02/02/2016 Victoria Derbyshire


02/02/2016

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I'm Joanna Gosling, welcome to the programme.

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Families of children with autism tell us they're suffering

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unacceptably long delays between being referred

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I didn't have the foggiest idea of autism, I didn't even know the word

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autism. So class probably found to be different and more energetic to

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talk to. No chance that the Olympic Games

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will be off, say authorities in That's despite the battle they face

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over the Zika virus. They insist there is no risk

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to athletes or visitors A draft deal will be published

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shortly setting out changes to the UK's relationship

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with the European Union - it'll give national parliaments

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what's being called a red card Welcome to the programme,

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we're on BBC Two and the BBC News Channel until

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11am this morning. Also this morning, we will be joined

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by former world heavyweight boxing champion David Hay. He says he is

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determined to regain the title. He will tell us about his time-out and

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his determination to regain the title. We would like to hear from

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you, particularly if you have autism in your family. How hard was due to

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get the support needed? Texts will be charged

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at the standard network rate. And, of course, you can watch

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the programme online wherever you are via the BBC News app

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or our website bbc.co.uk/victoria. Autism can affect a child's basic

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skills - such as socialising, communicating and forming

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relationships - but it can be Now families of children with autism

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are saying they are suffering an acceptably long delays between being

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referred and diagnosed. The National Autistic Society has said it is

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calling on the government and NHS England to start assessing times.

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An NHS England spokesperson said they're committed to overcoming

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the reasons behind long waiting times.

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We're going to discuss this more in a minute,

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but first here's a quick explainer of what autism is.

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It was put together by the National Autism Society.

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Do you know somebody with autism? It is much, much more common than some

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people think. About one and 100 people have autism, more than

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700,000 in the UK alone. Chances are that someone you know, work with all

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love has the condition. What is autism? It is a lifelong develop

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mental disability that affects how we communicate with and work with

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others and how we make sense of the world around us. Lots of things that

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people take for granted, like body language metaphors can be alienating

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for us. It is a spectrum condition, so while we share certain

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difficulties, it will affect us in different ways. Some go to

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university and hold down jobs, others need a lifetime of specialist

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support. As Burgess syndrome is a form of autism. -- Asperger's

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syndrome. People who have the syndrome are often of average or

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above average intelligence but may have problems with speech processing

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language. What is autism like? For us, the world can be a confusing

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mass of people, eventers and places. Sometimes we'd struggle to make

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sense of the world, it can make is anxious. Everyone with autism is

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different, which makes it so difficult to understand. Some of our

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characteristics involved a love of routines, sensory issues like

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noises, smells all light or having special interest. Some have

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difficulty in understanding and relating to others and having a

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social life can be harder for us. For some of us, going to a party can

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be very hot because we do not know what will happen or who will be

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there, and it often gets too noisy, which can be upsetting. Others with

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autism have trouble reading facial expressions, understanding jokes or

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sarcasm or comment phrases like break a leg. Even phrases people use

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every day like it's cool can be disorienting, you think they are

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asking you to turn the air conditioning. Many people with

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autism don't look disabled. Parents of children with autism say people

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often simply think their child is naughty. They are misunderstood,

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that is why it is called a hidden disability.

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That is what autism is like. Our reporter Jean Mackenzie went

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to meet Vanessa and her 10-year-old It took them six years

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to get Becky's diagnosis. You have got Harriet's party

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and you will be all dressed up. If you were sitting at the dinner

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table and you try to have a conversation,

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you see your eyes flit and a big grin come on her face

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and her eyes will be far away and you try to have a conversation

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with her and she will not be there and sometimes

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if you ask about it you ask What do you remember

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from her going to school, birthday parties, those sorts

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of social situations? Things like birthday parties,

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she would be happy to go along, no problem, but she would be the one

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jumping up and down and leaping It was sad to see that she could not

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socially join in with the group. My husband picked up on it at quite

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an early age. We didn't put two and two together

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and at first we thought maybe we are looking at ADHD,

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maybe something else. We didn't slot things

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together at first. Did you know I like

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climbing trees, Mum? How do you feel in social situations

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that you think is different I can't think of any subject to talk

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about without making it as dull Do you find it hard

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to have conversations? You said that you have got

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better at socialising. Do you remember it being more

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difficult when you were younger? I didn't have the foggiest

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idea of autism. The class probably found me

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different and more Since you found out that you have

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autism, has that made things easier for you,

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now you understand? All this madness comes straight

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to my brain in five seconds flat, it is all just because the wiring

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is all different in the brain. Some people have straight lines

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going into the brain, mine probably just has twisty types

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going all over the place. What did you think

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before you knew? I don't know what the grown up

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public will think of me I am sure they will

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think you are great. When you got that diagnosis

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and she said I have no doubt this is autism,

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can you remember the feeling? My feeling was, I do not

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want you to go yay. I want to go, yes, I am right,

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I have proved people are wrong. Now I have a child with special

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needs who will need a lot of work. I feel a mixture of anger,

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annoyance, sadness that had they listened to us in the first

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place, we would not have had to go private, we would not have had

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to wait so long in the end. Everybody else is OK,

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but it is poor Becky who has been affected and she is the one

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who will lose out and has lost out. We can talk now with Sarah Helps,

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a consultant clinical psychologist, Jane Harris from the National

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Autistic Society and Emma and Noah It took over two years to get

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a diagnosis for four-year-old Noah from the point Emma first

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sought professional help. Thank you all very much for coming

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in. Emma, first of all, tell us about your experiences, Noah was one

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when you first our concerns? He was around one, he was 18 months old

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when I took in to see somebody and I said, I think something is not

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different but not quite fitting, the pieces aren't quite

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different but not quite fitting, the puzzle. What was it? Whistle things.

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I know you should never, ever compare them to other children, but

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his friends and things were a little bit more advanced. -- little things.

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He was not really talking, it was hard to get him explain how he was

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feeling, he was feeling a lot of stress and built up tension,

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clearly, the communication was not there. I eventually took him in and

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got the usual of, he's a bit young, we don't really want to stamp them

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at that age. It was a really long fight to get him referred in the

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first place. Were you thinking autism at that stage? It was in the

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back of my head. Obviously a lot of the time you don't ever want to

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think, oh, there is something different about my child, you want

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them to have a normal life but, eventually, all the signs were there

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and you could not really ignore it any more. I just said, look, I think

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he needs to at least be considered. Sit down, baby. He needs to at least

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be considered, and eventually they started to listen and could see the

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same signs as well. One of the main things they picked up on was his

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number skills, he was counting to 100 at the age of, like, two. Even

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now, it is still massively advanced. He can write down five digit

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numbers, he can read them out exactly what they are, in tens of

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thousands. Maths in general. When you were wanting to get help and to

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see what others thought about Noah, when you had your concerns, did you

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sense there was a reluctance because he was young to label him as being

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autistic, or was it a lack of resources leading to a lack of

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referrals? A little bit of both. The cause he was so young, it is a stamp

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for life, isn't it, once they are diagnosed? That is it. Usually it

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doesn't change. At first they were reluctant, it was the case of, oh,

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he is a bit young. Will you go and see daddy? Find daddy? There was a

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little bit of reluctance to diagnose him because of his age. There was a

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lot of waiting times in terms of getting the appointments. We had to

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wait quite a long time for him to get onto speech and language

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therapy, we had to do a year of that, then we waited six months from

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his referral date to the first appointment. Then another six months

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to go through the process. It was a long time, actually, waiting. I do

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think, obviously it can't be helped, but I think a lot of it was down to

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staffing levels, there were not enough paediatricians at the time to

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get through the waiting list. Let's bring in chain from the National

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Autistic Society. We also heard about the key, her parents seeking

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help when she was three, six and eight. They had a journey getting

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her diagnosed. -- we also heard about Becky. How common is this and

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what are the issues? About the NHS does not measure waiting times for

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autism diagnoses. It measures waiting times for things like hip

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operations or plastic surgery, nobody measures these things for

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autism, so people like Emma and Noah are invisible, they are deciding

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every day where to put budgets, nobody can see these people are

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waiting for this time. It is extraordinarily stressful for people

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to have to wait. If you know your child is different, you might have

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experiences every day when you think, and I doing the right thing,

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helping them in the right way? You might do things that are normal to

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others, going to the supermarket, your child cannot cope. Often

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relatives start to question your parenting as well. The whole family

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goes through in order to stress and anxiety. It ends up clutching the

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NHS more money. People go into crisis and had to have expensive

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intervention sometimes because they develop depression and anxiety as

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well as being autistic -- ends up costing the NHS. We want the NHS to

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measure waiting times in the same way they do for everyone else. It is

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meant to be for everyone, autistic or not, why should they not measure

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autism diagnosis waiting times when they measure these others?

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One of the things I was struck by it was when you said about resources,

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are you saying that if it was properly monitored there would be

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more money made available because there would be greater recognition

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of the scale? That's right. The nationalised for clinical excellence

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has looked at the evidence and said it is cost-effective to make sure

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people have a diagnosis, their first appointment within three months.

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Unfortunately NHS trusts do not always monitor whether that is the

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case. We know that for adult, they are waiting up for two years for

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that first appointment, but nobody is monitoring that consistently for

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children. Some children miss out on their education while waiting for a

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diagnosis, it can have a long-term impact on their future and their

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family 's health. Paint the picture of resources versus need? Are the

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number of cases of autism increasing?

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We don't know if the number of cases are increasing all we are better at

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recognising it. Going back 50 years we didn't know what it was so our

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knowledge is increasing but we need to staff to assess people and if

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they notice things, maybe my child is autistic. For parents it can be

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an amazing moment of relief when they find out their trial is

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autistic because they find out this is what I can do. If you were going

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to take a child on holiday if they were autistic you would know you

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need to talk to them weeks in advance and about what is going to

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happen and maybe print photos of the airport. We've spoken to a number of

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airports for families to go to for a practice run before they go. They

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don't cost the NHS any money but the NHS needs to diagnose people quickly

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enough so those things become possible. You can identify with that

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moment of relief as it was described? The day before his

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birthday was when we found out and it was probably the best present

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that I could ever ask for, to find out, obviously you don't ever really

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want that diagnosis, it is not what you want to hear but after waiting

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for so long it was just a massive relief for us. Why was it such a

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relief? What slotted into place after the diagnosis? It's that... If

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you say, my son is four years old, he waited two and a half years, over

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half of his life and I waited over half of his life to get a diagnosis.

