have since found out that the FBI had no warrant to look

:05:09.:05:12.

at the complete and look at the e-mails on it. That is under

:05:13.:05:16.

negotiation they should be able to do so. We have learned there may be

:05:17.:05:22.

650,000 e-mails on this computer that have to be examined. So all in

:05:23.:05:28.

all, James comby is under immense pressure, he fiends under

:05:29.:05:31.

investigation he is used to dishing out. The Who, what, when, where why

:05:32.:05:41.

questions and there are suggestions tonight from some democratic

:05:42.:05:44.

Senators he may have acted illegally in revealing this letter.

:05:45.:05:50.

And Jon how much is effect is this having on the campaign? And that of

:05:51.:05:54.

course is the biggest question of them all. Can this intervention

:05:55.:06:00.

alter the trajectory of the race, we have seen that the homes had been

:06:01.:06:03.

tightening for Hillary Clinton. I think that those that love her will

:06:04.:06:07.

stay with her and those that loathe her will vote against her. But in a

:06:08.:06:12.

tight race, it's the people on the margin, the undecided, the people

:06:13.:06:15.

who were maybe going to vote for Hillary Clinton, but who either stay

:06:16.:06:19.

at home now, or they will vote for a third party candidate. Just ask

:06:20.:06:23.

yourself this question, is any of this what Hillary Clinton wanted? Or

:06:24.:06:27.

wanted to be discussing? The answer to that is absolutely no.

:06:28.:06:33.

The Government has revealed more details of how ministers helped

:06:34.:06:36.

persuade the Japanese car maker, Nissan, to build two new models

:06:37.:06:39.

at its plant in Sunderland, securing thousands of jobs.

:06:40.:06:43.

The Business Secretary, Greg Clark, now says he assured the company

:06:44.:06:46.

that the Government hoped to negotiate continued tariff-free

:06:47.:06:48.

access to EU markets for car manufacturers,

:06:49.:06:49.

when Britain leaves the European Union.

:06:50.:06:51.

Here's our political correspondent Alex Forsyth.

:06:52.:07:00.

Nissan's decision to keep making cars in Sunderland

:07:01.:07:02.

It meant thousands of jobs safe and, for some, was a sign of confidence

:07:03.:07:08.

What did the Government promise Nissan to make it stay?

:07:09.:07:15.

Today, the Business Secretary offered some more insight,

:07:16.:07:19.

telling the BBC he'd reassured the car giant the Government

:07:20.:07:22.

would try to avoid tariffs and trade when we leave the EU.

:07:23.:07:31.

What I said is our objective would be to ensure we have continued

:07:32.:07:34.

access to the markets in Europe, and vice versa, without tariffs

:07:35.:07:38.

The Government's denied promising any financial compensation

:07:39.:07:47.

to Nissan, but said today it did commit to training and skills

:07:48.:07:49.

funding for the whole UK car industry, efforts to move small

:07:50.:07:52.

supply chain businesses back to Britain and support

:07:53.:07:54.

All welcome for motor manufacturers - but what about other sectors?

:07:55.:08:05.

What we heard today was the Government making

:08:06.:08:07.

lots of reassuring noises about the automotive

:08:08.:08:09.

sector in particular, both about the trading relationship

:08:10.:08:10.

with Europe and the types of policy the Government will have

:08:11.:08:13.

Of course, that raises the question, what about other sectors?

:08:14.:08:17.

What about pharmaceuticals, what about aerospace?

:08:18.:08:18.

What sort of support will they get and what sort of trading

:08:19.:08:21.

relationship are they likely to see with the European Union in future?

:08:22.:08:24.

Labour says ministers should appear before Parliament

:08:25.:08:25.

The Government said it hopes to get tariff-free arrangements,

:08:26.:08:33.

but has it had that indication from the European Union?

:08:34.:08:36.

Millions of workers want to know where they stand.

:08:37.:08:38.

The welcome uncertainty for Nissan has ended,

:08:39.:08:40.

but what about the rest of the economy?

:08:41.:08:46.

What the Business Secretary has offered today is an insight

:08:47.:08:49.

into Government thinking, a signal that its industrial

:08:50.:08:50.

strategy will support businesses post-Brexit to keep the UK

:08:51.:08:53.

competitive, and that it hopes to achieve tariff=free

:08:54.:08:54.

arrangements with the EU, at least for some industries.

