Browse content similar to 27/10/2016. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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As fires smoulder in the Calais jungle camp - | :00:07. | :00:13. | |
at least 100 children are reported to be still there, without family - | :00:14. | :00:19. | |
despite assurances from the French authorities that everyone's | :00:20. | :00:23. | |
Also today, With the UK under a severe terror threat, almost 12 | :00:24. | :00:28. | |
months on from the Bataclan terrorist attacks - are clubs | :00:29. | :00:31. | |
In a special report we take a look at night life security. | :00:32. | :00:44. | |
There are a small number of venues that have slipped between the | :00:45. | :00:50. | |
cracks, because they cannot afford to do anything about it. | :00:51. | :00:53. | |
Plus - seven people are arrested after violence | :00:54. | :00:55. | |
at the West Ham Chelsea match last night. | :00:56. | :00:57. | |
West Ham say they'll impose life bans on anyone involved | :00:58. | :00:59. | |
in the disorder which saw families caught in the clashes. | :01:00. | :01:02. | |
We were watching the game in the front row near to the home fans. | :01:03. | :01:09. | |
Suddenly there is a whole lot of coins coming over. My daughter | :01:10. | :01:12. | |
Victoria got hit by seven coins. And - beautiful bakes | :01:13. | :01:14. | |
and bright lipstick... Candice, a PE teacher from Bedford, | :01:15. | :01:16. | |
is crowned the Bake Off winner - the last one ever on the BBC, | :01:17. | :01:19. | |
in a royal-themed finale. The winner of the Great British Bake | :01:20. | :01:41. | |
Off 2016 is... Candace! We are talking to a former winner and a | :01:42. | :01:43. | |
correspondent. Four Bake Off superfans | :01:44. | :01:46. | |
are going to be here Hello, welcome to the programme, | :01:47. | :01:48. | |
we're live until 11:00 this morning. Just want to thank the readers | :01:49. | :01:58. | |
of Pink News for THIS lovely award - we won broadcaster of the year last | :01:59. | :02:02. | |
night at the Pink News Awards, and we won it jointly with GMB | :02:03. | :02:08. | |
so congrats to them! And thank you if you voted for us, | :02:09. | :02:13. | |
it's the second consecutive year we've won this, | :02:14. | :02:16. | |
so we're really honoured, thank you. Today on the programme - | :02:17. | :02:20. | |
were you at the West Ham If so tell me what you saw, | :02:21. | :02:23. | |
and why clashes happened? Use the hashtag victoria | :02:24. | :02:26. | |
live and if you text, you will be charged | :02:27. | :02:30. | |
at the standard network rate. For the first time, the watchdog | :02:31. | :02:35. | |
which oversees doctors has raised concerns about the pressures | :02:36. | :02:39. | |
on the NHS, and their impact The General Medical Council says | :02:40. | :02:42. | |
the National Health Service is struggling because of tight | :02:43. | :02:49. | |
budgets and growing demand. It says that the stress felt | :02:50. | :02:52. | |
by doctors risks affecting patients. Here's more from our | :02:53. | :02:56. | |
Health Editor, Hugh Pym. There have been warnings before | :02:57. | :03:00. | |
about the state of the NHS But now the official regulator | :03:01. | :03:03. | |
the GMC has stepped in. In its annual report on the medical | :03:04. | :03:09. | |
profession, the GMC gives an It says services are struggling | :03:10. | :03:12. | |
under the burden of severely constrained funding and rising | :03:13. | :03:18. | |
patient numbers and goes on to say there are unmistakable signs | :03:19. | :03:22. | |
of distress from the medical profession, suggesting | :03:23. | :03:24. | |
a state of unease. The report says the number | :03:25. | :03:27. | |
of doctors moving immediately from foundation to specialist | :03:28. | :03:31. | |
medical training has fallen, with some citing burn-out | :03:32. | :03:34. | |
as the reason for needing a break. It notes that the standard of care | :03:35. | :03:38. | |
by UK doctors remains among the highest in the world, | :03:39. | :03:41. | |
but adds they are coming Invariably if there's a gap | :03:42. | :03:44. | |
between the number of doctors we have and the services | :03:45. | :03:49. | |
we are providing and the demands placed upon that service, | :03:50. | :03:59. | |
then patients will wait longer and for less emergency | :04:00. | :04:02. | |
procedures, there may be a restriction on how many | :04:03. | :04:04. | |
can be treated. The GMC report also refers | :04:05. | :04:06. | |
to the junior doctors' dispute in England and says the anger | :04:07. | :04:11. | |
revealed levels of alienation, which should cause everyone | :04:12. | :04:13. | |
to pause and reflect. The Department of Health, | :04:14. | :04:15. | |
responsible for England, says it was investing in the NHS' plan | :04:16. | :04:21. | |
to reform services for the future, and central to that was listening to | :04:22. | :04:24. | |
the concerns of staff. Annita is in the BBC | :04:25. | :04:26. | |
Newsroom with a summary Several hundred migrants remain | :04:27. | :04:32. | |
inside the so-called Jungle in Calais, despite officials | :04:33. | :04:38. | |
claiming the camp is now empty. Aid workers in France say at least | :04:39. | :04:42. | |
100 unaccompanied minors were left with nowhere to sleep overnight, | :04:43. | :04:46. | |
due to an onsite container More than 5500 people have been | :04:47. | :04:48. | |
moved to reception centres since Monday, as official | :04:49. | :04:55. | |
close down the site. In new arrivals will not be settled | :04:56. | :05:04. | |
and must be disbursed. And we'll be getting the latest | :05:05. | :05:10. | |
from Calais from our correspondent Simon Jones in a few minutes' time, | :05:11. | :05:13. | |
just after sport. Two strong earthquakes hit central | :05:14. | :05:15. | |
Italy within two hours of each other last night - | :05:16. | :05:17. | |
close to the area where an quake Both tremors occurred east | :05:18. | :05:21. | |
of the city of Perugia, Power lines are down and several | :05:22. | :05:24. | |
buildings have collapsed but there are no reports of serious | :05:25. | :05:28. | |
injuries, as Catriona This shows the sheer force of the | :05:29. | :05:30. | |
tremor. In this village, this church | :05:31. | :05:48. | |
comes tumbling down. There were two earthquakes two hours | :05:49. | :06:00. | |
apart. People rush onto the streets, fearing after-shocks. While | :06:01. | :06:06. | |
emergency services assess the damage. Houses are left with cracks | :06:07. | :06:15. | |
in the walls, power was lost. Boulders, some the size of cars, | :06:16. | :06:21. | |
block local roads. Those scared to sleep in their own homes have been | :06:22. | :06:27. | |
put up in shelters. TRANSLATION: At the moment we are | :06:28. | :06:31. | |
trying to manage the emergency situation and take care of the | :06:32. | :06:34. | |
people outside, give them at least some comfort because they have | :06:35. | :06:39. | |
experienced a major shock. So we are trying to have some hot drinks | :06:40. | :06:43. | |
available but it is clear, with so many people it is difficult to look | :06:44. | :06:48. | |
after them all. The first quake had a magnitude of 5.4, but the second | :06:49. | :06:55. | |
was stronger at 6.2, catching people unaware. TRANSLATION: I was at home | :06:56. | :07:00. | |
inside when the first one hit. Then we went outside because the Earth | :07:01. | :07:05. | |
kept moving. The most serious damage was caused by the second quake. It | :07:06. | :07:11. | |
was something I cannot describe. We were really scared and things | :07:12. | :07:14. | |
started to shake and things were falling down on us. I cannot put it | :07:15. | :07:21. | |
into words. In Rome, 100 miles to the south, this news programme was | :07:22. | :07:25. | |
interrupted by the after-shocks, as people in the city realised what was | :07:26. | :07:30. | |
happening. It started shaking and I didn't know. I said, is this an | :07:31. | :07:37. | |
earthquake? We saw the windows were opening back and forth and the | :07:38. | :07:40. | |
chandelier was rocking back and forth. We were rarely surprise. It | :07:41. | :07:45. | |
is understood these tremors were linked to the massive earthquake in | :07:46. | :07:50. | |
the same area two months ago. It took the lives of hundreds of people | :07:51. | :07:54. | |
and devastated several towns and villages. Remarkably, this time, | :07:55. | :07:59. | |
there are no reports of serious injuries, but the full extent of the | :08:00. | :08:01. | |
damage is not yet known. Seven people have been arrested | :08:02. | :08:05. | |
following violence at a EFL Cup match between West Ham and Chelsea | :08:06. | :08:08. | |
at the former Olympic Stadium. Plastic bottles, seats and coins | :08:09. | :08:11. | |
were thrown during the Hammers' 2-1 victory at London Stadium | :08:12. | :08:13. | |
as hundreds of supporters clashed and riot police | :08:14. | :08:15. | |
entered the concourse. It is the latest outbreak | :08:16. | :08:18. | |
of disorder at West Ham's A 19-year-old man is due to appear | :08:19. | :08:24. | |
in court this morning, charged in connection | :08:25. | :08:29. | |
with the discovery of a suspicious device | :08:30. | :08:30. | |
on a London Underground Damon Smith, who's from south east | :08:31. | :08:32. | |
London, is accused of possessing an explosive substance with intent | :08:33. | :08:36. | |
to endanger life. The device was found | :08:37. | :08:38. | |
at North Greenwich station a week A simple blood test carried out | :08:39. | :08:41. | |
as children receive their routine vaccinations could prevent around | :08:42. | :08:48. | |
600 heart attacks a year in people under the age of 40 | :08:49. | :08:52. | |
in England and Wales, according to researchers | :08:53. | :08:55. | |
at London's Queen Mary University. They say the test would detect | :08:56. | :08:59. | |
an inherited form of heart disease that can affect | :09:00. | :09:02. | |
around 1 in 270 people. With more, here's our health | :09:03. | :09:06. | |
correspondent Dominic Hughes. Every child in the UK has | :09:07. | :09:14. | |
vaccinations at the age of one or two, but could this help prevent | :09:15. | :09:17. | |
600 premature heart attacks Researchers believe a simple blood | :09:18. | :09:19. | |
test carried out at this The main cause of inherited early | :09:20. | :09:26. | |
heart disease is a condition called familial hypercholesterolemia, | :09:27. | :09:31. | |
which is characterised by high cholesterol levels and, | :09:32. | :09:33. | |
if left untreated, young adults who have the condition have | :09:34. | :09:37. | |
about a tenfold increased risk of heart attack | :09:38. | :09:39. | |
before the age of 40. Now a study involving more | :09:40. | :09:44. | |
than 10,000 children in England and Wales suggested that many more | :09:45. | :09:47. | |
people could be Children are already passing | :09:48. | :09:50. | |
through general practice at a time when parents are especially focused | :09:51. | :09:58. | |
on preventive health of their child and therefore their | :09:59. | :10:01. | |
families as a whole. This is an opportunity to provide | :10:02. | :10:03. | |
a population sweep, to pick up people with inherited heart disease | :10:04. | :10:06. | |