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If you think about anything else you have waited that long for it is just

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a weight lifted off your shoulders and you know you have more resources

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available to you now to be able to fight his case, because like you

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say, they go through education and a lot of them, it's like the whole

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naughty child thing, if they are not recognised as having that autism

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they are seen as disruptive or not performing as well in education. I

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didn't want that for him. Obviously I don't ever want that to be an

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excuse but at least I know now he can get the help in the areas that

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he needs it. Lots of people have been getting in touch, watching and

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listening to you. Allison McCartney, it's so frustrating that children

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have to wait for diagnosis, my son has a ST but they will still not

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give him the diagnosis of which would help him through college and

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people to understand it better, he is diagnosed with ADHD, anxiety,

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social communication disorder but all I have done for years is fight

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this, I've noticed that ADHD can be classed as naughty child. My child

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went for assessment and computer said no, we were asked yes or no

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questions by eight standard nonspecialist paediatrician and

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discharged. It is not black-and-white, that is why it is a

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spectrum. -- by a standard nonspecialist paediatrician. How

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difficult is it to diagnose autism? It is a complicated diagnosis to

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make and it's important the right people have the right training and

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make informed decisions based on seeing the child in multiple

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contexts, seeing the child do multiple tasks in clinic, at home,

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in school. It's very important that no diagnosis is rushed into. It's a

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process rather than a one-off appointment. . It can be in Cradley

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frustrating for families who come to clinic who have waited for many

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weeks, months and years to have the first appointment. -- incredibly

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frustrating. And they hope something that will happen, that can be very

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difficult. When you say it's important that the diagnosis is not

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rushed into, how often do children grow out of behaviours that appear

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autistic? We increasingly see children who have the right sort of

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support especially delivered in the right way early on and children can

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score out of a diagnosis to use technical terms. It's not very

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common. Autism is a lifelong neurodevelopmental disorder so even

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if children don't score on tests in the future they store have the core

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deficits of autism. But we are seeing real hope and children can

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make real progress. How much have things changed for you now as a

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result of the diagnosis and for Noah, do you understand each other

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better? There is more of a connection, at first I thought it

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must be something I was doing, when he was younger I could not consult

:19:55.:19:57.

him and there was a lot of stress involved. But now I feel we have

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more of a communication, I would say. We are much better with each

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other now, I think because the pressure is gone of waiting and the

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stress is gone. It has now made it a lot more relaxed at home. I think

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he's in a more relaxed environment. And I guess him knowing he's not

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being deliberately naughty. No, but sometimes we can put it down to that

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and other times we know that it's just him being him. But, yes, now I

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suppose you have a bit more, he has a bit more leeway as such, and not

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always quick to jump to, you are just naughty. A lot of the time it

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is him. Emma, Jane and Sarah, thank you very much. Do keep on getting in

:20:50.:20:52.

touch with your thoughts on that. We'll have the latest

:20:53.:20:54.

from Iowa where the race And former world heavyweight boxing

:20:55.:20:59.

champion David Haye tells us he's determined to regain

:21:00.:21:03.

his world title. We'll be talking to him live

:21:04.:21:05.

about his comeback fight. Texas Republican senator, Ted Cruz,

:21:06.:21:10.

beats Donald Trump in the first public vote in the race

:21:11.:21:20.

for the White House. Marco Rubio came in third winning

:21:21.:21:30.

more votes than predicted. Hillary Clinton claims a narrow

:21:31.:21:33.

victory over Bernie Sanders and says Draft proposals for Britain to be

:21:34.:21:37.

able to club together with other nations - to block some EU laws -

:21:38.:21:42.

are being published in Brussels. Profits at BP collapse by 50

:21:43.:21:55.

per cent in the last year as oil prices tumble - the oil giant

:21:56.:21:58.

confirms thousands of job losses - A Scottish holidaymaker has been

:21:59.:22:01.

killed by an elephant 2000 homes are still

:22:02.:22:04.

without electricity and there's travel disruption across northern

:22:05.:22:07.

eastern Scotland after Storm Henry The messaging app WhatsApp says

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one billion people - that's one in seven people -

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are now using it. The firm is owned by Facebook

:22:22.:22:24.

and it's outperformed the social Good morning. This time yesterday we

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were getting excited about transfer deadline day and which players were

:22:44.:22:47.

going well and we were caught on the hop at the BBC's centre when Man

:22:48.:22:50.

City announced Pep Guardiola would join them at the end of the season

:22:51.:22:55.

for three years. His wages are astronomical. He is now going to be

:22:56.:22:58.

earning more than any Premier League footballer.

:22:59.:23:03.

The football transfer window closed last night,

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as frantic as previous years, the top eight clubs in the Premier

:23:06.:23:10.

League didn't buy anyone yesterday, Stoke and Everton splashed

:23:11.:23:13.

in January - that's a five year high and spoending topped ?1 billion

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in a single season for the first time.

:23:28.:23:34.

At 10am, I'll be speaking at a transfer

:23:35.:23:40.

expert about all the numbers and trends.

:23:41.:23:43.

We have talked a lot about cheating in sport recently,

:23:44.:23:49.

you aurtomatically think of drugs, steroids, but here's

:23:50.:23:51.

a relatively new one, mechanical doping.

:23:52.:23:53.

Imagine you're in a bike race and an opponent has hidden a motor

:23:54.:23:56.

to make them go faster, well they've actually caught someone

:23:57.:23:58.

doing this in an official championship.

:23:59.:24:01.

And we'll hear from double Tour de France

:24:02.:24:02.

Champion about how this is the new frontier of cheating.

:24:03.:24:05.

After million dollar TV ads, hundreds of polls, televised debates

:24:06.:24:12.

and months of campaigning - last night marked the first vote

:24:13.:24:15.

People in the state of Iowa are first to choose which Republican

:24:16.:24:19.

and which Democrat they want as candidate, and it's seen

:24:20.:24:21.

as an important indicator of who's got momentum for the months ahead.

:24:22.:24:24.

Donald Trump - who'd been leading in the polls - finished second

:24:25.:24:27.

in the Republican vote - behind the Texas senator, Ted Cruz.

:24:28.:24:32.

Meanwhile, for the Democrats, Hillary Clinton's campaign claims

:24:33.:24:34.

a narrow victory over her socialist rival Bernie Sanders.

:24:35.:24:39.

We are just hearing, hot off the press, it has been announced she has

:24:40.:24:45.

officially won in Iowa. It was tight, being called too close to

:24:46.:24:51.

call but she has been officially named the winner for the Democrats.

:24:52.:24:59.

Let's look a bit deeper at the presidential race which is a complex

:25:00.:25:03.

process, very different to how we elect a leader in Britain.

:25:04.:25:06.

The field of candidates hoping to set up home at the White House

:25:07.:25:09.

started as a wide one - although it's been narrowing

:25:10.:25:11.

The Democrats are down to a two-horse race

:25:12.:25:14.

between Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders.

:25:15.:25:15.

The Republican frontrunners are Donald Trump and Ted Cruz,

:25:16.:25:18.

but Marco Rubio's strong showing in Iowa means

:25:19.:25:20.

the Republican race is a three-man fight.

:25:21.:25:23.

There was much fighting talk coming from those four candidates last

:25:24.:25:26.

night - let's hear what they had to say.

:25:27.:25:35.

Tonight is a victory for millions of Americans who have shouldered the

:25:36.:25:41.

burden of seven years of Washington deals run a mock. Tonight is a

:25:42.:25:49.

victory for every American who has watched in dismay as career

:25:50.:25:52.

politicians in Washington in both parties refuse to listen and too

:25:53.:25:57.

often fail to keep their commitments to the people. We will go on to get

:25:58.:26:02.

the Republican nomination and we will go on to easily be looked --

:26:03.:26:09.

easily beat Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders or whoever they throw

:26:10.:26:13.

up there. Iowa, we love you, we thank you, you are special and we

:26:14.:26:17.

will be back many times. In fact, I think I might come here and buy a

:26:18.:26:24.

farm, I love it, thank you. I want you to know that I will keep doing

:26:25.:26:29.

what I have done my entire life. I will keep standing up for you, I

:26:30.:26:33.

will keep fighting for you. I will always work to achieve the America

:26:34.:26:40.

that I believe in where the promise of that dream that we hold out to

:26:41.:26:43.

our children and our grandchildren never fades. But inspires

:26:44.:26:50.

generations to come. Join me, let's go and win the nomination. Thank you

:26:51.:26:56.

all and God bless you. And the reason that we have done so well

:26:57.:27:02.

here in Iowa, the reason I believe we are going to do so well in New

:27:03.:27:06.

Hampshire and the other states that follow, the reason is the American

:27:07.:27:14.

people are saying no to a rigged economy.

:27:15.:27:14.

CHEERING So what do they stand

:27:15.:27:16.

for and why should we care? Donald Trump, a billionaire

:27:17.:27:19.

businessman and reality TV star. He's outspoken and controversial

:27:20.:27:26.

but he's leading the race when it So when it comes to the top

:27:27.:27:29.

job, what would he do? He has said his priorities

:27:30.:27:34.

are strengthening the border He wants to undo the Obamacare

:27:35.:27:36.

health policy that was designed to make healthcare more affordable

:27:37.:27:45.

and accessible for all. And on national security,

:27:46.:27:47.

he wants to take care of veterans Giving Donald Trump a run

:27:48.:27:50.

for his money is Ted Cruz, He's a Texas senator who shot

:27:51.:27:55.

to fame in 2014 by speaking in the Senate for a whopping 21

:27:56.:28:02.

hours against Obama healthcare law. He wants more money and staff

:28:03.:28:11.

to firm up the Mexican border. And on the environment,

:28:12.:28:15.

he believes there are too many

:28:16.:28:17.

regulations - he's described the Environment Protection Agency

:28:18.:28:19.

as being out of control. Here are Trump and Cruz

:28:20.:28:22.

during the campaign on some Our country doesn't win any more.

:28:23.:28:43.

But I have four wins, we've got to have they win, we are going to win

:28:44.:28:49.

and win and win. You need somebody that can wheel and deal and get

:28:50.:28:53.

things done. I make bad deal is good, we're going to make good deal

:28:54.:29:00.

is not bad deals. People are flowing through, drugs are coming

:29:01.:29:03.

is not bad deals. People are flowing are going to create a border, build

:29:04.:29:06.

a wall, build a wall! Who is going to pay for the wall? Mexico!

:29:07.:29:17.

Washington is fundamentally broken. I will go to Congress, I will go to

:29:18.:29:23.

Congress, I will go to Congress and we will pass fundamental tax reform.

:29:24.:29:31.

Continue this awakening. Continue this spirit of revival. People are

:29:32.:29:36.

waking up... People are waking up and there is a spirit of revival. We

:29:37.:29:43.

will have a Commander in Chief that stands up and says to the world, we

:29:44.:29:47.

will defeat radical Islamic terrorism. Radical Islamic

:29:48.:29:52.

terrorism. Hillary Clinton, former First Lady

:29:53.:29:54.

and Secretary of State. She took a popularity dip over

:29:55.:29:58.

a scandal involving the use of her personal email, but having

:29:59.:30:02.

lost out to President Obama in 2008 there's a lot of

:30:03.:30:05.

expectation riding on her. In the last Democratic debate,

:30:06.:30:08.

Hillary said her presidential priorities would be creating jobs

:30:09.:30:11.

with a $275 billion boost in infrastructure, modernising

:30:12.:30:14.

transport links across the country. She also wants to ensure

:30:15.:30:20.

equal pay for women. And on the health front,

:30:21.:30:23.

she wants to bring down But standing in her way

:30:24.:30:25.

is self-declared democratic The 74-year-old Vermont senator has

:30:26.:30:29.

stunned the Democrat establishment emerging from nowhere

:30:30.:30:37.

to challenge Clinton. He has said his priorities would be

:30:38.:30:40.

to create jobs through more public works, make health care a right

:30:41.:30:46.

for all and wants to enforce a $15 With votes in the Democratic race

:30:47.:30:49.

in Iowa still being counted, the result looks to

:30:50.:30:55.

be on a knife edge - In fact the race is now over and

:30:56.:31:06.

these two are in front, Hillary Clinton winning for the Democrats

:31:07.:31:09.

and Ted Cruz winning for the Republicans.

:31:10.:31:10.

So what have Clinton and Sanders been saying on the campaign trail?

:31:11.:31:22.

It doesn't mean that we can Wakely somebody else to do the work, we had

:31:23.:31:29.

to do it. So he got to work. I want to work. We have work to do.

:31:30.:31:34.

I don't know whether they are actually talking about what's going

:31:35.:31:39.

on around kitchen tables. Sit around the kitchen table. I started by

:31:40.:31:43.

listening to people. I've actually had some real conversations. I will

:31:44.:31:48.

defend the progress we've made with the affordable care act. We have

:31:49.:31:53.

made progress. Have to defend the progress we've made. You've got to

:31:54.:32:00.

look at what we've accomplished. The United States government should

:32:01.:32:02.

represent the middle class and working families of this country,

:32:03.:32:07.

not just a handful of billionaires. Early. Ilhan hours.

:32:08.:32:16.

A political revolution in transforming America. Transform

:32:17.:32:20.

America. Transforming our government.

:32:21.:32:28.

Medicare for all. Health care is a right of all.

:32:29.:32:38.

