04/07/2017 Outside Source


04/07/2017

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There has been international condemnation to the latest North

:00:13.:00:16.

Korea missile test, Russia and China have said the missile programme must

:00:17.:00:22.

be halted, but they have also demanded that the Americans and

:00:23.:00:26.

South Koreans end their joint military exercises. The migrant

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crisis in Europe as drawn more attention between EU countries,

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Austria is threatening to station soldiers on the border with Italy.

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Jean-Claude Juncker was decidedly unimpressed with the turnout at the

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European Parliament earlier. Only a few members, here, you are

:00:45.:00:50.

ridiculous. We will get into what that was all about in a few minutes.

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We will play a report on Denmark's first female Muslim member of

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Parliament and how she is confronting one man who trolled her

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online. It is not so nice to be called those words. And we will be

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talking about sexual harassment in silicon valley after one prominent

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tech founder resigned, apologised, and said he had been a creep.

:01:16.:01:35.

Migrant crisis, yesterday, if you were watching, we were talking about

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Italy saying it needed more help from other European countries in

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dealing with the thousands arriving, today, Austria has announced it is

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prepared to send its army to its border with Italy to stop migrants

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from coming in. We are told 750 troops are on stand-by. The Italians

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are not impressed, you will not be surprised to hear. The Austrian

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ambassador ambassador in Italy has been summoned. I have been speaking

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with the Europe editor of the BBC World Service about whether they

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summon him or not, what the Italians can actually do about this. They do

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not have leveraged but there is a bit of sabre rattling going on. They

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have moved the soldiers onto stand-by, they have put armoured

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vehicles on stand-by, there is no suggestion yet that they will close

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the border. They have been talking between themselves, the two

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countries, to make sure that people are not getting across illegally.

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You have to remember, there is an election in Austria in October, a

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very sensible man is the governor of South Tyrol, the province of

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northern Italy, he has said, I have heard all this before, they keep on

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saying they are prepared to seal of the border, but just bear in mind,

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there is that election. The noises are coming from people like the

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Foreign Minister, one of the Conservatives, and from the defence

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minister, on the other side, one of the social Democrats, Hans Peter

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Doskozil, and so, there is definitely some jockeying for

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position going on. Yesterday we talked about the difficulties the EU

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is having in finding a common position. The European Commission

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has released a new action plan, promising $92 million to tackle the

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problem, most will go to helping the Libyan Coast Guard stemming the flow

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at source, also talking about another half of it, less than half

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of it, going to the Italians. To help to feed and how is the

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migrants, and process them and putting experts on stand-by to help

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the migrants get relocated if it comes to that. Are these pledges? Is

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it real money? LAUGHTER These are pledges, previous pledges

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have not even been met, so whether they will get new money at this

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stage is highly doubtful. We will see the money tear realises. The

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number of people making the journey to Europe has risen this year and

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many efforts are made to create reasons for people to stay in the

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country where they live. We will look at the example now of Ethiopia,

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the United Nations refugee agency has opened a new project to train

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refugees and stop them from taking the risk of travelling to Libya and

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beyond. We have been there, to find out more.

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Lucky to be alive, walking for two days from Eritrea, they have been

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shot at by government soldiers. Like many from their country, they have

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run away from what they say is forced conscription in the military.

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TRANSLATION: We walk through the bushes, hiding, not to be seen by

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the soldiers. We fled our country because they keep on forcing us to

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join the National Service. We are wanted in our homeland. Recent weeks

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have seen hundreds of religious arrive at refugee camps and

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reception centres like this one in the North, authorities say the

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numbers are overwhelming. These are the latest refugees to cross over

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into Europe, walking under the cover of darkness along a heavily guarded

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and dangerous border. Because of safety concerns for families, they

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do not want their identities revealed. Donors and the United

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Nations refugee agency are trying to persuade refugees to stay here

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rather than journeying to Europe. They believe the solution is

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textiles and wood works to electronics and catering jobs.

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Already the United Kingdom, the European Union and the World Bank

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have given half a billion US dollars for this programme. The big question

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is whether these jobs will be sustainable. Most refugees dream to

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continue onward movement, the reason they want to proceed onward, is that

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they do not see a future here, they do not know what to do. We are not

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sure if... How many years are we going to stay here, we do not have

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job opportunity. So many challenges for them. So, this programme is

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meant to equip them. Will this be enough to stop the movement of

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refugees? I am told much more is needed in it is these countries, by

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a man who twice attempted to move. TRANSLATION: I stayed here to get

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education, get skills, get a job, metalwork, would work it is good.

