20/06/2016

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:00:13. > :00:17.I'm Joanna Gosling. Welcome to the programme.

:00:18. > :00:21.Our top story: With just days

:00:22. > :00:23.to go till the referendum on the United Kingdom's membership

:00:24. > :00:25.of the European Union, the former Conservative Party chair,

:00:26. > :00:28.Lady Warsi, says she's changed her mind over the EU

:00:29. > :00:31.and is now supporting the campaign to remain in.

:00:32. > :00:33.She's angry over posters like this which she describes

:00:34. > :00:35.as nudge-nudge racism, something denied

:00:36. > :00:47.I made it quite clear on Sunday that that poster does not speak for Vote

:00:48. > :00:51.Leave, the official campaign. That is not the language we choose and

:00:52. > :00:55.our argument over controlling immigration is based on the consent

:00:56. > :01:00.of the voters and an ability to plan public services.

:01:01. > :01:02.Baroness Warsi joins car manufacturers and the English

:01:03. > :01:04.Premier League who have voiced their support for staying

:01:05. > :01:09.Also on the programme: As Parliament is recalled to pay tribute

:01:10. > :01:14.to the Labour MP Jo Cox, will her death change British politics?

:01:15. > :01:23.The British public are wonderful, they are decent, the way we behave

:01:24. > :01:26.is not decent. There is hate, there is poison.

:01:27. > :01:30.And in the Euros both Wales and England and are in action today.

:01:31. > :01:36.Both teams play their final qualification games tonight, with

:01:37. > :01:49.plenty at stake. Join us for more on the sport in the next 15 minutes.

:01:50. > :01:54.Good morning and welcome to the programme. We are live until 11

:01:55. > :01:58.o'clock. We will bring you the latest breaking news and developing

:01:59. > :02:01.stories as ever, and as always we are keen to hear from you on

:02:02. > :02:06.everything we are talking about this morning: If you text you will be

:02:07. > :02:09.charged at the standard network rate.

:02:10. > :02:13.With just days to go till the referendum

:02:14. > :02:15.on the United Kingom's membership of the European Union,

:02:16. > :02:17.the former Conservative Party chair, Lady Warsi, says she's

:02:18. > :02:20.changed her mind over the EU and is now supporting

:02:21. > :02:29.She accuses the Leave campaign of spreading hatred and xenophobia that

:02:30. > :02:34.Vote Leave does not remember her being on their side.

:02:35. > :02:36.Stepping out of the Leave camp and into Remain,

:02:37. > :02:38.as the referendum campaign enters its final stages.

:02:39. > :02:40.Although never a high-profile campaigner, this senior Conservative

:02:41. > :02:43.had voiced support on social media for leaving the EU.

:02:44. > :02:46.She was critical, though, of other Leave figures,

:02:47. > :02:55.attacking comments by Ukip leader Nigel Farage.

:02:56. > :02:58.But it was this poster depicting queuing migrants from his party last

:02:59. > :03:00.week that was too far for Lady Warsi.

:03:01. > :03:02.Now she is switching sides in the referendum,

:03:03. > :03:04.telling the Times that she can no longer support tactics that

:03:05. > :03:06.spread hate and xenophobia to win a campaign.

:03:07. > :03:09.Vote Leave said they didn't remember Lady Warsi ever having

:03:10. > :03:12.joined their campaign, and were bemused by the story.

:03:13. > :03:16.But her decision will be welcomed by the Prime Minister.

:03:17. > :03:23.David Cameron faced questions last night on the economy

:03:24. > :03:24.and on failing to meet the Government's immigration target.

:03:25. > :03:27.Is it really worth leaving the single market,

:03:28. > :03:31.damaging our economy, to make progress on this issue?

:03:32. > :03:42.It comes amid a shift in emphasis among some Leave campaign is on the

:03:43. > :03:46.issue of immigration. I am in favour of an amnesty for illegal immigrants

:03:47. > :03:53.who have been here for more than 12 years, unable to contribute to this

:03:54. > :03:57.economy, unable to pay taxes, unable to take a proper part in this

:03:58. > :04:00.society and I will tell you why. It is the humane thing to do, it is

:04:01. > :04:06.economically rational thing to do, and it means taking back control.

:04:07. > :04:10.With just three days of campaigning left, this debate is only likely to

:04:11. > :04:15.intensify. Tom Bateman, BBC News. the English Premier League has come

:04:16. > :04:21.out in favour of the UK remaining The motion was supported by all 20

:04:22. > :04:24.of the league's football clubs. Leave campaigners said EU membership

:04:25. > :04:26.reduced opportunities The group that represents

:04:27. > :04:29.the British car industry, which employs hundreds

:04:30. > :04:31.of thousands of people, has said it's in favour of the UK

:04:32. > :04:34.remaining in the European Union. The Society of Motor Manufacturers

:04:35. > :04:36.and Traders said access to the single market,

:04:37. > :04:38.and free movement of labour, But the Leave campaign say a vote

:04:39. > :04:43.for Brexit could provide Our political guru Norman Smith

:04:44. > :04:58.is at Westminster. What are we to make of the latest

:04:59. > :05:01.flurry of who is on whose side? I think Baroness Warsi's move is

:05:02. > :05:06.significant, not because she is a party chairman and not even because

:05:07. > :05:10.of her departure but because of what she is saying. She seems to be

:05:11. > :05:13.pointing to what is the key vulnerability of the Leave side in

:05:14. > :05:19.the last few days of this campaign and that is tone. The fear is that

:05:20. > :05:24.they get sucked up into the slip stream of Nigel Farage's much more

:05:25. > :05:28.abrasive approach, particularly around immigration and the official

:05:29. > :05:31.Leave campaign almost becomes the Nigel Farage campaign, which is

:05:32. > :05:36.their absolute nightmare. That is why over the weekend they have been

:05:37. > :05:40.desperately trying to push back, disassociating themselves from that

:05:41. > :05:49.post in particular, which has caused such a rout at which Baroness Warsi

:05:50. > :05:53.said was indefensible. -- such a row. Nigel Farage has defended the

:05:54. > :05:57.posted this morning, saying all that was wrong with it was the

:05:58. > :06:03.unfortunate timing coming just a few hours before the murder of Jo Cox.

:06:04. > :06:07.We released a poster, a similar one that I had released a couple of

:06:08. > :06:11.months before, and within two hours there was that tragic murder. I am

:06:12. > :06:15.sorry for the timing of this, of course I am. What the poster

:06:16. > :06:20.represented was the Schengen area and Angela Merkel's quality of

:06:21. > :06:23.unlimited numbers of people to come, literally breaking the Schengen zone

:06:24. > :06:29.apart, and the slogan was the EU is failing us all. There was nothing

:06:30. > :06:33.wrong with the poster but the timing was very unfortunate. It is not just

:06:34. > :06:40.that poster which has prompted Baroness Warsi to leave the Leave

:06:41. > :06:44.side. She is also furious about what she sees as Michael Gove's complete

:06:45. > :06:49.lies over Turkey, as she calls them. The idea that Turkey is going to

:06:50. > :06:53.join the EU imminently. It is also a question of the focus on

:06:54. > :06:57.immigration. She said she had hoped for a much more outward looking,

:06:58. > :07:04.optimistic, positive campaign, and that is what she had urged the

:07:05. > :07:07.Brexit campaign to focus on. That was her main criticism of the Leave

:07:08. > :07:12.side, that they allowed themselves to get sucked into focusing on

:07:13. > :07:18.immigration. This was her speaking on the Today programme this morning.

:07:19. > :07:21.Why is it that people like me, who are instinctively Eurosceptic, that

:07:22. > :07:26.feel that the EU needs reform and want to rebalance our relationship

:07:27. > :07:30.with Europe feeling that we have got to leave Leave? It is because day

:07:31. > :07:35.after day we hear the refugees are coming, the rapists are coming, the

:07:36. > :07:39.Turks are coming. It is a curious thing, but it seems to me that where

:07:40. > :07:44.the Leave side now are is that immigration is a double-edged sword.

:07:45. > :07:47.It is obviously their trump card, the centrepiece of their campaign,

:07:48. > :07:51.and it has driven a lot of their support. But at the same time it is

:07:52. > :07:58.their key weakness because the danger is that their tone gets

:07:59. > :08:02.wrapped up in Nigel Farage's tone and they become seen as one and the

:08:03. > :08:07.same. Throughout this whole campaign that has been a nightmare for the

:08:08. > :08:11.Leave side. They are desperate not to find themselves entangled with

:08:12. > :08:16.Nigel Farage so the public simply can't draw any distinction between

:08:17. > :08:18.them. Thank you. Sophie is in the BBC newsroom with a summary of the

:08:19. > :08:23.rest of the news. Good morning. Parliament is being recalled this

:08:24. > :08:26.afternoon so that politicians can pay their respects to the murdered

:08:27. > :08:28.Labour MP Jo Cox. Parliament had been

:08:29. > :08:30.in recess in the run-up Jo Cox was killed in her

:08:31. > :08:33.constituency of Birstall A fund set up in her memory has now

:08:34. > :08:37.raised over ?800,000. 52-year-old Thomas Mair has been

:08:38. > :08:39.charged with her murder and is due back in court later this

:08:40. > :08:44.morning. Three 12-year-old girls from Salford

:08:45. > :08:51.who became seriously ill after taking ecstasy,

:08:52. > :08:53.are now said to be Greater Manchester Police say a man

:08:54. > :08:56.and a woman have been arrested. It is thought the girls

:08:57. > :08:59.are among the youngest people in the UK to have fallen ill

:09:00. > :09:12.after taking the drug. A new report suggests children held

:09:13. > :09:16.in custody in England and Wales are twice as likely to have forced used

:09:17. > :09:22.against them than they were five years ago. The Howard League for

:09:23. > :09:26.Penal Reform says a new practice has emerged of locking up children in

:09:27. > :09:27.prison wings for 23 hours a day. We have more on this story just after

:09:28. > :09:33.10:30am. There should be more

:09:34. > :09:35.specialist help for pregnant women with epilepsy,

:09:36. > :09:36.according to new The Royal College of Obstetricians

:09:37. > :09:40.and Gynaecologists says more must be Experts warn that seizures can be

:09:41. > :09:44.harmful to both mothers and babies. The United Nations' refugee agency

:09:45. > :09:47.says that the number of people displaced by conflict has reached

:09:48. > :09:51.the highest level ever recorded. In a new report published

:09:52. > :09:54.on World Refugee Day the UN says more than 65 million people

:09:55. > :09:58.were either refugees, asylum seekers, or internally

:09:59. > :10:01.displaced by the end of last year. It says this represents one in every

:10:02. > :10:07.113 people on the planet. Residents from a town

:10:08. > :10:09.in Southern California have been evacuated from their homes

:10:10. > :10:12.after a wildfire jumped from five acres to 900 acres

:10:13. > :10:17.in a matter of hours. Hundreds of firefighters

:10:18. > :10:21.and an aircraft are working to beat the flames back in Potrero,

:10:22. > :10:24.east of San Diego. Temperatures in the area

:10:25. > :10:26.are hovering at around 49 degrees The Russian-born actor,

:10:27. > :10:31.Anton Yelchin, best known for playing Chekov in

:10:32. > :10:35.the recent Star Trek films, has been killed in a freak accident

:10:36. > :10:39.at his home in Los Angeles. Police say the actor, who was 27,

:10:40. > :10:44.became pinned against a wall when his car rolled towards him

:10:45. > :10:49.on his steep driveway. That's a summary of

:10:50. > :11:00.the latest BBC News. In the next few minutes we will be

:11:01. > :11:03.asking whether the death of Jo Cox will change British politics.

:11:04. > :11:06.Do get in touch with us throughout the morning.

:11:07. > :11:08.Use the hashtag VictoriaLIVE and if you text, you will be charged

:11:09. > :11:22.Now the very latest sport from Sally in Paris. Good morning. Yes, crunch

:11:23. > :11:27.time for two of the home nations at the European Championships. Wales

:11:28. > :11:31.and England play their final group B matches tonight. There are lots of

:11:32. > :11:34.permutations, but put simply, England only need one point to be

:11:35. > :11:37.sure of going through while Wales need a win to guarantee

:11:38. > :11:42.qualification. We will hear from Chris Coleman in a moment but first

:11:43. > :11:46.let's head the England camp and Olly Foster in Saint-Etienne ahead of the

:11:47. > :11:50.match against Slovakia tonight. It looks as though Roy Hodgson might be

:11:51. > :11:59.about to make some changes. Is that wise? Yes, you have talked about the

:12:00. > :12:03.permutations. England sitting very pretty at the top of group B. A win

:12:04. > :12:10.will do great and they will top the group and get a far easier team to

:12:11. > :12:14.play in the last 16 of the tournament. We knew he was likely to

:12:15. > :12:23.make a couple of tactical changes. What he did at half-time against

:12:24. > :12:27.Wales in Lens, bringing on Jamie Vardy and Daniel Sturridge after 45

:12:28. > :12:31.minutes, it could be a gamble but it was a tactical masterstroke because

:12:32. > :12:35.they both scored, turning the match against Wales and getting the win to

:12:36. > :12:39.go top of the group. There are unconfirmed reports that not just

:12:40. > :12:43.those two will start but there will be four other changes. Up to six

:12:44. > :12:49.changes to the starting 11, including Wayne Rooney, the captain,

:12:50. > :12:54.being dropped. That certainly does come across as a gamble. The reasons

:12:55. > :12:59.for this are partly tactical because Raheem Sterling hasn't been playing

:13:00. > :13:05.very well. Harry Kane looks dog tired as well but apparently he is

:13:06. > :13:09.worried about fatigue. If they lose and it backfires, yes, they are on

:13:10. > :13:12.four points which should get them through anyway, but if they finish

:13:13. > :13:17.third and goes through, then it could be a very tough last 16 tie.

:13:18. > :13:21.It is a big risk if he goes through with these changes. He has always

:13:22. > :13:27.said he trusts in his 23 and it looks like he will put that to the

:13:28. > :13:32.test. Thank you. We'll Roy Hodgson take the risk? Wales will be through

:13:33. > :13:39.to the knockout stages of 2016 if they beat Russia in their final

:13:40. > :13:44.group game in Toulouse tonight. Even a draw might be enough for the

:13:45. > :13:46.Russians to progress. Their disappointing start to the

:13:47. > :13:50.tournament has been overshadowed by violence from some of their fans.