with a view to avoiding premature And it's not just babies picked | :10:07. | :10:10. | |
up in the screening. Because it's an inherited condition, | :10:11. | :10:15. | |
one parent will also have it, so the process looks at generations | :10:16. | :10:18. | |
at the same time. The researchers suggest the danger | :10:19. | :10:23. | |
of heart disease developing can be greatly reduced | :10:24. | :10:27. | |
through taking statins. The UK National Screening Committee | :10:28. | :10:29. | |
looked at introducing a universal screening programme in March, | :10:30. | :10:32. | |
but decided the evidence That decision won't be | :10:33. | :10:35. | |
reviewed until 2019. College heads have warned that | :10:36. | :10:45. | |
"dire" funding levels for sixth form education in England means that | :10:46. | :10:47. | |
courses are being cut. The Sixth Form Colleges Association | :10:48. | :10:50. | |
claims modern foreign languages are particularly effected, | :10:51. | :10:53. | |
as well as the range of extra curricular activities | :10:54. | :10:56. | |
they can offer students. And around 9:45, Victoria will be | :10:57. | :11:07. | |
talking to the Chief Executive of the Sixth Form Colleges Association | :11:08. | :11:10. | |
about the funding pressures. Police officers are to be given | :11:11. | :11:12. | |
new training and national standards in the use of stop and search | :11:13. | :11:15. | |
for the first time. They will have to take | :11:16. | :11:17. | |
online courses and pass In the past stop and search has been | :11:18. | :11:19. | |
controversial as some have suggested police have had 'an unconscious | :11:20. | :11:24. | |
bias' against certain By the end of this decade global | :11:25. | :11:26. | |
wildlife populations will have declined by more than two thirds | :11:27. | :11:32. | |
from 1970s levels. Researchers from The WWF | :11:33. | :11:34. | |
and Zoological Society say humans are to blame through | :11:35. | :11:40. | |
activities like overfishing, Critics however, say | :11:41. | :11:43. | |
there is not enough data to draw The world's wildlife | :11:44. | :11:49. | |
is under threat. From African elephants, | :11:50. | :11:58. | |
whose numbers are plummeting because of poaching, | :11:59. | :12:01. | |
to Europe's killer whales, The Living Planet report looked | :12:02. | :12:04. | |
at 3700 different species, and it's found since 1970, | :12:05. | :12:13. | |
populations have That's a decline of about | :12:14. | :12:14. | |
2% every year. Extinction is actually a natural | :12:15. | :12:22. | |
process, but we are seeing high levels of extinction | :12:23. | :12:24. | |
than is naturally predicted. So we are already seeing | :12:25. | :12:26. | |
extinctions, but we would expect those extinctions only to increase | :12:27. | :12:29. | |
if we don't stop these The researchers say humans | :12:30. | :12:36. | |
are to blame, from overfishing They warn, if nothing is done, | :12:37. | :12:40. | |
wildlife populations could fall But some conservationists say | :12:41. | :12:46. | |
there's not enough data Amid the declines, there have | :12:47. | :12:52. | |
been some successes. Wild tiger numbers have risen | :12:53. | :12:59. | |
for the first time in a century and giant pandas are now no longer | :13:00. | :13:02. | |
classified as endangered. That's a summary of the latest | :13:03. | :13:07. | |
BBC News - more at 930. That's a summary of the latest BBC | :13:08. | :13:14. | |
News - more at 9:30. Thanks for your messages. They are | :13:15. | :13:30. | |
all about Bake Off so far. We have gone to the expense of getting cakes | :13:31. | :13:35. | |
in the studio, but they are bought and not made. Scott has said, I love | :13:36. | :13:39. | |
the Bake Off and it won't be the same when it moves to Channel 4. | :13:40. | :13:46. | |
Maria on Twitter says I will miss Bake Off. Anthony on Facebook says, | :13:47. | :13:51. | |
it is a good thing it is moving, it will soon be passed it like other | :13:52. | :13:54. | |
reality programmes. You can have too much of the good things. | :13:55. | :14:05. | |
Those on Twitter, I adore Bake Off, I will miss you. | :14:06. | :14:09. | |
Much-needed win the Jose Mourinho last night? Couldn't have come at a | :14:10. | :14:22. | |
better time. Jose Mourinho was under pressure. Last night they grabbed a | :14:23. | :14:27. | |
1-0 victory over their neighbours and Manchester City. Not quite the | :14:28. | :14:31. | |
classic fans were waiting for, neither team managed a shot on | :14:32. | :14:34. | |
target in the first half. As you saw, it was Juan Mata with the | :14:35. | :14:40. | |
breakthrough in the second half. What about Jose Mourinho? Before the | :14:41. | :14:43. | |
match he said his life in Manchester was a disaster, still living out of | :14:44. | :14:50. | |
the hotel and paparazzi following him around. And with Manchester | :14:51. | :14:54. | |
United's poor form, it made for a dire situation. Maybe this is the | :14:55. | :14:58. | |
momentum they need to jump-start their season. | :14:59. | :15:03. | |
In terms of the draw for the quarterfinals? Their reward is a | :15:04. | :15:06. | |
home match against West Ham at the end of next month. West Ham, I know | :15:07. | :15:10. | |
you will be talking about the violence that covered the match a | :15:11. | :15:16. | |
bit later, but let's show you what everyone was there to see, the | :15:17. | :15:20. | |
goals. They beat Chelsea 2-1, third win on the bounce for the hammers. | :15:21. | :15:28. | |
Fernandez doubled the lead in the second half, so West Ham through to | :15:29. | :15:33. | |
the last day to play United. Arsenal take on Southampton, Liverpool play | :15:34. | :15:35. | |
Leeds and host Newcastle. Andy Murray is closing in on as the | :15:36. | :15:46. | |
world number one, overtaking Djokovic. He has just got into the | :15:47. | :15:53. | |
second round in Australia, this is significant, the man he is chasing | :15:54. | :15:57. | |
for the world number one spot Novak Djokovic isn't playing in a | :15:58. | :16:00. | |
tournament, and so while Andy Murray is adding ranking points, Djokovic | :16:01. | :16:06. | |
isn't. Andy Murray was battling hard, he dropped a set, but he came | :16:07. | :16:10. | |
through and he will now play Gilles Simon in the next round. What is the | :16:11. | :16:19. | |
last story? Rugby league. Great news for England. The rugby league World | :16:20. | :16:28. | |
Cup of 2021 will be in England. They have beaten rival bids from Canada | :16:29. | :16:33. | |
and America. England have hosted the competition in 2013. 80% of the | :16:34. | :16:38. | |
games are planned to be in Lancashire and Yorkshire. | :16:39. | :16:42. | |
Southerners might have a way to travel. Thank you very much. Each | :16:43. | :16:50. | |
day this week our correspondent has been reporting live from the Calais | :16:51. | :16:52. | |
camp. Aid workers say around 100 | :16:53. | :16:58. | |
unaccompanied children in Calais have spent the night | :16:59. | :17:00. | |
without shelter, or slept in shipping containers, | :17:01. | :17:02. | |
following the closure of the camp and children were said to be | :17:03. | :17:09. | |
"wandering around lost" - France however, hailed | :17:10. | :17:11. | |
the operation as a success - claiming the jungle camp was emptied | :17:12. | :17:19. | |
- and said the story of the Calais But, it's reported that | :17:20. | :17:22. | |
many of the migrants bedded down on the roads outside | :17:23. | :17:25. | |
the registration hangar overnight - with a number of them | :17:26. | :17:28. | |
still remaining inside the camp. Let's find out what the situation | :17:29. | :17:30. | |
is in Calais this morning - Have you seen children wandering | :17:31. | :17:42. | |
around lost? We have seen children, yesterday afternoon when this place | :17:43. | :17:45. | |
was shut because it was so dangerous because of the fires that were | :17:46. | :17:50. | |
spreading, what we saw is a number of children who left the camp and | :17:51. | :17:56. | |
actually ended up waiting outside, wondering if they could go in and | :17:57. | :18:00. | |
what was going to happen to them. You can see some of the devastation | :18:01. | :18:05. | |
that the fire left and it was a very dangerous situation, and the | :18:06. | :18:07. | |
charities that look after the children say, imagine if you are a | :18:08. | :18:13. | |
child who has fled war or persecution, and then you are seeing | :18:14. | :18:16. | |
the place that you call home are going up in flames and all the | :18:17. | :18:20. | |
smoke. The charities are very concerned. They said around 70 | :18:21. | :18:26. | |
children had nowhere to go at the end of the evening. They said in the | :18:27. | :18:31. | |
end a number of them went to a hangar, the registration hanger, and | :18:32. | :18:37. | |
they were given shelter. Around 50 slept in blankets at a nearby school | :18:38. | :18:41. | |
which has been allowed to set up in the Jungle which will go when the | :18:42. | :18:48. | |
other structures go, but they were able to take shelter there and the | :18:49. | :18:51. | |
charity said was a very distressing situation. I don't understand why | :18:52. | :18:56. | |
the children were registered first and then dispersed to other parts of | :18:57. | :19:01. | |
France as so many hundreds of adults have been dispersed to France. It | :19:02. | :19:09. | |
has been a chaotic situation, they don't have places for the children | :19:10. | :19:12. | |
in centres across France, and so children registered for a wristband | :19:13. | :19:17. | |
have been sent to shipping containers the other side of the | :19:18. | :19:21. | |
Jungle. As a result some of the children were not able to register | :19:22. | :19:24. | |
yesterday because of the registration process, it had shut, | :19:25. | :19:29. | |
and those children were actually going to be remaining in the Jungle | :19:30. | :19:35. | |
in the meantime, in the shipping containers, but they are fears not | :19:36. | :19:38. | |
all of them registered and some might have disappeared. That is | :19:39. | :19:43. | |
really the problem. I want to show you over there, we are told migrants | :19:44. | :19:47. | |
have been cleared from this area but they haven't. We have spoken to the | :19:48. | :19:55. | |
prefect of Calais, and she told me the operation has cleared the | :19:56. | :19:58. | |
migrants and that is effectively over, job done, she said the people | :19:59. | :20:02. | |
we saw sleeping on the street outside the registration centre will | :20:03. | :20:06. | |
not migrants from the Jungle, they were migrants who had come in the | :20:07. | :20:09. | |
past couple of days from other parts of France hoping to get on a bus out | :20:10. | :20:14. | |
of Calais, but she said Calais can't be a magnet for anyone who wants to | :20:15. | :20:19. | |
come. There is a huge police operation. They are going around the | :20:20. | :20:25. | |
Jungle making sure people are out, but some people are not really sure | :20:26. | :20:30. | |
what to do. We can speak to Dorothy from the Save The Children. You have | :20:31. | :20:36. | |
been here, very chaotic. Exactly. There's a lack of information about | :20:37. | :20:40. | |
