:00:00. > :00:00.the 32 man squad for the upcoming friendly with Denmark. It includes a
:00:00. > :00:00.first international call-up for 18-year-old Southampton defender
:00:00. > :00:18.Luke Shaw. That is in 15 minutes, after the papers.
:00:19. > :00:25.It's good to be back. Am I saying that too soon? We will find out in a
:00:26. > :00:30.moment. Welcome to our look ahead at what the papers are bringing us
:00:31. > :00:34.tomorrow. Withers are James Lyons from The Mirror and Eleanor Mills
:00:35. > :00:39.from the Sunday Times. We will begin with the Express. We can show it to
:00:40. > :00:50.you this time! We are a step closer to an anti-ageing drug. The Mirror
:00:51. > :00:55.leads on claims that GCHQ snooped on webcam chats. The Daily Telegraph
:00:56. > :00:58.says that the UK will be a leader in dementia treatment. Yahoo have
:00:59. > :01:02.condemned what they call a completely unacceptable violation of
:01:03. > :01:09.privacy, says the Guardian. The Daily Mail focuses on migration to
:01:10. > :01:13.Britain and split in Cabinet. The Mirror says that dozens of children
:01:14. > :01:16.have been taken into care for being obese. The Times says that dangerous
:01:17. > :01:19.legal highs could be sold on the High Street under plans considered
:01:20. > :01:24.by ministers. Let's start with the Daily Mail, a couple of stories.
:01:25. > :01:30.Migration soars, good says Vince Cable. He mocks the PM's failure to
:01:31. > :01:34.control that EU influx. Another division in the Cabinet? The This
:01:35. > :01:43.could be quite serious. There has been a rocket from up to 212,000, up
:01:44. > :01:47.to 60,000 of the people coming to live and work in the UK. The
:01:48. > :01:52.majority is from the EU. It's interesting, in the light of Angela
:01:53. > :01:58.Merkel coming here today, he said very firmly there was going to be no
:01:59. > :02:01.change on freedom of movement in the UK. It is bad for Cameron because
:02:02. > :02:05.one of his key election pledges was that he was going to get net
:02:06. > :02:09.migration down. And this is really not happening at all. This is pretty
:02:10. > :02:13.bad news in the coalition. Of course, he has Vince Cable, very
:02:14. > :02:18.pro-immigration, hence it's a signee economy is doing really well,
:02:19. > :02:21.crowing about it. So, this is pensions, one might say. And a sign
:02:22. > :02:26.that people want to come and live here, it's a nice place today?
:02:27. > :02:30.Absolutely, the economy is doing well, people are coming here. This
:02:31. > :02:33.was a dividing line during the last election. Vince Cable clearly wants
:02:34. > :02:38.to make it a dividing line that the next election. A lot of people
:02:39. > :02:42.around David told him it was silly to make this pledge and it looks
:02:43. > :02:47.like that now. Buried in this bad news for David Cameron, even more
:02:48. > :02:52.bad news. These figures... You even sound like you are rubbing your
:02:53. > :03:02.hands together! Luff, I'm not, at all! These are 12 month figures to
:03:03. > :03:05.September last year. As we know, the controls on Bulgarian and Romanian
:03:06. > :03:08.immigrants were not lifted until January. In six months time I think
:03:09. > :03:12.we are going to see these figures looking worse. Won't he say, well,
:03:13. > :03:15.this is net migration, it has gone up because lots of people are
:03:16. > :03:19.staying here and don't want to go anywhere else? But that was the
:03:20. > :03:27.promise he made, we had some extraordinary exchanges, where they
:03:28. > :03:30.kept saying to him, is the Prime Minister confident that this
:03:31. > :03:34.election pledge will be met? He kept saying to us, we have got the right
:03:35. > :03:41.policies in place and that is our target. And we would say, but is it
:03:42. > :03:43.going to be met? Hang on, lots of governments of all different
:03:44. > :03:50.complexions have targets and they don't meet them, do they? Well, they
:03:51. > :03:52.should not make them. The measures they are putting in place, they keep
:03:53. > :03:59.talking about what they are trying to do around immigration. They can't
:04:00. > :04:04.do anything! Everything is around non-EU migration. The Which is not
:04:05. > :04:09.the driver. These are terrible headlines for Cameron in terms of
:04:10. > :04:15.the threat from UKIP. It lays into the hands of Nigel Farage. He has a
:04:16. > :04:20.conference tomorrow, I am sure he will put this rampage on the podium.
:04:21. > :04:23.He says the whole point of having to get out of the EU is because we
:04:24. > :04:27.can't control immigration. Nothing that was said, Angela Merkel,
:04:28. > :04:31.however they were trying to spin it in that she might give concessions,
:04:32. > :04:38.it is true, because they can't do anything about freedom of movement.
