02/02/2016 Outside Source


02/02/2016

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Hello, I'm Ros Atkins, this is Outside Source.

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David Cameron says a referendum on EU membership could be held

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Earlier on Tuesday, the EU unveiled draft reforms designed to persuade

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Ted Cruz beat Donald Trump into second place in

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On the Democratic side - Hillary Clinton won

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In Outside Source sport we'll take a look at this -

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I guess it wasn't long before drone racing became a thing.

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It's being watched by millions online.

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We'll hear from the man in charge of it.

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If you do have questions on the Iowa results and the race for the White

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House, get them to others. -- us. We have a draft of what a reformed

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relationship between the UK and the European Union

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would look like. Now it must be approved

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by all the member countries. Remember David Cameron has already

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promised a referendum on whether the UK stays

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in the EU or not - his hope is that the deal he gets

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will mean he can campaign Here's the latest report

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from our europe editor Katya Adler. Nope, no, no. Britain's relationship

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with the EU has been turbulent from the start. This uniting of friendly

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states... Never a marriage of conviction, more assumed

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convenience. Sometimes fruitful, often fraught. As of today, EU

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relations will be fundamentally changed. This is the first time in

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EU history that one country stood up in front of the rest, threatened to

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leave if the EU didn't dance to its reformist tune, then got what it

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asked for... Of sorts. The problem with the UK's new EU deal is the

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stage is set but the piece of music isn't finished. To complicate things

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further, with the 28 piece orchestra of the European Union, every

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musician is allowed to have their say. The danger is you have a

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discordant cacophony rather than a harmonious composition that will

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stand test of time. That is what David Cameron needs, credibly

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compose, watertight deal for his audience at home. But all his EU

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partners will agree to. Already today, as expect it, there were

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rumbles of dissent from Central and Eastern Europe with the plan to cut

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migrant benefits. According to all statistics, the Polish are very

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successful in rates Britain. I do not see why they should not be paid

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the same benefits as British workers. And the French? They are

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wrinkling their nose at the idea that the UK and other non-Eurozone

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nations can stall eurozone decisions. The current stage of the

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Eurozone is not sustainable. So it needs to be fixed. You cannot allow

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someone that is outside the family to forbid you from making it work

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better. All important Germany, meanwhile, is soothing ruffled

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feathers around the EU, determined everything must be done to keep the

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UK in. In general, I would say we are on the right way. We want the

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United Kingdom to remain an active and strong partner in an active and

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strong European Union. David Cameron, is banking on a grand

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finale at the EU leaders' summit in a couple of weeks, where his reform

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deal is applauded by his peers in Europe and presented to the British

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people. But the players on the stage and am predict a lot. The Prime

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Minister should be prepared to improvise.

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If you want lots of background information on this proposed deal,

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longer term background and how it got this point, go to the BBC News

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website. You will easily it. There are eight English Premier

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League games on. All of the main title contenders. It seems strange

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to be putting Leicester in the group. Runners through The Games

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please, Ore. Not often you see Leicester City and Manchester City

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in the same bracket as contenders. The question was, could Leicester

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continued their march to this unlikely Premier League title. On

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the evidence tonight, absolutely. If we go and have a look at the

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full-time result just now from the King Power Stadium, Leicester have

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beaten Liverpool 20-macro. Both goals scored by Jamie Vardy. He is

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looking to put himself on the plane to Paris and England's Euro 2016

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campaign. Final whistle is going all over the country just now.

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Tottenham, look like they will win against Norwich. Sergio Aguero goal,

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looks like they could leapfrog Arsenal. Terrible match at Upton

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Park for Aston Villa, the bottom club, going down 2-0 against West

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Ham. It looks like an unlikely task for them. Leicester with the 2-0

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result at the King Power Stadium. They lead the Premier League by

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three points. Just 14 games to go. You have got to take them seriously

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now. What a result. Full coverage of

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those games through the BBC Sport app as well. Just spotted this from

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an BBC Sport. Amir Khan will be fighting the Mexican Alvarez for the

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WBC world middleweight title in March. Amir Khan will be delighted

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with that match, but it will be tough. Watching on with interest

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will be Floyd Mayweather. Someone Amir Khan wanted to fight.

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In theory he's retired, but still when he talks,

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He was by far the best pound for pound boxer in the world

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I still think he would win any fight he got into.