what is happening to the children who are in the containers now and | :20:41. | :20:43. | |
the children who we know did not make it into the containers did not | :20:44. | :20:47. | |
get registered. Last night when I left them it was getting dark, and | :20:48. | :20:52. | |
there were 60 children who were not in accommodation and had probably | :20:53. | :20:57. | |
run out of the camp when the fires happened yesterday. Found that the | :20:58. | :21:01. | |
containers were full and had nowhere to go. The Tory was asking me, why | :21:02. | :21:10. | |
were the children not moved before the adults? -- Victoria was asking | :21:11. | :21:15. | |
me. It is unclear, Save The Children and other charities have been | :21:16. | :21:21. | |
calling for days and weeks for the demolition not to start while we | :21:22. | :21:25. | |
knew children were here. We had lists and we knew who the children | :21:26. | :21:30. | |
were, and those calls were not acted on and the diggers have come and we | :21:31. | :21:35. | |
saw what happened yesterday, chaos, frightening for children, and our | :21:36. | :21:39. | |
fears have been realised. Many children have now run when they saw | :21:40. | :21:42. | |
the fires and we don't know where they are now. Thanks. The prefect in | :21:43. | :21:49. | |
Calais said 60 children were given a place in a hanger down the road and | :21:50. | :21:54. | |
they will be moved to other centres right across France, but it seems | :21:55. | :21:58. | |
the shipping containers where most of the children have gone, around | :21:59. | :22:02. | |
thousand, that appears to be full and the focus now for the charities | :22:03. | :22:07. | |
is what is going to happen to those children, as the big police | :22:08. | :22:09. | |
operation continues today. Thanks for joining us. Simon will keep | :22:10. | :22:15. | |
across that story as he has done all week. | :22:16. | :22:19. | |
Music venues need to do more to protect against the threat | :22:20. | :22:23. | |
of a terror attack, according to the former head of the private | :22:24. | :22:26. | |
It comes almost a year since 130 people were killed | :22:27. | :22:32. | |
Islamist militants used suicide vests and gunmen to attack bars, | :22:33. | :22:38. | |
restaurants, a major stadium and a concert hall | :22:39. | :22:41. | |
At the Bataclan Theatre gunmen trapped fans watching a gig | :22:42. | :22:47. | |
Our reporter Chi Chi Izundu has more. | :22:48. | :22:59. | |
I was on the phone to my friend and he could hear the sound of gunfire. | :23:00. | :23:08. | |
Terrorists were shouting to stay down otherwise they will shoot us. | :23:09. | :23:12. | |
It was a gone is STUDIO: -- it was a concert on a Friday | :23:13. | :23:26. | |
night which changed France. It is years since 90 people were killed in | :23:27. | :23:31. | |
the Bataclan Theatre in Paris, they were watching an American rock group | :23:32. | :23:36. | |
when three gunmen stormed into the theatre and started shooting. I | :23:37. | :23:49. | |
spend a lot of time in music venues up and down the country and I asked | :23:50. | :23:52. | |
the basic question, what has changed here since that happened over there? | :23:53. | :24:00. | |
There are great differences between venues and I think some have taken a | :24:01. | :24:04. | |
lot of trouble to put into place security and others perhaps don't | :24:05. | :24:09. | |
take much trouble at all. I do think there are a small number of venues | :24:10. | :24:15. | |
which will slip between the cracks because they simply can't afford to | :24:16. | :24:19. | |
do anything. Almost 28 million tickets were sold for live music in | :24:20. | :24:26. | |
the UK last year for concerts and festivals around the country. None | :24:27. | :24:30. | |
of those events suffered a terror attack but in July this year some | :24:31. | :24:34. | |
venues in Camden in north London were evacuated when a suspicious | :24:35. | :24:39. | |
device was reported to police in a car. This person was there. I heard | :24:40. | :24:47. | |
the commotion out there, unusual in Camden, normally voices rise as one, | :24:48. | :24:53. | |
but it was a commotion and I looked through the window, and police were | :24:54. | :24:59. | |
marshalling loads of people out of many venues. There was a bomb | :25:00. | :25:06. | |
disposal unit. I ended up rolling down the street. I had a very acute | :25:07. | :25:11. | |
angle, but it looked like they were investigating something in a car. | :25:12. | :25:17. | |
There was no bomb in that car but Josh was worried about the way | :25:18. | :25:21. | |
people from the various bars and venues were ushered out into the | :25:22. | :25:26. | |
streets. You have got to keep people somewhere safe, you don't want to | :25:27. | :25:36. | |
cause too much chaos, it is also a one-way street, so it can be a | :25:37. | :25:40. | |
nightmare. Under health and safety venues music venues -- under health | :25:41. | :25:49. | |
and safety laws music venues have got have plans in place for fire, | :25:50. | :25:53. | |
but it is not same for a terror attack. Free advice has been | :25:54. | :26:01. | |
available to places from police, the attack on the Bataclan has brought a | :26:02. | :26:04. | |
renewed focus on it, and training videos like this one. In closed | :26:05. | :26:10. | |
spaces like theatres and nightclubs, they make attractive targets. So how | :26:11. | :26:20. | |
have venues reacted to the Bataclan attacks? I went to a couple to find | :26:21. | :26:26. | |
out, the medium-sized proxy in east London. -- Troxy. And one of the | :26:27. | :26:35. | |
busiest venues in the world, the O2 Arena. After what happened in France | :26:36. | :26:41. | |
there is a spotlight on security and we are no different, we are trying | :26:42. | :26:44. | |
to refine our processes, always change and adapt our security, we | :26:45. | :26:49. | |
never keep it the same. Behind the scenes our security operation is in | :26:50. | :26:53. | |
full swing, things are being monitored and you will see staff | :26:54. | :26:57. | |
around. Plainclothes, as well, we have a police presence on site. | :26:58. | :27:18. | |
We got in contact with the police after it happened and the night of | :27:19. | :27:26. | |
the Bataclan in Paris we had a boxing fight and then a Russian | :27:27. | :27:29. | |
concert the following night, there was a nervousness taking place at | :27:30. | :27:32. | |
the time for the we got in contact with the police and we had a | :27:33. | :27:37. | |
commerce Asian in terms of is there anything additional we could be | :27:38. | :27:40. | |
doing and they suggested we look at other measures -- we got in contact | :27:41. | :27:44. | |
with the police and we had a conversation. We have the local | :27:45. | :27:50. | |
counterterrorism team come down to induct us basically and that has | :27:51. | :27:56. | |
been fed down to the front line team and the security here, as well. As a | :27:57. | :28:01. | |
decent sized venue we still have quite a small team, smaller venues | :28:02. | :28:05. | |
have even smaller teams and they are probably thinking about how they can | :28:06. | :28:08. | |
run tonight's show and clear up from last night. Booking staff the next | :28:09. | :28:15. | |
week. While I'm sure terrorism is on the tick list of these venues, where | :28:16. | :28:24. | |
it is as a priority might slip down, and what happens generally with | :28:25. | :28:26. | |
events, they get bunched together and there is a quiet period and then | :28:27. | :28:32. | |
you look back at your processes, but when you are doing back-to-back for | :28:33. | :28:36. | |
30 days in a row it can be difficult to prioritise other elements. Both | :28:37. | :28:46. | |
Troxy and the O2 Arena have updated their security since last year's | :28:47. | :28:51. | |
attacks in Paris, there is concern within the Private security industry | :28:52. | :28:54. | |
that not everyone is taking advantage of initiatives like | :28:55. | :28:59. | |
Project Griffin. Everyone has upped their game in the UK, the police | :29:00. | :29:03. | |
have been incredibly proactive in putting in a free training and | :29:04. | :29:11. | |
advice to train people in venues, and venues have put in additional | :29:12. | :29:15. | |
training in place for their staff and generally raising the level of | :29:16. | :29:18. | |
awareness within their own environment. I think there is a | :29:19. | :29:22. | |
misconception from some of the smaller venue operators that | :29:23. | :29:26. | |
anything to do with counterterrorism is very expensive and they don't | :29:27. | :29:31. | |
have the budget for it. When in fact the opposite is true, there is an | :29:32. | :29:35. | |
incredible amount of absolutely free help and advice from police. | :29:36. | :29:40. | |
Standard operational procedures they could implement at their venues to | :29:41. | :29:44. | |
make them safer, and I do think there is a small number of venues | :29:45. | :29:46. | |
which have potentially slipped between the cracks. Under the | :29:47. | :29:50. | |
misapprehension that they can't afford to do anything. Baroness Ruth | :29:51. | :29:56. | |
Hennig, former head of the regulator of private security firms, would | :29:57. | :30:05. | |
like to change the law. Often larger venues, I think, but not only those, | :30:06. | :30:12. | |
who do have airport style security, and who also have metal detectors, | :30:13. | :30:17. | |
and who do have very well-trained security personnel for stop and they | :30:18. | :30:22. | |
topped up this training regularly. There are people out there who are | :30:23. | :30:26. | |
taking security very seriously, but I think at the other end there are | :30:27. | :30:32. | |
venues who aren't taking it seriously, we know this from the | :30:33. | :30:35. | |
police, who don't cooperate and who don't take up the offers which are | :30:36. | :30:38. | |
made to them and where I think there are concerns. The issue is, how do | :30:39. | :30:43. | |
you get to that tale of security venues who are perhaps not doing as | :30:44. | :30:47. | |
much as they should do about security. And how do you get to | :30:48. | :30:54. | |
them, what is the solution? All clubs and bars and similar venues | :30:55. | :30:58. | |
are licensed under the 2003 licensing act and if you were to | :30:59. | :31:02. | |
make the legislation more specific in terms of counterterrorism these | :31:03. | :31:07. | |
venues would have two show that they are actually taking security | :31:08. | :31:10. | |
seriously or they wouldn't get a licence. | :31:11. | :31:19. | |
We will talk about that more later in the programme. Sean on Facebook | :31:20. | :31:29. | |
says it is better to spend money on prevention, therefore intelligence | :31:30. | :31:36. | |
and also tight immigration controls. On the subject of the arrests at the | :31:37. | :31:40. | |
West Ham Chelsea game last night, some and says if West Ham are | :31:41. | :31:45. | |
responsible for crowd trouble again, than all of their matches should be | :31:46. | :31:49. | |
played away. A couple of people have been tweeting about the report from | :31:50. | :31:53. | |
Simon Jones in Calais regarding the unaccompanied children which aid | :31:54. | :31:58. | |