The political parties must choose a nominee. It is a complex process, it

:32:39.:32:44.

began last night but can enter taking months, as Katty Kay

:32:45.:32:45.

explains. -- can enter taking. I accept your nomination

:32:46.:32:49.

for President of the United States. Winning the nomination

:32:50.:32:54.

is a landmark moment in the race You only get the nomination

:32:55.:32:56.

by getting the support of delegates. They are sort of party grandees,

:32:57.:33:03.

important people who get to decide The number of delegates in each

:33:04.:33:06.

state is based largely on its size. Win the state and you win more

:33:07.:33:13.

delegates. The candidate who gets

:33:14.:33:16.

the majority of these delegates The savvy trick is to win

:33:17.:33:18.

states that voted early Political buffs call it

:33:19.:33:23.

controlling the calendar. The first two states to vote

:33:24.:33:28.

or Iowa and New Hampshire. Honestly, they don't really matter

:33:29.:33:31.

in and of themselves. They are not very big

:33:32.:33:34.

and they certainly do not represent But a good showing in Iowa

:33:35.:33:37.

and New Hampshire creates a sense of momentum

:33:38.:33:42.

and with that comes exposure. Win Iowa and suddenly you will be

:33:43.:33:47.

all over television. Getting the early states is sure

:33:48.:33:49.

to open the pockets of donors. Don't discount that

:33:50.:33:56.

intangible aura of success. We are going to South Dakota

:33:57.:34:00.

and Oregon and Washington. Although, there have been candidates

:34:01.:34:05.

who have taken that whole success But, if the candidate manages

:34:06.:34:08.

to keep their head while others are losing theirs, they make it

:34:09.:34:15.

to March were the stakes and states and number of precious

:34:16.:34:19.

delegates gets bigger. This is where long-term

:34:20.:34:23.

strategy is crucial. A candidate cannot be everywhere

:34:24.:34:27.

at once and with a lot of states voting on the same day,

:34:28.:34:30.

how does a candidate decide Texas and Vermont both

:34:31.:34:32.

vote on March the 5th. Texas has 155 Republican delegates,

:34:33.:34:41.

Vermont only has 16. On March the 15th, Florida,

:34:42.:34:45.

Ohio and Illinois go to the polls. Analysts say that if we do not

:34:46.:34:54.

have a clear winner by then this could be the decisive day

:34:55.:34:57.

for both parties. After that, well, the process

:34:58.:35:01.

starts all over again. It is back to the states to get

:35:02.:35:05.

you enough votes to get Running for president

:35:06.:35:08.

of the United States is the biggest The former world heavyweight axing

:35:09.:35:31.

champion David Haye has announced he will continue his comeback with a

:35:32.:35:34.

fight in May, but it is yet to see who his opponent will be.

:35:35.:35:37.

Possible contenders include Anthony Joshua, Dillian

:35:38.:35:38.

Tyson Fury has said he will not fight David.

:35:39.:35:44.

The man known as the "Hayemaker" is determined to repay his fans

:35:45.:35:47.

for their loyalty during his injury-enforced time away

:35:48.:35:49.

In his first comeback fight, 120 days ago he beat his opponent

:35:50.:35:53.

in 130 seconds with famous faces Idris Elba and Benedict Cumberbatch

:35:54.:35:55.

-- first comeback to fight just over two weeks ago.

:35:56.:36:01.

Thanks for joining us. That was a good way to come back? Yes, three

:36:02.:36:08.

and a half years out with some horrendous injuries, a big shoulder

:36:09.:36:12.

operation and what not, it took a year and a half to rehab it and get

:36:13.:36:16.

into perfect physical condition, have a new coach and a new team, to

:36:17.:36:23.

walk-outs at the O2 arena was one of the best moments of my life, and to

:36:24.:36:28.

knock somebody else who is ranked in the top ten, has never lost, he is a

:36:29.:36:34.

top ten ranked fighter and I have not fought for three and a half

:36:35.:36:38.

years, so despatching him really quickly proves I am firing on all

:36:39.:36:47.

cylinders. One and 31 seconds. You don't get paid overtime and boxing!

:36:48.:36:52.

Roll on to the next one, maybe 21st at the O2 arena, tickets are on

:36:53.:36:57.

sale, looking forward to getting cracking again, to regain the

:36:58.:37:03.

heavyweight championship. York coach, Shaun McGuigan, has talked

:37:04.:37:07.

about you as unique, a phenomenal athlete. But he said you are too

:37:08.:37:12.

powerful for your own good. In the past I have pushed it too hard in

:37:13.:37:17.

training and got injuries. All of my injuries have been done behind

:37:18.:37:21.

closed doors in the gym, because I train 100% all out every time. The

:37:22.:37:26.

training I was doing when I was 25, I cannot do at 35. I had to adapt a

:37:27.:37:32.

lot of the stuff, making it safer, taking the impact out of my knees,

:37:33.:37:37.

ankles and lower back to make sure I can stay in good shape and speak on

:37:38.:37:42.

the night and fight injury free. Shaun has had a tough task because

:37:43.:37:52.

the guys he has been -- has been training at 22, 20 three. For me, it

:37:53.:37:57.

is about injury prevention, making sure I am in perfect condition. What

:37:58.:38:02.

was it like being out of the two and half years? Very frustrating. In the

:38:03.:38:08.

time I have been retired, not retired, out with injury, Anthony

:38:09.:38:12.

Joshua has had pretty much his whole amateur and professional career

:38:13.:38:16.

combined in the time I have been out. I supported him at the

:38:17.:38:20.

Olympics, he has had 15 fights and is now one of my biggest potential

:38:21.:38:24.

opponents. It is nice to be in the mix. At one stage I was not sure if

:38:25.:38:29.

I could fight again, very frustrating. If I could somehow get

:38:30.:38:33.

my shoulder back to how it used to be, I would do things differently,

:38:34.:38:38.

adapt my training and be a force and regain the title. Thank God, I am

:38:39.:38:43.

healed and I am ready to go, I believe the heavyweight title will

:38:44.:38:47.

be around my waist and I will bring all the titles back to Britain. Did

:38:48.:38:52.

you totally lose your fitness? Compared to what I am now, yes, for

:38:53.:38:58.

sure. My shoulder had to be in this position in a brace for six months,

:38:59.:39:02.

I could not jump up and down, it would hurt, I was bedridden for

:39:03.:39:07.

months and months. Your body atrophy is, you lose all of your physical

:39:08.:39:11.

conditioning. It did not take long to get it back, it is like riding a

:39:12.:39:16.

bike. I have been competing in boxing since the age of ten, so to

:39:17.:39:21.

get back on the bike and keep going, everything falls back into place. I

:39:22.:39:26.

feel like I have never been away. Being bedridden after you have been

:39:27.:39:30.

world heavyweight champion must be so frustrating and mentally tough?

:39:31.:39:35.

Very low, depressing times when you are not sure if you will recover and

:39:36.:39:40.

be the performer you once were. It was the worst and most horrible

:39:41.:39:46.

time. It was not positive. Now I am back it is all worthwhile, but will

:39:47.:39:51.

those make you appreciate Baha'is. When I walked out at the O2 Arena,

:39:52.:39:56.

packed out, 16,000 people going bananas, they have been there from

:39:57.:39:59.

the start, they watched me win the unified cruiserweight titles, they

:40:00.:40:04.

watched me needs the biggest heavyweight champion in history,

:40:05.:40:08.

seven foot two, 25 stone, it was frustrating to accept that things

:40:09.:40:14.

were bad for me, injury wise. I am back on it and they have come out in

:40:15.:40:19.

their droves. Knowing what they have -- you have gone through makes it

:40:20.:40:24.

more remarkable that you are fighting fit. How much of a struggle

:40:25.:40:28.

was it, what was it like when you were bedridden, thinking you did not

:40:29.:40:32.

know if you could get back to physical fitness, feeling depressed?

:40:33.:40:37.

You run over your career, how and why you got injured, the people

:40:38.:40:41.

around you, the friends that were there that are no longer there. You

:40:42.:40:49.

re-evaluate your whole life. You have to ask yourself some tough

:40:50.:40:54.

questions and say to yourself, if I am fortunate enough to be able to

:40:55.:40:58.

compete again, what will I do to make sure it is the best possible

:40:59.:41:05.

run? You take advantage of yourself when you are younger, do exercises

:41:06.:41:09.

you maybe should not do, but when you are older you have to be smart

:41:10.:41:12.

about what you eat and drink, the type of training and coaching, you

:41:13.:41:16.

had to make sure everything is 100% give yourself last chance. This is

:41:17.:41:21.

my last run at heavyweight championship, I will get it right.

:41:22.:41:26.

The people who will turn up a maybe 21st believe that. I don't even have

:41:27.:41:31.

an opponent announced but most of the tickets are already gone,

:41:32.:41:35.

because people know this will be an historic heavyweight run. What was

:41:36.:41:39.

the moment when you thought, I can get back West Janak it only happened

:41:40.:41:45.

56 months prior to my comeback, probably. -- I can get back? It only

:41:46.:41:55.

happened five or six months prior to my comeback. I wanted to punch so

:41:56.:41:59.

hard that I would push my arm to the limits, my only worry was if my arm

:42:00.:42:08.

pops out, my shoulder goes wrong. This is what I have, this is my

:42:09.:42:14.

Hayemaker. It was only when I was working with Shaun McGuigan Mattis

:42:15.:42:17.

said, there is nothing wrong with your arm, it is better than it has

:42:18.:42:22.

been. I was knocking sparring partners out, punching hard. It

:42:23.:42:30.

seems like you never lost your fire? My fire has been there, since I was

:42:31.:42:34.

a young child. Having ambition, setting high goals for myself has

:42:35.:42:38.

always been deeply instilled in me as a youngster. My parents both

:42:39.:42:42.

said, you can do whatever you want in life as long as you are the best

:42:43.:42:47.

at it, and to do that you have to train harder and do more, I have got

:42:48.:42:51.

a really good work ethic which was deeply instilled in me by my

:42:52.:42:57.

parents. I will do whatever it takes to get to the heavyweight

:42:58.:42:59.

championship and win it and bring it back to Britain. You got a glimpse

:43:00.:43:05.

that real vulnerability. Frank Bruno, a huge Hiro of yours, he has

:43:06.:43:09.

spoken about his own vulnerabilities. He has been

:43:10.:43:12.

speaking recently about wanting to get back in the ring, would you want

:43:13.:43:18.

to see him do that? Not if he was fighting somebody like myself, or

:43:19.:43:23.

someone young and in that crime. I would not want to see John McEnroe

:43:24.:43:26.

have a tennis match with Andy Murray. Nobody will get hurt but it

:43:27.:43:30.

would not be very competitive. But I would like to see McEnroe and Boris

:43:31.:43:36.

Becker had a game, they are rather similar generation, so I would not

:43:37.:43:40.

mind Frank Bruno having a boxing match, as long as he is fit, which

:43:41.:43:45.

he is, and mentally sound. As long as he is fighting somebody has same

:43:46.:43:48.

age. They have veteran sports in every sport, over 50s rock on. I

:43:49.:43:54.

would not want to see a 50-year-old wrote 18 rating 20 Rugby team,

:43:55.:43:58.

somebody will get hurt, but 50 road row teams move up the same pace. As

:43:59.:44:06.

long as the duty of care is there, Frank Bruno is able to go through

:44:07.:44:10.

the training, which it looks like he can, put him in. Chris Eubank Junior

:44:11.:44:16.

