25/02/2016

Download Subtitles

Transcript

:00:09. > :00:11.Hello, I'm Ros Atkins, Midtjylland this is Outside Source.

:00:12. > :00:17.A judge in France has ruled the partial clearance of the Jungle

:00:18. > :00:22.I've a BBC investigation into the thousands of

:00:23. > :00:24.Pakistani Christians fleeing to Thailand,

:00:25. > :00:36.a lot of the women are complaining that their children are ill with

:00:37. > :00:38.vomiting and diarrhoea because of the dirty water.

:00:39. > :00:51.Win he fashioned a shirt made out of a plastic bag.

:00:52. > :00:54.And we'll bring you up to date with all the latest in tonight's

:00:55. > :01:15.More news involving this man, Donald Trump.

:01:16. > :01:20.There's no way the Republican establishment is going to let him

:01:21. > :01:25.get the presidential nomination wihtout a fight.

:01:26. > :01:31.Sure enough, that's what's happening. Mitt Romney has got

:01:32. > :01:32.involved by alleging that perhaps there are some tax issues to look

:01:33. > :01:48.into. Donald Trump has responded. I will tell you more about what

:01:49. > :02:03.Donald Trump has been saying in a moment.

:02:04. > :02:13.Donald Trump doesn't tend to respond to criticism with single tweets.

:02:14. > :02:22.He says that his financial statements are great and then he

:02:23. > :02:28.really digs in. Mitt Romney lost against Barack Obama in the last

:02:29. > :02:37.presidential election. And Mitt Romney has replied.

:02:38. > :02:45.Lex talk to Katty Kay. This is very interesting, and presumably not a

:02:46. > :02:51.residence, on the day of the last TV debate -- let's talk. Not a

:02:52. > :02:55.coincidence, dating back to some extent to the 2012 election when

:02:56. > :02:58.Mitt Romney, who is also a multi billionaire Carl was asked to

:02:59. > :03:05.release his tax return several times and he got into a huff about it. I

:03:06. > :03:10.suspect this is retribution on his part. I don't think this is going to

:03:11. > :03:15.make a huge difference, Donald Trump's supporters love him and

:03:16. > :03:19.whether he is a few million short of what he said, whether he's paid less

:03:20. > 1:15:55taxes than they have done, I don't think it will matter to them very

1:15:56 > 1:15:55much. Donald Trump has made no bones about the fact that he doesn't like

1:15:56 > 1:15:55paying taxes and he employs dozens of lawyers to make sure that he pays

1:15:56 > 1:15:55as few taxes as possible. He would see that as a badge of honour. Mitt

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Romney may be trying, this may be the establishment trying to dent

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Donald Trump but it's an odd way to do it. We hear about the Republican

1:15:56 > 1:15:55establishment but is it as coherent as we think? Are there people

1:15:56 > 1:15:55talking and coordinating to do their best to stop him? There are no smoke

1:15:56 > 1:15:55filled rooms like they're used to be when the establishment of both

1:15:56 > 1:15:55parties literally sat down and decided who was going to be the

1:15:56 > 1:15:55nominee. That doesn't happen. But there are people who have been

1:15:56 > 1:15:55around in the party for a long time and who have influence in election

1:15:56 > 1:15:55processes. There's the Republican National committee, made up of

1:15:56 > 1:15:55establishment Republicans. They are not particularly happy about Donald

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Trump. The question now, what do they do about it and will they have

1:15:56 > 1:15:55to rally around him if he is the nominee? I was going to ask about

1:15:56 > 1:15:55that, I can see that the Republican chairman is saying he does not

1:15:56 > 1:15:55decide the nomination and will support whoever the nominee is. It

1:15:56 > 1:15:55will be tough for these people to swallow if it's Donald Trump. The

1:15:56 > 1:15:55chairman of the RNC has said that for a while and of course that's the

1:15:56 > 1:15:55position of the National committee, to support the people decide is the

1:15:56 > 1:15:55nominee, to put the parties machinery and resources behind them.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55It would be astonishing if he said anything other than he would support

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Donald Trump if he is chosen, that would be going against the will of

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Republican voters. But you are right that they don't love him and many

1:15:56 > 1:15:55so-called established Republicans have been on television saying what

1:15:56 > 1:15:55they think about Donald Trump in unflattering terms and is going to

1:15:56 > 1:15:55be interesting to watch how they respond if Donald Trump becomes the