:13:51. > :13:54.Wales are second in group B with three points and their manager

:13:55. > :13:59.thinks whatever the result tonight, Euro 2016 is just the start for his

:14:00. > :14:03.side. Now that we have got to this tournament, nobody wants it to end.

:14:04. > :14:08.At the end of it, no matter when it gets knocked out, it is all over for

:14:09. > :14:20.us, the team is done. This team is very much in the middle of a

:14:21. > :14:22.journey. It is our first test of major football and it is fantastic,

:14:23. > :14:25.relentless. This group cannot lose because they will be going home when

:14:26. > :14:28.ever that time is with so much experience that in the past we have

:14:29. > :14:34.never got. The England game is on Radio 5 Live tonight and the Wales

:14:35. > :14:35.game is on Radio 5 Live Extra with highlights on BBC One at 10:50pm.

:14:36. > :14:39.Thank you. Politicians will return

:14:40. > :14:42.to Westminster this afternoon to pay tribute to Labour MP Jo Cox,

:14:43. > :14:44.who was killed in her constituency There are calls for MPs

:14:45. > :14:48.from different parties to sit together in the Commons

:14:49. > :14:50.in a show of unity. Normally each party sits

:14:51. > :14:53.in their own section. There's been no official decision

:14:54. > :14:56.yet on whether that will happen, but either way, the Conservative

:14:57. > :15:02.leader of the House of Commons, Chris Grayling,

:15:03. > :15:04.has said conventional party politics should be a million miles

:15:05. > :15:08.away from today's debate. But with the referendum

:15:09. > :15:10.campaign back under way, having been suspended for three days

:15:11. > :15:13.in tribute to Jo Cox, how long will it take

:15:14. > :15:15.for conventional party politics to return and all

:15:16. > :15:25.that it brings with it? Boris, well he is the life and soul

:15:26. > :15:28.of the party, but he is not the man you want driving you home at end of

:15:29. > :15:33.the evening. The strain of the campaign is beginning to tell on

:15:34. > :15:37.him. I think his judgment is going. Lord Heseltine is a humbug to WHO

:15:38. > :15:40.divided our party and a period of silence on his part would be

:15:41. > :15:43.welcome. It is always good to hear voices from the past. I would be

:15:44. > :15:48.grateful if they remained in the past! Ask my mother. I think I know

:15:49. > :15:54.what my mother would say, she would look across the dispatch box and

:15:55. > :15:59.say, "Do up your suit. Put on a tie and sing the National Anthem." If we

:16:00. > :16:03.are talking of motherly advice, my mother would say stand up for the

:16:04. > :16:07.principle of the Health Service free at the point of need for everybody.

:16:08. > :16:11.Stop lying. Ukip believes in the National Health Service, free at the

:16:12. > :16:16.point of delivery. It was you, it was you that prifised a large chunk

:16:17. > :16:24.of the Health Service. You're lying and you're lying. I'm going to come

:16:25. > :16:29.in now. You made the point... You know what Nigel Farage, it is not

:16:30. > :16:33.caused by immigrants. In your world every problem is caused by

:16:34. > :16:37.immigrants. This Prime Minister, three months ago, to have said all

:16:38. > :16:42.things were possible. He could even back Brexit to say if we leave, it

:16:43. > :16:50.will cause World War three. I think dishonest Dave works. This man has

:16:51. > :16:56.done more to divide this nation than anybody else. He has looked after

:16:57. > :17:00.his own profit and I still refer to him as dodgy Dave.

:17:01. > :17:03.Since Jo Cox's killing there have been repeated calls for her legacy

:17:04. > :17:07.to be an end to the nasty, tribal elements of British politics.

:17:08. > :17:18.I think the way we conduct politics can inspire people, can put people

:17:19. > :17:21.off, can lead to a poisoned environment and the way politics is

:17:22. > :17:24.conducted in this country is poisonous. I think the British

:17:25. > :17:30.public are wonderful. They're decent. The way we behave is not

:17:31. > :17:37.decent. There is hate. There is poison. So where we see hatred,

:17:38. > :17:41.where we find division, where we see imtolerance, we must drive it out of

:17:42. > :17:45.our politics and out of our public life and out of communities and if

:17:46. > :17:50.we truly want to honour Jo, then what we should do is recognise that

:17:51. > :17:54.her values, service, community, tolerance, the values she lived by

:17:55. > :17:58.and worked by, those are the values that we need to redouble in our

:17:59. > :18:03.national life in the months and in the years to come. In her memory, we

:18:04. > :18:07.will not allow those people that spread hatred and poison to divide

:18:08. > :18:11.our society. We will strengthen our democracy, strengthen our free

:18:12. > :18:17.speech. We should recognise that we've drifted into a situation where

:18:18. > :18:23.it is almost become accepted that MPs are the subject of venom and

:18:24. > :18:31.politician has become a term of abuse. And the debate has become so

:18:32. > :18:36.toxic. She gave a voice to those who cry for help she felt was not being

:18:37. > :18:41.heard. It changed attitudes and I know it contributed to a change in

:18:42. > :18:47.policy. When Jo would get abuse on Facebook or Twitter, we would talk.

:18:48. > :18:52.And sometimes cry together. But she would still focus on the positive

:18:53. > :18:58.and talk about the silent majority who didn't always shout the loudest.

:18:59. > :19:05.But over the past 48 hours people have not been silent. They have been

:19:06. > :19:10.vocal and passionate and have spoken from the heart with genuine emotion

:19:11. > :19:15.and no hidden agendas. Jo would have loved it.

:19:16. > :19:19.Here to discuss Stephen Kinnock, Labour MP, was a friend of Jo Cox.

:19:20. > :19:22.He shared an office with her and she had worked for his mother.

:19:23. > :19:24.He has written that parliament will never be the same

:19:25. > :19:29.He will be paying tribute to Jo Cox in the chamber later today.

:19:30. > :19:31.Tom Brake is Lib Dem for Carshalton and Wallington.

:19:32. > :19:34.He says, sadly, he doesn't think her death will change politics.

:19:35. > :19:36.Therese Coffey is Conservative MP for Suffolk Coastal.

:19:37. > :19:41.She says it's important that passionate politics continues.

:19:42. > :19:44.Joining us from their local BBC studios Dr Lisa Cameron,

:19:45. > :19:49.SNP MP for East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow.

:19:50. > :19:52.She's staying close to home this week to reassure her children.

:19:53. > :19:57.Jonathan Arnott is the Ukip MEP for the North East.

:19:58. > :20:04.Thank you all very much for joining us. Theresa, you have said that

:20:05. > :20:10.passionate politics needs to remain, but when you look at what we were

:20:11. > :20:13.just looking at there about some of the real vitry old that's seen in

:20:14. > :20:17.politics, where do you draw the line? You can be passionate about

:20:18. > :20:21.politics and about what you believe without impuning the motive of

:20:22. > :20:24.others and using the language of hatred and vitry old. I believe MPs

:20:25. > :20:28.come into Parliament and all politicians are motivated to do

:20:29. > :20:34.better things and make things better and you may disagree on the outcome

:20:35. > :20:41.or how we achieve those things. We must recognise the decisions we make

:20:42. > :20:44.have impact on people's lives as Jo exemplified working together with

:20:45. > :20:49.other MPs across party lines is a large part what we do on a daily

:20:50. > :20:54.basis and perhaps that work doesn't get seen often, but it is there and

:20:55. > :20:58.we should make sure it continues and remove the hatred language. Tom, you

:20:59. > :21:03.said you don't think anything will change, why not? Well, I think there

:21:04. > :21:08.has been a slight adjustment in relation to this campaign. I think

:21:09. > :21:12.we just heard from Michael Gove and Boris Johnson talking about

:21:13. > :21:16.statements talking about the positive impact that migration can

:21:17. > :21:23.have. My worry is the grass-roots activists, the sort of people who a

:21:24. > :21:27.couple of weeks ago in walington high street attacked the Remain

:21:28. > :21:33.campaigners, describing them as traitors that that feeling will be

:21:34. > :21:37.there for a significant number of grass-roots activists. This issue

:21:38. > :21:40.has become toxic and become a tool or a weapon for people to use when

:21:41. > :21:49.they are trying to find someone to blame that, is a very easy way out.

:21:50. > :21:55.Jonathan, how do you see that? I have also seen examples within my

:21:56. > :22:01.constituency and elsewhere of people who are supporting Leave in this

:22:02. > :22:05.referendum who have had property, vandalised in the wake of what

:22:06. > :22:10.happened and actually I think that the whole message of what we should

:22:11. > :22:15.be learning from the terribly sad and shocking events of Thursday is

:22:16. > :22:21.actually that we need to have a more positive approach as a society going

:22:22. > :22:25.forward and adversarial nature of politics is something in one sense

:22:26. > :22:29.can be a good thing if we are talking about views being challenged

:22:30. > :22:35.and for both sides of a debate to be properly heard and to ensure that

:22:36. > :22:40.anything that you say can actually stand up to the scrutiny that it

:22:41. > :22:45.should get, but when that becomes something which is personalised and

:22:46. > :22:49.aimed at a politician, aimed at a political party, aimed at

:22:50. > :22:53.individuals then that is something which is terribly out of order. So I

:22:54. > :22:58.think it really depends on what we mean by the word adversarial.

:22:59. > :23:05.Stephen Kinnock, where does it filter down from? Do MPs have a duty

:23:06. > :23:09.to not send out the sort of messages at grass-roots level can become

:23:10. > :23:15.played out in the way that they are? Yes, I think we all have a duty at

:23:16. > :23:21.all levels of politics to learn from this and to honour Jo's legacy and

:23:22. > :23:27.Jo's legacy was and should be that we need a new kind of politics based

:23:28. > :23:34.on unity, not on division, and on hope, not on fear. I think we have

:23:35. > :23:40.to recognise that this referendum campaign has unleashed some dark and

:23:41. > :23:44.divisive forces and when you light a touch paper, you have to expect that

:23:45. > :23:50.there will be an explosion and that is what I think we have seen in

:23:51. > :23:55.these tragic events and I think that those who are responsible for the

:23:56. > :23:59.poster that went up on Thursday need to think very, very carefully about

:24:00. > :24:03.their responsibility in that context and I hope that this is, what we

:24:04. > :24:06.will learn from this is that we will move forward into a kind of politics

:24:07. > :24:11.where that sort of thing never happens again. Lisa, what is your

:24:12. > :24:17.thought on that? In the Scottish referendum campaign there were some

:24:18. > :24:20.nasty trolling? I think the adversarial nature of politics that

:24:21. > :24:24.we have in the UK must be challenged to a degree because it is good to

:24:25. > :24:28.have debate. It is very important that we do debate points, but things

:24:29. > :24:34.should never become personal. I can say as someone who didn't come from

:24:35. > :24:39.a political background, who came into politics afresh last year,

:24:40. > :24:45.after the election, that I moved overnight from being a doctor who

:24:46. > :24:54.was respected and who was received positively to a politician who

:24:55. > :24:58.received messages online that were vision itrolic, who received

:24:59. > :25:01.negative E pails, etcetera from people that I don't believe would

:25:02. > :25:05.have come up to me and said that in the street but who felt able to do

:25:06. > :25:11.that because all of a sudden I was an MP. Why do you think that is? I

:25:12. > :25:15.think there is something about the amoplity of being behind a computer

:25:16. > :25:21.screen that people think they can do so. Why do you think MPs are seen in

:25:22. > :25:25.that way? I think that we have to take responsibility on many fronts

:25:26. > :25:29.in terms of MPs own behaviour over the years, but also in terms of

:25:30. > :25:34.media reporting of MPs. I don't think there is enough reporting on

:25:35. > :25:38.the very positive cross opinion heart work that's completed in

:25:39. > :25:41.Parliaments both in devolved parliaments and at the Westminster

:25:42. > :25:46.Parliament. As chair of the all-party group on disability, there

:25:47. > :25:49.is a lot of constructive cross-party working that takes place, but quite

:25:50. > :25:54.frankly, that's not what is reported in the media. I think that we need

:25:55. > :25:59.to get more of a consensus politics where things are taken forward that

:26:00. > :26:03.are best for society, that are what works policies and we do a

:26:04. > :26:07.disservice to people across the country to focus continually on

:26:08. > :26:12.adversarial and personalisation and negativity within politics.

:26:13. > :26:18.Quite a lot of what we do, especially working with MPs from

:26:19. > :26:21.other parties, is often issues in our constituencies, very worthy, but

:26:22. > :26:25.affect other parts of the country, but they are not the same as working

:26:26. > :26:29.together on aspects of the NHS or the big topics on where there are

:26:30. > :26:33.differences on how we make changes and what we believe will be better

:26:34. > :26:37.for patients and so on. So I think Lisa is right to point out that we

:26:38. > :26:45.should continue to do that work more closely together and perhaps be a

:26:46. > :26:49.bit tougher in tush pushing out that message. We have to be accountable

:26:50. > :26:53.for our words and what we say and what messages we project. It has

:26:54. > :26:56.been said so many times over the years, hasn't it? Things like Prime

:26:57. > :27:02.Minister's Questions, why does it have to be so add va carial, Tom?