Nigel Benn were talking about having a match. Nobody has a problem with

:44:17.:44:21.

that. -- Chris you and Nigel Benn. As long as it is governed, and I

:44:22.:44:28.

think boxing is the most stringent in its physical setup. They make

:44:29.:44:35.

sure all the eyes are dotted and the teas are crossed. They make sure

:44:36.:44:39.

everyone is super healthy. I think they should have a serious division

:44:40.:44:43.

where maybe the over 50s can do it, they be change the length of the

:44:44.:44:47.

rounds or make it safer. Frank Bruno has always been a fighter, he was

:44:48.:44:51.

knocked out in his first three attempts to win a world heavyweight

:44:52.:44:56.

title, he won it on his fourth. Everybody wrote him off, you prove

:44:57.:45:00.

them wrong. He will not win the world heavyweight title at his age,

:45:01.:45:03.

but having a boxing match is no problem. We have mentioned some

:45:04.:45:08.

names, Tyson Fury has said he will not fight you. He is fighting

:45:09.:45:13.

Wladimir Klitschko again in Germany, he is out for around nine months.

:45:14.:45:19.

The big fight that I would like is Anthony Joshua, that is who the

:45:20.:45:23.

public would like me to fight. 15 fights unbeaten, highly ranked in

:45:24.:45:26.

the world, bigger, stronger and younger than me. He will want to see

:45:27.:45:32.

that I have more experience, speed and athleticism, it makes for a good

:45:33.:45:37.

match. -- people want to see. But his team might want him to get more

:45:38.:45:41.

experience before fighting someone who has been world champion twice.

:45:42.:45:46.

That fight is bubbling along nicely, it will happen at some stage. It

:45:47.:45:50.

will not be my next fight, he has another fight scheduled, but we will

:45:51.:45:55.

get is a one world ranked, tough, durable, somebody who will ask me

:45:56.:45:59.

questions, but I am not sure who that will be. I believe I am the

:46:00.:46:03.

best on the planet and want the opportunity to prove it, that is why

:46:04.:46:08.

I am coming back. Love your fighting had -- spirit, thank you, David.

:46:09.:46:12.

Still to come... Brazil says there's no chance

:46:13.:46:14.

the Rio Olympics will be cancelled because of a Zika virus outbreak -

:46:15.:46:17.

but what precautions will be made Let's catch up with the weather.

:46:18.:46:33.

I want to show you some pictures, you may have seen them in the

:46:34.:46:37.

newspaper or on social media, these clouds, they are gorgeous, we saw

:46:38.:46:41.

loads yesterday and today up and down the country. They are very much

:46:42.:46:47.

like mother-of-pearl is. These clouds form high in the

:46:48.:46:51.

stratosphere, so if you've ever flown in a passenger plane, they

:46:52.:46:55.

tend to be around the height of the troposphere and stratosphere, these

:46:56.:47:02.

clouds are even higher than that and form in temperatures of -78 or even

:47:03.:47:07.

lower. And the best time to see them is when the sun is at its lowest on

:47:08.:47:11.

the horizon, around dawn or dusk, and it reflects through the clouds,

:47:12.:47:18.

lots of ice in these clouds, and it creates beautiful patterns rather

:47:19.:47:20.

like mother-of-pearl. They are gorgeous. Do you have a favourite

:47:21.:47:27.

type of cloud? It is a really boring one, I love

:47:28.:47:30.

those but I always love a mackerel sky. It is the first type of cloud I

:47:31.:47:36.

learned at school. At least you knew what it was. These

:47:37.:47:46.

were beautiful this morning. It is lovely. Always good to see you.

:47:47.:47:52.

The weather is improving competitive what it has been like, we had Storm

:47:53.:47:57.

Henry, Storm Henry is starting to move away but he is still packing

:47:58.:48:03.

quite a punch with the wind left across the North and north-east of

:48:04.:48:07.

the UK. Still gusty winds, but not as strong as they have been, and

:48:08.:48:12.

also we have a weather front moving south, rain will clear across

:48:13.:48:15.

eastern counties and southern counties and we have a day of

:48:16.:48:19.

blustery showers and sunshine. Snow across the hills and mountains in

:48:20.:48:24.

Scotland but as we go through the day you will find it comes down to

:48:25.:48:29.

lower levels. Even into the afternoon we continue with this

:48:30.:48:32.

scenario, lots of sunshine, a few showers in the east, more in the

:48:33.:48:36.

west and some could prove heavy. Although the wind is continuing to

:48:37.:48:39.

abate, if you are in it it will still feel pretty cold. Across

:48:40.:48:44.

northern England, is a story, most showers in the west, the East seeing

:48:45.:48:49.

something brighter but in Scotland we have showers as we have in

:48:50.:48:52.

Northern Ireland but still rain and hill snow across the far North. In

:48:53.:48:57.

the evening and overnight the weather front producing that will

:48:58.:49:00.

sink southwards and as it does so it will take snow to lower levels

:49:01.:49:04.

across Northern Ireland, southern Scotland and northern England. In

:49:05.:49:08.

this area adjacent to the Irish seed it will turn pretty windy, gusting

:49:09.:49:13.

up to gale forceful stop -- the Irish Sea. The wind direction is

:49:14.:49:17.

changing and you can see it from the Isa bass coming from the North. That

:49:18.:49:21.

is a hint as to what the weather will do in the next couple of days.

:49:22.:49:25.

Tonight it will be culled, there will be a widespread frost and we

:49:26.:49:29.

will have a risk of ice on untreated surfaces, something we have to bear

:49:30.:49:33.

in mind in the morning. The weather front continues to journey

:49:34.:49:36.

southwards, all the way down to the English Channel, weakening all the

:49:37.:49:40.

time and tomorrow it is not a bad day, quite a lot of sunshine around,

:49:41.:49:44.

the winds will be much lighter than yesterday and today and although the

:49:45.:49:47.

temperature values are not that dissimilar it will feel much better

:49:48.:49:51.

than it has done. Later in the day we have thicker cloud coming in from

:49:52.:49:54.

the west and that heralds the arrival of the next weather front

:49:55.:49:57.

introducing some rain. That will move across from west to east during

:49:58.:50:02.

Wednesday into Thursday and another waiting in the wings. On this chart

:50:03.:50:07.

you can see the Isa bass coming from a different direction so we are

:50:08.:50:10.

going to start to pull in some milder air from the Atlantic and

:50:11.:50:14.

with that we are going to introduce more cloud and there will be rain

:50:15.:50:20.

and it will be windy -- isobars. Look at the blue on the east of the

:50:21.:50:23.

chart but it gets pushed away by the Mothercare coming in on Thursday and

:50:24.:50:34.

also on Friday. And into the weekend -- the milder air. Those

:50:35.:50:39.

temperatures will go back up into double figures on Thursday.

:50:40.:50:47.

Hello - welcome to the programme if you've just joined us -

:50:48.:50:50.

The struggle to get an autism diagnosis -

:50:51.:50:53.

parents tell us they face 'unacceptable delays' -

:50:54.:50:55.

for a condition that now affects one in every 100 children.

:50:56.:50:59.

Former World Heavyweight champion David Haye tells us he's "firing

:51:00.:51:02.

on all cylinders" and working to regain his title.

:51:03.:51:08.

He is relishing his comeback after injury.

:51:09.:51:12.

It's nice to be back in the mix because at one stage I wasn't sure

:51:13.:51:16.

if I could fight again and that was frustrating. I said to myself, if I

:51:17.:51:19.

can somehow get my shoulder back to how it used to be I'm going to do

:51:20.:51:23.

things differently and adapt my training like I have done and I will

:51:24.:51:27.

be a force and I will regain the title.

:51:28.:51:30.

You can see the full interview on our programme page

:51:31.:51:33.

The global health emergency linking zika virus to birth defects -

:51:34.:51:37.

in Brazil are insisting. off - the authorities

:51:38.:51:51.

Texas Republican senator, Ted Cruz, beats Donald Trump in the first

:51:52.:51:58.

public vote in the race for the White House.

:51:59.:52:00.

Ted Cruz beat him in the Iowa Republican caucus gaining momentum

:52:01.:52:06.

as the pair square up for the next vote in New Hampshire. Republican

:52:07.:52:12.

establishment favourite Marco Rubio comes third, he won more votes than

:52:13.:52:14.

the polls predicted. In the Democratic Party contest,

:52:15.:52:16.

Hillary Clinton says she's breathing a sigh of relief as she claims

:52:17.:52:19.

a narrow victory over her socialist David Cameron's reached a draft deal

:52:20.:52:22.

with the EU that could be put to the British people ahead

:52:23.:52:29.

of the referendum on membership. The details are published shortly -

:52:30.:52:31.

they're understood to include plans for EU nations to be able to band

:52:32.:52:34.

together and block some EU laws. Storm Henry begins to ease but two

:52:35.:52:37.

thousand homes in north east Storm Henry begins to ease but 2000

:52:38.:52:43.

homes in north east Scotland Motorists have been warned

:52:44.:52:46.

of bridge and road closures. The messaging application WhatsApp

:52:47.:53:00.

one in seven people are using it, that is 1 billion people. It has

:53:01.:53:04.

outperformed Facebook's own messaging app.

:53:05.:53:09.

Profits at BP collapse by 50% in the last year as oil

:53:10.:53:12.

prices tumble - the oil giant confirms thousands of job losses -

:53:13.:53:15.

That is an extraordinary drop in profits.

:53:16.:53:24.

It is, BP is that latest of the oil majors to release fourth-quarter

:53:25.:53:27.

results, much like Chevron last week who expected a big fall and that is

:53:28.:53:32.

exactly what we got. The headline loss of $6.5 billion in 2015 as it

:53:33.:53:37.

massively downgrades the value of its reserves and other assets,

:53:38.:53:41.

stripping out the effect of the readjustment of the company made

:53:42.:53:45.

profits of $5.9 billion for the year, a 51% fall in profits from

:53:46.:53:49.

this time last year, so that is profits for the full year falling by

:53:50.:53:53.

over half. For the last quarter it showed a 90% drop is the year went

:53:54.:53:58.

on. The company and chief Executive Bob Dudley blamed the fall in the

:53:59.:54:03.

price of crude, it slumped 70% since mid-2014. Two weeks ago in Davos Bob

:54:04.:54:09.

Dudley said he expected the price of oil to be around $50 or $60 a barrel

:54:10.:54:14.

but it's currently around $34. We were expecting a bigger drop. The

:54:15.:54:19.

two other major issues in best keen to look out for today in this set of

:54:20.:54:26.

results were news on capital expenditure and dividend. On the

:54:27.:54:29.

former we already knew that BP was slashing around 4000 jobs in its

:54:30.:54:33.

upstream business, including production and refining, including

:54:34.:54:38.

in the North Sea. But today we also heard about a further 3000 jobs

:54:39.:54:43.

being cut, mostly contractual jobs, and that is in the downstream

:54:44.:54:48.

business. All of this comes from a huge $2.5 billion restructuring

:54:49.:54:51.

programme slashing huge sums of money on any new projects and when

:54:52.:54:54.

it comes to the dividends, the salary they pay out to shareholders,

:54:55.:54:58.

BP is really important on this front because it's one of the biggest

:54:59.:55:03.

sources of dividend income on the FTSE 100, and today we got the

:55:04.:55:06.

announcement they are going to maintain that dividend at 10 cents

:55:07.:55:10.

per ordinary share for the quarter, around 7%. Good news in a sense but

:55:11.:55:15.

it means shareholders and investors will be scratching their heads and

:55:16.:55:19.

wondering how long they can maintain that while the company stays in its

:55:20.:55:22.

current shape. Before coming on I checked the share price, around 300

:55:23.:55:28.

and 40p per share, town around -7.6%. Thank you. -- down around. We

:55:29.:55:37.

have some news to bring you, the body of a British tourist has been

:55:38.:55:41.

found in a canal in Amsterdam. Police have identified a body found

:55:42.:55:45.

in the canal in Amsterdam yesterday night as that of missing British

:55:46.:55:52.

tourist Richard Cole. The police had been searching the canals with is

:55:53.:55:57.

never dog. They found a body late last night. The family of Richard

:55:58.:56:04.