charities say are wandering around lost. Joe says, seeing as you seem | :31:59. | :32:04. | |
so concerned about those children, why don't you take them back to | :32:05. | :32:08. | |
England? Jay says they are trying to | :32:09. | :32:12. | |
emotionally blackmail us, these children have come so far passing | :32:13. | :32:16. | |
through several, safe countries. On bake-off, Luke says it was a | :32:17. | :32:21. | |
close final last night and it has been a terrific series and one of | :32:22. | :32:24. | |
the best. Is that right? Let me know. | :32:25. | :32:26. | |
Fans kick off again at West Ham's new London stadium - | :32:27. | :32:30. | |
7 arrests this time - West Ham say they'll ban any | :32:31. | :32:33. | |
fans involved for life - we'll speak to our reporter | :32:34. | :32:35. | |
who was at the game and hear from a family caught | :32:36. | :32:38. | |
And by sixth form colleges are cutting the courses on offer with | :32:39. | :32:45. | |
teenagers getting and narrower experience of education. | :32:46. | :32:49. | |
Officials in Calais say the process of registering migrants | :32:50. | :32:54. | |
from the so-called Jungle camp is over and no more buses | :32:55. | :32:57. | |
will be used to take people to reception centres. | :32:58. | :33:00. | |
More than 5500 people have been moved since Monday, | :33:01. | :33:03. | |
68 children slept in the registration hanger last night, | :33:04. | :33:08. | |
aid workers say they will be moved to centres elsewhere in France. | :33:09. | :33:12. | |
It's thought physical demolition of the camp will be | :33:13. | :33:14. | |
GDP which stands for gross domestic product gives a snapshot of the UK's | :33:15. | :33:37. | |
economic health. Experts will be looking at figures closely as the | :33:38. | :33:40. | |
statistics will indicate how Brexit has impacted on the economy. | :33:41. | :33:44. | |
Emergency services in Italy have been working throughout the night | :33:45. | :33:46. | |
after two strong earthquakes struck in the space of two hours, | :33:47. | :33:49. | |
damaging buildings and injuring dozens of people. | :33:50. | :33:51. | |
Both quakes occurred in the central part of the country, | :33:52. | :33:53. | |
east of the city of Perugia, with magnitudes of | :33:54. | :33:55. | |
There are few reports of some serious injuries. | :33:56. | :33:59. | |
Bad weather has been hampering efforts to assess the damage. | :34:00. | :34:06. | |
That's a summary of the latest BBC News - more at 10.00. | :34:07. | :34:09. | |
Manchester United edged past their rivals Manchester City | :34:10. | :34:14. | |
to go through to the quarter-finals of the EFL Cup. | :34:15. | :34:16. | |
A goal from Juan Mata separated the sides. | :34:17. | :34:19. | |
Despite being top of the Premier League on goal | :34:20. | :34:21. | |
difference, City have now gone six games without a win | :34:22. | :34:23. | |
That's their worst run in eight years. | :34:24. | :34:29. | |
United will face West Ham in the last eight. | :34:30. | :34:32. | |
Crowd trouble marred the end of their 2-1 win over Chelsea. | :34:33. | :34:35. | |
In the other quarter-finals, Liverpool will play Leeds, | :34:36. | :34:37. | |
Hull are at home to Newcastle and Arsenal face Southampton. | :34:38. | :34:41. | |
Andy Murray is closing in on world number one status. | :34:42. | :34:45. | |
He's through to the second round of the Vienna Open | :34:46. | :34:47. | |
after victory over world number 35 Martin Klizan. | :34:48. | :34:50. | |
And England will host the 2021 Rugby League World Cup. | :34:51. | :34:53. | |
It was selected ahead of rival bids from the US and Canada. | :34:54. | :34:56. | |
England last hosted the tournament in 2013, when Australia beat | :34:57. | :35:00. | |
New Zealand in the final at Old Trafford. | :35:01. | :35:06. | |
That is all the sport for now, Victoria. Thank you very much. | :35:07. | :35:11. | |
Is hooliganism back in English football's top division? | :35:12. | :35:14. | |
West Ham have condemned the behaviour of supporters | :35:15. | :35:17. | |
after clashes between both sets of fans overshadowed the Hammers' | :35:18. | :35:19. | |
2-1 victory over Chelsea in the EFL Cup fourth round last night. | :35:20. | :35:22. | |
The club says it will impose life bans on anyone found to have | :35:23. | :35:25. | |
Let's get more on this from our Sports News Correspondent, | :35:26. | :35:30. | |
There was an increased police presence and an alcohol ban, so what | :35:31. | :35:43. | |
happened inside? It was intense, a big London derby. West Ham winning | :35:44. | :35:49. | |
2-0 and a lot of goading and taunting of Chelsea supporters. It | :35:50. | :35:52. | |
spilled over in the last five minutes of the game. But fans have | :35:53. | :35:57. | |
been saying objects were being thrown back and forward between the | :35:58. | :36:01. | |
fans throughout the game. But the last five minutes of the match, that | :36:02. | :36:07. | |
is when tempers flared. A Chelsea fan got into a separate zone, | :36:08. | :36:11. | |
taunted the fans, came back and then a chair seat was ripped up and | :36:12. | :36:15. | |
thrown into the Chelsea section. More objects being thrown. And at | :36:16. | :36:20. | |
the Concourse, the top of the stand, that is where the two sets of | :36:21. | :36:25. | |
supporters surged together. They were held back by a line of stewards | :36:26. | :36:34. | |
and a flimsy fence. Riot police came into the stadium and quelled the | :36:35. | :36:36. | |
disturbance. The final whistle was blown thankfully for the Stadium | :36:37. | :36:41. | |
operators, but a very ugly scenes. You have spoken to some fans? On the | :36:42. | :36:47. | |
way out, Chelsea fans were given a police escort and I caught up with | :36:48. | :36:50. | |
some of them who said they were hit by coins. | :36:51. | :36:53. | |
We're in the front row near to the home fans. | :36:54. | :36:57. | |
Suddenly there is a whole load of coins coming over. | :36:58. | :36:59. | |
My daughter Victoria got hit by seven coins. | :37:00. | :37:01. | |
The stewards didn't seem to do much at all. | :37:02. | :37:05. | |
Other kids were hit in the front and it was a disabled section. | :37:06. | :37:11. | |
Do you know who was throwing the coins? | :37:12. | :37:14. | |
You could clearly see them throwing them. | :37:15. | :37:17. | |
You couldn't really see who was throwing them... | :37:18. | :37:20. | |
I'm lucky I got out of the game now it has finished. | :37:21. | :37:36. | |
The thing we should point out, we're Chelsea season ticket holders. | :37:37. | :37:39. | |
Vicky has been going since she was two. | :37:40. | :37:40. | |
She never experienced violence like this before or the aggression | :37:41. | :37:43. | |
We've never hit been by coins before. | :37:44. | :37:47. | |
To be hit by seven of them in one evening, that's why we've kept them | :37:48. | :37:51. | |
because we want to take this matter further. | :37:52. | :37:53. | |
In your opinion Paul, the stewards and police | :37:54. | :37:55. | |
They should have dragged the whole crowd back from the side | :37:56. | :38:01. | |
and dealt with them, but all they did | :38:02. | :38:03. | |
For a little girl eight years old to be hit by this number | :38:04. | :38:08. | |
of coins and other children hit as well, it is not just my daughter. | :38:09. | :38:11. | |
There were kids next to us and they were all hit. | :38:12. | :38:14. | |
She is a brave little girl. But upsetting. I don't understand how | :38:15. | :38:35. | |
one set of fans can get across a segregated area to get near to the | :38:36. | :38:39. | |
other set of fans? This is one of the criticisms people have had of | :38:40. | :38:45. | |
the new stadium. West Ham don't control the stewards, it is operated | :38:46. | :38:49. | |
by a separate company. They are the stadium operators and they are in | :38:50. | :38:54. | |
charge of stewarding matters. There has been criticism of the | :38:55. | :38:58. | |
stewarding, prior to West Ham moving in, the stewards have had to do with | :38:59. | :39:02. | |
concerts, rugby union and athletics, perhaps not the volatile nature of a | :39:03. | :39:08. | |
football crowd. Some of the stewards that were at West Ham's old ground, | :39:09. | :39:13. | |
Upton Park, were brought in and put into areas where the operators | :39:14. | :39:17. | |
believed would be hot spots, but that didn't prevent those scenes | :39:18. | :39:21. | |
taking place. I have tweeted the chairman of West Ham this morning to | :39:22. | :39:25. | |
see if he will come on the programme. I haven't had a reply. | :39:26. | :39:29. | |
They have said they will impose life bans on anyone caught up in the | :39:30. | :39:33. | |
trouble, how do they identify them? West Ham have a high-definition | :39:34. | :39:39. | |
unsophisticated CCTV system in place. They have already banned some | :39:40. | :39:45. | |
fans already. Last night, in order to go to the game, you had to have a | :39:46. | :39:49. | |
previous purchase history with the club. You couldn't just walk up to | :39:50. | :39:54. | |
the gate and buy a ticket. Using that CCTV, they hope to identify the | :39:55. | :39:58. | |
fans involved and hand out life bans. Thank you very much, Richard. | :39:59. | :40:09. | |
Let's talk to West Ham fan Sean Whetstone was at the game, | :40:10. | :40:19. | |
What did you see? I was about 20 feet away from the troubles. It had | :40:20. | :40:27. | |
been publicised in the media, helicopters over top. But up until | :40:28. | :40:31. | |
five minutes before the end of the game, it was quite good-natured. | :40:32. | :40:35. | |
Normal banter, I weigh fans singing at the West Ham fans and vice versa. | :40:36. | :40:41. | |
What I saw, about five minutes before full-time, Chelsea fans | :40:42. | :40:46. | |
started to leave, they knew they had lost the game, they were 2-0 down | :40:47. | :40:51. | |
and coins started to come over from the Chelsea end. I was hit by two | :40:52. | :40:57. | |
quoins and I picked up six or seven coins around me, five peas, 20p | :40:58. | :41:04. | |
pieces and that initiated some retaliation from West Ham fans, | :41:05. | :41:09. | |
which is run by the way. Everybody does deserve a ban for anything. | :41:10. | :41:14. | |
Plastic bottles were thrown, programmes, scarves and obviously | :41:15. | :41:21. | |
coins. A few seeds. I saw two or three seats thrown. You have been | :41:22. | :41:27. | |
reporting segregation was broken. My understanding is from witnessing it | :41:28. | :41:32. | |
and talking to club operators this morning, segregation wasn't broken. | :41:33. | :41:36. | |
There is letting between the two sets of fans. Although they tried to | :41:37. | :41:41. | |
get to each other, Chelsea didn't get into the west camp and vice | :41:42. | :41:52. | |
versa. One man who did cross, was taken back. But there was no actual | :41:53. | :41:57. | |
fighting in the stadium. These pictures are flashed around the | :41:58. | :42:00. | |
world, which is very unfortunate. There is two sides to every story. I | :42:01. | :42:08. | |
absolutely get that. And, it is a minority of supporters and all of | :42:09. | :42:12. | |
the cabbie 's report on this, but is this a return of hooliganism in | :42:13. | :42:18. | |