:27:03. > :27:08.The chamber is designed to make it adversarial. What I hope will come

:27:09. > :27:13.out of this is perhaps a willingness to focus on the facts. I think what

:27:14. > :27:18.has been very difficult about the EU referendum campaign is the fact that

:27:19. > :27:26.there have been fiction deployed as fact. If I look at the literature

:27:27. > :27:30.that talked about the UK losing control of our Armed Forces for

:27:31. > :27:34.instance, there is material that's out there, that really doesn't

:27:35. > :27:40.reflect the reality. Both sides are saying that's a lie. When you look

:27:41. > :27:44.back it through the prism of the death of Jo and everything she stood

:27:45. > :27:47.for, do you feel ashamed that's the campaign that has been had on

:27:48. > :27:51.something so important? Well, I do. Because it hasn't actually helped

:27:52. > :27:54.inform the public. It hasn't helped people make a decision which really

:27:55. > :27:57.they have had to make in a three month period because of course, it

:27:58. > :28:00.is really only in the last three months that finally there has been

:28:01. > :28:04.the focus on what the European Union does and what it doesn't do. And

:28:05. > :28:08.people have been able to absorb the facts, but it is in a very limited

:28:09. > :28:15.period of time. Jonathan, are you proud of the campaign that this

:28:16. > :28:20.country has seen? Well, I think there has been fault on both sides

:28:21. > :28:25.in terms of the way that things have been said in this referendum

:28:26. > :28:29.campaign. We have had rhetoric from the Remain campaign for instance

:28:30. > :28:33.which has threatened us virtually with World War three and the end of

:28:34. > :28:39.western political civilisation as we know it. The arguments put forward

:28:40. > :28:43.on both sides, it is basically both sides have been criticised for it

:28:44. > :28:50.and it is that broad tone of politics, isn't it? And certainly

:28:51. > :28:53.from my point of view I try to put across as positive a message as I

:28:54. > :28:56.can. I believe coming from a point of view where you're campaigning to

:28:57. > :29:00.leave the European Union, that actually for me, it is important to

:29:01. > :29:06.put across a positive message of the kind of Britain that I want to see

:29:07. > :29:12.after this referendum. So I think it is vitally important that we portray

:29:13. > :29:16.a positive message as well. Of course, there will be negatives

:29:17. > :29:19.attached to staying in and of course, the Remain campaign will say

:29:20. > :29:23.there are negatives attached to leaving so we have to be able to

:29:24. > :29:27.point those things out, but the question perhaps of tone is one that

:29:28. > :29:33.is the one that should be looked at. Would it be a powerful message for

:29:34. > :29:39.MPs today to shift completely where they sit in the Commons and not be

:29:40. > :29:45.sitting in the usual spots divided by party lines? That's a nice idea.

:29:46. > :29:48.I'm looking forward to seeing my close colleagues today and I'm

:29:49. > :29:53.looking forward to sitting with them in the chamber. Does that mean

:29:54. > :30:00.staying with Labour MPs? I will be staying on the Labour side. The

:30:01. > :30:03.Labour Party lost a sister. Frankly, I had Labour MPs crying in my arms

:30:04. > :30:06.last Thursday. They need to sit together. They have lost their

:30:07. > :30:10.sister and we shouldn't be trying to try and crash in on that. There are

:30:11. > :30:17.plenty of opportunities for MPs to work together. We will be in the

:30:18. > :30:21.church afterwards. Why are you crashing in on it, one Tory MP said

:30:22. > :30:27.he will be sitting with his fellow West Yorkshire MPs? Joanna,

:30:28. > :30:31.Parliament is a family. We recognise the merits of each other, but

:30:32. > :30:34.genuinely the Labour Party, this is one the their Closest friends they

:30:35. > :30:38.have lost. You want to respect that fact that they've lost one of their

:30:39. > :30:47.closest friends. The equivalent of a sister. I cannot pretend to say I

:30:48. > :30:49.know Jo Cox. Yes, I was on a tug-of-war team raising money,

:30:50. > :30:54.Stephen has known Jo for sometime. Let's just not try and come up with

:30:55. > :30:55.something artificial for the sake of the fact that Labour have lost a

:30:56. > :31:05.great sister. I think a lot of this discussion is

:31:06. > :31:11.about tone, and I think it is right that we have a tonne of healthy

:31:12. > :31:15.scepticism, which means we have in opposition the ability to hold the

:31:16. > :31:20.government to account. What has happened in this campaign is that we

:31:21. > :31:26.have tipped over from healthy scepticism to corrosive cynicism.

:31:27. > :31:32.MPs directly accusing other MPs of lying, should that be done? The

:31:33. > :31:37.media has been involved in this and social media as well. There are

:31:38. > :31:43.certain protocols in Parliament which mean we can't do that sort of

:31:44. > :31:47.thing. We can best demonstrate this by presenting a united front, as we

:31:48. > :31:53.are doing, in wanting to see a change in the way we conduct

:31:54. > :31:58.politics. Focus on the fact that less on to make sure that the public

:31:59. > :32:02.are able to assess things in a logical fashion rather than being

:32:03. > :32:06.driven by emotion. This text says Jo Cox seems to be a lovely exception

:32:07. > :32:16.to the rule regarding politicians. People were told MPs in higher

:32:17. > :32:20.regard if more people were like her. Politicians just follow the party

:32:21. > :32:23.line and the party gets its way nine times out of ten. My thoughts are

:32:24. > :32:28.with the family. What do you think about that? I think she was

:32:29. > :32:31.obviously an exceptional MP. She was a young mother who came into

:32:32. > :32:37.politics to try to change things for her constituency and to change

:32:38. > :32:41.things across the UK. We want to encourage many more people from

:32:42. > :32:45.diverse backgrounds into politics, to encourage people with young

:32:46. > :32:53.families into politics, and, to be frank, MPs are vulnerable. We need

:32:54. > :32:56.to have much more robust health and safety policies in the constituency,

:32:57. > :33:01.at Westminster and in terms of online activities in order to

:33:02. > :33:07.protect MPs. But also we need to be able to reach out to constituents

:33:08. > :33:14.and have a balance. Yes, we need to attract many more new MPs who want

:33:15. > :33:18.to create change, who have come from different backgrounds and can bring

:33:19. > :33:21.different skills and experiences and abilities. Quite frankly, I think

:33:22. > :33:25.the system we have just now does very little to encourage those

:33:26. > :33:30.people. We really have got to take a good look at it. This should be a

:33:31. > :33:34.turning point that we should do that. You have got kids, so you are

:33:35. > :33:39.staying close to home for a while, just to reassure them. How are they

:33:40. > :33:46.reacting and how are you feeling on a personal level? How is your whole

:33:47. > :33:52.family reacting? Yes, my heart absolutely goes out to Jo Cox's

:33:53. > :33:57.family. It is unimaginable what they must be feeling, the shock and

:33:58. > :34:03.disbelief at what has happened. It is such a grave tragedy. You can't

:34:04. > :34:09.help but think there but for the grace of God go I. That is why we

:34:10. > :34:15.must look at our system. My own family, my daughter learned about

:34:16. > :34:20.this from peers, and has spoken about it. An MP died, money. What do

:34:21. > :34:26.you say in that situation and how do you reassure your children? That is

:34:27. > :34:33.a difficult situation to be in and as a society and as people in

:34:34. > :34:37.politics, we should be providing a positive role model and we should be

:34:38. > :34:42.ensuring that we move forward in a positive manner and a collaborative

:34:43. > :34:48.manner. There are many more things in politics where we can agree

:34:49. > :34:53.rather than disagree, but when debate descends into such negativity

:34:54. > :34:57.and personalisation, that has a big factor to play in the tragedy that

:34:58. > :35:05.has unfolded. Thank you for joining us. I know that some will be going

:35:06. > :35:10.to the Commons later and the church service later to remember Jo Cox.

:35:11. > :35:13.Thank you. Thomas Mair is due to appear in court this afternoon

:35:14. > :35:17.charged with the murder of Jo Cox. At an initial hearing at Westminster

:35:18. > :35:22.Magistrates Court on Saturday he refused to give his name. He said he

:35:23. > :35:26.was called death to traitors, freedom for Britain. The magistrates

:35:27. > :35:29.said he ought to be seen by a psychiatrist. After ten o'clock this

:35:30. > :35:32.morning, we will speak to more friends of Jo Cox.

:35:33. > :35:35.Still to come: An exclusive report on the hundreds of unaccompanied

:35:36. > :35:37.child asylum seekers who have gone missing after they

:35:38. > :35:43.And we'll talk to England and Wales football fans as the two home sides

:35:44. > :35:54.prepare for their final group stage matches.

:35:55. > :36:02.Now let's catch up with all the day's news with Sophie. Thank you.

:36:03. > :36:04.With just four days before the EU referendum,

:36:05. > :36:06.the former Conservative Party chairman, Lady Warsi,

:36:07. > :36:08.says she's changed her mind and will vote Remain.

:36:09. > :36:10.The peer says she made the decision

:36:11. > :36:13.after seeing a Ukip poster depicting a line of migrants, along

:36:14. > :36:20.Vote Leave says it didn't remember ever having her support.

:36:21. > :36:23.Parliament is being recalled this afternoon so that politicians can

:36:24. > :36:25.pay their respects to the murdered Labour MP Jo Cox.

:36:26. > :36:27.Parliament had been in recess in the run-up

:36:28. > :36:30.Jo Cox was killed in her constituency of Birstall

:36:31. > :36:39.A fund set up in her memory has now raised over ?800,000.

:36:40. > :36:49.We all have a duty at all levels of politics to learn from this and to

:36:50. > :36:55.honour Jo Cox's legacy. Her legacy was and it should be that we need a

:36:56. > :36:57.new kind of politics based on unity, not on division, and on hope, not on

:36:58. > :37:02.fear. A new report suggests children held

:37:03. > :37:05.in custody in England and Wales are twice as likely to have force

:37:06. > :37:08.used against them by staff The findings have been revealed

:37:09. > :37:11.by the Howard League for Penal Reform, which says

:37:12. > :37:14.a new and widespread practice has emerged of locking up children

:37:15. > :37:16.by themselves on main prison wings 40% of adults in the UK will be

:37:17. > :37:29.overweight by the year 2035, according to new research

:37:30. > :37:31.from the Obesity Health Alliance. The rising obesity levels

:37:32. > :37:33.could result in more than 7 million cases of serious

:37:34. > :37:36.illness such as diabetes, cancer The report also calls for a junk

:37:37. > :37:40.food tax and restrictions England and Wales play their final

:37:41. > :38:03.group matches at the European Wayne Rooney could be rested

:38:04. > :38:07.as Roy Hodgson is rumoured to be making up to six changes to the team

:38:08. > :38:10.that beat Wales. England only need a point to be sure

:38:11. > :38:13.of going through to the last 16. For Wales, it could be

:38:14. > :38:15.a bit more serious. They need to win to guarantee

:38:16. > :38:17.qualification. Any other result

:38:18. > :38:20.could see them go out. Hosts France finished top of group

:38:21. > :38:23.A last night after a goalless draw Both sides are through

:38:24. > :38:28.to the last 16. Albania have kept their chances

:38:29. > :38:30.of going through alive. They could end up facing

:38:31. > :38:40.the winners of group B, which includes of course

:38:41. > :38:42.England and Wales. With just a week to go

:38:43. > :38:44.to the start of Wimbledon, Andy Murray has won a record fifth

:38:45. > :38:47.title at Queen's. He came from a set down

:38:48. > :38:50.to beat Milos Raonic. And Dustin Johnson is

:38:51. > :38:53.the new US Open champion. But he had to survive

:38:54. > :38:58.a controversial decision to penalise him one shot

:38:59. > :39:02.when his ball moved as he prepared That is all the sport from Paris.

:39:03. > :39:11.Back to you. Thank you. Figures obtained by this programme

:39:12. > :39:14.show hundreds of migrant children have disappeared after arriving

:39:15. > :39:16.in the UK on their own On average, at least eight children

:39:17. > :39:20.went missing from local authority Many are feared to have been

:39:21. > :39:24.trafficked and exploited Asian Network's Divya Talwar

:39:25. > :39:40.has the full report. We have hundreds of missing migrant

:39:41. > :39:46.children and nobody knows where they are. Many of them are presumed to

:39:47. > :39:48.have been trafficked. She told me I was lucky she hadn't sent me for

:39:49. > :39:59.prostitution. If a young person decides that they

:40:00. > :40:01.are going to disappear, it is very difficult for us to keep track of

:40:02. > :40:13.them. Some people because they come and

:40:14. > :40:17.they are moved into a different area... The young girls coming to

:40:18. > :40:19.this youth group in London are all from different countries and they

:40:20. > :40:24.speak different languages, but they have found a lot in common. Each of

:40:25. > :40:28.them was lied to and tricked into coming to Britain, with the same

:40:29. > :40:33.promise of a better life here. All of the young girls in there were

:40:34. > :40:36.trafficked into the UK. Some of them were forced into prostitution,

:40:37. > :40:40.others were made to work in nail bars and restaurants and private

:40:41. > :40:45.homes. One of them showed me a big scar on her right arm where she said

:40:46. > :40:50.she was beaten with a belt by his slave master. I wasn't allowed to go

:40:51. > :41:01.out. The only time I went out was to take the thin from the house to the

:41:02. > :41:06.bin outside. -- the litter bin. Whatever she told me to do, I had to

:41:07. > :41:10.do and whatever she told me to say, I had to say. Tina was 14 when she

:41:11. > :41:15.was trafficked into the UK from Nigeria. She was taken straight to a

:41:16. > :41:18.woman's house, who she was told to call auntie. She thought she was

:41:19. > :41:24.going to school here but instead she was enslaved in the house. I was a

:41:25. > :41:30.slave because I had to do things. An unpaid job. On top of that I was

:41:31. > :41:35.limited with the things that I felt I was entitled to. I wasn't allowed

:41:36. > :41:43.to have a shower for more than five minutes. I was not allowed to have a

:41:44. > :41:47.light in my room. There was a tiny TV in my room and I wasn't allowed

:41:48. > :41:52.to put that on. I couldn't put anything on Alessi told me to. I

:41:53. > :41:57.tried to talk to her again and she said I was lucky she hadn't sent me

:41:58. > :42:01.for prostitution. Was there any physical abuse? She was very

:42:02. > :42:05.violent. One day she told me to go and clean the house. She woke me up

:42:06. > :42:11.at six o'clock in the morning. Normally that is what she did. She

:42:12. > :42:15.woke me up and told me to go outside, to clean up, and I wasn't

:42:16. > :42:22.feeling well, so I said to her eye wasn't feeling well. She said I

:42:23. > :42:26.didn't pay ?2000 for you to come and sleep. I want you to get up and

:42:27. > :42:35.clean the house. I was cleaning and I think I dropped something. I was

:42:36. > :42:38.wearing pyjamas. She said because I didn't want to clean the house, I

:42:39. > :42:42.should get out of the house, and that day it was winter and it was

:42:43. > :42:47.snowing. She threw me out into the garden. I didn't have any shoes on.

:42:48. > :42:52.It was snowing everywhere. She didn't want me to come back in. She

:42:53. > :42:58.locked the doors and I had to stay in the garden. That was nine o'clock

:42:59. > :43:04.in the morning. Until the next day I had to stay outside. Last year

:43:05. > :43:11.around 3000 unaccompanied asylum seeking children arrived in the UK.