Cole have been informed. Police are investigating the circumstances of

:56:05.:56:07.

his death and how he ended up in the water. That has just come through to

:56:08.:56:13.

us, Richard Cole, the British tourist, his body has been found in

:56:14.:56:17.

a canal in Amsterdam. You may have seen us talking to his family just a

:56:18.:56:22.

few days ago, concerned about the fact that he had gone missing. Very

:56:23.:56:26.

sadly we are hearing that police are confirming that his body has been

:56:27.:56:28.

found in the canal. Let's catch up with all the sport

:56:29.:56:30.

now and join Olly Foster. And Pep Guardiola took us

:56:31.:56:33.

all by surprise, didn't he? He did catch us on the hop

:56:34.:56:38.

yesterday. The big deadline day transfer

:56:39.:56:40.

yesterday was managerial, Pep Guardiola is on his way

:56:41.:56:42.

the Premier League at the end of the season, Manchester City

:56:43.:56:45.

revealing that they've signed the Bayern Munich and former

:56:46.:56:51.

Barcelona boss on a three-year deal to replace Manuel Pellegrini,

:56:52.:56:57.

and Manchester City fans will be very

:56:58.:57:00.

excited by the prospect of what players he may bring

:57:01.:57:01.

to the Etihad in the It was certainly a low-key finish

:57:02.:57:03.

to the January window, but ?175 million was spent pushing

:57:04.:57:08.

Premier League transfer spending in a single season past

:57:09.:57:14.

?1 billion for the first time. Let's chat to Alex Thorne,

:57:15.:57:20.

transfer expert from Deloitte. Where was most of the money spent

:57:21.:57:28.

across January? It is always very interesting, this year not just the

:57:29.:57:32.

level of spending, taking Premier League spending to over 1 billion

:57:33.:57:35.

for the season but in January 50% of the spending was done by the clubs

:57:36.:57:39.

towards the bottom half of the table, the bottom six accounted for

:57:40.:57:43.

just over half the Premier League spending, demonstrating clubs

:57:44.:57:47.

wanting to stay in the league and anticipating significant uplifts

:57:48.:57:50.

next season in terms of broadcast revenue. There is a big pot of money

:57:51.:57:54.

at the end of the season coming up. This graph is interesting because

:57:55.:57:58.

175 million doesn't sound an awful lot when you think about ?1 billion,

:57:59.:58:03.

but all of the transfer windows across Europe were over, Pep

:58:04.:58:05.

Guardiola's Bundesliga where he is at the moment, and look at that,

:58:06.:58:10.

astonishing that the Premier League is head and shoulders above

:58:11.:58:13.

everybody else. We are seeing this consistently that the Premier League

:58:14.:58:16.

clubs can spend a lot more than European counterparts and all of the

:58:17.:58:19.

Premier League clubs ranked in the top 40 in terms of global revenue so

:58:20.:58:23.

they have greater means than their European counterparts and this

:58:24.:58:26.

translates, like you say, into greater levels of transfer spending.

:58:27.:58:31.

What is also interesting is the Championship, the league below the

:58:32.:58:33.

Premier League, also shows significant spending in January, to

:58:34.:58:38.

a level even in excess of some of these European leagues. They all

:58:39.:58:41.

want to get up, we had Everton and Stoke signing a couple of players

:58:42.:58:46.

from abroad yesterday, they were the big lake spenders, ?30 million

:58:47.:58:50.

between them. The top eight clubs have become quite canny, they didn't

:58:51.:58:55.

do any business yesterday whatsoever, and it is becoming more

:58:56.:58:58.

of a desperate market in January. It is difficult to get value in January

:58:59.:59:03.

for several reasons, one is the calibre of the player that you can

:59:04.:59:06.

bring in if you are at the top of the league, bringing somebody in of

:59:07.:59:11.

that calibre in mid-season is not possible. The top clubs spent a lot

:59:12.:59:15.

in the summer, ?870 million spent in the summer, so it might be a case

:59:16.:59:18.

they felt they could not get value in this market but also that they

:59:19.:59:22.

might have done their business early in the season. Many thanks for your

:59:23.:59:26.

thoughts. ?1 billion across the season.

:59:27.:59:32.

Now, cheating in cycling has been a big issue in recent

:59:33.:59:35.

years, but it's been all about what the riders have been

:59:36.:59:37.

putting in their bodies, steroids, EPO and the like,

:59:38.:59:40.

not what they've been hiding on their bikes.

:59:41.:59:42.

Over the weekend authorities caught a cyclist in a World Championship

:59:43.:59:44.

cyclo-cross race that was to some degree actually a motor-bike.

:59:45.:59:47.

The Belgian rider maintains she didn't know that an electric

:59:48.:59:49.

motor was concealed within the bike's frame,

:59:50.:59:53.

she'd got it mixed up with a friend's, and with a hidden

:59:54.:00:04.

boost button on the handlebars, the kind of mechanical doping that

:00:05.:00:07.

can enable a rider to go 3-4 mph faster

:00:08.:00:09.

Chris Froome says his bike has been checked over in the past

:00:10.:00:13.

as authorities try and stamp out this latest way of cheating.

:00:14.:00:16.

It's just incredible. Speaking from personal experience

:00:17.:00:23.

over the last couple of seasons my bike has been checked and dismantled

:00:24.:00:30.

at least a dozen times. So I think they are taking the threat

:00:31.:00:35.

seriously. And hopefully this will mean that they only increase the

:00:36.:00:39.

number of checks that they do on the world to a level. Was that you

:00:40.:00:45.

saying, that's incredible, Joanna? Every time you say that about what

:00:46.:00:49.

happened I can't believe it! You would like one, though, wouldn't

:00:50.:00:51.

you? I would like one!

:00:52.:00:55.

Thank you for joining us this morning, welcome to the programme

:00:56.:00:58.

if you've just joined us, we're on BBC Two and the BBC

:00:59.:01:01.

News Channel until 11am this morning.

:01:02.:01:07.

What's coming in on autism. Norma says, when her child was tested she

:01:08.:01:14.

said she thought the clinical psychologist was unsympathetic, she

:01:15.:01:17.

said she felt they wanted to be rid of them and that they were wasting

:01:18.:01:21.

their time. Charlotte says I have waited two years for my four-year

:01:22.:01:26.

old son to be diagnosed, it was a constant battle with paediatricians

:01:27.:01:29.

for appointments and a decision regarding an outcome.

:01:30.:01:33.

Another viewer says Mike granddaughter has finally been

:01:34.:01:36.

diagnosed autistic. When she was younger, her condition was blamed on

:01:37.:01:41.

her mother for neglect and she was threatened with removal. Keep your

:01:42.:01:42.

comments coming in. Texts will be charged

:01:43.:01:43.

at the standard network rate. Wherever you are you can

:01:44.:01:46.

watch our programme online via the BBC News app

:01:47.:01:48.

or our website bbc.co.uk/victoria. The amount of time it takes

:01:49.:01:51.

for autism to be diagnosed should be monitored by NHS England,

:01:52.:01:56.

the National Autistic Society has The charity says delays

:01:57.:01:59.

between being referred to an autism specialist and diagnosis

:02:00.:02:02.

were unacceptably long and putting A report by Public Health England

:02:03.:02:05.

has shown there is a huge disparity NHS England said it was committed

:02:06.:02:11.

to reducing waiting times. The National Autistic Society says

:02:12.:02:15.

it can take on average over two years for children and adults to get

:02:16.:02:18.

a diagnosis if the time it can take to get a referral

:02:19.:02:24.

from a GP is considered. Our reporter Jean Mackenzie went

:02:25.:02:26.

to meet 10-year-old Becky who had to wait years before

:02:27.:02:29.

being diagnosed with autism. How do you feel in social situations

:02:30.:03:11.

that you think is may be different to how your friends feel? I can

:03:12.:03:18.

think of any subject to talk about without making it as dull as

:03:19.:03:24.

watching paint dry -- I can't. You find it hard to have conversations?

:03:25.:03:29.

You have got better at socialising? Do you remember it being more

:03:30.:03:33.

difficult when you were younger? I think I was just a bit... I didn't

:03:34.:03:38.

have the foggiest idea of autism, I didn't even know the word. So the

:03:39.:03:43.

class probably found me different and more energetic to talk to. And

:03:44.:03:48.

since you have found out that you have autism, does that make things

:03:49.:03:52.

easier for you and how you understand? Yes, all this madness

:03:53.:03:59.

that comes straight into my brain in five seconds flat, it's all just

:04:00.:04:03.

because the wiring is all different in the brain. Yeah. Somebody might

:04:04.:04:11.

have straight lines going into their brain, mind probably has, I don't

:04:12.:04:15.

know, twisty tree types going all over the place. What did you think

:04:16.:04:23.

before you knew? This is me, woohoo! I don't know what the grown-up

:04:24.:04:27.

public will think of me when I am 20 years old. I am sure they will think

:04:28.:04:29.

you're great. Cool. Yeah. We can speak now to Dave Traxon,

:04:30.:04:34.

an educational psychologist Thank you for joining us. How

:04:35.:04:47.

difficult is it to make a diagnosis? What is going wrong? Can some

:04:48.:04:53.

capacity issues, but as your report suggested, it is a bit of a postcode

:04:54.:04:57.

lottery. In the West Midlands, where I am speaking from today, there is a

:04:58.:05:03.

lot of good practice. My local authority, Sandwell, for example,

:05:04.:05:08.

has cut the waiting list down considerably by much more

:05:09.:05:12.

collaborative working. The idea is that we work as a team, a

:05:13.:05:20.

psychiatrist, a paediatrician, a clinical psychologist, an

:05:21.:05:23.

educational psychologist, a speech and language therapist and an

:05:24.:05:28.

occupational therapist. In lines with an ICA guidelines, we are

:05:29.:05:32.

operating with some very collaborative pathways. -- in lines

:05:33.:05:37.

with Nice guidelines. They are called autistic pathways. Would a

:05:38.:05:42.

child had to see people from all those disciplines before a full

:05:43.:05:47.

diagnosis? Not necessarily all of them. There would be representatives

:05:48.:05:51.

of those teams at what is called the decision meeting. We like to

:05:52.:05:56.

contextualise the assessment. Some of those professionals would see the

:05:57.:06:01.

child in a classroom setting, some professionals would see the child in

:06:02.:06:06.

a clinic. The speech and language therapists might see the child in

:06:07.:06:10.

both settings, the classroom and a clinic. We try to get the most

:06:11.:06:15.

holistic picture possible of a child's needs. Is it very difficult

:06:16.:06:24.

to spot if the behaviour a child is presenting with is down to autism,

:06:25.:06:28.

can you tell when a child comes to you whether or not they are

:06:29.:06:34.

autistic? The girl no. In any team, there is a lot of experience. Some

:06:35.:06:39.

of them have specialised with working with autistic children for

:06:40.:06:44.

25 years, like one of my colleagues. When we put the information from all

:06:45.:06:49.

the professionals together, we get a very comprehensive view of what the

:06:50.:06:54.

child's level of need is. How difficult is it to say whether a

:06:55.:06:58.

child is autistic? It is one of those things that sometimes you

:06:59.:07:13.

will... Sometimes it is an easy label to pain? No, that is why we

:07:14.:07:18.

have this thorough process. At the final decision meeting we read

:07:19.:07:22.

through the international criteria for autism and we check that on each

:07:23.:07:30.

criteria there is, if you like, a yes or a no. Whether that child gets

:07:31.:07:37.

a take. If there are enough yes it is, and the professionals at the end

:07:38.:07:40.

of the meeting agreed, that child goes forward with a successful and

:07:41.:07:49.

important diagnosis. In educational terms, what difference does it make

:07:50.:07:54.

to a child, having that diagnosis? A huge difference, we have lots of

:07:55.:07:59.

expertise over the last 20 years of strategies and approaches that are

:08:00.:08:05.

really benefit autistic children in mainstream classes. You might have

:08:06.:08:10.

heard of a fuel like having a visual timetable, where to reduce their

:08:11.:08:14.

levels of anxiety they have little picture clues as to what they are

:08:15.:08:20.

going to do during the morning, so it might be reading followed by Lego

:08:21.:08:26.

followed by Playtime followed by swimming followed by seeing the

:08:27.:08:32.

speech therapist, and each of those activities has a little symbol, and

:08:33.:08:37.

by using those symbols the children are really reassured and they are

:08:38.:08:41.

not caught out. One of the things that the stresses autistic children

:08:42.:08:49.

is any sudden changes in routine. When you describe pretty simple

:08:50.:08:52.

things that can make a big difference to the life of an

:08:53.:08:55.

autistic child, it is very clear to see why as early a diagnosis is a

:08:56.:09:04.

good thing for a child, but is it also... How difficult is it to

:09:05.:09:08.

diagnose at a very early age? We spoke to one parent who basically

:09:09.:09:12.

spotted it when her son was 18 months, but was told at those early

:09:13.:09:16.

stages it was too young for a child to be autistic. The British

:09:17.:09:21.

psychological Society and the Association Of Educational

:09:22.:09:26.