1:15:56 > 1:15:55nominee. I suspect more of them will have to fall in line and decide this

1:15:56 > 1:15:55is what the party has got, if they want the White House, they have to

1:15:56 > 1:15:55support him. A word about the TV debate. Looking at it from afar, I

1:15:56 > 1:15:55imagine that this is one that Donald Trump has to get through, but for

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz, they need to learn some punches. Can you

1:15:56 > 1:15:55believe this is the 10th time. I can believe it, we have talked about

1:15:56 > 1:15:55them! Unbelievable, you would think that the audience knows what they

1:15:56 > 1:15:55are after. We are looking not so much at Donald Trump, it is Marco

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Rubio and Ted Cruz. You would think they would turn against the front

1:15:56 > 1:15:55runner, I don't think we'll see that. They will be attacking each

1:15:56 > 1:15:55other to be the last person standing when this becomes a two person race.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Thank you for joining us. I would have thought they would be going at

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Donald Trump but no, this is sorting out who is going to be the

1:15:56 > 1:15:55establishment candidate to take on Donald Trump. This is the 10th TV

1:15:56 > 1:15:55debate but it's a gripping campaign. There is a devoted US politics page

1:15:56 > 1:15:55on the BBC News website and app. All this week we've been taking

1:15:56 > 1:15:55you on a tour through the southern Looking at the different political

1:15:56 > 1:15:55divides across that part of the country.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Next stop is Arkansas, Rajini Vaidyanathan been talking

1:15:56 > 1:15:55They don't care about Caitlin Jenner, they care about their

1:15:56 > 1:15:55interpretation of the Bible and often it justifies taking their

1:15:56 > 1:15:55child out of the home. I've been pushed, I've been hit, I've had

1:15:56 > 1:15:55things thrown at me. Arkansas is the heart of America's Bible Belt, where

1:15:56 > 1:15:55face comes first. For many here, sexuality is incompatible with their

1:15:56 > 1:15:55religious beliefs and those feelings are deep-rooted, meaning the change

1:15:56 > 1:15:55that has been seen and felt in other parts of America hasn't quite

1:15:56 > 1:15:55reached yet -- homosexuality. 21-year-old Morris dreams of

1:15:56 > 1:15:55becoming a chef. He was a teenager when he came out to his mother who

1:15:56 > 1:15:55did not accept his sexuality. He ran away several times before getting

1:15:56 > 1:15:55his place in low income housing. My mum, I felt she did not agree

1:15:56 > 1:15:55because of religion. She even mentioned the Bible, being gay is a

1:15:56 > 1:15:55sin. How do you feel when you go to church, given that is the place that

1:15:56 > 1:15:55shaped your mother 's beliefs towards your sexuality? I go to hear

1:15:56 > 1:15:55the word from the Lord at church. I pray before and after and I

1:15:56 > 1:15:55personally worry about what people are saying. People used to say that

1:15:56 > 1:15:55it is the demon and I am like no, because I personally know that isn't

1:15:56 > 1:15:55true. Nobody runs Lucy 's place which

1:15:56 > 1:15:55found Kaelon a place to live. It is the only centre of its kind in

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Arkansas. Another paces that many centres run by the church turn away

1:15:56 > 1:15:55LGBT people. We have gay marriage now and transgender people can serve

1:15:56 > 1:15:55in the military. We have made these strides. People are feeling more

1:15:56 > 1:15:55empowered to come out as who they actually are. But their parents in

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Little Rock Arkansas, small towns, they haven't changed, they are the

1:15:56 > 1:15:55same and they still believe that LGBT people don't deserve to exist.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55There has been a generational shift in attitudes towards LGBT rights but

1:15:56 > 1:15:55in some parts of America, opinions are deeply entrenched.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55The reports are online if you wish to see them again, or share them.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Time for the sport, more European football. A couple of great evenings

1:15:56 > 1:15:55of Champions League action. Tonight it is the Europa League. I know

1:15:56 > 1:15:55we've already had some results, so let's look at those first.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Had been concerns that there would be some tension

1:15:56 > 1:15:55between Locomotiv Moscow fans and Fenerbache fans

1:15:56 > 1:15:55as there are diplomatic tensions between Russia and Turkey.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55But the match passed without any trouble.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55It ended 1-1, which means Fenerbache go through 3-1 on aggregate.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Liverpool will also be in tomorrow's draw for the last 16,