England's top flight? I don't think so. I was around in the 80s on the | :42:19. | :42:25. | |
terraces, at Upton Park. There was a lot more trouble in those days. | :42:26. | :42:30. | |
People have been stabbed and seriously hurt and some even died in | :42:31. | :42:34. | |
the fighting. We're not talking about a return to that. In reality, | :42:35. | :42:45. | |
there is always a small minority intent on trouble. Not just West | :42:46. | :42:50. | |
Ham, in all football clubs. Because this is the Olympic Stadium, it is | :42:51. | :42:54. | |
iconic and they want to come and prove a point and get bragging | :42:55. | :43:00. | |
rights. I would say less than 100 were involved in throwing things. | :43:01. | :43:06. | |
Probably less than 100. There were seven arrests, I believe, outside | :43:07. | :43:13. | |
the stadium. The media are focusing on the London stadium. Trouble does | :43:14. | :43:17. | |
happen at Chelsea, Stamford Bridge, but it is not reported. On the first | :43:18. | :43:23. | |
game of the season at Stamford Bridge, there was trouble between | :43:24. | :43:28. | |
West Ham and Chelsea fans. But it wasn't reported because it happens | :43:29. | :43:33. | |
every season. This trouble is happening, but the media attention | :43:34. | :43:37. | |
is on the London stadium. We are seeing it all around the world on | :43:38. | :43:41. | |
every back page and on every news report. Thank you very much. | :43:42. | :43:46. | |
She's a 31 year old PE teacher from Bedford known for her beautiful | :43:47. | :43:49. | |
baking and bright lipstick - and she's also now | :43:50. | :43:52. | |
Here's the moment Candice Brown was crowned the winner of the Great | :43:53. | :43:58. | |
Watched by a massive 14.8 million people. Those audience figures just | :43:59. | :44:08. | |
in. Its biggest ever audience. Jane, Candace, after a lot of | :44:09. | :44:24. | |
deliberation, the winner of the great British Bake Off 2016 is... | :44:25. | :44:32. | |
Candace! CHEERING AND APPLAUSE | :44:33. | :44:47. | |
Well done. Well done, Candace. Well done. | :44:48. | :44:59. | |
In her first broadcast interview since last night's programme, | :45:00. | :45:02. | |
Candice Brown told BBC's Three Counties Radio it was | :45:03. | :45:04. | |
I think it might have been longer than that on the day. In my head, I | :45:05. | :45:17. | |
think I was standing there for about an hour, but I know it definitely | :45:18. | :45:22. | |
wasn't. I was just praying my legs were not going to give way. My knees | :45:23. | :45:28. | |
were knocking. If you had put sound on them, it would have sounded like | :45:29. | :45:33. | |
somebody knocking on the door. They were shaking. I never expected to | :45:34. | :45:37. | |
get on it in the first place, let alone for then this them to say my | :45:38. | :45:45. | |
name. It makes me smile so much, I am very grateful. It is one of those | :45:46. | :45:51. | |
things, we did it and we went back to work and everything like that. | :45:52. | :45:55. | |
But the last few days has been, this is happening and then last night it | :45:56. | :46:00. | |
was real. I kept looking at my watch. And then I thought, it is | :46:01. | :46:07. | |
out! It is out. I don't need to shut down and turn my back on people when | :46:08. | :46:12. | |
we start talking Bake Off now. It is a good feeling to be able to smile | :46:13. | :46:14. | |
and say, I did it. She did it. We can have a look at | :46:15. | :46:19. | |
some tweets. Candice thanking everyone | :46:20. | :46:33. | |
that supported her. She tweeted, I am grateful | :46:34. | :46:34. | |
thankful and honoured! You will never know | :46:35. | :46:36. | |
what's this means to me! Word that Val was off to Ayia Napa | :46:37. | :46:42. | |
brought out people's creativity And Adam Penny @AdamPeeny said | :46:43. | :46:45. | |
If I don't make it to Ayia Napa with Val then I've | :46:46. | :46:54. | |
failed at everything. And finally this one from UptonGirl | :46:55. | :46:57. | |
who prepared for last night's finale in | :46:58. | :47:04. | |
style Jammies are on. Jo Malone candle lit. | :47:05. | :47:06. | |
Wine poured. And according to today's papers | :47:07. | :47:08. | |
Candice could earn ?1 million It's become the UK's most | :47:09. | :47:16. | |
watched TV programme - last year over 15 million | :47:17. | :47:29. | |
people tuned in to watch And 14 million people watched last | :47:30. | :47:32. | |
night. It was the end of an era too | :47:33. | :47:39. | |
as you know - the last ever Bake Off to grace BBC screens, before it | :47:40. | :47:43. | |
moves to Channel 4 next year. Let's take a look back | :47:44. | :47:46. | |
at some of the highlights OK. Let's think about having to | :47:47. | :48:03. | |
present that. That's not cooking. Oh! No, no. Yes, you're OK. Oh God. | :48:04. | :48:18. | |
Bakers, down tools, construction is over. That is one of the best things | :48:19. | :48:24. | |
I've ever seen baked in bread ever, that is fantastic and I would never | :48:25. | :48:28. | |
have attempted anything like that. It is time for your last ever tech | :48:29. | :48:33. | |
challenge, it is one of Paul's recipes, any pearls of wisdom? No. | :48:34. | :48:38. | |
Your bungee jump awaits, have a great time. The safety harness is | :48:39. | :48:43. | |
there, but Paul, we haven't bothered for you. That is absolutely fine. | :48:44. | :48:52. | |
Don't they get fed at home? They will love these. I didn't know what | :48:53. | :48:59. | |
to expect at all. I was expecting to make rude remarks about this being a | :49:00. | :49:05. | |
pudding. It is not about baking, it is presentation. What you do when | :49:06. | :49:10. | |
you arrive at this wonderful tea party, you look at everything. You | :49:11. | :49:15. | |
always bake for a reason, you are giving it to people and you make it | :49:16. | :49:18. | |
the best you can and you make it with love. Whenever I make anything, | :49:19. | :49:26. | |
I put love into it, every time. I will never put boundaries on myself | :49:27. | :49:30. | |
ever again, I will never say, I can't do it. Bakers, finalists, | :49:31. | :49:38. | |
welcome to the tent. Good luck. Good luck, guys. Hello. Thank you. Thank | :49:39. | :49:49. | |
you. Three layers of heaven, it's beautiful. Everyone wants to win. | :49:50. | :50:00. | |
Everyone in this tent. Oh! I've got so many timers. | :50:01. | :50:08. | |
OK, bakers. Five hours is up. The winner of The Great British Bake Off | :50:09. | :50:20. | |
2016 is... Candice. CHEERING Well done. I loved the screaming | :50:21. | :50:33. | |
from friends and family. Let's talk now to Frances Quinn, | :50:34. | :50:39. | |
she won the Great British Also joining us is Amari Koryang | :50:40. | :50:42. | |
who won the junior version of Bake Off last year | :50:43. | :50:47. | |
at 11 years old. Scott Bryan is Buzzfeed's | :50:48. | :50:50. | |
"Bake Off Correspondent" and has been attempting every week's | :50:51. | :50:52. | |
technical challenge himself - What did you think of it last night? | :50:53. | :51:09. | |
I was very happy that Candice won, she is a very good bay Gavin Sheehan | :51:10. | :51:13. | |
to good personality to go with it, as well, so I was happy she won -- | :51:14. | :51:21. | |
she has a very good personality to go with it. It was a very good | :51:22. | :51:26. | |
final, they all went into the show stopper and it was an even playing | :51:27. | :51:33. | |
field. Those little sausage rolls... They were stunning. 49 pieces in | :51:34. | :51:39. | |
that royal picnic. Why not make it 50? Fair enough, or fair enough. | :51:40. | :51:46. | |
Scott, did the right person win? I think so, it Jane and Andrew would | :51:47. | :51:51. | |
have been deserving winners, as well, it came down to the final | :51:52. | :51:55. | |
challenge. If you failed or were a bit behind that is it. I found that | :51:56. | :52:05. | |
weeks ago Benjamin could have been a finalist but she underperformed. | :52:06. | :52:10. | |
Candice took the feedback she got from early episodes, and she took | :52:11. | :52:15. | |
that into consideration and honed her skills. She was pretty much bang | :52:16. | :52:22. | |
on perfect last night. You have your notebook from the series when you | :52:23. | :52:26. | |
won it in 2013. That is a lovely memento. Delicious. They were doing | :52:27. | :52:34. | |
the salmon escaped last night and this was the first debate I did on | :52:35. | :52:37. | |
the show -- they were doing the sandwich bake. I was a designer | :52:38. | :52:42. | |
before going on the show and I'm always designing the ideas down on | :52:43. | :52:47. | |
paper before I take them into the kitchen. You have cut out | :52:48. | :52:52. | |
photographs and pictures. It is like a mood board. Orcollo arch. -- a car | :52:53. | :53:01. | |
large. Very beautiful. How'd you keep the fact that you have won | :53:02. | :53:07. | |
quiet and secret so long? It is so hard, it is a long period of time | :53:08. | :53:10. | |
and you have to keep it secret for so long. People are talking to you | :53:11. | :53:17. | |
and you want to say that you have won junior Bake Off but you can't. | :53:18. | :53:22. | |
What would they say if you had let it slip by mistake which -- mistake? | :53:23. | :53:36. | |
Wrote they wouldn't they would just stare at me. Not just you have to | :53:37. | :53:42. | |
keep it secret? Yes, my mum and dad, as well. How long was it? For | :53:43. | :53:54. | |
months. -- four months. I we said, if you can keep it secret for that | :53:55. | :53:58. | |
long you could work at MI5 -- I always said. It is an enormous | :53:59. | :54:01. | |
release when it is shown on television. You start questioning, | :54:02. | :54:07. | |
did I win? They might have a shot two endings. When you watched the | :54:08. | :54:13. | |
series, it must be quite relaxing, in a way? Compared to us who are | :54:14. | :54:22. | |
feeling tense. We had a party and there were emergency chairs, but I | :54:23. | :54:26. | |
stood throughout. We don't get to see the episodes before they go out | :54:27. | :54:32. | |
and are edited. It was four months ago, so you don't know how it has | :54:33. | :54:35. | |
been put together. It is quite crazy. What have you baked? This is | :54:36. | :54:47. | |
a Brownie owl. This is a recipe for my book, it is able born brick | :54:48. | :54:55. | |
Brownie. -- Borbon biscuit. What about the technical challenges? What | :54:56. | :55:02. | |
was the most difficult? The saccharine, you had to go with a | :55:03. | :55:07. | |
pipe chocolate disc. Mine came out looking like the words trash or | :55:08. | :55:14. | |
Tokyo or according to some people dogs and ghosts. Completely | :55:15. | :55:20. | |
inedible. How come? You are following a recipe. I did not try to | :55:21. | :55:25. | |
have any outside help, I was trying to keep it like it would be in the | :55:26. | :55:30. | |
challenge and I covered it in layers and layers of alcohol and that | :55:31. | :55:35. | |
killed it. It was really dry. That did not go down well. It says a lot | :55:36. | :55:40. | |
about you that you put so much alcohol in it. LAUGHTER | :55:41. | :55:45. | |
What would it be like on Channel 4? I think less people might not watch | :55:46. | :55:49. | |