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Maybe they will change their minds if they are trained. Many refugees

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here are pleased with the prospect of starting a new life in a new

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land, but many more remain unconvinced and are willing to risk

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everything for the chance of a better life in Europe.

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Turning back to the European Union, interesting scene at the European

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Parliament earlier, Jean-Claude Juncker, president of the European

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Commission, turned up for a debate to mark the end of Malta's

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presidency of the EU. Not sure why there had to be a debate about it

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but the debate was organised, and this was the scene that greeted

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Jean-Claude Juncker. Almost empty parliament. One British MEP told the

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BBC that people cannot be bothered to turn up and they already on paid

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leave for the summer. Whether that is entirely accurate or not,

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Jean-Claude Juncker was far from impressed.

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Only a few members here, you are ridiculous...

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I will never again attempt a meeting of this kind.

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The commission is under the control of

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the parliament but the parliament has the respect even the

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and the parliament is not doing that.

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Sharp words from Jean-Claude Juncker. Initially, I thought he was

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picking himself up and saying, how do you not come to hear me speak but

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what he was saying was, you should pay respect to smaller countries. --

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bigging himself up. Malta was meant to be giving a resume of what they

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have achieved during their six months, from that point of view, he

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has a point. The president of the parliament was far from impressed,

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and he said, no, no, he told him to moderate his language, withdraw the

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remark about the parliament being useless and not serious. They got

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into a very multilingual spat, spraying between French, English and

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Italian, quite heated it was. All in the context of who has influence

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over the major issues for the EU, whether it is Brexit, common defence

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policy, the migrant crisis. You heard Jean-Claude Juncker say very

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clearly, it is true, the commission is under the control of the

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parliament. But, does that happen in practice? I am not so sure.

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We will begin with a huge story at the Tour de France in sport, all to

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do with this moment, world champion, Peter Sagan, that is his elbow, look

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at what it is doing to Mark Cavendish, trying to win a sprint

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finish but ends up smashing into the barriers. Peter Sagan has been

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disqualified, all to do with the crash and the allegation that the

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elbow was deliberate, that is what the race officials have found. Let

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me play you a statement from the organiser of the tour, the tour

:09:45.:09:54.

president. Article 12 says, in sprints, we can disqualified a rider

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if we consider that the movement made by Peter Sagan has been very

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severe. And if it cost one or more riders. Mark Cavendish said this: I

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was bleeding a lot, and my shoulder... Something to do with the

:10:18.:10:20.

previous shoulder, that I did in Harrogate. Just sat backwards. I

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don't know if I snapped the ligament or what. I'm not a doctor, I don't

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know what, but from the feeling... I'm not optimistic, anyway. The

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incident itself? What happened? I followed him around... Peter Sagan

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came over... Looks like he can to apologise or explain himself. You

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know, I get on with Peter well... But... If... He came across, that is

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one thing, but the elbow, I am not a fan of him putting his elbow in like

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that. But like I said, I get on with Peter. A crash is a crash. I would

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just like to know about the elbow, really. It is the elbow that has

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done for Peter Sagan, news out of the Tour de France. Tennis, Houdet

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two of Wimbledon, very much drawing to a close, I'm hoping... -- day

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two. Mark Cavendish again, not getting much like here, third time

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lucky, Nick, searching for you all over my screen. I should get you

:11:37.:11:40.

straight up-to-date with trying to find where Bernard Tomic is,

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everyone will be wanting to talk to him after his press conference

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today, a disgrace, and embarrassment, really, as an

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Australian myself, listening to what he had to say, he said he was bored

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after losing three sets to Mischa Zverev, how could you be bored on

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the hallowed turf? Surely every player dreams of growing up and

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playing at Wimbledon?! Sets a really bad example to kids, watch this

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press conference, watch how petulant he looks, swinging around in his

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chair like a kid who has done wrong at school. I was not mentally and

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physically there, with my mental state to perform. I don't know why.

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I felt a little bit bored out there. To be completely honest. I tried, at

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the end, managed to win the set, 6-3, 6-4, but... It was too late.