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It has been crazy, the number thrown at me, nine figures. I have had

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money thrown at me from so many different countries. As of right

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now, I am loyal to the MGM Grand. They have treated me very well and I

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am blessed to be in this position. If I get the itch to come back, it

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won't be for the money, but I had to get paid. That's why they nicknamed

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me, Floyd money Mayweather. You are not ruling it out completely? I am

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out completely at the moment. People watching this will be asking,

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Michael Collins, his business manager said they have made some

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contact with the promotions, two may be facing you again if you come out

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of retirement. Clarify what the situation is? Everything you guys

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are hearing, Michael Collins had said, is totally false. I haven't

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spoken to Michael Collins or anyone else. The promotions, I dictate and

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control what goes on with Mayweather emotions. -- promotions. Everything

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has to go through me. You are on this victory tour, for people to

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come to see you, it is an opportunity to see one of the best

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fighters in the world. What do you want to get out of experience? I am

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no longer active, I like saying the best ever. It is not being arrogant,

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but the proof is in the pudding. I have earned the right. I have lived

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up to the name. I went out there day in, day out when I was active and I

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was winning. Everyone that was put in front of me. As I ever taken a

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loss in life? Yes, when you lose a loved one, that is a loss. When your

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children hurt, that is a loss. When you are sick, that is a loss. But I

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got to where I am from a lot of hard work, and very, very strong team, a

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very smart team. They stood behind me. Floyd Mayweather, 49 and zero in

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marked marked

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was getting millions of views online.

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It was drone racing - looks like a computer game,

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Drones are operated by drivers, who wear special goggles.

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We got Nicholas Horbaczewski, founder of the Drone Racing League,

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it is definitely real. It is all real. How do you set it up, the

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video I watched was set up in a stadium and it must have taken a

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long time to get together? We have been working on this for a long time

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and our goal is to bring this exciting new sport to the public. It

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is a challenge to put on these razors, it takes a lot of

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innovation, training and practice. I didn't see too many crashes in a

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video, but to get those drones to go through those gates must be hard?

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There is crashing, it is very exciting and if they crash, it means

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the pilots are pushing the boundaries. If I was a racer, where

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would I be when the race is taking place? In this case, they were

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sitting in the seeds of the stadium. The key is, the drones have a camera

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that broadcast a video signal back to the pilots. They are wearing

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video goggles to display the video feed. They will be seen what the

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drones is, like sitting in the cockpit of the drone. Will we be

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able to see what they see, how will the coverage work? We will have the

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coverage from the point of view, so you can see what the pilots see as

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well as third person coverage. See can see them pass each other and go

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through the gates and do incredible turns. The big Chris was present in

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the US was drones, but this looks like an expensive and an difficult

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spot to put on? This is elite, drone racing is a hobby that has a global

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following. People from all over the world get-together with their

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friends and do some drone racing. This is the Formula 1 version of

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drones. The most elite form of it you can imagine. When the league

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kicks off, we might report back. We have been talking about the Zika

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virus story and this one is coming from Texas. It has reported the

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first case of the Zika virus reported in Texas. This is a Dallas

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County resident who had sexual contact with someone who had been

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flexion whilst travelling abroad. Some scientists have suggested the

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Zika virus can be transmitted sexually. Previously it is thought

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it could only be transmitted by one type of mosquito. It adds to the

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discussion how you stop the virus if there are two ways it can be passed

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from one person to another. We will keep abreast of that.

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In a little while we have a report from Alistair elite head. He has

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been to Nairobi and the biggest refugee camp. It is 25 years since

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it was set up and Alistair will show us life there.

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Britain's second biggest supermarket, Sainsbury's has agreed

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It says the ?1.3 billion deal will create the biggest

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Sainsbury's has been trialling these concessions.

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Now it's on the verge of buying the whole business.

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If you think about it, the smartphone is only eight years

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old, and yet it's had a profound impact on our lives in the way

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We need to future-proof our business not just over the next three to five

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years, but over the next five to ten years.

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The deal would create a formidable force in retail.

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It has non-food sales of just under ?4 billion.

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John Lewis does more business at ?4.4 billion.

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But, in one fell swoop, this new combined group will have

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general merchandise sales of ?6 billion, rivalling

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Sainsbury's wants to tap into Argos' delivery expertise.

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These days, it can get products to customers within four hours.

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Argos has 840 stores and many are close to a Sainsbury's.

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This business is grappling with too much space it no longer needs.

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So it's likely several hundred Argos stores will close to be relocated

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For Sainsbury's, it solves a problem and saves a lot of money.

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Some job losses are likely, although Sainsbury's says it hopes

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to eventually create more positions in stores,

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I think of this deal as a bit like a temporary sticking plaster

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because it gives Sainsbury's an opportunity to radically cut

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costs at Argos, and that will boost their profits

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But it doesn't fundamentally address the problem of Sainsbury's that it's

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got just too many supermarkets and hypermarkets.

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For more than 100 years, Sainsbury's has been synonymous

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with selling us food, but now, under fierce competition,

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it wants to reshape its business to meet the demands of modern day

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This is Outside Source live from the BBC newsroom.

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Earlier on Tuesday, the EU unveiled draft reforms designed to persuade

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Lyse Doucet has been speaking to the King of Jordan.

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He says his country has reached saturation point in its ability

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On the News at Ten in the UK, Will Gompertz speaks to the artist

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Brian Donnelly, better known as Kaws.

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He's got his first major show in the UK.

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Let's get more on the Iowa caucus results.