it because it is moving to Channel 4. It will be the same, kind of, but | :55:50. | :55:58. | |
Sue and Mary have gone and it is not the same without them, to be honest, | :55:59. | :56:01. | |
but I still think it will be Bake Off, but it won't be the same. The | :56:02. | :56:09. | |
tabloid speculation after you won, I can't remember that, but they say | :56:10. | :56:12. | |
that Top Gear is going to win a million quid. -- but they said now | :56:13. | :56:19. | |
that Candice is going to earn a million quid. You don't win that | :56:20. | :56:24. | |
much, but you have opportunities and you have a platform, and I'm sure | :56:25. | :56:29. | |
Candice will use all of that. That is all ahead of her and I wish her | :56:30. | :56:34. | |
the very best. Thanks for coming onto the programme. I don't know if | :56:35. | :56:40. | |
you are taking a wonderful cake home or sharing it with our crew. Scott, | :56:41. | :56:48. | |
we are going to have a mini Bake Off contest in the studio and Scott is | :56:49. | :56:54. | |
free pleased about that. -- very. He will be the judge. We will talk to | :56:55. | :56:57. | |
you later. There's a huge amount of worry | :56:58. | :57:02. | |
that the Brexit vote could hit the City of London, | :57:03. | :57:04. | |
all the trading that goes on there and the money that flows | :57:05. | :57:07. | |
from it into the economy. But some analysts say the massive | :57:08. | :57:11. | |
deregulation 30 years ago - the so-called "Big Bang" - | :57:12. | :57:17. | |
could protect the UK's Before the Big Bang, | :57:18. | :57:19. | |
trading had to be done face to face between certain controlled trading | :57:20. | :57:25. | |
companies - but afterwards, anyone could trade and it was | :57:26. | :57:27. | |
all done by computers. It opened up London to international | :57:28. | :57:32. | |
firms and laid the foundations that have helped to propel London | :57:33. | :57:35. | |
into a global powerhouse for finance - and it's claimed no other European | :57:36. | :57:38. | |
city right now that has the same It was extraordinary, it was really | :57:39. | :58:22. | |
life changing, previously you had thousands of people walking across | :58:23. | :58:27. | |
the market floor, huge noise. The trading market options were on their | :58:28. | :58:30. | |
own on a Monday morning and the rest of the stock exchange was like a | :58:31. | :58:32. | |
ghost town. There's a dragline of causation from | :58:33. | :58:56. | |
the Big Bang in 1986 because before that we took the risk ourselves with | :58:57. | :58:59. | |
our own partnership money, but after that we were taking a risk with | :59:00. | :59:03. | |
someone else's money and so the risk could be built up and someone has | :59:04. | :59:05. | |
got to be responsible for it. We have the latest news and sport in | :59:06. | :59:29. | |
a moment. Let's get the latest weather | :59:30. | :59:32. | |
update - with Carol. It has been fairly foggy for many | :59:33. | :59:41. | |
people, but it will slowly lift. Southern England will have a lot of | :59:42. | :59:46. | |
Bild, we have rain at the other end of the country -- we have a lot of | :59:47. | :59:55. | |
cloud. The strong wind will mean the rain will move through quite | :59:56. | :59:58. | |
quickly, and in terms of the temperatures, we are in good shape. | :59:59. | :00:04. | |
South-east Wales and South west midlands, we could hit maybe 18, | :00:05. | :00:09. | |
above average for this time of year. Through the evening and overnight, | :00:10. | :00:13. | |
the weather front moves steadily south, clearing Scotland and | :00:14. | :00:17. | |
Northern Ireland, reaching northern England and North Wales, any breaks | :00:18. | :00:21. | |
over the Highlands could mean it will be cold enough for a touch of | :00:22. | :00:25. | |
frost, but generally we are not looking at that as a problem for the | :00:26. | :00:30. | |
UK. Tonight we still have the weather front, and through the day | :00:31. | :00:33. | |
it will pivot round and take another swipe at Northern Ireland with some | :00:34. | :00:38. | |
rain. Some heavy showers in the far north and some sunshine in between. | :00:39. | :00:43. | |
Further south variable amounts of cloud, some brighter breaks and a | :00:44. | :00:48. | |
bit of sunshine. Temperatures from ten in the north and 17 in the | :00:49. | :00:53. | |
South. At the weekend, more of the same, high pressure dominating the | :00:54. | :00:57. | |
weather, but on Sunday we might have rain across the North West. | :00:58. | :01:02. | |
Hello, I'm Victoria Derbyshire, welcome to the programme. | :01:03. | :01:06. | |
We've been hearing how dozens of unaccompanied children in Calais | :01:07. | :01:09. | |
have spent the night without shelter, or slept | :01:10. | :01:11. | |
in shipping containers, following the closure of the migrant | :01:12. | :01:15. | |
French authorities say the mission has been a success - | :01:16. | :01:19. | |
but Aid charities say more should have been done | :01:20. | :01:21. | |
Save the Children and other organisations have been calling not | :01:22. | :01:24. | |
to start the demolition while children were here. | :01:25. | :01:38. | |
We had lists and we knew who the children were. | :01:39. | :01:42. | |
A new study's recommending that children should be screened | :01:43. | :01:46. | |
early to stop them having heart attacks young. | :01:47. | :01:48. | |
I'll be speaking to a couple who lost their daughter and a woman | :01:49. | :01:51. | |
Beautiful bikes and bright lipstick, Candace was crowned the Great | :01:52. | :02:05. | |
British Bake Off winner. The winner of the Great British Bake | :02:06. | :02:07. | |
Off 2016 is... Bake off has the best fans and we'll | :02:08. | :02:11. | |
have four of them here in the studio with their own specially made GBBO | :02:12. | :02:24. | |
tributes - and you can French officials say the Calais | :02:25. | :02:27. | |
migrant camp has been cleared, but there are still groups of people | :02:28. | :02:43. | |
lingering around the ruins The Calais prefect has said | :02:44. | :02:46. | |
they won't be resettled under the camp registration | :02:47. | :02:54. | |
programme, and must be, But around 100 unaccompanied under | :02:55. | :02:56. | |
18s are also thought to be wandering More than 5500 people have been | :02:57. | :03:00. | |
moved since Monday to centres The latest figures on how much | :03:01. | :03:05. | |
we spend on goods and services reveal Britain's economy barely | :03:06. | :03:11. | |
slowed in the three months to the end of September, | :03:12. | :03:13. | |
despite the Brexit vote. GDP, which stands for | :03:14. | :03:15. | |
Gross Domestic Product, gives a snapshot of the UK's | :03:16. | :03:17. | |
economic health. The official figures show it rose | :03:18. | :03:19. | |
0.5%, which is better than expected. The Office for National Statistics | :03:20. | :03:22. | |
says there's little evidence The Chancellor Philip Hammond said | :03:23. | :03:24. | |
it put the UK in a strong Very pleased to see that the economy | :03:25. | :03:30. | |
is still resilient, very strong third quarter growth, | :03:31. | :03:38. | |
that tells us that we go into the period for negotiating our | :03:39. | :03:43. | |
exit from the EU from a position of strength with the | :03:44. | :03:46. | |
economy doing very well. The latest police stop and search | :03:47. | :03:50. | |
figures for England and Wales show that the number conducted fell | :03:51. | :03:53. | |
by 28% compared The figures follow the announcement | :03:54. | :03:55. | |
that officers are to be given new training and national standards | :03:56. | :03:58. | |
in the use of stop and search In the past stop and search has been | :03:59. | :04:01. | |
controversial as some suggest police have had "an unconscious bias" | :04:02. | :04:06. | |
against certain sets of people. Emergency services in Italy have | :04:07. | :04:11. | |
been working throughout the night after two strong earthquakes struck | :04:12. | :04:14. | |
in the space of two hours, damaging buildings and | :04:15. | :04:16. | |
injuring dozens of people. Both quakes occurred in the central | :04:17. | :04:19. | |
part of the country, east of the city of Perugia, | :04:20. | :04:23. | |
with magnitudes of There are few reports | :04:24. | :04:25. | |
of some serious injuries. Bad weather has been hampering | :04:26. | :04:30. | |
efforts to assess the damage. In August about 300 people were | :04:31. | :04:45. | |
killed in an earthquake in the south of the country. | :04:46. | :04:47. | |
Seven people have been arrested following violence at a EFL Cup | :04:48. | :04:50. | |
match between West Ham and Chelsea at the former Olympic Stadium. | :04:51. | :04:52. | |
Plastic bottles, seats and coins were thrown during the Hammers' 2-1 | :04:53. | :04:55. | |
victory at London Stadium as hundreds of supporters | :04:56. | :04:57. | |
clashed and riot police entered the concourse. | :04:58. | :04:59. | |
It is the latest outbreak of disorder at West Ham's | :05:00. | :05:01. | |
For the first time, the watchdog which oversees doctors has raised | :05:02. | :05:06. | |
concerns about the pressures on the NHS, and their impact | :05:07. | :05:12. | |
The General Medical Council says the National Health Service | :05:13. | :05:16. | |
is struggling because of tight budgets and growing demand. | :05:17. | :05:18. | |
It says that the stress felt by doctors risks affecting patients. | :05:19. | :05:21. | |
The Department for Health says it is investing in the NHS | :05:22. | :05:24. | |
A 19-year-old man is due to appear in court this morning, | :05:25. | :05:30. | |
charged in connection with the discovery | :05:31. | :05:31. | |
of a suspicious device on a London Underground | :05:32. | :05:33. | |
Damon Smith, who's from south east London, is accused of possessing | :05:34. | :05:39. | |
an explosive substance with intent to endanger life. | :05:40. | :05:42. | |
The device was found at North Greenwich station a week | :05:43. | :05:45. | |
That's a summary of the latest BBC News. | :05:46. | :05:58. | |
On the subject of security at music venues, it means society is bending | :05:59. | :06:14. | |
to terrorism so terrorism has one already. | :06:15. | :06:18. | |
Cat has said, what a way to react to terror. The more security we have on | :06:19. | :06:25. | |
buses and chips, the more likely to be hit by a car. | :06:26. | :06:30. | |
Another Manhas, I have not noticed any widespread changes and I have to | :06:31. | :06:35. | |
ask the venue that emergency plan. I make a point of checking all exits | :06:36. | :06:40. | |
when in any venue. For that matter, any public place. I also briefed the | :06:41. | :06:44. | |
band and the crew to make sure they know where the exits are and if | :06:45. | :06:47. | |
something bad was to happen, you run like you have never run before. | :06:48. | :06:50. | |
Please get in touch with us. A timely win for Jose Mourinho | :06:51. | :06:54. | |
and Manchester United last night. They're through to the | :06:55. | :06:59. | |
quarter-finals of the EFL Cup after edging past rivals | :07:00. | :07:02. | |
and holders Manchester City. So under pressure Mourinho can | :07:03. | :07:05. | |
breathe a little sigh City might be top of | :07:06. | :07:11. | |
the Premier League on goal difference, but they're now six | :07:12. | :07:18. | |