1:15:56 > 1:15:55only a James Milner penalty was the difference between them

1:15:56 > 1:15:55And Valencia against Rapid Vienna finished 10-0 on aggregate.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Gary Neville seems to have turned around Valencia's fortunes.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55There had been calls for him to resign as manager.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55I think that the fans might have changed their mind after that

1:15:56 > 1:15:55result. Those tricky games early on. And a

1:15:56 > 1:15:55word about those games going on at the moment.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55A big one at Old Trafford. Manchester United looked for some

1:15:56 > 1:15:55time like they were at risk of being knocked out of Europe. They were 2-1

1:15:56 > 1:15:55down after the first leg against the Danish champions Midtjylland.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Midtjylland scored first, so a lot of tension but United have taken the

1:15:56 > 1:15:55lead. Marcus Rashford is on his debut and what a debut, two goals

1:15:56 > 1:15:55for him and it is for -3, United, so perhaps tension is easing on Louis

1:15:56 > 1:15:55van Gaal. Totten on winning 2-1 against Fiorentina. Ryan Mason and

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Erik Lamela scoring the goals. -- Tottenham are winning. Sevilla are

1:15:56 > 1:15:55on course to win their third consecutive Europa League title,

1:15:56 > 1:15:55which no other team have done. They are only in the competition because

1:15:56 > 1:15:55they dropped out of the Champions League. They are 3-1 up one

1:15:56 > 1:15:55aggregate. -- on aggregate. I will be back with more through the

1:15:56 > 1:15:55evening. Looks like a great game at Old

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Trafford. The Fifa presidential election takes place on Friday. This

1:15:56 > 1:15:55shows you how everyone is following it, Nigeria News carrying it, Jerome

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Champagne, one of the candidates, trying to postpone the vote because

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Fifa wasn't using transparent voting booths. People have been calling for

1:15:56 > 1:15:55it but it has been rejected and it will go ahead as planned. If you

1:15:56 > 1:15:55want a guide, we have a piece on the BBC Sport website. He says it will

1:15:56 > 1:15:55take more than one election to repair the damage. And we will take

1:15:56 > 1:15:55you through the five men who might replace Sepp Blatter.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Now, you might remember this story from earlier this year.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55This is about an Afghan boy who's a fan of Lionel Messi.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55This picture went around the Internet very heavily.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55A plastic bag with Messi's number 10 written on the back.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55He lives in a rural town in Ghazni province in Afghanistan.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55They got in touch with Lionel Messi. Now he has got the real thing. He

1:15:56 > 1:15:55has a shirt from Lionel Messi, signed. Here he is looking

1:15:56 > 1:15:55understandably very pleased with his new present. You can see the

1:15:56 > 1:15:55signature by the number ten. Looks like he's left footed as well, so he

1:15:56 > 1:15:55may have a similar future. He told the BBC he is very happy

1:15:56 > 1:15:55and he will keep the jersey It made its first journey after

1:15:56 > 1:15:55a multi-million pound restoration. The pictures are spectacular. Here

1:15:56 > 1:15:55it is, speeding from London to York. We'll give you details of the

1:15:56 > 1:15:55journey. Here in the UK, BT's competitors say

1:15:56 > 1:15:55broadband problems with cable infrastructure won't be solved

1:15:56 > 1:15:55by a decision to force BT Openreach to open up its networks

1:15:56 > 1:15:55to rival firms. The rivals say the telecom regulator

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Ofcom has done a good job of identifying problems,

1:15:56 > 1:15:55but hasn't come up with solutions. The watchdog wants Openreach

1:15:56 > 1:15:55to behave more like an independent Our technology correspondent

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Rory Cellan-Jones reports. Along the streets of York,

1:15:56 > 1:15:55a new ultra fast broadband network It's not BT which is laying

1:15:56 > 1:15:55the fibreoptic cable but rival firms unhappy with the service it offers

1:15:56 > 1:15:55them and their customers. They're convinced people

1:15:56 > 1:15:55like Jessica North and her young My husband goes

1:15:56 > 1:15:55on his computer games. With the technology going up now,

1:15:56 > 1:15:55the speed needs to get You think you're

1:15:56 > 1:15:55future-proofed now? There's a big debate about how far

1:15:56 > 1:15:55you need to take fibreoptic cable. BT takes it to a street side

1:15:56 > 1:15:55cabinet and delivers it

1:15:56 > 1:15:55with an old fashioned copper wire. Its rivals say that's no good,