:43:12. > :43:15.Some may have been fleeing war and persecution. Others found in the

:43:16. > :43:18.back of lorries after being trafficked into the country. Or they

:43:19. > :43:21.may have been discovered working illegally. If they are under 18 they

:43:22. > :43:25.are typically given the right to stay in the UK until they are adults

:43:26. > :43:34.and placed in the care of the local authority. Young people here are all

:43:35. > :43:37.identified as child trafficking victims and were referred to the

:43:38. > :43:41.charity. The weekly youth group tried to help the children rebuild

:43:42. > :43:47.their lives, but there have been young people that Debbie and her

:43:48. > :43:59.team have struggled to help. One of them was Ang, a Vietnamese boy she

:44:00. > :44:04.was working with. When he arrived here, he was put into a cannabis

:44:05. > :44:10.factory in a house. He was made to grow cannabis and he was locked in

:44:11. > :44:14.there. He was also sexually abused by the same men. So he had a lot

:44:15. > :44:21.going on and he was obviously very scared. Occasionally many days would

:44:22. > :44:27.go past when he didn't see anybody. It was after a few months of being

:44:28. > :44:30.in that house that it was raided by police. They came in and he couldn't

:44:31. > :44:36.speak English and he couldn't speak to them. He was arrested. He was

:44:37. > :44:40.taken to the police station, but then they understood that he was 14

:44:41. > :44:44.and recognised that he was a victim of trafficking, so he was taken to

:44:45. > :44:50.social services and put into care. And then he was rebuilding his life?

:44:51. > :44:54.What happened to him? He was in school, he was in foster care, he

:44:55. > :44:57.was engaged in English classes and football. He would come to the youth

:44:58. > :45:03.group and he was growing in confidence and meeting other young

:45:04. > :45:07.people. Then he just went missing. Obviously it was a shock for

:45:08. > :45:10.everybody and we were very concerned. Unfortunately there are

:45:11. > :45:11.many cases of young people that go missing and are not discovered

:45:12. > :45:38.again. When migrant children go missing

:45:39. > :45:41.there is often an acceptance that's what they do. They have gone back to

:45:42. > :45:45.their family or something. A real lack of understanding about the

:45:46. > :45:49.risks of exploitation and I think there would be a national outcry if

:45:50. > :45:53.this was the same number of British born children going missing from

:45:54. > :45:55.carement we're in a situation now where we have hundreds of missing

:45:56. > :45:59.migrant children and no one knows where they are. They are presumed,

:46:00. > :46:04.many of them, to have been trafficked, but very little is being

:46:05. > :46:08.done. It is completely unacceptable. Kent County Council is looking after

:46:09. > :46:12.more unaccompanied children than any other local authority. It saw the

:46:13. > :46:15.most go missing. Last year it was around four a week.

:46:16. > :46:20.How can you stop these young people going missing from your care? I

:46:21. > :46:24.think it is very difficult and I don't think we could ever put our

:46:25. > :46:27.hand on our heart and say we could totally stop young children going

:46:28. > :46:31.missing from our care. We do everything we can to safeguard these

:46:32. > :46:35.children, to prothebgt these children, we put them with good

:46:36. > :46:39.foster carers, we give them social workers, we support them in every

:46:40. > :46:43.way we can, but we can't put them under lock and key. They are not in

:46:44. > :46:49.secure accommodation. So we just have to work as closely with them as

:46:50. > :46:54.we can, but if a young person decides at 10pm that they are going

:46:55. > :47:00.to disappear and they don't let their foster carer know or their

:47:01. > :47:05.care worker know and they just slip out, it is difficult for us to keep

:47:06. > :47:12.a track on them. Often it is a sign they've been trafficked. It could be

:47:13. > :47:16.sometimes they may go back to their traffickers because they have a debt

:47:17. > :47:19.to pay or they are worried about the threats back home and they have the

:47:20. > :47:24.hope if I just pay this off, I will be free. If they are this care, it

:47:25. > :47:30.is uncertain and am I going to be isn't back home? Am I going to be in

:47:31. > :47:34.trouble? When you found out he gone missing because he was coming to

:47:35. > :47:41.this youth group once a week, what were your fear as soon as He maybe

:47:42. > :47:45.harmed. That we knew that most likely, he was taken back and he was

:47:46. > :47:49.trafficked again. Before he went missing he was placed in a home, not

:47:50. > :47:54.too far from where he was found. Refugee charities are concerned that

:47:55. > :47:56.trafficked children aren't always being placed in suitable

:47:57. > :48:00.accommodation, but there is worries the authorities don't always believe

:48:01. > :48:06.or recognise victims in the first place. Tina was kept as a Standard

:48:07. > :48:10.Life for yo years before she ran away, but she says she didn't find

:48:11. > :48:17.anyone to help her. The social worker, who I was talking to, told

:48:18. > :48:24.me that I needed to go back to my aunt's house. I said to him, "I

:48:25. > :48:28.can't go back because this lady is not OK in her head. I think she will

:48:29. > :48:33.do something to me." They said, no, she is your aunt. You have been here

:48:34. > :48:38.for a very long time, you can't just runaway from her house. And on top

:48:39. > :48:44.of that, it was a language barrier so I couldn't really explain to them

:48:45. > :48:51.like what has been happening. I was so depressed I wanted to kill myself

:48:52. > :48:56.because I thought no one is actually understanding what I'm saying. Tina

:48:57. > :48:59.was sent back to her auntie. A few months later she managed to escape

:49:00. > :49:03.again and this time she was identified as a trafficked child.

:49:04. > :49:09.She is now 18 and has been granted asylum here. Last year, the

:49:10. > :49:12.Government piloted a scheme to give trafficked children an independent

:49:13. > :49:15.adult add vow account to try and prevent young people from returning

:49:16. > :49:18.to their traffickers. Charities want the scheme implemented as growing

:49:19. > :49:25.numbers of children are making it to the UK on their own.

:49:26. > :49:31.Little is known about what happens to those that do go off the radar.

:49:32. > :49:34.When Angn went missing last year, a few months later the authorities

:49:35. > :49:38.found out what happened to him. He was walking alongside of the road

:49:39. > :49:42.and a car pulled up beside him and they actually took him by force. He

:49:43. > :49:46.felt he no other choice and he was taken back into the same situation,

:49:47. > :49:51.back into a cannabis factory. He was identified because the police had a

:49:52. > :49:54.notification about another cannabis house. They weren't aware it was

:49:55. > :49:57.going to be him. But when they went in, he was found in there and he was

:49:58. > :50:01.brought back to the social worker and back to the group. Now it has

:50:02. > :50:05.been a year later and he has not gone missing and he did talk to the

:50:06. > :50:10.police, but there hasn't been any prosecution yet.

:50:11. > :50:16.Some of the hundreds of children still missing maybe found years

:50:17. > :50:18.later, be exploited by criminal gangs. In many of the cases, the

:50:19. > :50:22.child may never show up again. "The Government will later this year

:50:23. > :50:27.publish a new missing strategy and implementation plan including

:50:28. > :50:30.actions in relation to reducing children going missing from care

:50:31. > :50:32.and reducing the harm We will bring you more reaction

:50:33. > :50:41.later in the programme. Coming up: As a senior Conservative

:50:42. > :50:43.says she's changed her mind about how to vote in the EU

:50:44. > :50:46.referendum, we'll get the latest And by the way, the latest in that

:50:47. > :50:54.campaigning includes the English Premier League coming

:50:55. > :50:57.out in favour of Britain remaining But Leave say EU membership means

:50:58. > :51:01.it is harder to sign footballers But away from the politics and back

:51:02. > :51:07.on the pitch, at the Euros, England take on Slovakia and Wales

:51:08. > :51:10.face Russia in the last If both teams win, England will top

:51:11. > :51:14.Group B and Wales will come second. Let's talk now to some English

:51:15. > :51:17.and Welsh fans in France Craig Richardson and Ned Ozkasim

:51:18. > :51:33.are England fans, and Ffion Owen Thank you very much for joining us.

:51:34. > :51:38.Qualifying for the tournament was a pretty good achievement and facing

:51:39. > :51:41.the prospect of going into the knock-out stages of the, only the

:51:42. > :51:47.second time ever for Wales to do that. How are you feeling?

:51:48. > :51:50.Yeah, a mixture of excitement and nerves starting to kick in now, but

:51:51. > :51:53.yeah, we are looking forward to the game tonight and really, really

:51:54. > :51:59.crossing everything that we'll get what we want and supersede to the

:52:00. > :52:08.last 16. Russia beat Wales in the euro 2004 play-offs. Is there some

:52:09. > :52:12.history there? Yeah, that I was only about ten. That was my first tragic

:52:13. > :52:17.Wales moment. I think a lot of Welsh fans think it is revenge time.

:52:18. > :52:22.Tonight is the night hopefully! Steve, she has got her flag, so have

:52:23. > :52:27.you, do you think the side will do you proud tonight? Yeah, I think so.

:52:28. > :52:31.I think we have come a long way and despite the below par performance

:52:32. > :52:35.against England, this squad are good enough to beat the Russian side. I

:52:36. > :52:39.don't think they are that good. They are a bit ponderous. I think we

:52:40. > :52:44.could get easily get a result. It doesn't mean I'm not nervous mind

:52:45. > :52:51.because having watched Wales since 1991, I have seen plenty of

:52:52. > :52:59.heartbreak. Yeah, still a little bit nervous. Are you worried about any

:53:00. > :53:04.trouble with the Russian fans? Yeah. In the back of my mind there is

:53:05. > :53:08.that. However, having been out in Toulouse for the last 24 hours, it

:53:09. > :53:12.doesn't seem to be too much nerves within the city. People people to be

:53:13. > :53:16.relatively happy mixingment there were report from a few of my

:53:17. > :53:20.friends, they bumped in a few Russian and they have been mixing

:53:21. > :53:23.fine with them. I think with a bit of luck the hooligan element has

:53:24. > :53:28.perhaps gone home now, hopefully. So it is in the back of my mind, but I

:53:29. > :53:31.don't think we're going to see any issues.

:53:32. > :53:36.Ned, you're going to the England match tonight, what do you want to

:53:37. > :53:40.see in the starting line-up? The two scorers in the match against Wales,

:53:41. > :53:45.weren't in the starting line-up, they came on as subs? This is great

:53:46. > :53:48.opportunity for Roy Hodgson to freshen the team up. We saw the

:53:49. > :53:52.impact the substitutes had in the last game. The likes of Vardy and

:53:53. > :53:55.Sturridge, I'm sure they will get their chance tonight and maybe a few

:53:56. > :53:59.other squad members. Do you want them to be in the starting line-up?

:54:00. > :54:04.They are pushing for it and they have shown what they can do on the

:54:05. > :54:08.pitch. In the first-half against Wales, England didn't really perform

:54:09. > :54:17.to their ability. England need a draw to go through, a win to go top.

:54:18. > :54:21.How important is it they go top? If we go top, we play in Paris on

:54:22. > :54:25.Friday. That's a great location and you will get more tickets for the

:54:26. > :54:32.game in Paris as well. England, Craig, do you want Roy Hodgson to

:54:33. > :54:41.take a risk with the line-up tonight as Ned is talking about? I would

:54:42. > :54:45.like Sturridge or Vardy to start. Lallana needs to remain on the

:54:46. > :54:48.bench. You're not going to the match, are you, you have been

:54:49. > :54:53.concerned about trouble? Yeah, I mean, I am an ex-pat living in

:54:54. > :54:58.Marseille. So we have the game. I was very much at the fore front of

:54:59. > :55:02.all the chaos that was going on down here in the old port. It wasn't a

:55:03. > :55:05.great scene and considering that we have been living here for a few

:55:06. > :55:13.years now, it was quite troublesome to see. I am adjust concerned about

:55:14. > :55:19.the security and visiting the bars around France really. A word on the

:55:20. > :55:23.line-up for the Welsh side. What do you think about the Welsh side? Oh

:55:24. > :55:28.yeah, they have all been good obviously. Hopefully we will see

:55:29. > :55:35.Jonathan Williams, I would like him to strt and maybe Collins and maybe

:55:36. > :55:40.a couple of tweaks, but Coleman has been all right so far so we will put

:55:41. > :55:45.our faith in his line-up tonight. Give us your prediction for the

:55:46. > :55:48.result? Oh, I really, as Steve was saying, I really hope we can win and

:55:49. > :55:54.I think we've got what it takes to win. So I hope it could be maybe 2-0

:55:55. > :56:01.win, maybe hopefully, but yeah, crossed fingers. Steve what do you

:56:02. > :56:08.think? I would take 1-1 right now, but maybe a 1-0 win. Maybe a 1-0

:56:09. > :56:13.win. Ned? 2-0. Craig? I think it will be a 2-1 England tonight. All

:56:14. > :56:15.right. Let's see who is right. We're crossing our fingers for erchlt

:56:16. > :56:17.thank you very much for joining us. Thank you. Enjoy the games. Thank

:56:18. > :56:20.you very much. Thanks. Let's get the latest

:56:21. > :56:29.weather update with Carol. The weather is looking unsettled at

:56:30. > :56:35.the moment. We have got quite a bit of rain, but some of us are seeing

:56:36. > :56:39.sunshine. A beautiful picture sent in by one of our Weather Watchers

:56:40. > :56:44.this morning. Some lovely blue skies. If you look at this one,

:56:45. > :56:47.again sent in by one of our BBC Weather Watchers, here it has been

:56:48. > :56:51.raining and there is quite a bit of rarn around this morning. You can

:56:52. > :56:54.see it on the radar picture. Moving across England and Wales,

:56:55. > :56:58.particularly the southern half, some of that is heavy as you can see,

:56:59. > :57:01.denoted by the light greens, but we have got a few showers across parts

:57:02. > :57:04.of Scotland and Northern Ireland. With rain continuing to move away

:57:05. > :57:08.from Shetland. Through the morning, off goes that rain. The other thing

:57:09. > :57:12.you will notice is the breeze will tend to ease a touch as well. Behind

:57:13. > :57:15.it, there will be a lot of dry weather, but not necessarily bone

:57:16. > :57:19.dry, but compared to this morning across Wales and the south-west, we

:57:20. > :57:23.are looking at a cloudy afternoon with some brighter breaks and it is

:57:24. > :57:26.the same across southern counties as well, as temperatures rise,

:57:27. > :57:30.especially if there is any sunshine that could spark off a few showers

:57:31. > :57:32.which could prove to be thunderiment for Northern England sh and Northern

:57:33. > :57:37.Ireland and Scotland, it is a mixture of bright spells, sunshine

:57:38. > :57:40.and a few showers. Again, behind the band of rain clearing Shetland what

:57:41. > :57:45.you will find is there will be a lot of cloud and still the odd shower

:57:46. > :57:47.here and there. Then as we head on through the evening and overnight

:57:48. > :57:50.period, we will be left with a few showers, but there will be a lot of

:57:51. > :57:54.dry weather around. There will be clear skies too. But by the end of

:57:55. > :57:57.the night, we will have further showers coming in particularly

:57:58. > :58:01.across northern and Western Scotland and Northern Ireland. This is our

:58:02. > :58:05.temperature range, nine to 15 Celsius. Not a particularly cold

:58:06. > :58:08.night, but it will be a wee bit cooler for some of us than the night

:58:09. > :58:11.that's just gone. So tomorrow, we start off with a lot of dry weather.