:04:39. > :04:41.She agrees about curbing benefit migrants. Whatever the government
:04:42. > :04:44.pretends, there are people coming here to work and get jobs. Vince
:04:45. > :04:50.Cable says that, they are coming to fill jobs in the expanding labour
:04:51. > :04:56.market. We still have nearly 1 million young people that can't get
:04:57. > :05:02.jobs. It's not good politics for David Cameron. Can anyone out there
:05:03. > :05:06.differentiate between EU and non-EU migration, or do they just see that
:05:07. > :05:09.migration is going up? It doesn't matter where they are coming from,
:05:10. > :05:14.if you don't like migration do you care? There are really stupid things
:05:15. > :05:17.going on in the name of trying to get down non-EU migration. A lot of
:05:18. > :05:21.people that want to come here from China, as tourists sought to study,
:05:22. > :05:26.are being told they can't. There has been a public relations disaster in
:05:27. > :05:29.India. A lot of students were coming to the UK and because of the
:05:30. > :05:33.tightening up on visas to study they are not coming, which will cost us a
:05:34. > :05:37.fortune. The whole policy does not work. One of the big entertainment
:05:38. > :05:43.firms, don't know if I am allowed to mention it? They were complaining
:05:44. > :05:46.that they run the attractions in London and they say the Visa system
:05:47. > :05:49.for Chinese people are stopping people coming here and costing loads
:05:50. > :05:53.of money and jobs. We seem to have ended up with the worst of all
:05:54. > :05:55.worlds. Still loads of people coming from Europe that we can't do
:05:56. > :06:02.anything about, at the same time, we are stopping the lucrative tourist
:06:03. > :06:09.market. You managed not to sound fully for them. Well, it's bad for
:06:10. > :06:12.everyone. Patricia Hewitt, I was wrong over PIE. This is the former
:06:13. > :06:18.Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt, general secretary of the National
:06:19. > :06:23.Council For Civil Liberties in the 1970s, which had links with this
:06:24. > :06:26.Paedophile Information Exchange, which claimed it was not a
:06:27. > :06:32.campaigning group to encourage legalising sex with children.
:06:33. > :06:35.Patricia Hewitt has now come out and said very emphatically denies that
:06:36. > :06:40.she was wrong not to have done something about that. Slightly
:06:41. > :06:43.unfair, she has finally apologised, it says, she has been out of the
:06:44. > :06:47.country for the last 12 days which is why she has not responded to the
:06:48. > :06:52.stuff that was going on. She didn't leave any room for doubts over his
:06:53. > :07:01.regrets? No, she has definitely given a masterclass in how to deal
:07:02. > :07:04.with this sort of thing. Harriet Harman problems, that she has had
:07:05. > :07:10.this week, have by and large been caused by the way she responded to
:07:11. > :07:14.this and the failure to fully explain the situation, as she saw it
:07:15. > :07:17.at the time. To admit that clearly mistakes had been made. They might
:07:18. > :07:21.not have been mistakes she made, that mistakes were clearly made. I
:07:22. > :07:27.think it was the failure to clearly say that in the interview at the
:07:28. > :07:32.start of this week. I think it is very interesting that she has said
:07:33. > :07:42.it so unequivocally, so did Sammy Chakravarty, from Liberty, there
:07:43. > :07:48.were questions over why she found it so difficult to say this was not a
:07:49. > :07:51.good thing that happened in the 70s, it was another era, it was
:07:52. > :07:55.misguided, they were wrong. The other two have said it, I don't know
:07:56. > :08:00.why she finds it so difficult. Isn't there a difference to be drawn here?
:08:01. > :08:06.Patricia Hewitt says, I had a close link because of my role... They had
:08:07. > :08:09.different jobs. If we are being realistic about this, Patricia
:08:10. > :08:14.Hewitt is no longer a front line politician. Therefore, it is easier
:08:15. > :08:19.for her to say sorry, easier for her to draw a line under it. If Harriet
:08:20. > :08:25.Harman had spoken out in such aliphatic way, she knew that her
:08:26. > :08:29.enemies were waiting to pounce. She could have drawn a line under this a
:08:30. > :08:33.week ago by saying, you know, it was a different era, we were totally
:08:34. > :08:37.wrong, it was bizarre, it now looks really awful and the other two have
:08:38. > :08:40.done the right thing. I think she played it incredibly badly. Let's
:08:41. > :08:50.look at the Telegraph. A really interesting photograph of when Dave
:08:51. > :08:53.met Angela. It interesting to hear her speak English today. You don't
:08:54. > :09:06.hear it very often. They look like they are about to kiss. It's a bit
:09:07. > :09:11.Four Weddings And A Funeral. They described the relationship as him
:09:12. > :09:16.being at the naughty nephew, which is really weird. The strangest
:09:17. > :09:22.description I have heard between world leaders. Somebody at Number 10
:09:23. > :09:28.really got that wrong. It seems almost sinister. This is a very old
:09:29. > :09:32.picture. They do look quite chummy. The other pictures I saw, they
:09:33. > :09:35.looked extremely on edge, staring daggers at each other if they were
:09:36. > :09:40.looking at each other at all. There was an odd picture of him in the
:09:41. > :09:45.kitchen at Number 10, or I should say one of the Cameron's kitchens.