Psychologist 's, my professional bodies, do not support the idea of

:09:27.:09:32.

diagnosis that early. They believe that the optimum time for diagnosis

:09:33.:09:37.

is when a child has started in a stone shall situation, like nursery

:09:38.:09:43.

or school -- social situation like nursery or school, a reception class

:09:44.:09:48.

in school. That tends to be when most assessments are done, we can do

:09:49.:09:53.

the assessment in context. Classroom teachers are very experienced these

:09:54.:10:00.

days in spotting the signs. And special educational needs

:10:01.:10:07.

coordinators are absolutely superb at spotting signs of children that

:10:08.:10:14.

have social and communication difficulties. Lots of people are

:10:15.:10:18.

getting in touch on this one. Brenda says autism has been diagnosed and

:10:19.:10:24.

asp urges, I live in hell daily, I get no help at my age, so lonely.

:10:25.:10:30.

Charlie says, I have autism, it has taken three years to get an

:10:31.:10:35.

assessment. Sophie said she waited for seven years, was diagnosed in

:10:36.:10:40.

23, later life diagnosis had life changing impact in a negative way.

:10:41.:10:44.

We are hearing from a lot of people not getting the diagnosis of autism.

:10:45.:10:50.

Does it happen where people are presented to you, kids are all --

:10:51.:10:54.

kids or Older People, people around them believe they are autistic they

:10:55.:11:00.

believe the tests would indicate they are not? Does that happen much?

:11:01.:11:05.

It can happen. Safeguard is that if a professional believes there are

:11:06.:11:12.

indicators of autism, that professional would make a referral

:11:13.:11:16.

to the team, the multi-professional team. Members of that team would

:11:17.:11:24.

come out quite quickly in order to follow up that assessment. Seven

:11:25.:11:28.

years is way too much. Certainly my professional bodies would want that

:11:29.:11:35.

to improve. In some areas, we had to be honest, it is due to cutbacks in

:11:36.:11:41.

mental health and assessment teams. The government has acknowledged

:11:42.:11:44.

that, there have been cuts to mental health services. Thank you very

:11:45.:11:54.

much, Dave Traxon, and educational authority. -- educational

:11:55.:11:56.

psychologist. Still to come before 11am -

:11:57.:11:59.

as a deal is struck to set out changes to the Britain's

:12:00.:12:02.

relationship with the European Union, we'll be asking

:12:03.:12:04.

what people in other EU countries think about the renegotiations -

:12:05.:12:07.

and whether they want us to stay. The Brazilian government says this

:12:08.:12:09.

summer's Rio Olympics will go ahead, despite the Zika outbreak that's

:12:10.:12:12.

been declared a global health emergency by the World

:12:13.:12:14.

Health Organisation. Authorities in Brazil says there's

:12:15.:12:16.

no risk to athletes or spectators, except pregnant women,

:12:17.:12:19.

at the event in August. The mosquito-borne virus has been

:12:20.:12:20.

linked to babies being born Meanwhile the Brazilian government

:12:21.:12:23.

is continuing efforts to eradicate breeding grounds for the mosquitoes,

:12:24.:12:26.

with more than 200,000 troops deployed to help

:12:27.:12:28.

with home inspections. Silvia Salek is from the BBC's

:12:29.:12:34.

Brazil Service and she's Tell us more about the measures that

:12:35.:12:49.

are being done in readiness for the games, Silvia? The government

:12:50.:12:54.

announced a few weeks ago that they would intensify the fight to

:12:55.:12:57.

eradicate mosquitoes around the venues where the gains will take

:12:58.:13:02.

place and tourists will be visiting. If that is enough, it is a question

:13:03.:13:06.

to be answered by authorities later when they have this press

:13:07.:13:10.

conference. They are supposed to talk about how prepared Rio is six

:13:11.:13:15.

months added the Olympics, but this will be overshadowed with concerns

:13:16.:13:19.

about what could happen. The risks are not just for people visiting

:13:20.:13:22.

Brazil, but what could happen when they go back to their countries. 23

:13:23.:13:26.

countries in the Americas have been affected. What are the the areas

:13:27.:13:34.

that could be vulnerable? It sounds like an immense task to reassure

:13:35.:13:39.

people, to do what they say they will do, in just six months? There

:13:40.:13:46.

is another aspect here, which is when people from Brazil here the

:13:47.:13:49.

Government talking about what they will do to the visitors, they hear,

:13:50.:13:55.

what about us? The government is doing a lot, some people criticise

:13:56.:14:00.

that the response was late, but it is a huge task and it involves an

:14:01.:14:05.

awareness that it is also about individual responsibility. It is

:14:06.:14:11.

very common for people to say that mosquitoes can reproduce outside,

:14:12.:14:14.

but inside the houses the mosquito is very well adapted to urban areas.

:14:15.:14:20.

When I went to Brazil in October during the outbreak, I noticed how

:14:21.:14:23.

the places that my parents live, they are not poor areas, and the

:14:24.:14:32.

mosquito was everywhere. How worried are people about that? I think now

:14:33.:14:35.

they are worried. People were complacent with the mosquito, they

:14:36.:14:40.

have been living with Deng fever for a while, even though people die of

:14:41.:14:45.

it, we thought, we can live with it. But now we see the microcephaly

:14:46.:14:50.

possibly being linked to Zika, and things might change now. You

:14:51.:14:54.

describe the type of mosquito, which is interesting, it is a particular

:14:55.:15:01.

type which carries this, it is easy to spot? I was at a friend 's has in

:15:02.:15:07.

a wealthy area and I said, there mosquitoes everywhere, and she said,

:15:08.:15:14.

don't worry, the Aeges is not here. And they clean said, yes, they are

:15:15.:15:18.

here, they are in the back toilet. People do not necessarily notice. --

:15:19.:15:21.

and their cleaner said. Lots of Olympic fans have already

:15:22.:15:24.

booked their trips to this year's event, and many more people

:15:25.:15:27.

are planning their holidays to South Well let's speak to Simon Williams

:15:28.:15:29.

who's the director of Bespoke Brazil, which specialises

:15:30.:15:34.

in holidays to Brazil and is offering packages

:15:35.:15:36.

to this years Olympics. Has many people booked in for the

:15:37.:15:46.

Olympics do you? Absolutely, we have got and getting lots of bookings, I

:15:47.:15:50.

have had another this morning. It is not putting people off. People are

:15:51.:15:54.

raising a lot of questions because there are lots of big headlines

:15:55.:16:00.

about Zika, but it is not putting people off from travelling,

:16:01.:16:04.

certainly. Has anyone tried to cancel because of it? Not yet,

:16:05.:16:10.

hopefully no one does. We have had a couple of people deciding to

:16:11.:16:16.

postpone trips. One was looking to get pregnant, so I fully understand

:16:17.:16:20.

that. That is the real problem about Zika and the potential links between

:16:21.:16:26.

Zika and microcephaly. Yeah, pregnant mothers or people looking

:16:27.:16:30.

to get pregnant, yeah, I probably wouldn't trouble to Brazil just

:16:31.:16:36.

because of the fear, even though the actual chance of your child having

:16:37.:16:44.

microcephaly is very low. We also had another elderly lady who decided

:16:45.:16:47.

not to go because she was worried about contracting Zika and then

:16:48.:16:52.

bringing it home to her granddaughter. That is obviously a

:16:53.:17:00.

little bit daft, because Zika is not passed from adult human to adult

:17:01.:17:10.

human. Unlike Ebola was. So there should not be that nervousness. And

:17:11.:17:15.

because of that, I don't see it affecting the Olympic Games at all.

:17:16.:17:21.

What is the criteria for you if somebody wants to cancel, and

:17:22.:17:22.

obviously not be out of pocket? We deal with those on a case-by-case

:17:23.:17:34.

basis and you would have two probably be pregnant and be advised

:17:35.:17:37.

by your doctor not to travel because of that. And until travel advice

:17:38.:17:47.

changes to another situation then there will basically be no grounds

:17:48.:17:54.

to cancel your trip and they should be no reason to cancel your trip

:17:55.:18:02.

either. Zika in its base form, when you separated from the issues with

:18:03.:18:07.

microcephaly is a very mild disease. Sylvia just mentioned inky fever,

:18:08.:18:14.

which is potentially more serious, mosquito borne illness. Zika does

:18:15.:18:21.

not show symptoms in most people -- dengue fever. From what the World

:18:22.:18:24.

Health Organisation has been saying it only stays in your body for a

:18:25.:18:28.

week or two weeks and then passes. They should be no long-lasting

:18:29.:18:32.

effects of zika, unless of course, there are potential links between

:18:33.:18:36.

zika and microcephaly, which are very worrying and by and large to

:18:37.:18:45.

the poor communities in Brazil, these poor communities are being

:18:46.:18:50.

affected who are living in squalid conditions and around stagnant

:18:51.:18:54.

water. Those people are really suffering rather than as tourists

:18:55.:18:58.

who are very lucky to only spend a little bit of time in Brazil, or

:18:59.:19:04.

unlucky as I would see it, and stay in nice accommodation which is a

:19:05.:19:08.

conditioned, has mosquito nets and we are able to have access to

:19:09.:19:15.

repellents. The likelihood of us contracting it is low and then

:19:16.:19:22.

obviously to have those links to microcephaly.

:19:23.:19:24.

Thank you, Simon. Thanks for joining us today -

:19:25.:19:29.

still to come before 11am: The BBC

:19:30.:19:32.

learns of serious concerns most senior female law

:19:33.:19:33.

enforcement officer. A dramatic victory for

:19:34.:19:41.

Ted Cruz in the first electoral test of

:19:42.:19:45.

the White House race. The deeply conservative

:19:46.:19:48.

Texas Senator beat Donald Trump in the Iowa Republican caucus -

:19:49.:19:50.

gaining momentum for the next vote, Republican Establishment favourite

:19:51.:19:53.

Marco Rubio comes third. He won more votes than

:19:54.:20:02.

the polls had predicted. In the Democratic Party contest,

:20:03.:20:06.

Hillary Clinton says she's breathing a sigh of relief as she claims

:20:07.:20:08.

a narrow victory over her socialist David Cameron's reached a draft deal

:20:09.:20:11.

with the EU that could be put to the British people ahead

:20:12.:20:20.

of the referendum on membership. The details are published shortly -

:20:21.:20:23.

they're understood to include plans for EU nations to be able to band

:20:24.:20:26.

together and block some EU laws. Dutch Police say a body found

:20:27.:20:33.

in a canal in Amsterdam yesterday is that of a missing

:20:34.:20:36.