:58:12. > :58:15.Again variable amounts of cloud. Some sunny spells. Just the odd

:58:16. > :58:18.showerment more showers and breezier conditions across Northern Ireland

:58:19. > :58:22.and also Western Scotland. But we will have more rain coming in across

:58:23. > :58:26.the Isles of Scilly, in through Cornwall and Devon and also the

:58:27. > :58:30.Channel Islands. Our temperatures ranging from about 13 Celsius in the

:58:31. > :58:34.north to a high of 21 Celsius as we push down towards the south. Moving

:58:35. > :58:38.from Tuesday into Wednesday, things start to change a little bit in the

:58:39. > :58:42.feel of the weather because we will start to pull up some humid air from

:58:43. > :58:46.France particularly so across the south-eastern quarter of the

:58:47. > :58:50.country. Now what that might do is spark off some thunderstorms in the

:58:51. > :58:54.South East. It is something to be aware of. Glastonbury, of course,

:58:55. > :58:57.starts on Wednesday and the forecast for Glastonbury is one of the

:58:58. > :59:01.sunshine and showers. However, it is worth noting that we have seen a lot

:59:02. > :59:06.of rain recently in this part of the world so you might find there is

:59:07. > :59:11.still a lot of mud around. It is probably worth taking your wellies.

:59:12. > :59:13.Bright spells, some sunny spells and showers, but feeling muggy in the

:59:14. > :59:30.far south-east. Parliament is recalled to pay

:59:31. > :59:34.tribute to the Labour MP, Jo Cox, but will her death have a lasting

:59:35. > :59:38.effect on British politics? It is good to have debate. It is very

:59:39. > :59:39.important that we do debate points, but things should never become

:59:40. > :59:58.personal. And paying an EU referendum is back

:59:59. > :00:05.up to speed following the death of Jo Cox. Nigel Farage defends his

:00:06. > :00:10.poster, saying the only thing wrong with it was the unfortunate timing

:00:11. > :00:16.ahead of the murder of Jo Cox. Also on the programme: The child asylum

:00:17. > :00:20.seekers who have gone missing after arriving in the UK. Nobody knows

:00:21. > :00:24.where they are. They are presumed to have been trafficked but very little

:00:25. > :00:29.is being done and it is not acceptable. A year after 38 tourists

:00:30. > :00:34.were killed in a terrorist attack in Tunisia, one survivor makes the

:00:35. > :00:38.journey back. Just being here now, I can feel my heart in my mouth again,

:00:39. > :00:46.just how I felt. Sheer panic, white panic. Both England and Wales play

:00:47. > :00:50.their final games of the group stages here in France tonight, with

:00:51. > :01:02.qualification for the knockout stages at stake. Good morning. Let's

:01:03. > :01:04.catch up with the day's news with Sophie in the BBC newsroom. Thank

:01:05. > :01:09.you. With just four days

:01:10. > :01:11.before the EU referendum, the former Conservative Party

:01:12. > :01:12.chairman, Lady Warsi, says she's changed her mind

:01:13. > :01:14.and will vote Remain. The

:01:15. > :01:17.peer says she made the decision after seeing a Ukip poster depicting

:01:18. > :01:19.a line of migrants, along Vote Leave says it didn't remember

:01:20. > :01:25.ever having her support. the English Premier League has come

:01:26. > :01:31.out in favour of the UK remaining The motion was supported by all 20

:01:32. > :01:34.of the league's football clubs. Leave campaigners said EU membership

:01:35. > :01:36.reduced opportunities The group that represents

:01:37. > :01:41.the British car industry, which employs hundreds

:01:42. > :01:45.of thousands of people, has said it's in favour of the UK

:01:46. > :01:48.remaining in the European Union. The Society of Motor Manufacturers

:01:49. > :01:51.and Traders said access to the single market,

:01:52. > :01:53.and free movement of labour, But the Leave campaign say a vote

:01:54. > :01:57.for Brexit could provide Parliament is being recalled this

:01:58. > :02:05.afternoon so that politicians can pay their respects to the murdered

:02:06. > :02:07.Labour MP Jo Cox. Parliament had been

:02:08. > :02:09.in recess in the run-up Jo Cox was killed in her

:02:10. > :02:12.constituency of Birstall A fund set up in her memory has now

:02:13. > :02:18.raised over ?800,000. 52-year-old Thomas Mair has been

:02:19. > :02:24.charged with her murder and is due back

:02:25. > :02:27.in court later today. Three 12-year-old girls from Salford

:02:28. > :02:29.who became seriously ill after taking ecstasy,

:02:30. > :02:31.are now said to be Greater Manchester Police say a man

:02:32. > :02:36.and a woman have been arrested. It is thought the girls

:02:37. > :02:38.are among the youngest people in the UK to have fallen ill

:02:39. > :02:41.after taking the drug. Dave Guest is following

:02:42. > :02:51.the story for us. It seems they have taken an ecstasy

:02:52. > :02:56.tablet known as a teddy tablet. It appeared that was taken mixed into a

:02:57. > :02:59.soft drink. One of the questions the police will be wanting to answer is

:03:00. > :03:05.whether the girls were fully aware the tablet had been crashed into the

:03:06. > :03:10.soft drink or was it given to them unknowingly. Overnight they arrested

:03:11. > :03:14.a man and a woman on suspicion of possessing a class A drug and these

:03:15. > :03:18.questions will be put to them. A new report suggests children held

:03:19. > :03:21.in custody in England and Wales are twice as likely to have force

:03:22. > :03:24.used against them by staff The findings have been revealed

:03:25. > :03:28.by the Howard League for Penal Reform, which says

:03:29. > :03:30.a new and widespread practice has emerged of locking up children

:03:31. > :03:33.by themselves on main prison wings And Joanna will be discussing this

:03:34. > :03:37.story just after 10.30. 40% of adults in the UK will be

:03:38. > :03:41.overweight by the year 2035, according to new research

:03:42. > :03:44.from the Obesity Health Alliance. The rising obesity levels

:03:45. > :03:47.could result in more than 7 million cases of serious

:03:48. > :03:51.illness such as diabetes, cancer The report also calls for a junk

:03:52. > :04:06.food tax and restrictions This problem isn't going to go away.

:04:07. > :04:10.It is going to get worse. Those figures represent a massive burden

:04:11. > :04:14.on the NHS and public health and the health of future generations. We

:04:15. > :04:16.hope this will help them make good on their promise for a game changing

:04:17. > :04:27.children's obesity strategy. In the next few minutes we will talk

:04:28. > :04:30.to friends of the murdered MP Jo Cox, and we have been asking this

:04:31. > :04:34.morning whether her death will have any effect on changing British

:04:35. > :04:38.politics. Lots of you have been getting in touch. David says, if

:04:39. > :04:43.anyone thinks the behaviour of MPs will change, they are deluded. Just

:04:44. > :04:47.watch PMQs and you will see them acting like overgrown

:04:48. > :04:50.schoolchildren. Kath says, it amazes me and are surprised by the

:04:51. > :05:03.disrespect they receive from the public when their behaviour during

:05:04. > :05:06.PMQs is so appalling. Week after week we see them doing, shouting,

:05:07. > :05:08.hissing and interrupting each other. It is a game of bullies. For those

:05:09. > :05:10.of us genuinely interested in the question and the answer, they show

:05:11. > :05:13.utter disrespect. They think shouting down or humiliating an

:05:14. > :05:16.opponent is a victory. And Joe says Jo Cox was a rare breed of

:05:17. > :05:21.politician who acted for an on behalf of the people and sadly not

:05:22. > :05:25.enough of her existing British politics.

:05:26. > :05:27.Do get in touch with us throughout the morning.

:05:28. > :05:30.Use the hashtag VictoriaLIVE and if you text, you will be charged

:05:31. > :05:38.Yes, it's crunch time for two of the home nations

:05:39. > :05:46.Wales and England play their final group B matches tonight.

:05:47. > :05:49.There are lots of permutations but put simply, England only need

:05:50. > :05:52.a point to be sure of going through, while Wales need a win

:05:53. > :06:02.After waiting 58 years for a major tournament of football,

:06:03. > :06:05.Welsh fans are desperate not to leave just yet.

:06:06. > :06:08.To lose in Toulouse today would be the end.

:06:09. > :06:11.Beat or maybe just draw with Russia, and it's onto the next round.

:06:12. > :06:15.It would be nice to go out with a bang and maybe try and score

:06:16. > :06:18.a few more goals and maybe try and change tactics a little bit.

:06:19. > :06:22.We have done so well even getting here

:06:23. > :06:28.If they win they could have a chance of going through.

:06:29. > :06:35.The results elsewhere could decide both teams' fates.

:06:36. > :06:38.If other teams lose around us, and we end up losing,

:06:39. > :06:40.There are so many different scenarios.

:06:41. > :06:43.If you stop and ponder and worry about that too much, then

:06:44. > :06:47.For England the game against Slovakia is more

:06:48. > :06:52.about working out who should play up front.

:06:53. > :06:59.And who is England's best goal threat? Jamie Vardy is looking to

:07:00. > :07:03.force his way in and something Harry Kane is looking tired.

:07:04. > :07:05.The man who used to do that job is enjoying his

:07:06. > :07:10.We know we've got good quality players who can score goals and it's

:07:11. > :07:13.important that we try and give them the chances to give them

:07:14. > :07:17.Welsh fans will fill this stadium with sound in the hope this

:07:18. > :07:19.isn't their swansong and Toulouse isn't journey's end.

:07:20. > :07:34.A week to go until the start of Wimbledon and Andy Murray has

:07:35. > :07:37.made the perfect preparation, winning the title at Queen's Club

:07:38. > :07:40.He beat the Canadian Milos Raonic in the final, despite

:07:41. > :07:47.He came back to win 6-3 in the decider.

:07:48. > :07:54.He gave his new coach Ivan Lendl a winning start.

:07:55. > :07:56.American Dustin Johnson overcame some final round controversy

:07:57. > :07:59.to clinch his maiden major title at the US Open.

:08:00. > :08:01.There was confusion over whether Johnson would get a penalty

:08:02. > :08:04.when his ball moved as he prepared to putt on the 5th green.

:08:05. > :08:06.A decision wasn't made until after play had finished,

:08:07. > :08:09.meaning plenty of uncertainty for Johnson and the chasing pack.

:08:10. > :08:11.He held his nerve though to win by three strokes,

:08:12. > :08:25.ahead of a group of players including Ireland's Shane Lowry.

:08:26. > :08:27.And last night in the Euros, France finished top of group

:08:28. > :08:33.The match was notable for a burst ball which doesn't happen too often.

:08:34. > :08:36.Then there was the matter of the Swiss shirts,

:08:37. > :08:44.Arsenal's new signing Granit Xhaka went through three of them!

:08:45. > :08:51.Barely any of the players managed to keep them intact. Maybe a flimsy

:08:52. > :09:08.design? Not sure! Thank you. Baroness Warsi has criticised the

:09:09. > :09:16.reaction to her decision to join the Remain campaign. Norman is with us.

:09:17. > :09:19.What has been happening? There has been blowback against Baroness Warsi

:09:20. > :09:23.following her decision to leave the Leave campaign. One tweet here. The

:09:24. > :09:29.vile reaction of people unhappy with my decision to leave Leave, politics

:09:30. > :09:36.of hate bus stop. Unite against hate. That follows the decision to

:09:37. > :09:40.quit the Leave campaign because of what she claimed was a xenophobic

:09:41. > :09:45.tone around their campaigning on immigration. She accused them of

:09:46. > :09:50.nudge nudge wink wink xenophobic approach. She was incensed by that

:09:51. > :09:54.hugely controversial breaking point poster that Nigel Farage unveiled

:09:55. > :09:59.last week, the one with the snaking line of migrants trying to get into

:10:00. > :10:02.southern Europe. She criticised more than that. She also criticised

:10:03. > :10:05.Michael Gove foretelling what he said were complete lies about the

:10:06. > :10:13.imminent accessing of Turkey into the EU. She was on the Today

:10:14. > :10:18.programme this morning and she said she had been consistently trying to

:10:19. > :10:24.get the Brexit campaign to adopt a more optimistic, positive, inclusive

:10:25. > :10:29.approach. Listen to her now. How is that poster even defensible? What is

:10:30. > :10:32.it suggesting? The fact that it is perpetuating a set of lies about who

:10:33. > :10:36.those people are and where they are going, suggesting they are coming to

:10:37. > :10:41.the United Kingdom. This kind of nudge nudge wink wink xenophobic

:10:42. > :10:45.racist campaign may be politically savvy or politically useful in the

:10:46. > :10:51.short-term, but it causes long-term to communities. It is why even

:10:52. > :10:56.during the mayoral campaign I called out my own side, saying this kind of

:10:57. > :11:01.divisive, toxic politics in Britain must no longer be allowed to be

:11:02. > :11:04.successful. Why is it that people like me who are instinctively

:11:05. > :11:08.Eurosceptic and feel the EU needs reform and wants to rebalance our

:11:09. > :11:13.relationship with Europe are feeling that we have got to leave Leave?