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INAUDIBLE QUESTION Which...? Which money? If you ask

:12:38.:12:45.

Roger Federer to give back $500 million, would he do that? We all

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work for money. At 34, perhaps I can donate to charity, but if you ask

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Roger Federer if he will do it, I will do it. If these guys donate to

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charity, then I will, no problem. Have you felt like that before in a

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game? Many times in my career, and I am sure that you know it.

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Ridiculous, I told you, you can watch that again and again on the

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website. Big reaction coming here, two-time Wimbledon doubles champion

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Rene Stubbs says, if you are board, you are not physically there, it is

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because you do not train, let's be honest, you are an embarrassment to

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yourself, and two Australian tennis, such a long beautiful history at

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this event and we have players here try so hard, who have half the

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ability of Bernard Tomic, they would give so much to play out there. --

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Rennae Stubbs. Pat Cash, winner of Wimbledon 31 years ago tomorrow,

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brilliant, he said, absolute disgrace, new needs to go and work

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in a factory for a while, he is too rich, too early. That is it from

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sport, I would love to give him more action but this is a hot topic at

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the All-England Club. That is quite something, and you can

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watch the clip again if you have the BBC Sport app. You can share it very

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easily. Coming up: we will run a report on

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what could be a revolution in cancer care, to do with mapping the

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patient's DNA, we will play that in a few minutes. -- winner of

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Wimbledon 30 years ago tomorrow. High Court has rolled that a

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16-year-old boy held in solitary confinement for more than 23 hours

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had his human rights breached. The teenager, who has

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significant mental health problems, was kept in a cell

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at Feltham Young Offenders Institution for four and a half

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months, without access to education. Our Home Affairs Correspondent Danny

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Shaw sent this report VOICEOVER: It holds some of the most

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troubled and dangerous teenage But is Feltham Young

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Offenders Institution looking Last week, an inspection report

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said the centre was not The boy was initially

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detained in his cell for 23 He was allowed out only to shower,

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exercise and make phone calls. And he had no access

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to education for three months. The court ruled keeping the boy

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away from other inmates breached his right to respect

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for a private life. It also said he should have

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had at least 15 hours' Troublesome boys cannot be allowed

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to drift, the court said. There is still the issue about it

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still being possible for prisons We think that's wrong and we think

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that's a child protection issue, Inspectors found that almost a third

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of boys at Feltham spent only two This woman's son had a particularly

:15:58.:16:02.

difficult time there. Solitary confinement

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can't rehabilitate you. All it does, as a child

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as well, it makes you more You don't have access to anything

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that can help you in the future. as declaring that what happened

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to the 16-year-old at the centre of the case

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was inhuman and degrading. That will come as a relief

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to the Ministry of Justice, which has overall responsibility for

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Feltham. The ministry said the safety

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and welfare of young people was its highest priority,

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but it added that proportionate and justified segregation

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was an essential tool to manage offenders who would otherwise

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pose a significant risk Danny Shaw, BBC News,

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at the High Court. STUDIO: The lead story: global

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condemnation of North Korea's latest missile test. China and Russia have

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put out a joint statement demanding North Korea freeze its missile and

:17:20.:17:23.

nuclear problems. In a moment we will talk about gene

:17:24.:17:34.

testing but some breaking news, some new copy, US officials say North

:17:35.:17:40.

Korea and the latest missile test was likely to be a test of an

:17:41.:17:46.

intercontinental ballistic missile, an assessment is ongoing. That is in

:17:47.:17:49.

line with what analysts have already said, it is the first time the

:17:50.:17:52.

Americans have confirmed they believe that this was

:17:53.:17:55.

a test of an intercontinental ballistic missile.

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This talk about gene testing, the Chief Medical Officer in England

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once a revolution in how we go about it, including a national network of

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DNA testing, that in turn could impact on cancer care and the

:18:09.:18:10.

treatment of rare diseases. Inside nearly cell in our body is

:18:11.:18:24.

our genome, errors in the code can trigger cancer or other diseases.

:18:25.:18:32.