games without a win. United will face West Ham | :07:19. | :07:21. | |
in the next round after their 2-1 win over Chelsea, although the end | :07:22. | :07:28. | |
of the match was marred In the rest of the draw, | :07:29. | :07:31. | |
Liverpool host Leeds, Hull are at home to Newcastle | :07:32. | :07:34. | |
and Arsenal face Southampton Celtic fans are certainly | :07:35. | :07:37. | |
enjoying life at the moment. One line coming into us, Jose | :07:38. | :07:51. | |
Mourinho has been charged by the FA for comments made prior to the match | :07:52. | :07:54. | |
against Liverpool that it would be difficult for the referee to | :07:55. | :07:58. | |
officiate the fixture because of the pressure being put on him. | :07:59. | :08:07. | |
Celtic fans are certainly enjoying life at the moment. | :08:08. | :08:11. | |
Their team has extended their lead at the top of the Scottish | :08:12. | :08:14. | |
Premiership, after beating Ross County 4-0. | :08:15. | :08:15. | |
It's Celtic's fourth league win in a row and moves them seven | :08:16. | :08:18. | |
points clear at the top, with a game in hand over | :08:19. | :08:21. | |
England will host the 2021 Rugby League World Cup after beating | :08:22. | :08:24. | |
rival bids from the United States and Canada. | :08:25. | :08:26. | |
It last hosted the tournament in 2013, when Australia | :08:27. | :08:28. | |
beat New Zealand in the final at Old Trafford. | :08:29. | :08:31. | |
80% of the games will be held in Lancashire and Yorkshire, | :08:32. | :08:33. | |
with proposed "showpiece fixtures" taking place in London, | :08:34. | :08:36. | |
England have confirmed Surrey spinner Zafar Ansari | :08:37. | :08:44. | |
will make his test debut in place of Gareth Batty | :08:45. | :08:46. | |
Ansari was seen being congratulated by teammates in training yesterday, | :08:47. | :08:54. | |
and Jonny Bairstow says the Surrey slow-left-armer is ready | :08:55. | :08:56. | |
He has opened the batting baby sleep for Surrey. He will be a good asset | :08:57. | :09:14. | |
for English cricket to have. The pacey bowls can only be a good thing | :09:15. | :09:20. | |
for us. Andy Murray is closing | :09:21. | :09:22. | |
in on the world number one spot. He's through to the second | :09:23. | :09:24. | |
round of the Vienna Open. He dropped a set against world | :09:25. | :09:26. | |
number 35 Martin Klizan, which is rare for Murray who's been | :09:27. | :09:29. | |
in impressive form of late. But he's through to the third round | :09:30. | :09:32. | |
and faces Gilles Simon later today. He could overtake Novak Djokovic | :09:33. | :09:35. | |
in the world rankings Now, on a wet, wintry Tuesday | :09:36. | :09:37. | |
evening in the market town of Altrincham, the last person | :09:38. | :09:41. | |
you'd expect to come Well, after his sell-out concerts | :09:42. | :09:43. | |
just up the road from there, Justin Bieber visited | :09:44. | :09:48. | |
the town, not to party, He joined a practice session | :09:49. | :09:50. | |
with Manchester Storm.. Bieber is a big ice hockey fan | :09:51. | :09:58. | |
and supports the Toronto Maple Leafs And apparently he even | :09:59. | :10:04. | |
went for a pint with A new study is recommending that | :10:05. | :10:10. | |
children should be screened early to stop them having | :10:11. | :10:24. | |
heart attacks young. Inherited Heart Disease | :10:25. | :10:26. | |
is where high cholesterol levels In fact even though | :10:27. | :10:29. | |
it's fairly common - only a small proportion | :10:30. | :10:38. | |
of people know they have it. Researchers at Queen Mary University | :10:39. | :10:40. | |
of London have looked at more than 10,000 children and say it can | :10:41. | :10:43. | |
be can be successfully detected within families | :10:44. | :10:45. | |
IF you screen one to two year old children at the time | :10:46. | :10:48. | |
of their routine vaccinations. Let's talk now to Amanda | :10:49. | :10:50. | |
and John Wingett - their 11 year old daughter Rianna | :10:51. | :10:52. | |
died suddenly because of Georgina Dixon lives | :10:53. | :10:55. | |
with the condition, but she thinks it's unnecessary for babies | :10:56. | :11:02. | |
to be routinely screened. David Wald, is a Professor | :11:03. | :11:04. | |
of Cardiology who carried out the research for Queen Mary | :11:05. | :11:07. | |
University of London - he's recommending young children | :11:08. | :11:09. | |
are screened for FH. And Jules Payne is from | :11:10. | :11:11. | |
the charity Heart UK. David, this is known as FH, what is | :11:12. | :11:30. | |
it? It is inherited high cholesterol levels. People are born with this | :11:31. | :11:34. | |
condition and is caused by a change in one of the genes that is | :11:35. | :11:38. | |
important in handling cholesterol. If you can identify a child that has | :11:39. | :11:44. | |
this condition, it is sensible to test the parents because one of them | :11:45. | :11:52. | |
had to have it. In this particular screening project, we tested | :11:53. | :11:56. | |
children first and foremost, if they were positive, we went on to test | :11:57. | :12:04. | |
the parents. In so doing, testing two generations simultaneously and | :12:05. | :12:07. | |
it provides an important opportunity to institute preventative measures | :12:08. | :12:13. | |
to avoid early heart attacks. I'll ask you about those measures in a | :12:14. | :12:17. | |
moment. Amonde, you carry this condition, tell us about it? Yes, I | :12:18. | :12:24. | |
have FH. I was diagnosed when I was 19. I kept to a low-cholesterol diet | :12:25. | :12:39. | |
and I'd take statins. What led you to go and take test? It was more | :12:40. | :12:48. | |
luck, my mother went to the GP with a problem and the GP at the time had | :12:49. | :12:52. | |
just been on a course about cholesterol. As she sat there, my | :12:53. | :13:00. | |
mother had been yellow bits by her eyes. The doctor asked how many she | :13:01. | :13:05. | |
had those. And my mother said lots of people in my family have had it. | :13:06. | :13:12. | |
The doctor sends her for tests and it came back high so they tested me | :13:13. | :13:16. | |
and my brother. His was normal, but mine was high. I said in | :13:17. | :13:24. | |
introduction that tragically, Rianna your daughter tragically died, | :13:25. | :13:30. | |
collapsed at school after a PE lesson? Yes, she had a PE lesson | :13:31. | :13:35. | |
that morning. They called it cross-country, but they had to run | :13:36. | :13:39. | |
round the field. And apparently they sat them in a line to take the | :13:40. | :13:44. | |
timings and she just sort of collapsed and that was it. We got a | :13:45. | :13:50. | |
phone call to say the ambulance had been called and she was at the | :13:51. | :13:55. | |
hospital. But there wasn't anything they could do for her. This was | :13:56. | :14:01. | |
related to your condition? We found out afterwards following the | :14:02. | :14:08. | |
postmortem, they tested her heart, all her arteries were blocked. I | :14:09. | :14:15. | |
have forgotten the name, what is the name of the internal... Coronary | :14:16. | :14:22. | |
arteries. Yes, some of them were down to a pinhole and they said the | :14:23. | :14:27. | |
family should be looked at for FH. John, what do you think of this | :14:28. | :14:32. | |
research from David and whether screening should be rolled out? I | :14:33. | :14:36. | |
definitely think it should be rolled out really early. There is clear | :14:37. | :14:44. | |
chances to detect FH very early. Obviously, the impact it causes on | :14:45. | :14:51. | |
families, losing a child. In my case, it turns out my wife has FH as | :14:52. | :15:00. | |
well. From Rianna's death, we got tested and found out I have it as | :15:01. | :15:04. | |
well. So obviously we have been carrying it for a long time. There | :15:05. | :15:08. | |
is a big benefit in doing it, not just from a cost point of view, but | :15:09. | :15:16. | |
it does families. It is unimaginable for most people to understand what | :15:17. | :15:20. | |
it must be like to lose a little girl? Yes, it changes you for ever. | :15:21. | :15:26. | |
It is like losing a limb, you carry on with life, but you know you are | :15:27. | :15:30. | |
always missing something, you never get over it. It does impact the | :15:31. | :15:33. | |
whole family. I am sure. How do you manage it, Georgina? It | :15:34. | :15:46. | |
is maintaining a positive healthy lifestyle and I have to take | :15:47. | :15:49. | |
statins, as well, that is the only where it to keep it down. How do | :15:50. | :15:54. | |
they work? If you don't mind me asking. Statins get a bad press. I'm | :15:55. | :16:03. | |
trying to talk to the media to turn that around, because they are very | :16:04. | :16:07. | |
safe and they one of the safest drugs around, they have been around | :16:08. | :16:12. | |
30 years. They have a tremendous effect on reducing the cholesterol | :16:13. | :16:17. | |
levels and for people with this condition it should be a diagnosis | :16:18. | :16:20. | |
and not a death sentence and people should be able to live with it, and | :16:21. | :16:26. | |
early diagnosis is key. For these patients, medication is essential, | :16:27. | :16:29. | |
as well as a healthy diet and lifestyle, and this is where heart | :16:30. | :16:33. | |
UK can help and provide the support and guidance that patients need. If | :16:34. | :16:38. | |
this screening was to be taken up, how money lives could be saved each | :16:39. | :16:45. | |
year by detecting this early? We estimate, if this was rolled out | :16:46. | :16:49. | |
across the UK, we could avoid between 600 and 1000 fatal or | :16:50. | :16:56. | |
nonfatal heart attacks every year. There is actually, we have been | :16:57. | :17:02. | |
campaigning for a national testing service for F H and we are getting | :17:03. | :17:07. | |
there but it is not a National Service and it is still a postcode | :17:08. | :17:13. | |
lottery. I'm a great believer in top-down and bottom-up and I think | :17:14. | :17:18. | |
this study is very welcome because it is a large study and that is | :17:19. | :17:23. | |
amazing in itself. At the moment we are in a situation where the average | :17:24. | :17:27. | |
age of the first patient being diagnosed in each family is 55 and | :17:28. | :17:35. | |
the average age of Cascade tested family members is 35, and ago from | :17:36. | :17:42. | |
that approach, that will be very welcome, we need a multipronged | :17:43. | :17:46. | |
approach to this diagnosis. We will be calling for national screening | :17:47. | :17:53. | |
committees to account and to ask them to review their recent review | :17:54. | :18:04. | |
of their guidance around having FH screening programmes for the | :18:05. | :18:08. | |
population. It is not just a question, very important, but is not | :18:09. | :18:12. | |
just a question of catching this early, although of course that is | :18:13. | :18:16. | |
important. It gives time to implement treatment options before | :18:17. | :18:20. | |
the onset of disease, but there is another very important reason why we | :18:21. | :18:24. | |
should be testing children first and children between the ages of one and | :18:25. | :18:27. | |