:11:14. > :11:19.Because day after day we are hearing the refugees are coming, the rapists

:11:20. > :11:25.are coming, the Turks are coming. What is going on here? That poster

:11:26. > :11:31.has really alarmed the official Leave campaign. I think they're

:11:32. > :11:37.great fear, bluntly, is contamination from Nigel Farage and

:11:38. > :11:40.Ukip. Many in the official Leave campaign find him toxic and their

:11:41. > :11:46.fear is he will drive away voters. His abrasive and famine treat --

:11:47. > :11:51.inflammatory approach to immigration. They would like to

:11:52. > :11:53.bundle him into a white van and sent him to lands end and make sure he

:11:54. > :11:58.doesn't appear for the remaining few days of the campaign. It was

:11:59. > :12:03.striking over the weekend and this morning when you listen to official

:12:04. > :12:08.Leave campaigners, they are desperately trying to push Nigel

:12:09. > :12:14.Farage away and to condemn that poster. Listen. That poster does not

:12:15. > :12:18.speak for Vote Leave, the official campaign. That is not the language

:12:19. > :12:21.we choose. I will argue in favour controlling immigration are based on

:12:22. > :12:28.the consent of the voters and the ability to plan public services.

:12:29. > :12:33.When I saw that poster, I shuddered. I thought it was the wrong thing to

:12:34. > :12:37.do. I do not approve of a poster that links Syrian refugees to a

:12:38. > :12:42.debate about see movement within the European Union, that is absolutely

:12:43. > :12:47.clear. -- free movement within the EU. Nigel Farage has been defending

:12:48. > :12:52.the poster, saying it is one of half a dozen that his party has put out.

:12:53. > :12:55.He said the only thing wrong about it was the timing of it, just a

:12:56. > :13:07.couple of hours before the murder of Jo Cox. This is what he said. I

:13:08. > :13:10.could not help the fact that we released that poster and within a

:13:11. > :13:13.couple of hours there was that tragic murder.

:13:14. > :13:16.I am sorry for the timing of this, of course I am.

:13:17. > :13:20.What the poster represented was the Schengen area

:13:21. > :13:22.and Angela Merkel's call for unlimited numbers of people

:13:23. > :13:24.to come, literally breaking the Schengen zone apart,

:13:25. > :13:26.and the slogan was the EU is failing us all.

:13:27. > :13:29.There was nothing wrong with the poster but the timing

:13:30. > :13:39.You are talking about Baroness Warsi and the upset she has had. Some

:13:40. > :13:43.tweet here. The usual whispering campaign against Baroness Warsi when

:13:44. > :13:49.she does something anti-government. And this one, the abuse she is

:13:50. > :13:53.receiving is disgusting. I imagine Baroness Warsi will think those

:13:54. > :13:57.tweets underline her case. She has been sounding the alarm bell about

:13:58. > :14:02.the tone of some of the campaigning around the Leave side for some time.

:14:03. > :14:06.She signed a letter with Shami Chakrabarti of Liberty and Baroness

:14:07. > :14:11.Lawrence as well, Stephen Lawrence's mother. That was when Nigel Farage

:14:12. > :14:15.came out with the comments about Cologne and the danger of sex

:14:16. > :14:25.attacks in the UK and as we vote for Brexit. She has been warning about

:14:26. > :14:29.this for some time. -- unless we vote for Brexit. It has been neck

:14:30. > :14:33.and neck for the last few days, but the problem with the Leave campaign

:14:34. > :14:37.is their trump card becomes their Achilles heel. Immigration has

:14:38. > :14:42.driven their campaign and the real fear is that the tone becomes marked

:14:43. > :14:47.by Nigel Farage's approach and becomes seen as ugly and

:14:48. > :14:51.unacceptable and that drains support from them from more middle ground

:14:52. > :14:55.voters. In a funny way, although immigration is their key winning

:14:56. > :15:03.point, it can also be their key losing point. Thank you. Still to

:15:04. > :15:07.come: One-man's journey of healing. Back to the scene in Tunisia that

:15:08. > :15:18.changed his life for ever. MPs will return to Parliament today.

:15:19. > :15:22.Since her killing on Thursday, there intrn repeated calls for her legacy

:15:23. > :15:28.to be an end to the nasty trible element of British politics.

:15:29. > :15:33.I hope the way we conduct politics can inspire people, can put people

:15:34. > :15:38.off, can lead to a poisoned environment and I think the way poll

:15:39. > :15:43.sticks is conducted in this country is poisonous. I think the British

:15:44. > :15:46.public are wonderful, they are decent, the way we behave is not

:15:47. > :15:52.decent. There is hate. There is poison. So where we see hatred,

:15:53. > :15:56.where we find division, where we see intolerance, we must drive it out of

:15:57. > :16:01.the our politics and out of our public life and out of our

:16:02. > :16:06.communities and if we truly want to honour Jo, then what we should do is

:16:07. > :16:11.recognise that her values, service, community, tolerance, the values she

:16:12. > :16:15.lived by and worked by, those are the values that we need to redouble

:16:16. > :16:20.in our national life in the months and in the years to come. In her

:16:21. > :16:24.memory we will not allow those people who spread hatred and poison

:16:25. > :16:28.to divide our society, we will strengthen our democracy, strengthen

:16:29. > :16:33.our free speech. We should recognise that we've drifted into a situation

:16:34. > :16:40.where it is almost become accepted that MPs are the subject of venom

:16:41. > :16:47.and politician has become a term of abuse and the debate has become so

:16:48. > :16:51.toxic. She gave a voice to those whose cry for help she felt was not

:16:52. > :16:57.being heard. It changed attitudes and I know it contributed to a

:16:58. > :17:02.change in policy. When Jo would get abuse on Facebook or Twitter, we

:17:03. > :17:07.would talk. And sometimes cry together. But she would still focus

:17:08. > :17:13.on the positive and talk about the silent majority who didn't always

:17:14. > :17:19.shout the loudest. But over the past 48 hours people have not been

:17:20. > :17:24.silent. They have been vocal and passionate and have spoken from the

:17:25. > :17:32.heart with genuine owe motion and no hidden agendas. Jo would have loved

:17:33. > :17:35.it. Well, that was her sister with that

:17:36. > :17:45.incredible tribute to Jo. We can speak to three people

:17:46. > :17:48.who knew Jo at different and friend who co-founded the Jo Cox

:17:49. > :17:52.Fund. Tim was with Brendan Cox on Thursday

:17:53. > :17:55.when he received the call telling him his wife had been

:17:56. > :17:58.stabbed and shot in her Heidi Alexander, Labour MP,

:17:59. > :18:01.first met Jo when she was in the opposition

:18:02. > :18:03.whip's office at the time and she had been asked to put together

:18:04. > :18:06.an induction programme for the new intake

:18:07. > :18:08.of 2015 Labour MPs. And Anne Wainwright,

:18:09. > :18:13.chair of Hermitage Moorings Thank you very much for coming in.

:18:14. > :18:16.Tim, I said that you were with Brendan when the call came through.

:18:17. > :18:25.It must have been a horrendous moment? It is a moment you just want

:18:26. > :18:29.to erase from your mummery. We knew Jo had been attacked and Brendan

:18:30. > :18:34.just ran, but that's not the way that we want to remember Jo. The

:18:35. > :18:40.ehaven'ts of Thursday, we were just saying before last time I saw Jo was

:18:41. > :18:44.Monday last week on the houseboat, she was hauling through a pile of

:18:45. > :18:52.laundry, through the houseboat as she talked about the kids and

:18:53. > :18:56.chickenpox and Syrian refugees and Anne was just saying... The story

:18:57. > :18:59.every Monday morning she would hang out her washing and I was thinking

:19:00. > :19:03.about the rain this morning and someone went past one day when she

:19:04. > :19:12.said, "I know it is raining, but it is going to be sunny later." We were

:19:13. > :19:18.just saying that so epitomized Jo's approach to life. She was a typical

:19:19. > :19:23.mum juggling duties, but with exceptional ability. When you saw

:19:24. > :19:27.her on Monday, what did you talk about? You talked about everything,

:19:28. > :19:32.didn't you? Brendan and I have been working together over the last six

:19:33. > :19:35.or eight months on an initiative to ask the question how do we change

:19:36. > :19:39.people's hearts and minds and move us away from this sort, the hatred

:19:40. > :19:45.and extremism that we have been, that we are just hearing and you

:19:46. > :19:48.know, these voices that want to divide us rather than bring us

:19:49. > :19:52.together particularly around the cause of refugees which Jo was a

:19:53. > :19:58.fantastic champion of. So we were talking about all of that as she was

:19:59. > :20:02.hauling through the laundry. I think the wonderful thing about Jo, she

:20:03. > :20:07.was an aids mazing mum, really genuinely, an incredible mum, but

:20:08. > :20:10.she, you know, she had that fierce love for her kids to want them to

:20:11. > :20:14.grow up in an environment that is safe and secure and loving. She also

:20:15. > :20:20.wanted that for every other mum in the world so she also thought about

:20:21. > :20:25.a Syrian mum in Aleppo being just as important as her. Her capacity to

:20:26. > :20:29.see that there is just so much more than That unites us all as people

:20:30. > :20:34.than what divides us no matter where we are, who we are. That's the

:20:35. > :20:37.legacy, that's the thing, well, that's the, it is the charge in a

:20:38. > :20:43.sense for all of us as her friends that we feel we want to move on with

:20:44. > :20:48.for the rest of our lives because she embody it so much. Next week,

:20:49. > :20:51.she was due to be involved in a report on the launch of radical

:20:52. > :20:57.nationalism. Is that something you were aware of? Yes. She know it is

:20:58. > :21:01.from her constituency in Yorkshire where she had seen this. You know,

:21:02. > :21:06.it is on both sides, the raticalisation in parts of in all

:21:07. > :21:11.parts of the community, this toxic sort of hatred and extremism and you

:21:12. > :21:16.know, she was always asking the question how does love win out over

:21:17. > :21:21.hate? How does hope win out over fear? You talked obviously about a

:21:22. > :21:24.very personal memory of her as a human, as a mum, did you see her as

:21:25. > :21:28.a politician? Did she put that across? That was interesting. We

:21:29. > :21:33.were talking about that last night. I moon, my image of her getting on

:21:34. > :21:36.her bicycle and cycling after she had done the domestic and made sure

:21:37. > :21:39.the children were fine, getting on her bike and coming into

:21:40. > :21:44.Westminster. I saw her every day, other than the day she was obviously

:21:45. > :21:48.in her constituency, but we are all also saying she just led by her

:21:49. > :21:54.shining examp. She never forced her politics on you. All the time I knew

:21:55. > :21:58.her subsequently when she became an MP, it was never made into a big

:21:59. > :22:02.issue. You just were aware, but I that I what I want to say is the

:22:03. > :22:07.most amazing thing that I think has struck us as a tiny very close-knit

:22:08. > :22:16.community is that our Jo belonged to everybody. Not just Jo talking about

:22:17. > :22:22.our Jo and listening to politicians all over the world talking about our

:22:23. > :22:26.Jo and suddenly we real uzed we only knew a tiny part of her and she was

:22:27. > :22:30.this incredible woman who touched people's lives, not just on a local

:22:31. > :22:34.basis, but on a truly, truly international basis. You must be

:22:35. > :22:39.proud to be able to call her a friend? Unbelievably so. Yes, you

:22:40. > :22:45.don't think about it every day when you see someone. You kind of take,

:22:46. > :22:49.although our friendship and sense of close community is not something we

:22:50. > :22:56.take for granted, but now, more than ever, yes, just to have known her is

:22:57. > :23:05.really special. You saw another side of her through politics. Tim and

:23:06. > :23:10.Anne know Jo better than I do, but she was this tiny person with this

:23:11. > :23:14.huge presence. I first met her about a year ago and what struck me about

:23:15. > :23:17.her was that she wanted to be an MP for all the right reasons. She

:23:18. > :23:23.wanted to campaign on the issues that she cared about. She wasn't

:23:24. > :23:28.interested in grand standing. She really wanted to make a difference

:23:29. > :23:35.both to her constituency, but also to our country and globally, but

:23:36. > :23:42.fundamentally, she was just such a decent human being. I think we all

:23:43. > :23:46.feel that enormous loss. You know, I remember watching her do Newsnight

:23:47. > :23:50.interviews within months of being elected and having a huge admiration

:23:51. > :23:53.for her and she was one of these people that when you spoke to her,

:23:54. > :23:57.you felt better at end of the conversation than you did at the

:23:58. > :24:00.beginning. And in the corridors of Westminster, sometimes you know,

:24:01. > :24:06.when you come across somebody with that absolute zest for life that she

:24:07. > :24:12.had and with such good decent beliefs and values that you just

:24:13. > :24:15.want to hang on this tomb. I was talking to one of my colleagues

:24:16. > :24:19.yesterday, a member of Parliament, she said the thing about Jo was that

:24:20. > :24:23.she was almost like a good box of chocolates and you thought you would

:24:24. > :24:29.be able to enjoy her over a period of time and what is so sad for all

:24:30. > :24:34.of us is that has been taken away from us and we're devastated about

:24:35. > :24:38.that, but it is, we're devastated for the loss to politics and to

:24:39. > :24:42.democracy as well because she had such wisdom and compassion and I

:24:43. > :24:46.think that is what is so, so sad. Do you think that loss might translate

:24:47. > :24:49.to a change in politics which is something that we have been talking?