British tourist. 30-year-old Richard Cole

:20:37.:20:38.

from Gloucestershire was last seen Storm Henry begins to ease but 2000

:20:39.:20:42.

homes in north east Scotland Motorists have been warned

:20:43.:20:50.

of bridge and road closures. The messaging app WhatsApp says

:20:51.:20:53.

one billion people - that's one in seven

:20:54.:20:56.

people in the world - The firm is owned by Facebook

:20:57.:20:59.

and it's outperformed the social Profits at BP collapse by 50%

:21:00.:21:06.

in the last year as oil prices tumble - the oil giant confirms

:21:07.:21:11.

thousands of job losses - Let's catch up with all the sport

:21:12.:21:14.

now with Olly Foster. On transfer deadline day,

:21:15.:21:23.

there was a managerial coup Pep Guardiola is on his way

:21:24.:21:30.

to the Premier League the Bayern Munich and former

:21:31.:21:36.

Barcelona Manager has signed a three-year deal to take over

:21:37.:21:39.

from Manuel Pellegrini at the end His wages of over a reported

:21:40.:21:41.

?20 million a year will make him better

:21:42.:21:45.

paid than any player Premier League transfer spending has

:21:46.:21:49.

gone past ?1 billion in a single season

:21:50.:21:51.

for the first time. Deadline day big spenders

:21:52.:21:57.

were Everton, ?13 million on Senegal forward Oumar Niasse,

:21:58.:22:03.

Stoke an ?18 million club record on Giannelli

:22:04.:22:05.

Imbula from Porto. Speaking about an astonishing amount

:22:06.:22:07.

of money - Floyd Mayweather says he's been offered over

:22:08.:22:12.

?100 million to try But he says even that isn't enough

:22:13.:22:14.

to get him back in the boxing ring. And Tour de France champion

:22:15.:22:20.

Chris Froome says mechanical doping That's after a cyclist was caught

:22:21.:22:22.

with an electric motor in her bike during a world championship race -

:22:23.:22:27.

the Belgian rider denies knowing anything about it,

:22:28.:22:29.

saying it was her friend's bike. We end the sport on Joanna's

:22:30.:22:35.

favourite story of the day. It is my favourite story and I'm

:22:36.:22:39.

putting one on my wish list for my next birthday! Thank you, Olly

:22:40.:22:41.

Foster. The BBC has learnt of serious

:22:42.:22:42.

concerns about the performance of the UK's most senior female law

:22:43.:22:45.

enforcement officer. Lynne Owens is the new head

:22:46.:22:47.

of the National Crime Agency, which leads the fight

:22:48.:22:49.

against serious and organised crime, and is responsible for

:22:50.:22:52.

the Child Exploitation and Online Protection

:22:53.:22:55.

Centre - known as CEOP. It's emerged that Surrey's Police

:22:56.:22:58.

and Crime Commissioner was considering dismissing Mrs Owens

:22:59.:23:00.

because of the force's record on public protection

:23:01.:23:02.

when she was Chief Constable. Let's speak to our home affairs

:23:03.:23:04.

correspondent Danny Shaw. Why has this emerged now? This has

:23:05.:23:15.

come out because we did a Freedom of Information Act request to obtain

:23:16.:23:18.

e-mails, letters and documents regarding conversations and

:23:19.:23:22.

correspondence between Kevin Hurley, regarding conversations and

:23:23.:23:25.

the Police and Crime Commissioner in Surrey and Lynne Owens, and

:23:26.:23:30.

interactions with the Inspectorate of Constabulary. That revealed that

:23:31.:23:33.

in a few months before she was appointed to head the National Crime

:23:34.:23:36.

Agency there was a complete breakdown of trust between Lynne

:23:37.:23:40.

Owens and Kevin Hurley, so much so that he was considering starting

:23:41.:23:44.

what is known as section 38 proceedings, which is the process by

:23:45.:23:46.

which Police and Crime Commissioner is can this miss effectively the

:23:47.:23:52.

Chief Constable Gargan. He had written to Sir Tom Winsor, the Chief

:23:53.:23:58.

Executive -- Inspector of Constabulary because he was worried

:23:59.:24:01.

about the problems at Surrey regarding child protection and

:24:02.:24:04.

domestic abuse and other issues were not properly addressed by Lynne

:24:05.:24:08.

Owens and he held her responsible for those failings. Tell us a bit

:24:09.:24:13.

more about the record. First of all there was the well-publicised case

:24:14.:24:14.

of Breck Bednar, the groomed online before being

:24:15.:24:21.

murdered. Surrey Police's handling of that case and the phone call it

:24:22.:24:25.

took from Breck Bednar's mother was heavily criticised by the

:24:26.:24:30.

independent police complaint commission and then there was the

:24:31.:24:33.

Inspectorate of Constabulary report into the child protection procedures

:24:34.:24:38.

of Surrey Police which revealed serious flaws and later a published

:24:39.:24:42.

report ranking Surrey Police as inadequate in the way it dealt with

:24:43.:24:46.

vulnerable people, one of the four worst performing forces in the

:24:47.:24:50.

country. I also understand there is a report to come out quite soon on

:24:51.:24:56.

Surrey's record on tackling serious and organised crime, which also

:24:57.:24:59.

exposed deficiencies and it will save the force needs to make

:25:00.:25:02.

improvements. A series of reports on a force that is reasonably well

:25:03.:25:07.

funded, not struggling particularly financially compared to some other

:25:08.:25:10.

forces and not in an area where you would expect a force to be

:25:11.:25:14.

struggling. It doesn't have an inner city area with all of the problems

:25:15.:25:17.

that entails and I think Kevin Hurley felt this record wasn't good

:25:18.:25:22.

enough, and he wanted to hold Lynne Owens to account for that. Has she

:25:23.:25:26.

responded? She has responded saying that she

:25:27.:25:29.

rejects the accusations made by Kevin Hurley, that she was putting

:25:30.:25:34.

in place an improvement plan and he supported that. She also points out

:25:35.:25:38.

that her appointment process for the National Crime Agency job, appointed

:25:39.:25:41.

by the Home Secretary Theresa May, was thorough and the Home Office has

:25:42.:25:45.

also responded by saying that she is one of the exceptional policing

:25:46.:25:51.

leaders of her generation. So a lot of support from the Home Office and

:25:52.:25:55.

from other people that say she has a fantastic track record. There is

:25:56.:26:00.

sort of two ways of looking at this, one is that people are saying this

:26:01.:26:04.

is about Kevin Hurley and his bid to be re-elected as Police and Crime

:26:05.:26:07.

Commissioner of Surrey and distancing himself from some of the

:26:08.:26:10.

failings in the force and the other point of view is he is exposing

:26:11.:26:13.

serious concerns relating to the record of a woman who has now got

:26:14.:26:17.

such a massive role leading the National Crime Agency and its right

:26:18.:26:22.

that those concerns are out there so the public can judge for themselves.

:26:23.:26:27.

Thank you, Danny. Let's just bring you a word on the

:26:28.:26:32.

response to the zika virus. The World Health Organisation has set up

:26:33.:26:35.

a global response unit on microcephaly and zika. Using, they

:26:36.:26:44.

say, all lessons learned from the Ebola crisis. The World Health

:26:45.:26:47.

Organisation was criticised for its response initially to the Ebola

:26:48.:26:51.

crisis, criticised as slow initially. It says it has learned

:26:52.:26:57.

lessons and setting up a global response unit. Lots of you getting

:26:58.:27:01.

in touch ahead of the Rio Olympics on this one, which they are saying

:27:02.:27:04.

will not be affected by the zika virus. But Graeme tweeted to say:

:27:05.:27:10.

the reality is no amount of effort will stop these insects breeding and

:27:11.:27:15.

infecting so what is plan B? Davey says if I was an athlete I wouldn't

:27:16.:27:19.

go anywhere near South America. Clifton tweeted: it's not daft that

:27:20.:27:21.

people are scared. After months and months of haggling,

:27:22.:27:23.

a draft deal's been struck - now all David Cameron has got to do

:27:24.:27:27.

is get everyone to agree to it. Very shortly, the European Council

:27:28.:27:30.

president Donald Tusk will publish a set of proposals that would change

:27:31.:27:33.

Britain's relationship He and the Prime Minister hope it

:27:34.:27:35.

will be enough to persuade the UK to vote to stay in the EU

:27:36.:27:40.

in the upcoming referendum. The draft deal will have to be

:27:41.:27:43.

approved by all the EU member states - and if that happens,

:27:44.:27:46.

the referendum could be held Our world affairs correspondent

:27:47.:27:49.

Rob Watson is here. A whole chain of things need to

:27:50.:28:01.

happen, Rob. This agreement, how much of a breakthrough is it?

:28:02.:28:06.

Excitement is building for people like us, for political journalists.

:28:07.:28:12.

Obviously we have to wait until 11 o'clock, which is not long, only

:28:13.:28:17.

about 15 minutes to go. We understand the agreement is needed

:28:18.:28:20.

to cover the four areas David Cameron wanted dealing with. One

:28:21.:28:24.

estimate the European Union more competitive and get rid of some red

:28:25.:28:27.

tape, to protect countries like Britain that don't use the euro. And

:28:28.:28:31.

then the ones that are controversial, what do we do about

:28:32.:28:35.

migration? As far as the voters in this country are concerned that is

:28:36.:28:38.

the biggest issue about Europe, trying to somehow slow down the

:28:39.:28:43.

level of net migration, so something about benefits. Mbemba fourth area

:28:44.:28:46.

is the really big picture stuff about stopping Britain from being

:28:47.:28:50.

part of this movement towards an ever closer European Union. Is it

:28:51.:28:56.

likely that any country is likely to veto these proposals, would Donald

:28:57.:29:03.

Tusk have signed off on this if there was a chance of that

:29:04.:29:05.

happening? The short answer is probably not but the other answer is

:29:06.:29:12.

who knows? How long will it take? In this modern age of journalism and

:29:13.:29:17.

Twitter and all of this kind of stuff I wouldn't have thought very

:29:18.:29:20.

long. When we see the document, and we have not got long to wait,

:29:21.:29:25.

perhaps some of that stuff is a little bit left loose, so that will

:29:26.:29:30.

be part of the negotiation between the commission and David Cameron and

:29:31.:29:33.

other EU member states. Is it looking increasingly like the 23rd

:29:34.:29:39.

of June to pencil in? I think so and the important thing to remember is

:29:40.:29:44.

the other European union members are desperate for us to stay and we have

:29:45.:29:48.

to bear that in mind and that's why some Eurosceptics in this country

:29:49.:29:51.

say, crikey, Mr Cameron, given how desperate the other members are for

:29:52.:29:56.

us to save maybe you could have driven a harder bargain -- for us to

:29:57.:30:03.

stay. We are now going to check the polls on that.

:30:04.:30:04.

So what do people across Europe think of the renegotiations?

:30:05.:30:07.

Let's speak to Guillaume Levrier, a trainee banker from Paris,

:30:08.:30:10.

Jose Moreno, a hot air balloon pilot and musician from Alicante in Spain,

:30:11.:30:13.

Justyna Politanska, an event manager from the Polish capital Warsaw,

:30:14.:30:18.

Justyna Politanska, an event manager from the Polish capital Warsaw.

:30:19.:30:20.

Thank you for joining us. Are you desperate for us to stay, Guillaume

:30:21.:30:30.

Levrier? Know I'm not. Sorry to disagree with what has been said.

:30:31.:30:34.

The main problem with the deal that David Cameron is trying to strike is

:30:35.:30:38.

firstly the two first items, competitiveness and powers to

:30:39.:30:41.

national parliaments are really compass -- cosmetic. The emergency

:30:42.:30:49.

brake towards the EU is bad economic policy. I'm not wanting Britain to

:30:50.:31:00.

stay if they willingness to reform the EU does not go the right way.

:31:01.:31:03.

Are you desperate for Europe to stay? I think they should stay but I

:31:04.:31:09.

think you should stay to create a New Year oh, altogether. The one we

:31:10.:31:15.

have now is not working for people, it's working well for money but it's

:31:16.:31:20.

not really solving the problems for the people in southern Europe.