:08:55.:08:57.

What the Government can't answer is how, or exactly

:08:58.:08:59.

Tonight, there are still no decisions and no guarantees.

:09:00.:09:02.

Alex Forsyth, BBC News, Westminster.

:09:03.:09:16.

Meanwhile, the EU and Canada have signed their delayed free trade

:09:17.:09:19.

deal, held up last week because of objections

:09:20.:09:23.

The pact, which has taken seven years to negotiate, will remove

:09:24.:09:27.

99% of tariffs, and generate billions of pounds worth

:09:28.:09:29.

It's also viewed as a possible model for the UK,

:09:30.:09:33.

As the UK prepares to leave, Canada has arrived.

:09:34.:09:48.

Look at the force in the hug, a leader who is embracing the EU.

:09:49.:09:51.

You'd never have thought trade could be so emotional.

:09:52.:09:57.

"Difficult things are difficult, but we made it".

:09:58.:10:07.

So, are there any implications for Brexit?

:10:08.:10:10.

Does this set the standards for a Brexit deal?

:10:11.:10:16.

I don't see any relation between what we are signing today

:10:17.:10:19.

Outside the summit venue today, protesters determined,

:10:20.:10:28.

even at this stage, to stop the EU-Canada agreement.

:10:29.:10:30.

They fear it gives big business too much power - public feeling that

:10:31.:10:33.

And that's despite the fact EU leaders described it as the least

:10:34.:10:47.

controversial imaginable, one that should bring economic

:10:48.:10:52.

growth and jobs to benefit half a billion people.

:10:53.:10:54.

Justin Trudeau certainly seemed pleased.

:10:55.:10:57.

That leadership that we were able to show is not just something that

:10:58.:11:00.

will reassure our own citizens, but should be an example

:11:01.:11:02.

to the world of how we can move forward on trade deals that do

:11:03.:11:06.

But even for the best of friends, this took patience to achieve.

:11:07.:11:14.

That is why it so obviously means so much to them.

:11:15.:11:17.

The biggest takeaway for Brexit from this deal, even

:11:18.:11:19.

with good will on all sides, it took seven years for the EU

:11:20.:11:24.

Damian Grammaticas, BBC News, Brussels.

:11:25.:11:34.

Let's take a look at some of the day's other news now.

:11:35.:11:37.

The Government is considering reforming the way people

:11:38.:11:39.

are assessed for disability benefits, following claims

:11:40.:11:41.

Ministers want to offer more targeted and personalised

:11:42.:11:46.

support, to help get more people back into work.

:11:47.:11:48.

But while the move has been welcomed by campaigners,

:11:49.:11:50.

the Labour Party wants assessments scrapped altogether.

:11:51.:11:55.

An eight-year-old boy has died, after a house in Cheshire.

:11:56.:12:01.

An eight-year-old boy has died, after a house fire in Cheshire.

:12:02.:12:03.

He was rescued from the property in Sandbach early this

:12:04.:12:06.

morning, but he died a few hours later in hospital.

:12:07.:12:08.

A 35-year-old woman, who's thought to be his mother,

:12:09.:12:10.

The supermarket chain Asda has apologised after problems with card

:12:11.:12:16.

payments systems in some of its stores today saw customers

:12:17.:12:18.

having to wait in long queues at checkouts for up to 45 minutes

:12:19.:12:21.

There's been a powerful earthquake in central Italy,

:12:22.:12:27.

the biggest to hit the country for nearly 40 years.

:12:28.:12:30.

Measuring 6.6, it struck close to the region,

:12:31.:12:32.

where nearly 300 people died, in a quake two months ago.

:12:33.:12:34.

This time, though, thousands of people had

:12:35.:12:36.

already left their homes following tremors last week.

:12:37.:12:38.

Our correspondent James Reynolds reports from the town of Norcia,

:12:39.:12:40.

close to the epicentre of the latest quake.

:12:41.:12:50.

At 7:40 this morning, central Italy had its fourth

:12:51.:12:52.

The Church of St Benedict in the nearby town of Norcia

:12:53.:13:07.