:24:50. > :24:53.Lots of people tacking about whether that might be her legacy? I really

:24:54. > :24:57.hope so. Lots of people this weekend, when I have been out in my

:24:58. > :25:02.constituency have been saying to me, "Will it change the way I do my

:25:03. > :25:06.job?" I said, it won't change anything. I will continue to do my

:25:07. > :25:12.job in the way that I've done it. What I hope will happen though is

:25:13. > :25:17.that the words and actions of some other politicians who frankly should

:25:18. > :25:20.know better that they change some of the things that they do and say

:25:21. > :25:25.because we need a politics that does have more compassion. That is

:25:26. > :25:31.kinder, where we can sometimes agree to disagree and not create a climate

:25:32. > :25:35.of hatred and fear which my concern is that over the last couple of

:25:36. > :25:40.months that is what we have started to see in this country and if Jo's

:25:41. > :25:44.legacy is to mean anything, it means our democracy and our politics does

:25:45. > :25:48.start to change. Tim, those two children have lost

:25:49. > :25:52.their mother and Brendan is doing the best he can to and everybody

:25:53. > :25:55.around them to look after those children and protect them. He has

:25:56. > :26:01.tweeted about the fact that he took them camping as a way of remembering

:26:02. > :26:05.her. Tell us more about the sort of world the two of them created for

:26:06. > :26:11.their children? They love the outdoors. They love hiking. They, I

:26:12. > :26:16.think, in a way, it is quite amazing because they almost grew up in a

:26:17. > :26:22.world of enchantment which is what Brendan and Jo created for them. The

:26:23. > :26:30.stories and the adventures and just even the rituals of life like the

:26:31. > :26:34.little cottage on the river Wye which they escaped which is off

:26:35. > :26:38.mains electricity and water. It is their escape. They had time together

:26:39. > :26:41.and I always found it amazing, you would be at dinner and the kids, you

:26:42. > :26:47.know, half-way through dinner you hear a noise from the room and Jo

:26:48. > :26:50.would go back, close the door, say something five minutes later, shut

:26:51. > :26:56.the door and come back, and there would be no more noise from the

:26:57. > :27:00.kids. That was Jo. This amazing ability to just she is so close to

:27:01. > :27:07.the kids, but also and so present with the kids and also so present

:27:08. > :27:12.with all of us. Brenda, you know, the last couple of days, to help the

:27:13. > :27:16.kids, knowing her only three and five, they won't remember their mum,

:27:17. > :27:21.you know, when they're grown-up. So he is trying to help them to now

:27:22. > :27:25.write down their memories. So he got them to write down little memories

:27:26. > :27:28.on pieces of paper, cut out the paper, different shapes and hang

:27:29. > :27:35.them on a tree in the front garden where he is. I just think, you know,

:27:36. > :27:40.that's he is trying to carry on what Jo and he created for them and I

:27:41. > :27:48.guess as friends we will want to be doing all that we can to step in and

:27:49. > :27:56.try and help because I mean the loss is beyond words. What will your

:27:57. > :28:04.favourite memory be? I don't know if there is a single memory. Jo had

:28:05. > :28:09.such energy and flair and passion. Almost a bunsyness and a ver say

:28:10. > :28:14.shouldsness and such an openness. That's what I'll always remember.

:28:15. > :28:23.Lots of little silly memories, I guess. But memories that I think

:28:24. > :28:28.that we sort of, as Anne says, it is memories we all feel we share

:28:29. > :28:32.because it feels like now Jo is not just a personal friend, but someone

:28:33. > :28:37.bigger for everybody. She stands for what we want to be. She was the

:28:38. > :28:41.better person that each of us want to be. That's how I will remember

:28:42. > :28:45.her and I think to honour her, I guess, you know, I feel like I just

:28:46. > :28:49.want to pursue the things that we used to talk about and the causes

:28:50. > :28:53.that she held most dear. That is echoed in the way that

:28:54. > :28:59.everybody out there, who didn't know her is responding. A viewer is

:29:00. > :29:01.tweeting, "Typical message. So sad in circumstance, yet so

:29:02. > :29:05.inspirational in story. Jo Cox really was just a normal mum, yet a

:29:06. > :29:10.powerful woman." Thank you very much, thank you.

:29:11. > :29:19.Keep your thoughts coming in on everything we're talking about this

:29:20. > :29:22.morning on the programme. The hundreds of unaccompanied asylum

:29:23. > :29:25.seekers is something we will be talking about later. We will be

:29:26. > :29:28.asking what is being done to find them?

:29:29. > :29:30.And a worrying investigation finds an increase of force being used

:29:31. > :29:41.With the news, here's Sophie in the BBC Newsroom.

:29:42. > :29:44.The former Conservative Party chairman, Baroness Warsi,

:29:45. > :29:47.has criticised what she is calling the vile reaction to her

:29:48. > :29:52.decision to switch sides on the EU referendum.

:29:53. > :29:54.With just three days of campaigning left, the Tory peer says

:29:55. > :29:58.She says she made the decision after seeing a Ukip poster

:29:59. > :30:00.depicting a line of migrants, along with the slogan

:30:01. > :30:14.Vote Leave says it didn't remember ever having her support.

:30:15. > :30:18.MPs are being recalled to Parliament this afternoon so they can

:30:19. > :30:20.pay their respects to murdered colleague Jo Cox.

:30:21. > :30:22.The Commons had been in recess in the run-up

:30:23. > :30:26.Jo Cox was killed in her constituency of Birstall

:30:27. > :30:37.A fund set up in her memory has now raised over ?800,000.

:30:38. > :30:43.We all have a duty at all levels of politics to learn from this and who

:30:44. > :30:49.honoured Joe's legacy. We need a new kind of politics based on unity, not

:30:50. > :30:52.on division and on hope, not on fear.

:30:53. > :30:55.A new report suggests children held in custody in England and Wales

:30:56. > :30:58.are twice as likely to have force used against them by staff

:30:59. > :31:02.The findings have been revealed by the Howard League

:31:03. > :31:04.for Penal Reform, which says a new and widespread practice has

:31:05. > :31:07.emerged of locking up children by themselves on main prison wings

:31:08. > :31:14.40% of adults in the UK will be overweight by the year 2035,

:31:15. > :31:17.according to new research from the Obesity Health Alliance.

:31:18. > :31:20.The rising obesity levels could result in more

:31:21. > :31:23.than 7 million cases of serious illness such as diabetes, cancer

:31:24. > :31:28.The report also calls for a junk food tax and restrictions

:31:29. > :31:40.Join me for BBC Newsroom Live at 11 o'clock.

:31:41. > :31:46.Thank you. Now we can catch up with the sport with Sally in Paris. Good

:31:47. > :31:48.morning. England and Wales play their final

:31:49. > :31:51.group matches at the European Wayne Rooney could be rested

:31:52. > :31:55.as Roy Hodgson is rumoured to be making up to six changes to the team

:31:56. > :31:58.that beat Wales. England only need a point to be sure

:31:59. > :32:01.of going through to the last 16. For Wales, it could be

:32:02. > :32:04.a bit more serious. They need to win to guarantee

:32:05. > :32:06.qualification. Any other result

:32:07. > :32:12.could see them go out Hosts France finished top of group

:32:13. > :32:15.A last night after a goalless draw Both sides are through

:32:16. > :32:20.to the last 16. Albania have kept their chances

:32:21. > :32:22.of going through alive. They could end up facing

:32:23. > :32:32.the winners of group B which includes of course

:32:33. > :32:33.England and Wales. With just a week to go

:32:34. > :32:36.to the start of Wimbledon, Andy Murray has won a record fifth

:32:37. > :32:38.title at Queen's. He came from a set down

:32:39. > :32:41.to beat Milos Raonic. And Dustin Johnson is

:32:42. > :32:43.the new US Open champion. But he had to survive

:32:44. > :32:47.a controversial decision to penalise him one shot

:32:48. > :32:51.when his ball moved as he prepared That is all the sport for now. Thank

:32:52. > :33:10.you. A new report suggests children held

:33:11. > :33:13.in custody in England and Wales are twice as likely to have force

:33:14. > :33:16.used against them by staff The findings have been revealed

:33:17. > :33:26.by the Howard League Their director joins me now. You are

:33:27. > :33:32.talking about illegal, systemic abuse of children in prison. This is

:33:33. > :33:39.a report that we published reviewing progress over ten years. We

:33:40. > :33:43.published a report ten years ago, following by a review into the

:33:44. > :33:48.treatment of children. We find there has been some progress but there are

:33:49. > :33:52.major concerns regarding physical constraint and solitary confinement

:33:53. > :33:56.for children in custody. Solitary confinement for children as young as

:33:57. > :34:02.what? These are children under the age of 18 and some of them will be

:34:03. > :34:06.14 or 15. The issue on the progress side as we have seen a big reduction

:34:07. > :34:13.in the number of children in prison and we should welcome that. There

:34:14. > :34:19.are now under 1000 children in prison. But the very concerning fact

:34:20. > :34:23.is the use of restraint and physical violence to manage behaviour has

:34:24. > :34:29.greatly increased, almost doubling. Why do you think that is? The

:34:30. > :34:33.prisons are under great pressure and we have seen that in the adult

:34:34. > :34:39.prisons and in the child prisons. Less staff, less resources. Really

:34:40. > :34:44.we need to get to the bottom of why physical violence is being used in

:34:45. > :34:48.this way. When you think about the fact that two children have died in

:34:49. > :34:53.custody, there have been inquests, inquiries, acres of reports on

:34:54. > :34:57.trying to minimise and manage the use of restraint, to see it increase

:34:58. > :35:05.in this way and to see it being used to get children to do what they are

:35:06. > :35:08.told is very concerning. When you say that kids as young as 14 of 15

:35:09. > :35:15.are being put into solitary confinement, what is there at that

:35:16. > :35:19.stage that means a decision is taken to protect a child and what impact

:35:20. > :35:27.does it have on the child? We think there is not sufficient concern for

:35:28. > :35:30.that. Why are children put in solitary confinement? Clearly there

:35:31. > :35:34.are behavioural issues in the prison but it is not a healthy way of

:35:35. > :35:38.managing that behaviour, simply to isolate the child. And why is it a

:35:39. > :35:41.problem if children are restraint? These children have been in trouble

:35:42. > :35:45.with the law, which is why they are in prison, but they will be released

:35:46. > :35:50.and we want to make sure when they come out of custody they are

:35:51. > :35:53.law-abiding citizens of the future and not criminals and prisoners of

:35:54. > :35:56.the future. If you are teaching them effectively that the only way to

:35:57. > :36:00.deal with behaviour and the only way to get people to do what you want

:36:01. > :36:05.them to do is to use violence or isolate them for up to 23 hours a

:36:06. > :36:08.day, which has been proven to be damaging to mental health, then that

:36:09. > :36:14.is not going to create a healthy young people that we want. If a

:36:15. > :36:20.child is being particularly difficult, abusive, violent

:36:21. > :36:23.themselves, is this sort of thing justified in any circumstances?

:36:24. > :36:28.There are circumstances where physical restraint may be necessary.

:36:29. > :36:32.We know for a sample when young people are effect to themselves or

:36:33. > :36:37.other people or they are trying to escape, then staff may have to

:36:38. > :36:41.intervene. One of the concerns we have in this report, in one of three

:36:42. > :36:46.incidents, restraint is simply being used because the child is not doing

:36:47. > :36:51.something that they want them to do and they are using restraint to

:36:52. > :36:55.ensure compliance. To us that is not appropriate and in the courts it has

:36:56. > :37:05.been found to be unlawful. Thank you for joining us.

:37:06. > :37:07.Three 12-year-old girls rushed to hospital after taking

:37:08. > :37:09."Teddy Bear" ecstasy tablets in Salford are now

:37:10. > :37:12.Officers believe the children took the drug after it was mixed

:37:13. > :37:17.Greater Manchester Police say a man and a woman have been arrested

:37:18. > :37:19.on suspicion of being in possession of a controlled substance.

:37:20. > :37:22.Dr Adam Winstock is the founder of the Global Drug Survey,

:37:23. > :37:23.the biggest drug survey in the world.

:37:24. > :37:28.Thank you for joining us. Have you heard about the teddy bear tablet

:37:29. > :37:32.before? Three girls aged 12 have been hospitalised as a result of

:37:33. > :37:39.taking it and that makes you wonder what is in it. What do you know?

:37:40. > :37:42.Until we have confirmation, there is a lot of uncertainty about whether

:37:43. > :37:46.this tablet contains a lot of MDMA, which would be very dangerous to

:37:47. > :37:53.12-year-old girls in itself, or whether there is another jargon, we

:37:54. > :37:57.just don't know. -- another drug. It would be unusual for three people to

:37:58. > :38:01.become very sick from taking the same tablet, but being 12 in itself

:38:02. > :38:05.increases your risk becoming very unwell if you take a lot of MDMA.

:38:06. > :38:11.And that difference is there ecstasy pills? We are seeing pictures and

:38:12. > :38:15.they are packaged differently. This is all branding and marketing. There

:38:16. > :38:19.is no relationship between the sides, the sheik, the logo on the

:38:20. > :38:27.tablet and how much MDMA there is in it. ! The size and shape. Some

:38:28. > :38:32.contain 200 mg of MDMA, four times a normal dose. Some people would think

:38:33. > :38:37.one tablet is a single dose, which is not the case. More MDMA is not

:38:38. > :38:42.more fun and it's hugely increases your risk of ending up seeking

:38:43. > :38:46.emergency medical treatment, which may be what has happened in the

:38:47. > :38:51.current case but we don't know. Explain what MDMA is and the effect

:38:52. > :38:56.on the body. MDMA is the archetypal drug that we know as ecstasy, a

:38:57. > :39:01.stimulant drug and at moderate doses, 80 mg, people feel happy,

:39:02. > :39:05.euphoric, empathy. People go clubbing on it. But bigger doses of

:39:06. > :39:10.that drug can make people feel nauseous and can make people

:39:11. > :39:13.overheat, dehydrate, get heart problems, people become confused,

:39:14. > :39:17.cut off from their surroundings. What we have seen from the global

:39:18. > :39:22.drug survey over three years is the marked increase in the number of

:39:23. > :39:25.young people, especially young women, seeking emergency medical

:39:26. > :39:30.treatment following the use of MDMA. At the moment we have a situation

:39:31. > :39:34.where it has never been so easy to take so much, and that is why we are

:39:35. > :39:40.saying to people, peace be really careful. The best thing to do is to

:39:41. > :39:43.avoid it but if you are going to use it, start low, go slow and keep an

:39:44. > :39:47.eye on your friends. If something goes wrong, they are the people who

:39:48. > :39:52.can get you to the first aid tent and call for help as soon as you

:39:53. > :39:53.can. And don't mix with alcohol and other drugs because that increases

:39:54. > :40:00.your risk. Thank you. It's almost a year since a lone

:40:01. > :40:03.gunman opened fire on a beach in Tunisia, killing 38 tourists,

:40:04. > :40:05.30 of them British. The attack, claimed

:40:06. > :40:07.by the so-called Islamic State, was the greatest loss of British