:31:21.:31:25.

Winnie to reform it and I think the UK needs to take an important

:31:26.:31:29.

leading role. Would you be sad if the UK left? Definitely. For Polish

:31:30.:31:36.

people a strong European Union is something very important and also

:31:37.:31:39.

because we benefit a lot from being in the European Union and from being

:31:40.:31:45.

in the UK as well. For Polish people the UK staying in the European Union

:31:46.:31:49.

is something absolutely necessary, I think. On the other hand, it's

:31:50.:31:55.

reasonable what David Cameron is doing right now. I mean, for me it's

:31:56.:32:02.

a question of solidarity in the European Union. Within this whole

:32:03.:32:08.

migrant crisis we have right now it's important that we are together,

:32:09.:32:13.

not only on benefits but also on the problems we need to face, so for

:32:14.:32:19.

that reason it's understandable for me that the renegotiation of

:32:20.:32:22.

Britain's position in the European Union is taking place right now.

:32:23.:32:27.

Do you have sympathy with the position and concerns over issues

:32:28.:32:34.

like migration and a desire to try to restrict the ability of migrants

:32:35.:32:41.

to the UK getting benefits? I understand that. Many people in

:32:42.:32:45.

Poland say that such policies are against the Polish people and

:32:46.:32:49.

migrants in the UK in general, but we also have to remember that, for

:32:50.:32:53.

example, this is what the law is like in Poland as well. You can't

:32:54.:32:59.

start to get social benefits if you are living in Poland and you don't

:33:00.:33:03.

work, it is just not possible. You have to work at least 12 months

:33:04.:33:08.

within the last 18 months. On one hand we are saying it is

:33:09.:33:12.

discrimination, on the other we have the same policies. I think we should

:33:13.:33:17.

be a little bit more compassionate ear. Jose, what is your perspective

:33:18.:33:23.

on benefits and migration? I think it is very funny when I hear

:33:24.:33:26.

politicians talking about trying to keep migration down by doing that.

:33:27.:33:32.

You can do all the rules and all the laws you want, but as long as we

:33:33.:33:36.

have a situation in southern Europe that we keep having in the last

:33:37.:33:41.

seven years, as long as we like this we will continue going to Germany,

:33:42.:33:45.

England and wherever we can find a decent job and a pay check to make

:33:46.:33:49.

our lives. You want to make it difficult for us to do it? OK, go

:33:50.:33:53.

on, but I don't think it'll make difference. Do you think that things

:33:54.:34:01.

like benefits in the UK RA pull factor for people wanting to go to

:34:02.:34:07.

the UK? Honestly, I don't think people are very aware of how the

:34:08.:34:11.

benefits are in the UK before they leave. Before they leave, they are

:34:12.:34:15.

just thinking about finding a job. If the answer is yes, they will be

:34:16.:34:25.

going. I know lots of talented people, Spanish, Greek, Portuguese,

:34:26.:34:30.

working with you and giving you all their talents. I think it is a good

:34:31.:34:36.

thing. Justyna, what about freedom of movement? -- Guillaume, what

:34:37.:34:46.

about? It is one of the bases of the EU. Putting lives at stake, you

:34:47.:34:51.

think you can denounce the freedom of movement and expect to gain

:34:52.:34:57.

access to all of the other components of the EU, I think it is

:34:58.:35:01.

a mistake -- putting their sad state. I think the EU package comes

:35:02.:35:06.

as a whole and you had to take everything as it comes.

:35:07.:35:18.

Might leaving get better growth to the UK? I think that is mistaken?

:35:19.:35:25.

Does being part of the EU make you proud? How does it make you feel? Is

:35:26.:35:35.

it part of your identity? Of course. Europe as an entity has always been

:35:36.:35:45.

there. You can't imagine not knowing about Shakespeare, desk arts,

:35:46.:35:57.

Goethe. -- Shakespeare, Descartes and Goethe. Trying to goad the other

:35:58.:36:03.

way, it has been like that for 1000 years. I think there is a real

:36:04.:36:14.

European identity, this identity needs to get reforms, or maybe

:36:15.:36:26.

gather more strength. I don't see how having the EU as Great Britain

:36:27.:36:31.

wanted to be would help. Justyna, how do is EU membership make you

:36:32.:36:37.

feel? Proud and strong. We have to remember that the European Union is

:36:38.:36:41.

the biggest market in the world, but only if we are together. I believe

:36:42.:36:44.

this is something very important that we should fight for, to be

:36:45.:36:54.

together and be united and to feel the needs the solidarity. What I

:36:55.:37:02.

said in the beginning, we need to stay together not only for the

:37:03.:37:05.

benefits but also the problem is that the challenges we have

:37:06.:37:13.

together, for the last ten years that Poland has been in the European

:37:14.:37:19.

Union, a lot has changed, so I think this is also something that can move

:37:20.:37:26.

countries forward. So that we all achieve the same level of living for

:37:27.:37:31.

the benefit of everyone. Because now we can stop people crossing borders

:37:32.:37:35.

and moving from one country to another -- we can't stop. It is in

:37:36.:37:41.

everyone peers best interest for all the countries to develop at the same

:37:42.:37:45.

speed. Do some countries benefit more than others? Sometimes yes, but

:37:46.:37:54.

the aim is for all the countries to achieve the same or a similar level

:37:55.:38:00.

of quality of life, let's say. Yes, this means that some countries that

:38:01.:38:05.

have been underdeveloped for recent years need to have more benefits

:38:06.:38:10.

over a certain period, but it also means that they can't have those

:38:11.:38:16.

benefits wherever, and if the time comes, they will be able to help

:38:17.:38:19.

other countries as well and to take the burden. So, yeah. A final

:38:20.:38:32.

thought from Jose? I think there is no other option than we stick

:38:33.:38:37.

together in Europe with the UK. I think David Cameron knows. I think a

:38:38.:38:41.

desire to see them playing a strange chess game where David Cameron is

:38:42.:38:47.

trying look like he is fighting for the UK's right over Europe's right.

:38:48.:38:52.

We have to stop thinking on a short-term basis, if I do that may

:38:53.:38:56.

be more migrants are coming here, if I don't do that, I can avoid them.

:38:57.:39:02.

We need to think in the long term about working together and making

:39:03.:39:06.

southern European countries wealthy means that you have a lot of talent

:39:07.:39:10.

from the south coming to your country. In the long-term, we will

:39:11.:39:14.

definitely come to the conclusion that sticking together and working

:39:15.:39:18.

together with people is the best thing for everyone in Europe. Thank

:39:19.:39:20.

you all for joining us. David Beckham is trending this

:39:21.:39:22.

morning after he surprised a paramedic and her elderly patient

:39:23.:39:24.

with a hot drinks after he spotted them in the cold waiting

:39:25.:39:28.

for an ambulance. Cycle response paramedic

:39:29.:39:29.

Catherine Maynard was helping an elderly man, who had

:39:30.:39:31.

fallen in central London. The former England captain greeted

:39:32.:39:34.

them, got in his car, and returned ten minutes later

:39:35.:39:36.

with cups of tea and coffee. Catherine said she was "very

:39:37.:39:40.

amused and flattered". The patient was taken to hospital

:39:41.:39:42.

where he was treated for minor Apparently when he first went off

:39:43.:39:55.

she said to the others, do you think that looked like David Beckham? When

:39:56.:40:00.

he came back, it was him! Bearing hot drinks, what a hero.

:40:01.:40:02.

Thanks for your comments about our interview a little earlier

:40:03.:40:04.

Pete tweeted: take care and wish you all the success on your crusade.

:40:05.:40:08.

Paul said: So David Haye is set to fight again in May

:40:09.:40:11.

against an un-named opponent, surely it's Frank Bruno then?

:40:12.:40:13.

It will sell well and Andrew tweeted: Who are you going to fight?

:40:14.:40:17.

Nobody is going to buy a ticket until you name the opponent.

:40:18.:40:20.

You can see the full interview on our programme page,

:40:21.:40:22.

but here's some of what he told me earlier about his comeback.

:40:23.:40:29.

After three and a half years out of the ring,

:40:30.:40:31.

I was hampered with some horrendous injuries.

:40:32.:40:33.

And whatnot, took three and a half years to rehab it and got me in

:40:34.:40:45.

physical condition. Got a new coach and a team, to walk out at the O2

:40:46.:40:48.

arena was one of the best moments of my life. To fight against someone

:40:49.:40:54.

who had never lost in 11 years, he is a top ten ranked fighter, I had

:40:55.:40:58.

not fought the three and a half years. So to dispatch and really

:40:59.:41:03.

quickly, like I did, it routes I am fired real on all cylinders.

:41:04.:41:06.

You don't get paid overtime and boxing!

:41:07.:41:09.

Get in there and didn't really take much punishment in the process.

:41:10.:41:12.

Roll on to the next one, May 21st at the O2 Arena,

:41:13.:41:15.

tickets are on sale, looking forward to getting cracking

:41:16.:41:17.

again, working my way up to the world title and regaining

:41:18.:41:19.

Your coach, Shaun McGuigan, has talked about you as unique,

:41:20.:41:24.

But he said you are too powerful for your own good.

:41:25.:41:30.

In the past I have pushed it too hard in training and got injuries.

:41:31.:41:35.

All of my injuries have been done behind closed doors in the gym,

:41:36.:41:38.

because I train 100% all out every time.

:41:39.:41:42.

The training I was doing when I was 25, I cannot do at 35.

:41:43.:41:47.

I have had to adapt a lot of the stuff, making it safer,

:41:48.:41:50.

taking the impact out of my knees, ankles and lower back to make sure

:41:51.:41:53.

I can stay in good shape throughout training camp and peak on the night

:41:54.:41:57.

Shane has had a tough task because the guys he has

:41:58.:42:05.

Young, fresh guys who could do anything.

:42:06.:42:13.

I could do it but there is a chance of me getting injured in that.

:42:14.:42:17.

For me, it is about injury prevention, making sure I am

:42:18.:42:19.

on and win the world heavyweight title.

:42:20.:42:25.

What was it like being out of the sport for three

:42:26.:42:28.

Sitting back and watching these guys.

:42:29.:42:31.

I have been sitting out and watching this guy at the Olympics.

:42:32.:42:34.

In the time I have been retired, not retired, out with injury,

:42:35.:42:37.

Anthony Joshua has had pretty much his whole amateur

:42:38.:42:39.

and professional career combined in the time I have been out.

:42:40.:42:42.

I supported him at the Olympics, he has had 15 fights and is now one

:42:43.:42:45.

At one stage I was not sure if I could fight

:42:46.:42:51.

If I could somehow get my shoulder back to how it used to be,

:42:52.:42:55.

I would do things differently, adapt my training and be a force

:42:56.:42:58.

Thank God, I am healed and I am ready to go, I believe

:42:59.:43:04.

the heavyweight title will be around my waist and I will bring

:43:05.:43:12.

Good to talk to David Haye earlier. Alfie has tweeted to say somebody

:43:13.:43:18.

definitely won't be leaving the ring. Les says a great interview on

:43:19.:43:23.

Victoria, very eloquent and composed. David, not top ten. Hall,

:43:24.:43:29.

David Haye wearing a T-shirt with his own name on it!

:43:30.:43:34.

We do not know who he will be fighting in May. Hopefully not too

:43:35.:43:36.

long until we find out. Thank you for your company today,

:43:37.:43:37.

and for all your messages which really do help to

:43:38.:43:40.

inform our conversations. We always love you getting a dirge.

:43:41.:43:43.

-- getting in touch. You can contact me at any time

:43:44.:43:49.

via email or social media - Not so long ago,

:43:50.:43:52.

you just beat a rug for a good time. After this, we can do the other

:43:53.:44:05.

carpet in the lounge. Since then, things have perked up.

:44:06.:44:08.

Oh, my God! See one family live through

:44:09.:44:13.

a spare time revolution.

:44:14.:44:20.

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