1:15:56 > 1:15:55you have to take fibre right It's BT's Openreach division

1:15:56 > 1:15:55which is behind most of Britain's Today, Ofcom said it must

1:15:56 > 1:15:55open up its network to rivals if the UK is to perform

1:15:56 > 1:15:55better in fibre broadband. BT says we are performing well

1:15:56 > 1:15:55compared to our neighbours. We have the highest take-up

1:15:56 > 1:15:55of super fast broadband, the lowest prices

1:15:56 > 1:15:55and highest coverage. For me, we need to build on that

1:15:56 > 1:15:55rather than criticise it. Three years ago, a Lancashire

1:15:56 > 1:15:55community group gave up on waiting for BT to offer fast broadband

1:15:56 > 1:15:55and laid their own fibre cables That's how Christine gets a fast

1:15:56 > 1:15:55enough connection to make If BT do not get their act together

1:15:56 > 1:15:55soon and stop pratting about with the copper, we'll end up

1:15:56 > 1:15:55as a Third World digital nation. BT is promising to invest in fibre

1:15:56 > 1:15:55but Ofcom could order the break-up of the company if it

1:15:56 > 1:15:55doesn't see progress. This is Outside Source live

1:15:56 > 1:15:55from the BBC newsroom. Our lead story is that a French

1:15:56 > 1:15:55judge has ruled that a partial clearance of the migrant camp

1:15:56 > 1:15:55in Calais in northern France If you're outside the UK you'll

1:15:56 > 1:15:55get World News America. Katty will be showing you a report

1:15:56 > 1:15:55from our North American editor Jon Sopel on that ongoing battle

1:15:56 > 1:15:55between Apple and the FBI. And if you're watching here,

1:15:56 > 1:15:55the News at Ten has an interview He's been talking to

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Lucy Manning about that report A BBC investigation

1:15:56 > 1:15:55into the growing number An increase in Islamist violence

1:15:56 > 1:15:55and attacks on Christians has led to thousands travelling to Thailand,

1:15:56 > 1:15:55despite the fact it is a lengthy journey, and Thailand

1:15:56 > 1:15:55doesn't offer asylum. This means many end up staying

1:15:56 > 1:15:55in detention facilities Chris Rogers' report

1:15:56 > 1:15:55starts in Bangkok. If this Christian service were

1:15:56 > 1:15:55taking place in certain parts of their homeland, this pastor and his

1:15:56 > 1:15:55congregation could be risking their lives. Many families have fled

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Pakistan, arriving in Thailand, each with their own stories of

1:15:56 > 1:15:55persecution and of those who didn't make it. TRANSLATION: My sister was

1:15:56 > 1:15:55burnt alive only because she said the word "god". She was burned for

1:15:56 > 1:15:55this reason alone. She said the word God. Their trauma is far from over.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55In Bangkok, Pakistani families rely on charity hand-outs for food.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Thailand has signed up to a UN international agreement to take in

1:15:56 > 1:15:55asylum seekers. Authority agencies classify anyone without a Visa as a

1:15:56 > 1:15:55criminal. The UNHCR has stepped in and investigates asylum claims and

1:15:56 > 1:15:55eventually relocate them to another country but the process is taking

1:15:56 > 1:15:55years and the Thai immigration police are growing impatient. This

1:15:56 > 1:15:55woman's husband has been taken away? Yes, taken away. I've just come to

1:15:56 > 1:15:55this apartment block and found dozens of women sobbing. It became

1:15:56 > 1:15:55clear why. They've taken their husbands. In a series of raids,

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Pakistani women and children are also rounded up, charged with

1:15:56 > 1:15:55illegal immigration, they find and imprisoned. -- fined. They are taken

1:15:56 > 1:15:55to Bangkok's main detention centre for illegal immigrants. Journalists

1:15:56 > 1:15:55are not welcome and we had to pose as charity volunteers. Of 200

1:15:56 > 1:15:55healthier, they are mainly Pakistani Christians, including children --

1:15:56 > 1:15:55here. The noise is there freedom to beef -- desire for freedom. A long

1:15:56 > 1:15:55have you been here? Three months? All the charity can offer them is