:40:08. > :40:10.life in a terrorist attack since the London bombings

:40:11. > :40:12.in July 2005. One of the survivors, Colin Bidwell

:40:13. > :40:14.from Windlesham in Sussex, wanted to return to the resort

:40:15. > :40:18.town of Sousse. The BBC took him back

:40:19. > :40:20.for what he calls a I'm a painter and decorator

:40:21. > :40:29.from Windlesham. Myself and my wife, we've been

:40:30. > :40:34.travelling to Tunisia, I think, 11 times now,

:40:35. > :40:37.and what happened on that day changed our lives forever,

:40:38. > :40:41.and many other people's as well. But I feel now is the right

:40:42. > :40:48.time for me to go back. Myself and my wife were just

:40:49. > :41:28.down here on the right. Probably getting very close

:41:29. > :41:48.to it now. Just heard some sounds,

:41:49. > :41:55.just thought, fireworks, Just turned, looked at my wife

:41:56. > :42:03.on the sunbed next to me, and she was already off the sunbed,

:42:04. > :42:06.running in that direction. I just decided to run straight down

:42:07. > :42:12.the beach into the sea. I knew I was the last

:42:13. > :42:15.person left on the beach. And I thought he was coming

:42:16. > :42:25.towards me and just continuing It was a very good thing you did

:42:26. > :42:51.for me, you saved my life. So I was here,

:42:52. > :43:02.Mohammed, wasn't I? And you pulled me up

:43:03. > :43:10.here onto the boat. I remember my head was against

:43:11. > :43:13.the outboard and all I could I will never forget it,

:43:14. > :43:16.never forget that. I can still hear

:43:17. > :43:19.everything going on. Mohammed told me to go

:43:20. > :43:28.into the Bellevue. As soon as I looked over the other

:43:29. > :43:41.side of the wall, there was this AK-47 on the front of it,

:43:42. > :43:44.just sticking out, and I could just I was just going to continue

:43:45. > :43:48.over the wall, and then I know that if I had jumped,

:43:49. > :43:57.I would probably have been hit Just being here now I can

:43:58. > :44:02.feel my heart in my mouth again. Just how I felt, just

:44:03. > :44:04.complete, We are in the University

:44:05. > :44:40.Hospital in Sousse. Where myself and a majority

:44:41. > :44:42.of the injured came Just the panic in the place,

:44:43. > :44:52.the tension, the smells, I will never forget those,

:44:53. > :44:55.never forget those. Everybody sends their love,

:44:56. > :45:15.everybody sends their love. Now there is a relation,

:45:16. > :45:18.more than doctor and patient I hope and pray it becomes

:45:19. > :45:31.a safe country. That other people can come back

:45:32. > :45:34.here and help the economy. Because the economy has been ruined

:45:35. > :45:37.just because of one person. And there are still a lot

:45:38. > :45:40.of survivors that will be scared to come back, and I understand that,

:45:41. > :45:43.I was scared coming here. But for me it was a process,

:45:44. > :45:47.I had to do it, I had to process it, to put me in a better

:45:48. > :46:14.place where I am today. Well, that's Colin's emotional

:46:15. > :46:19.story. The former Conservative Party chair

:46:20. > :46:23.has criticised the vile reaction she says she has had following her

:46:24. > :46:27.decision to switch sides in the EU referendum from Leave to Remain.

:46:28. > :46:34.Lots of you letting us know your thoughts on it.

:46:35. > :46:39.This is proof of the fickle attitude politicians have and of their lack

:46:40. > :46:43.of principle or conviction on anything, not agreeing with the

:46:44. > :46:47.conduct of a campaign, didn't make out wrong or the other side right.

:46:48. > :46:55.It just shows she has not got the future of the UK at heart." E-mail

:46:56. > :47:03.from Mark John Terry how breathtakingly immature of Lady

:47:04. > :47:16.Warsi to change sides. Where is her core beliefs?" If Baroness Warsi, I

:47:17. > :47:23.have not forgotten the rent scandal." Philip says, "I agree with

:47:24. > :47:33.her on most things, but leaving because of a Ukip poster seems odd."

:47:34. > :47:37."No doubt more on a promise from Cameron than anything intellectual.

:47:38. > :47:39.As if she would influence one single person." Thank you four your

:47:40. > :47:43.comments. Keep them coming in. Figures obtained by this programme

:47:44. > :47:45.show hundreds of migrant children have disappeared after arriving

:47:46. > :47:48.in the UK on their own, On average, at least eight children

:47:49. > :47:51.went missing from local authority Many are feared to have been

:47:52. > :47:55.trafficked and exploited We bought you the full report

:47:56. > :48:10.from Asian Network's Divya Talwar Some people because they come in and

:48:11. > :48:14.they are moved to a different area... Young girls coming to this

:48:15. > :48:16.youth group in London are from different countries and they speak

:48:17. > :48:23.different languages, but they found a lot of in common. All of the young

:48:24. > :48:27.girls in there were trafficked into the UKment some were forced into

:48:28. > :48:32.prostitution, others made to work in nail bars, in restaurants, in

:48:33. > :48:38.private homes. I wasn't allowed to go out. The only time I used to go

:48:39. > :48:43.was to take the bin from the house to the bin outside. Tina was 14 when

:48:44. > :48:49.she was trafficked into the UK from Nigeria. She was taken straight to a

:48:50. > :48:54.woman's house who Tina was told to call auntie. She was enslaved in the

:48:55. > :49:01.house. I was a slave because I had to do things, you know, unpaid job

:49:02. > :49:06.and then on top of that, I was limited with the things that I felt

:49:07. > :49:11.I was entitled to. She told me, "You're lucky I haven't sent you for

:49:12. > :49:18.prostitution." She was very, very violent. Tina managed to runaway,

:49:19. > :49:23.but says social workers didn't recognise she was a traffic child

:49:24. > :49:29.and she was sent back to live with her auntie. Charities says vun ral

:49:30. > :49:32.and trafficked migrant children aren't always given the right

:49:33. > :49:38.support after he arrive in the UK on their own. Almost 900 unaccompanied

:49:39. > :49:42.asill lull seeking children went missing from care between 2013 and

:49:43. > :49:46.2015. A third still haven't been found. There would be a national

:49:47. > :49:48.outcry if this was the same number of British born children going

:49:49. > :49:51.missing from care. We are in a situation now where we have hundreds

:49:52. > :49:55.of missing children, migrant children, and no one knows where

:49:56. > :50:00.they are. They are presumed to have been trafficked, but very little is

:50:01. > :50:04.being done. It is unacceptable. Kent County Council is looking after more

:50:05. > :50:09.unaccompanied children than any other local authority. And it also

:50:10. > :50:13.saw the most go missing. Last year it was around four a week. We do

:50:14. > :50:20.everything we can to safeguard the children and to protect the

:50:21. > :50:23.children. We put them with good foster carers and we give them

:50:24. > :50:28.social workers. We can't put them under lock and key. We were told the

:50:29. > :50:33.Government will publish a new strategy this year. Those who have

:50:34. > :50:36.gone missing maybe found years later being exploited by criminal gangs.

:50:37. > :50:45.In many of the cases, the children may never show up again.

:50:46. > :50:51."The Government will later this year publish a new missing strategy

:50:52. > :50:53.and implementation plan including actions in relation to reducing

:50:54. > :50:55.children going missing from care and reducing the harm

:50:56. > :50:59.If you want to watch the full report you can find it on our programme

:51:00. > :51:08.Chloe Setter is Head of Policy for the anti-child

:51:09. > :51:12.Lynne Chitty is UK Care director of Love 146 UK.

:51:13. > :51:14.They provide safe accommodation for trafficked children and provide

:51:15. > :51:20.Lynne is currently working with 11 trafficked children.

:51:21. > :51:28.Thank you for coming in. Chloe, what is happening to these children? The

:51:29. > :51:32.one that is go missing? Yes. We presume many are being trafficked.

:51:33. > :51:37.Often the case is they arrive in the country and they usually go missing

:51:38. > :51:40.often within 48 hours or a week and so often quickly. Sometimes less.

:51:41. > :51:44.And they are returning to their traffickers because they have been

:51:45. > :51:47.told and groomed by their traffickers to return to them once

:51:48. > :51:52.they enter the care system. Sometimes the care system is used

:51:53. > :51:55.like holding pens so the traffickers know they are not that safe and they

:51:56. > :51:58.know the children can easily get away. They tell the children go into

:51:59. > :52:02.care and when you get there, call this number or come and meet us at

:52:03. > :52:05.this location and then they get exmroted and moved around the

:52:06. > :52:09.country. So take it back a step then. Where are most of these kids

:52:10. > :52:14.coming from and how are the traffickers finding them and what is

:52:15. > :52:19.the route? What are they told about what they will get if they come

:52:20. > :52:22.here? It is very complex. There is no one same scenario. The countries

:52:23. > :52:28.we are seeing children trafficked from at the moment and have been for

:52:29. > :52:31.many years from these countries is nigh gatheria,nate vam, Albania,

:52:32. > :52:35.some parts of Eastern Europe, Romania, it is varied from different

:52:36. > :52:40.parts of the world and they come for different reasons. They are

:52:41. > :52:43.exploited in secondsual exploitation, forced labour, forced

:52:44. > :52:46.criminality which is being forced to grow drugs or carry drugs or

:52:47. > :52:51.pickpocketing on the streets of London. It is a varied crime. But

:52:52. > :52:55.what we're seeing is really unacceptable which is local

:52:56. > :53:01.authorities not putting in place the right safeguards to protect these

:53:02. > :53:04.children and keep them safe and that's to do with a lack of

:53:05. > :53:09.resourcing from Government and a failure to treat them as children.

:53:10. > :53:13.They are often seen through the lens of immigration and not seen as who

:53:14. > :53:18.they are, which is children who need protection. You are working with 11

:53:19. > :53:21.children who were trafficked, you must have worked with many more over

:53:22. > :53:24.the years... Hundreds. What's the typical child you see? We are

:53:25. > :53:29.working with young people from Vietnam. Some young people from

:53:30. > :53:33.Albania, but Vietnam is the highest at the moment for us. And can you

:53:34. > :53:39.persuade a child to go down a different path? The kids that end up

:53:40. > :53:44.with you, how is it that they are finding their way to you? We truly

:53:45. > :53:47.believe, as soon as a child is identified or suspected of being

:53:48. > :53:53.trafficked they need to be safeguarded immediately. We have

:53:54. > :53:57.developed a safety plan so these young people go on to a safety plan

:53:58. > :54:01.of the there is no access to a telephone and internet. They don't

:54:02. > :54:05.have money and the carers are with them 24/7 and they escort them if

:54:06. > :54:10.they go out. That gives that period of time for the police to look at

:54:11. > :54:14.the trafficking against them and also us to look at the child

:54:15. > :54:19.protection. This enables young people to learn about their rights

:54:20. > :54:24.in the UK and that there could be another way and they could stay

:54:25. > :54:30.safe, but without that safety plan, young people are going to

:54:31. > :54:35.inappropriate placements and making contact and disappearing. Diana

:54:36. > :54:41.said, "How can the UK believe we can help these children when our own are

:54:42. > :54:45.abused in care or held in solitary confinement. Let's not play with

:54:46. > :54:50.more children's lives." Peter says, "So they have disappeared, what a

:54:51. > :54:54.surprise? Another disaster created by the media and stupid gullible do

:54:55. > :54:59.gooders. They were better off where they were." Howard said, "They

:55:00. > :55:07.should have been sent back to their home country at the earliest

:55:08. > :55:12.opportunity." Not much sympathy? It reflects what we see in practise.

:55:13. > :55:16.They have rights here. All children have the same universal rights

:55:17. > :55:19.wherever they are from, it doesn't matter what their immigration status

:55:20. > :55:24.is. We have safety guarding duties to them. You know, but what we see

:55:25. > :55:29.in practise is sometimes that xenophobic attitude and it is really

:55:30. > :55:34.unhelpful. And dabbling for children who have been through some shocking

:55:35. > :55:40.trauma and abuse, often for many, many years. From what you were

:55:41. > :55:43.saying though, effectively being brought here albeit vulnerable

:55:44. > :55:47.children, but told to play the system? Well, they are not really

:55:48. > :55:53.playing the system because they are the oning... Someone else is

:55:54. > :55:57.benefiting from their abuse. How do you get to the traffickers in the

:55:58. > :56:00.first place and stop the chain before it kind of get to say this?

:56:01. > :56:07.That's the million dollar question, you know, we need a multi-agency

:56:08. > :56:11.response. We need a global response. We need a cross-border child

:56:12. > :56:16.protection response. We need the Criminal Justice System come down

:56:17. > :56:20.hard on traffickers. We rarely see prosecutors of child trafficking. It

:56:21. > :56:24.is very rare. We are seeing traffickers operate with impunity.

:56:25. > :56:27.What concerns us is what we want the Government to do is put in place

:56:28. > :56:31.measures that we know would be helpful. So for example, there was a

:56:32. > :56:36.trial last year, 23 local authorities across England of a

:56:37. > :56:40.child trafficking advocate scheme, every child was given an independent

:56:41. > :56:44.person, they must build that relationship of trust from an early

:56:45. > :56:46.stage. A quick thought from you Lynn, presumably the kids come here

:56:47. > :56:53.thinking they will have a better life. Do many of them end up with

:56:54. > :56:57.that? It is not all doom and gloom, if you safeguard immediately and you

:56:58. > :57:05.put in a safety plan and do your wrap around support, the children

:57:06. > :57:11.stand a chance. Thank you very much. Now MPs return to the Commons to pay

:57:12. > :57:16.tribute to the MP, Jo Cox who was shot and stabbed at her constituency

:57:17. > :57:20.last week. Those tributes will begin after 2pm this afternoon and you can

:57:21. > :57:26.watch them on the BBC News Channel this afternoon. Harry on Facebook

:57:27. > :57:29.says, "What Jo Cox brought to politics was honesty and straight

:57:30. > :57:32.talking. Many others could and should learn from her. She was one

:57:33. > :57:37.of a very small number of MPs who had genuine respect from all

:57:38. > :57:42.quarters. I really hope that nobody will use her tragic death for

:57:43. > :57:47.political gain." Jo tweeted to say, "It is very sad this undoubtedly

:57:48. > :57:50.special person has been murdered." Nick tweeted to say, "Don't expect

:57:51. > :57:57.politicians to change following Jo's tragic death. Most of them have

:57:58. > :58:02.forgotten how to tell the truth. " It is a subject we were talking

:58:03. > :58:08.about earlier about whether the legacy of the death of Jo Cox could

:58:09. > :58:09.be that politics becomes gentler. Thank youyard your comments today.

:58:10. > :58:13.Thank you for your company. Tomorrow, what is TTIP and why

:58:14. > :58:16.you should care about it. Victoria's back and she'll bring

:58:17. > :58:18.you a special report after so many of you got in touch

:58:19. > :58:22.asking us to look into it. See you very soon. Have a good

:58:23. > :58:35.afternoon. Bye-bye. Catch all the action from

:58:36. > :58:39.Euro 2016 across the BBC.