Cancer runs in Toby Knight's family, both his parents died from it, and

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he was diagnosed with: cancer four years ago. Now, he is one of 31,000

:18:37.:18:43.

patients who have had their entire genome mapped by the NHS. -- colon

:18:44.:18:47.

cancer. I'm very excited about it, for me, hopefully, you know, if my

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cancer decides to come back it will benefit me, more importantly it will

:18:53.:18:55.

benefit a lot of other people for future generations, for better

:18:56.:19:01.

treatment, for quicker treatment and better diagnoses. Dame Sally Davies

:19:02.:19:05.

says that genome testing is still a cottage industry, she would like DNA

:19:06.:19:09.

analysis to be the norm for cancer patients within five years. Patient

:19:10.:19:16.

will benefit if we can offer them the scan of their genome which will

:19:17.:19:19.

make a difference to treatment. That is clearly all people with rare

:19:20.:19:25.

diseases, of whom there are 3 million or more in this country.

:19:26.:19:28.

Most patients with cancers, quite a lot of infections. It cost ?680 to

:19:29.:19:35.

map a person's entire genetic code, it is getting cheaper every few

:19:36.:19:39.

months. In some cases, DNA mapping can be cheaper than existing tests

:19:40.:19:44.

or avoid the need for invasive biopsies. But what about data

:19:45.:19:49.

confidentiality? The NHS believes it can protect genomic information.

:19:50.:19:56.

Some are concerned about the safeguards. This report is an

:19:57.:20:01.

attempt to do not come -- democratise -- democratise genomics,

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moving it into the mainstream, so that more and more patients can

:20:08.:20:10.

benefit from personalised targeted treatment.

:20:11.:20:12.

Not the first time on outside source, we will talk about the

:20:13.:20:17.

treatment of women in Silicon Valley, they've McClure, silicon

:20:18.:20:20.

valley venture capitalist founded a firm called 500 start-ups and he has

:20:21.:20:27.

resigned after another entrepreneur in the New York Times talk about

:20:28.:20:31.

being sent inappropriate messages by him. -- Dave McClure. His response

:20:32.:20:42.

came in the form of a blog post, title, "I'm a creep - I'm sorry".

:20:43.:20:46.

The most astonishing resignation announcement you have ever seen, he

:20:47.:20:52.

has owned up to a lot of indescribably bad behaviour, the

:20:53.:20:55.

only word for it, as he done it because he was caught out? There was

:20:56.:20:59.

a story that ran in the New York Times, causing this to snowball,

:21:00.:21:03.

causing other women to come forward, he has stood up, held up his hands,

:21:04.:21:08.

I have done this, I need to work out why it has happened, I need to get

:21:09.:21:12.

help. There has been a professional mood in Silicon Valley, quite a few

:21:13.:21:16.

departures from people... Owning up to bad behaviour. Can that

:21:17.:21:21.

confession helped them to save their reputation and move on? Divided

:21:22.:21:25.

opinion on social media today, some people have said it is fantastic

:21:26.:21:29.

he's being honest and is prepared to work on this side of his

:21:30.:21:33.

personality. Others say, he has done something really bad and should be

:21:34.:21:36.

punished, should not be praised for apologising. He has admitted he has

:21:37.:21:41.

behaved in an unacceptable way, but is this a criminal matter or social?

:21:42.:21:46.

As far as we know, no charges pressed, no legal action involved,

:21:47.:21:49.

perhaps that is why he has chosen to confess, to try to stem the tide, we

:21:50.:21:54.

do not know. All that has come forward is a load of claims. You

:21:55.:21:57.

could have denied them, stood up to them, he has held up his hands, it

:21:58.:22:02.

could be a tactic to try to soften the path a little going forward.

:22:03.:22:03.

Thank you very much. I want to talk about one of Denmark's first female

:22:04.:22:13.

Muslim members of Parliament, inevitably she has been on the

:22:14.:22:16.

receiving end of online abuse and the response has been an interesting

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one, as you are about to see. It is not so nice to be called monkey. I'm

:22:24.:22:28.

really not a racist, I am the opposite. You say I should go home,

:22:29.:22:34.

but I am home! Those who are born here, we should care about.

:22:35.:24:40.

I am not sure that we will meet up again. I hope that we can meet each

:24:41.:24:49.

other. You say yes, so I will come again. It will be an interesting

:24:50.:24:54.

discussion to witness, if they do. Thank you very much for joining us,

:24:55.:24:58.

I will be with you on Thursday from Hamburg for the G20.

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We know that we British like to talk about the weather, two types

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