:09:46. > :09:52.They have two kitchens! His and hers. They had to put in a nicer
:09:53. > :09:58.kitchen when they came in. Gordon Brown's kitchen was a bit grotty.
:09:59. > :10:01.Samantha Cameron likes a nice kitchen. I don't think the Telegraph
:10:02. > :10:05.is talking about the kitchens, they are talking about the relationship
:10:06. > :10:07.in two nations and what don't think the Telegraph is talking about the
:10:08. > :10:11.kitchens, they are talking about the relationship in two nations and
:10:12. > :10:18.what's given on Twitter is the kitchen and the box set! There was a
:10:19. > :10:30.whole James Bond set... Shall we move on and say it didn't go well? A
:10:31. > :10:34.?60 yellow toaster! Right, the first three-parent babies
:10:35. > :10:40.next year. This is also in the Telegraph. Well,
:10:41. > :10:44.this is the move of the genetic equivalent of changing a faulty
:10:45. > :10:48.battery in a car. I think she thought that would sound reassuring
:10:49. > :10:54.but it doesn't. It is unfortunate. You would have to
:10:55. > :11:00.be the Chief Medical Fer. This is about couples having IVF
:11:01. > :11:06.treatment for severe disabilities, so that they are offered a downer
:11:07. > :11:11.bit of genetic code from another woman's egg to stop the likely hooud
:11:12. > :11:14.of passing on that genetic condition. So there is science
:11:15. > :11:21.behind this. But people have an issue with it? It
:11:22. > :11:26.has gone through the HE Fay. I think it is a good idea. If you are a
:11:27. > :11:31.family with those kinds of degenerative diseases, and you can
:11:32. > :11:36.Boro a tiny bit. It is literally the sack that the rest of the genetic
:11:37. > :11:41.stuff sits in, coming from the other egg and if you can do that it means
:11:42. > :11:46.you don't get a child that suffers from this terrible disease, why not?
:11:47. > :11:53.Should we be even thinking of stopping it happen, if you can stop
:11:54. > :11:57.these awful diseases? This has clear fantastic potential. I don't think
:11:58. > :12:02.that anyone would want to stand in their way? Well, there is a bit of a
:12:03. > :12:08.yuck factor about it. The Metro: The spy who loved me,
:12:09. > :12:15.naked on webcam. You, do you love this? But there is a serious side to
:12:16. > :12:22.it. It is a bit Carry On Spying. The way it sounds? People caught naked
:12:23. > :12:26.on a webcam, but the fact that GCHQ have been looking at the pictures
:12:27. > :12:32.and storing them? And apparently that one in nine has undesirable
:12:33. > :12:36.nudity. This is not my definition. I cannot really help you with the
:12:37. > :12:43.definition, but this is what the spy chiefs think is undesirable.
:12:44. > :12:50.This is Operation Optic Nerve. Yes and there are apparently 1. 8
:12:51. > :12:54.million images. I think that is about 160,000 images of undesirable
:12:55. > :12:59.nudity. Good maths! For those who may be
:13:00. > :13:04.worried about this, apparently the operation ran from 2008 until 2010
:13:05. > :13:08.and possibly a little after that. Lots of people thinking did they
:13:09. > :13:16.have a webcam then. And the serious part, GCHQ were
:13:17. > :13:20.trying to try out facial recognition software to help them track down
:13:21. > :13:25.terrorists, so they stored millions of images from webcams trying to do
:13:26. > :13:31.that but of course they got a lot of things that were not faces! And of
:13:32. > :13:35.course the worry is that WikiLeaks could get hold of it.
:13:36. > :13:40.Do you think that they have bottom recognition? Maybe not. I don't have
:13:41. > :13:46.a webcam, so I can rest easy! That is the papers for this hour, but we
:13:47. > :13:52.are back later for another look at the front pages. Stay with us on the
:13:53. > :13:58.BBC News. Peter Robinson welcomes a judge-led inquiry to letters sent to
:13:59. > :14:01.Republican suspects, telling them they would not be prosecuted. Coming
:14:02. > :14:13.up next is Sportsday. Hello and welcome to Sportsday with
:14:14. > :14:17.me Tim Hague. Here's what's to come tonight: Spurs stage an amazing
:14:18. > :14:18.comeback to keep their European adventure