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Ted Cruz won for the Republicans, and Hillary Clinton

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What did you make of that? What a night. A lot of things we didn't

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think were going to happen actually happened. Marco Rubio, who we had

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not talked very much about ended at ain't the winner, even though he

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came in third, such as the nature of American politics. Donald Trump

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didn't turn those huge rallies into people who would go and stand in

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line and caucus to him. That was interesting because it says

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something about the nature of his campaign going forward. My take on

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the Democratic side is it is a bad night for Hillary Clinton. Bernie

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Sanders came second but only by a razor-thin margin, much too close

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for the Clinton campaign. And Marco Rubio, if he emerges as the

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candidate, he is a formidable candidate. Before we get into

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further questions about the campaign, one viewer asks, would you

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give this coverage to the UK election? I would say we wouldn't,

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because the US election is pretty much separate from every other

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election in the world? Yes, what happens at the White House matters

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to almost all of you is right around the world. I cannot think of a

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country in the world that isn't affected by policy decisions that

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are made in the United States. It will is a world superpower and

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whoever is the commander-in-chief of the biggest military in the world,

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and the president of the biggest economy in the world, means an awful

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lot. It has a lot of impact. It is why we give this election such a lot

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of coverage. A few people in Kenya stay up late to watch us, and they

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are asking who is Ted Cruz? We haven't spoken about him much, he is

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a conservative senator from Texas. He is probably the least liked

:19:58.:20:02.

person in Washington, DC, and that is saying something. I cannot even

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find any of his Republican colleagues who like the man. He did

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very well in Iowa, it is a state where he spent a lot of money and a

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lot of time, virtually going to live there for the last year. It doesn't

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mean he will I think, do very well in The States to follow. One tweet

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is from Donald Trump who has highlighted the fact he was part of

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one of the biggest vote totals in Iowa history, since these primaries

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have been going on. Is this evidence the electorate is engaging more than

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it did do than with Barack Obama and Romney? Donald Trump is

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larger-than-life and seems to have taken his defeat in Iowa hard. He is

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trying to spin us, saying I came in second, got this huge turnout, why

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is everyone in the press saying it is a bad night for me. He has been

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saying I am a winner and don't take losing well, and effectively he

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didn't win last night. There was a big turnout in Iowa last night and

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that does suggest a level of engagement. I was special and the

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Iowa people take the politics special and the Sony was some

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engagement here last night. Thank you very much. World News America

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coming up after Outside Source. We quite rightly spend

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a lot of time talking We're going to look at another mass

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movement of people now. It started 25 years ago

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with the civil war in Somalia, thousands came across

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the border into Kenya. And many of them and their

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children are still there, living in the world's

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largest refugee camp. It's at a place called Dadaab

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in the north east of Kenya. For some, it's been home

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for all of their lives. In a baking scrubland of windblown

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desert, 350,000 people live in limbo, in a temporary camp that has

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been here 25 years. Those who live in Dadaab survive on aid, are not

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allowed to work or leave the camp, unless it is to go back home. This

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woman was 14 when she arrived in 1992, soon after it opened. Today

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she is leaving with her seven children, all of whom have been

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here, but never left. TRANSLATION: When I arrived here,

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life was good. But now the living conditions have deteriorated. That

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is why I am going back. She fled a civil war which drove thousands from

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their homes. Then foreign troops fought Al-Shabab. They are still a

:22:58.:23:03.

threat using suicide bumps and terror attacks. Most people think it

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is too dangerous to go home, and so remain trapped here, behind the

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thorns. This man is 19. -- woman. She was born here and never left

:23:18.:23:22.

this camp. The difference between the camp and

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Somalia, she said, is you get education here. But after school,

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there are no jobs. It is not save, you can easily be killed in these

:23:32.:23:36.

camps, she said. She is hoping to get a scholarship to study in

:23:37.:23:37.

Canada. This is one answer to thousands of

:23:38.:23:44.

migrants and refugees arriving in your country. But our camps, who had

:23:45.:23:49.

been here a quarter of a century and the size of small cities, a solution

:23:50.:23:54.

of how not to deal with mass migration? Fingerprinting is use to

:23:55.:24:00.

monitor food rationing. But they are being reduced as International

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funding is going elsewhere. Stopping the migrant crisis means tackling

:24:05.:24:09.

why people left. This is why it is very important, from the first stage

:24:10.:24:19.

to deal with costs. Other ways, it is inevitable to see this phenomena,

:24:20.:24:25.

not only here, but in Northern Africa, Turkey and Lebanon. Some

:24:26.:24:30.

people are heading back to a very different Somalia, but leaving can

:24:31.:24:33.

be even harder than remaining refugee.

:24:34.:24:40.

Just like all of the longer reports we play you from our correspondence

:24:41.:24:46.

on Outside Source, you can get them online right now. Either download

:24:47.:24:52.

the BBC News app to your phone or go to the first page of the BBC News

:24:53.:24:57.

website and go from there. That is all from us tonight, goodbye.

:24:58.:25:10.

February started on a stormy note. Henrik, the eighth named storm of

:25:11.:25:17.

the winter season has come and gone, but

:25:18.:25:18.

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