In this region, you need to know how to get away quickly.

:13:08.:13:13.

In the hours after this morning's quake, the ground continued to move.

:13:14.:13:17.

There was just an after-shock just now.

:13:18.:13:20.

Some stones from this ancient entranceway fell down.

:13:21.:13:25.

You can see there is still a sense from people here that

:13:26.:13:29.

the earthquakes, the after-shocks, have not yet finished.

:13:30.:13:32.

That this is, at the moment, not a safe place for people to live.

:13:33.:13:39.

You just saw what happened, the after-shock.

:13:40.:13:48.

We're trying to find our things, and then we'll go.

:13:49.:13:51.

For now, a park bench may be the safest place.

:13:52.:13:54.

Since the first quake in August, many have decided to stay outside.

:13:55.:13:57.

Stefano Boldrini and his eight-year-old daughter,

:13:58.:13:58.

I asked if they would remain in Norcia.

:13:59.:14:09.

There is no more school, or church, or police station.

:14:10.:14:12.

Italian officials in Norcia have set up an emergency headquarters.

:14:13.:14:22.

The after-shocks have now become so common that no one

:14:23.:14:24.

Here, the computer equipment shakes, but registration carries on.

:14:25.:14:32.

And this town will help its dazed residents move

:14:33.:14:34.

No-one is sure when the next quake will come.

:14:35.:14:44.

The Home Secretary, Amber Rudd, is expected to make an announcement

:14:45.:14:50.

tomorrow on whether or not to hold an inquiry into police

:14:51.:14:53.

tactics at the so-called "Battle of Orgreave",

:14:54.:14:58.

Our special correspondent, Allan Little, has brought together

:14:59.:15:01.

pickets and a policeman involved in what is still one of Britain's

:15:02.:15:04.

most violent industrial disputes, to reflect on what happened

:15:05.:15:06.

Two former miners return to Orgeave, where these photographs tell

:15:07.:15:21.

the story of the bitterest industrial dispute in living memory.

:15:22.:15:23.

We don't look like we are the aggressors at all in these

:15:24.:15:26.

They were among thousands who gathered here to try to stop

:15:27.:15:32.

lorries entering and leaving the plant, but the police

:15:33.:15:35.

We were walking down the field and we saw all these police

:15:36.:15:39.

We should have turned back then, but we didn't.

:15:40.:15:42.

So it were a little bit scary, an electric atmosphere.

:15:43.:15:44.

Tony Munday was one of thousands brought in from around the country.

:15:45.:15:55.

There was bricks, and there was bottles coming amongst us.

:15:56.:16:00.

So I absolutely felt, quite frankly, pretty terrified.

:16:01.:16:02.

It was almost like we were skittles in a bowling alley.

:16:03.:16:06.

The miners surged towards police lines.

:16:07.:16:08.

The order to send in horses dramatically changed the policing

:16:09.:16:20.

I won't repeat the language, but basically we were all saying

:16:21.:16:28.

to each other, why doesn't somebody do something?

:16:29.:16:30.

And then the mounted officers, followed by the short

:16:31.:16:32.

Certainly, I was one of those who cheered at that point,

:16:33.:16:36.

For more than 30 years, the miners have disputed the claim

:16:37.:16:45.

that violence from them provoked the police.

:16:46.:16:49.

Just can't believe what happened here.

:16:50.:16:52.

Anne Scargill and John Dunn are part of the Orgreave Truth

:16:53.:16:55.

They believe that at Orgreave a new kind of police

:16:56.:16:59.

When did the police become a military force?

:17:00.:17:03.

Where did they actually rehearse for what happened on these fields?

:17:04.:17:05.

Because that wasn't a spontaneous thing.

:17:06.:17:08.

They didn't just happen to have 5000 police waiting here in the broad

:17:09.:17:12.

sunshine in case some miners in T-shirts turned up.

:17:13.:17:16.

It was planned, and we want to know how and when.

:17:17.:17:21.

My generation lost respect for the police during the strike.

:17:22.:17:23.

And it's too late for us to get it back.

:17:24.:17:26.

The policing changed on that day to what I can only describe

:17:27.:17:32.