1:15:56 > 1:15:55food and water. Many are complaining that children are ill with vomiting

1:15:56 > 1:15:55and diarrhoea because of the dirty water. Imprisoning a child with

1:15:56 > 1:15:55adults, even with their parents, is a breach of UN international law, a

1:15:56 > 1:15:55law that Thailand has signed up to. They are taken back to these hot,

1:15:56 > 1:15:55overcrowded cells, with women and children separated from the men. The

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Thai government says it is trying to provide the best possible care.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Those who can't pay their fines for illegal immigration are sent to a

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Thai jail. Some of them are freed after charities pay for their

1:15:56 > 1:15:55release. Preservation Mac they put us in shackles. We used to have

1:15:56 > 1:15:55injuries on our ankles, we were in a lot of pain -- TRANSLATION: They put

1:15:56 > 1:15:55us in shackles. There are an estimated 11,500 asylum requests and

1:15:56 > 1:15:55the UNHCR admits that limited resources has led to long delays and

1:15:56 > 1:15:55the Thai government says that they then have no choice but to arrest

1:15:56 > 1:15:55illegal immigrant is. -- immigrants. This has generated a lot of

1:15:56 > 1:15:55interest, the Flying Scotsman, thousands of it turned -- thousands

1:15:56 > 1:15:55of people turning out to see it because it has been furthest and has

1:15:56 > 1:15:55returned. It's not a locomotive,

1:15:56 > 1:15:55it's a celebrity. Flying Scotsman, back centre-stage

1:15:56 > 1:15:55on its old stomping ground, For the crew, it's a tough,

1:15:56 > 1:15:55filthy, rewarding job. This very cramped passage is just

1:15:56 > 1:15:55one of the things that makes It meant that drivers could change

1:15:56 > 1:15:55over whilst the train That made this the first service

1:15:56 > 1:15:55that went from London This engine has had all the ups

1:15:56 > 1:15:55and downs of a celebrity's life. Then shipped off to

1:15:56 > 1:15:55the United States, shipped It's caused heartache, heartbreaks,

1:15:56 > 1:15:55heart attacks and bankruptcies. I think many people believed

1:15:56 > 1:15:55it would never again, NEWSREEL: The beautiful engine

1:15:56 > 1:15:55eased out of platform 10. Flying Scotsman's

1:15:56 > 1:15:55always made headlines. It was the first train

1:15:56 > 1:15:55officially clocked at 100 mph. Today, the only delays were down

1:15:56 > 1:15:55to train-spotters on the line. At its birthplace in Doncaster,

1:15:56 > 1:15:55they can still pull the crowds. Journey's end in York and the crew

1:15:56 > 1:15:55are stars for the day. The enthusiasm, people coming out

1:15:56 > 1:15:55on to the tracks to see It's brilliant to see

1:15:56 > 1:15:55everyone lineside. Great to see everyone's

1:15:56 > 1:15:55supporting the engine. After a decade out of the limelight,

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Flying Scotsman's going So thousands more can

1:15:56 > 1:15:55revel in this sight. Thousands of people turned out.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55Didn't go to plan to everyone, though.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55This was sent to the BBC by Ryan Allen.

1:15:56 > 1:15:55He had been waiting for a while for the train to pass

1:15:56 > 1:15:55but when it did, his view was ruined by this Virgin train passing

1:15:56 > 1:15:55He saw a bit of it going over the horizon. Perhaps not what he had in

1:15:56 > 1:15:55mind! At least he had the sense of humour to send it to us. Thanks for

1:15:56 > 1:15:55the video. And I want to show you this before

1:15:56 > 1:15:55we go, President Obama hosted a concert at the White

1:15:56 > 1:15:55House on Wednesday. The event paid tribute

1:15:56 > 1:15:55to the late Ray Charles, and Mr Obama even joined

1:15:56 > 1:15:55in with a bit of singing himself. Very good, you can see the full

1:15:56 > 1:15:55video on the BBC website. Thanks for watching. We will be in South Africa

1:15:56 > 1:15:55on Tuesday next week. Whilst the two you from Johannesburg. -- I'll speak

1:15:56 > 1:15:55to you. Time to bring you up-to-date with

1:15:56 > 1:15:55what we think is going to happen through next week. If you were

1:15:56 > 1:15:55watching yesterday evening, little has changed, but let's put some more

1:15:56 > 1:15:56detail on it. This