We need to get it sorted out, find out what happened and make sure

:17:33.:17:37.

More than half with "riot", an offence that then carried

:17:38.:17:45.

The courts found the police evidence unreliable.

:17:46.:17:54.

The South Yorkshire detective stood up and then said,

:17:55.:17:57.

"Right, this is an instruction, not a request.

:17:58.:18:02.

These phrases, these sentences, must go into every statement

:18:03.:18:04.

A number of us, including myself, said, "What's going on here,

:18:05.:18:12.

It came back, this is from the top, and this is how it is.

:18:13.:18:19.

Was there a plan, a strategic intention to convict

:18:20.:18:24.

These remain live and unanswered questions, even now, 32 years on.

:18:25.:18:33.

I've only to look in my village now and look around.

:18:34.:18:36.

Do you know there are two generations in my village who have

:18:37.:18:38.

And some women are having to have two jobs because

:18:39.:18:46.

I mean, they just tried to smash us, which, obviously, it's been

:18:47.:18:50.

With all the sport, here's Katherine Downes

:18:51.:19:08.

Bangladesh are celebrating their first ever

:19:09.:19:15.

Captain Alastair Cook says inexperience led to a complete

:19:16.:19:20.

batting collapse after tea - and Bangladesh won by 108 runs

:19:21.:19:22.

A beauty of sport is its capacity to deliver the unexpected.

:19:23.:19:32.

Bangladesh beating England at cricket?

:19:33.:19:33.

For The Tigers, it's the best in their history.

:19:34.:19:41.

For the tourists, one of their worst.

:19:42.:19:45.

If catches win matches, England can at least pinpoint

:19:46.:19:48.

Four went down in Bangladesh second innings, as a target of 273 was set

:19:49.:19:58.

The reply was led by Alistair Cook and Ben Duckett.

:19:59.:20:03.

A century stand, the perfect start - England's highest successful

:20:04.:20:06.

run chase in Asia, now a realistic prospect.

:20:07.:20:10.

But after tea, the pitch began to turn, and so too the game.

:20:11.:20:15.

The first ball did for Duckett and suddenly Bangladesh

:20:16.:20:19.

The key scalp though was that of Cook.

:20:20.:20:22.

England were being destroyed by a display of spin

:20:23.:20:31.

All 10 wickets falling in a stunning final session

:20:32.:20:39.

that will live long in the memory for both teams.

:20:40.:20:41.

It's obviously good for Bangladesh cricket that they've

:20:42.:20:43.

beaten a major side, beaten England today.

:20:44.:20:47.

For Test cricket to keep growing, we need it played in these

:20:48.:20:50.

conditions, and Bangladesh to keep improving to add to the pool,

:20:51.:20:53.

England must quickly turn their attention

:20:54.:20:56.

Lewis Hamilton has won the Mexican Grand Prix

:20:57.:21:04.

to keep alive his hopes of retaining his Formula

:21:05.:21:06.

Starting from pole, he enjoyed a comfortable victory,

:21:07.:21:10.

with his Mercedes teammate and championship leader

:21:11.:21:12.

The gap between the two is down to 19 points with two races to go.

:21:13.:21:22.

There were two Premier League matches this afternoon.

:21:23.:21:24.

Match of the Day 2 follows this programme on BBC1,

:21:25.:21:26.

so it's time to pop out of the room if you don't want

:21:27.:21:29.

Chelsea climbed up to fourth, after goals from Eden Hazard

:21:30.:21:34.

and Diego Costa gave them a 2-0 win at Southampton.

:21:35.:21:38.

Everton were also 2-0 winners, beating West Ham to stay sixth.

:21:39.:21:42.

Andy Murray's boosted his chances of knocking Novak Djokoivic off

:21:43.:21:45.

the top spot in the tennis world rankings - he won his seventh title

:21:46.:21:48.

of the year, beating Jo Wilfried Tsonga in the final

:21:49.:21:50.

If he wins the next tournament in Paris, and Djokovic fails to make

:21:51.:21:59.

the final there, then Murray will become the new world number one.

:22:00.:22:05.

And Manchester City Women have been presented

:22:06.:22:06.

with the Women's Superleague trophy this afternoon after finishing

:22:07.:22:09.

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