two and that is because that is the time in a person's life where it is | :18:28. | :18:31. | |
most accurate to pick up this condition. The reason is not | :18:32. | :18:36. | |
completely clear, but probably because that is when toddlers are | :18:37. | :18:40. | |
starting to eat a usual diet and that stresses the tablets and and -- | :18:41. | :18:49. | |
stresses the metabolism and makes their cholesterol are different, and | :18:50. | :18:52. | |
so a simple test can pick up most people who are affected and most | :18:53. | :18:56. | |
people who aren't. If you do that in teenage ears and adults, that is | :18:57. | :18:59. | |
more difficult because the cholesterol is go up for a lot of | :19:00. | :19:05. | |
reasons -- teenage years. It is hard to separate effective from | :19:06. | :19:12. | |
unaffected, unfortunately. This could be a routine vaccination which | :19:13. | :19:19. | |
every parent takes their toddler for? It would be convenient. What | :19:20. | :19:26. | |
about the cost? It would be much lower than other screening | :19:27. | :19:28. | |
strategies which are implemented because you are combining it with an | :19:29. | :19:32. | |
existing service. You are piggybacking this onto a turnstile | :19:33. | :19:38. | |
which is already in place and in any screening programme the real | :19:39. | :19:43. | |
challenge is getting wide uptake, there is no sense in having a | :19:44. | :19:47. | |
screening programme which takes the boxes but only 10% of the population | :19:48. | :19:52. | |
subscribe to. We found over 80% of parents agreed to have their | :19:53. | :19:55. | |
children screamed and that was a research study, it might be greater | :19:56. | :20:02. | |
in actual practice. -- screened. That means we stand a real chance of | :20:03. | :20:07. | |
identifying all or nearly all people in the population with this | :20:08. | :20:09. | |
condition and therefore offering treatment. Can I just come in, the | :20:10. | :20:16. | |
only national programme which tests people for cholesterol at the moment | :20:17. | :20:20. | |
is the NHS health checks which is great, but that starts at 40 and by | :20:21. | :20:27. | |
then these people have already developed cardiovascular disease, | :20:28. | :20:29. | |
and the earlier diagnosis the better. Introducing this strategy | :20:30. | :20:37. | |
would be a great idea. I think the test is a heel prick test which | :20:38. | :20:42. | |
babies have when they are born, and it is not that traumatic for the | :20:43. | :20:47. | |
child to have sub very straightforward. Our daughter was | :20:48. | :20:55. | |
scared of needles and dentists and to have tried to take her for a | :20:56. | :21:01. | |
normal blood test would have been an event in itself, and so do think | :21:02. | :21:04. | |
that although they are little they don't really understand what is | :21:05. | :21:07. | |
happening, they cry at the vaccinations, anyway. Heel prick | :21:08. | :21:11. | |
test is quite simple and fairly painless. Thank you very much. Thank | :21:12. | :21:15. | |
you for coming on the programme. Public Health England say | :21:16. | :21:20. | |
they've reviewed familial hypercholesterolemia this year | :21:21. | :21:23. | |
and they don't recommend a screening They said there was uncertainty | :21:24. | :21:25. | |
about how well it'd work in practice and said | :21:26. | :21:37. | |
they found no clear evidence on whether screening children | :21:38. | :21:39. | |
would reduce illness or death. The evidence was not there when they | :21:40. | :21:41. | |
reached that conclusion. Thank you. Almost 12 months on from the | :21:42. | :21:52. | |
terrorist attacks in Paris, our clubs and music venues any safer in | :21:53. | :21:58. | |
the UK? -- are. There's a lot of free help and advice from police and | :21:59. | :22:02. | |
there are standard operational procedures which they can implement | :22:03. | :22:05. | |
at their venues to make them safer but I do think there is a small | :22:06. | :22:08. | |
number who have potentially slipped between the cracks. | :22:09. | :22:12. | |
Last night marked the end of an era - it was the BBC's last ever episode | :22:13. | :22:16. | |
In a moment, we'll be holding our very own mini Bake Off. | :22:17. | :22:28. | |
We have four superfans in the studio, equipped | :22:29. | :22:30. | |
with their very best versions of bakes from this year's | :22:31. | :22:32. | |
But first, let's take a look at how some of our fans reacted | :22:33. | :22:37. | |
to Candice Brown, the 31 year old PE teacher from Bedfordshire, winning. | :22:38. | :22:54. | |
We are here at the K club and we are getting ready to watch the GBBO | :22:55. | :23:05. | |
final. -- cake. If you are team Jane chair. Oh! Team-macro Candace. | :23:06. | :23:15. | |
Who will be the winner of the great British bake of 2016? The winner | :23:16. | :23:28. | |
is... Candice. CHEERING You are happy she has won? I cried. | :23:29. | :23:37. | |
Bless your heart. She has done so well. She has been an absolute star. | :23:38. | :23:44. | |
I love those Bake Off parties. Now for our own mini bake-off | :23:45. | :23:47. | |
featuring 4 Bake-Off superfans - we're joined now by Lynn Hill | :23:48. | :23:49. | |
who has created a festive pumpkin swirl cake - | :23:50. | :23:52. | |
who didn't really have a preference out of Andrew Jane and Candice | :23:53. | :24:00. | |
for who she wanted to win Judith Summerton, who was a big fan | :24:01. | :24:03. | |
of Jane, has whipped up a batch of Viennese whirls - | :24:04. | :24:06. | |
inspired by her grandmother. John Holland took inspiration | :24:07. | :24:09. | |
from last night's episode and has It is a Victoria sponge. It is under | :24:10. | :24:16. | |
there somewhere. Amazing. Becky Chester's bake | :24:17. | :24:26. | |
of choice is a floral cake, inspired by botanical week - | :24:27. | :24:28. | |
she was a fan of Candice. And back with us is Scott Bryan is | :24:29. | :24:33. | |
Buzzfeed's "Bake Off Correspondent" and has been attempting every week's | :24:34. | :24:39. | |
technical challenge himself - who is going to judge | :24:40. | :24:42. | |
these creations. Tell us a little bit more... You | :24:43. | :24:51. | |
love this, Scott. My technical is of varying quality. It is about the | :24:52. | :24:56. | |
taste. You know what you like. Yeah, yeah. Talk us through this? It is | :24:57. | :25:03. | |
just a chocolate cake with buttercream around it and the | :25:04. | :25:08. | |
flowers and leaves are made from buttercream, as well. Mary is giving | :25:09. | :25:14. | |
a wave in front. Absolutely stunning. You can have a taste? I | :25:15. | :25:23. | |
think if I go over. No, don't move, the director will have a fit. | :25:24. | :25:27. | |
LAUGHTER What about this one? Home roast | :25:28. | :25:36. | |
pumpkin, freshly roasted, with spices and orange inside, and it has | :25:37. | :25:41. | |
a drizzle of orange icing on the top. Lovely. You would like to taste | :25:42. | :25:51. | |
that? I will. Using a fork is controversial. I need to hold it in. | :25:52. | :26:01. | |
Oh! That is so good. Point out the ingredients. How much sugar is in | :26:02. | :26:12. | |
that? Light brown sugar, sugar is natural, anyway, as long as you | :26:13. | :26:16. | |
don't eat too much. All things in moderation. I note... You are not | :26:17. | :26:25. | |
joking? It is quite light. I was expecting it to be quite strong | :26:26. | :26:34. | |
flavour but it isn't. What can you taste? The pumpkins, it has a nice | :26:35. | :26:40. | |
texture, but it is fairly smooth, I think. The spices? Yes, but they are | :26:41. | :26:50. | |
subtle, not overpowering. I really like that one. Jolly good. What | :26:51. | :26:57. | |
about the Victoria sponge? I set out with the intention of just making a | :26:58. | :27:01. | |
Victoria sponge, but I wanted to personalise it. These are all the | :27:02. | :27:11. | |
winners, how fabulous. John, Joe, Francis, Nadia, Ed and Candice. You | :27:12. | :27:20. | |
must have been up all night. I got to bed at half past three. I waited | :27:21. | :27:26. | |
until the end of the show and I had to wait for the oven to warm up. | :27:27. | :27:31. | |
Maybe four and a bit hours waiting for it to cool down. It seems a | :27:32. | :27:37. | |
shame to stick a knife into it. I will have a bit of Candice. Oh!. Do | :27:38. | :27:48. | |
we all have a chance to taste it? This is going to be interesting. | :27:49. | :27:57. | |
There we go. Just use fingers. Wow. I didn't think that was going to | :27:58. | :28:03. | |
work. It really looks like the ones they had last night. You are a | :28:04. | :28:10. | |
judge. I'm not going to be on the Channel 4 version. It was the | :28:11. | :28:16. | |
biggest live audience for Bake Off last night, over 14 million. It was | :28:17. | :28:25. | |
13.4 million last year. Some viewers have said it was the best ever. | :28:26. | :28:31. | |
There is a bit of added interest because people don't know what is | :28:32. | :28:33. | |
going to happen with it, but the show is sensational. Why does it do | :28:34. | :28:39. | |
so well online? It is suitable for everybody. The show is popular with | :28:40. | :28:47. | |
young people who love talking about it on Twitter and making jokes about | :28:48. | :28:52. | |
it, but equally it is suitable for someone who is in their 60s and who | :28:53. | :28:57. | |
might not use the internet at all. They have really worked on having | :28:58. | :29:00. | |
bakers who are not only just fantastic, but are great | :29:01. | :29:04. | |
personalities. Quick, taste some of that. And then we will look at these | :29:05. | :29:11. | |
beautiful Viennese swells. It is delicious. Absolutely, I'm not going | :29:12. | :29:17. | |
to criticise. I really like the cream and jam. You are not supposed | :29:18. | :29:25. | |
to speak with your mouth full. I know, but it is hard to do two | :29:26. | :29:29. | |
things. These were inspired by your grandma? Yes, in as much as she | :29:30. | :29:35. | |
asked me to make them for her, and I was doing the technical challenge | :29:36. | :29:37. | |
every week, making whatever the technical challenge was on the Bake | :29:38. | :29:43. | |
Off, with varying degrees of success compare to do your bakes. I'm not | :29:44. | :29:48. | |
sure how you got to be a judge on this. LAUGHTER | :29:49. | :29:53. | |
My grandma loved them and said I should bring them on, and they are | :29:54. | :29:58. | |
bite sized so no need to worry about your knife and fork. I'm going to | :29:59. | :30:03. | |
offer them around. Would you like one? You can say no. I had a late | :30:04. | :30:14. | |
night, so I need some carbs. They looked like how they were supposed | :30:15. | :30:17. | |
to in the show, as well. Home-made jam. Again, made after Bake Off last | :30:18. | :30:26. | |
night, another late night. Take it into work, make everyone very fat. | :30:27. | :30:33. | |
Fat and happy. When I tried it, the overwhelming taste of the middle | :30:34. | :30:40. | |
made it a bit like... But you have done it really well, so it all fits | :30:41. | :30:45. | |
in, no overpowering layer, nothing using from the side and it looks | :30:46. | :30:51. | |
really good. -- nothing coming out from the side. Tell us a bit more | :30:52. | :31:00. | |
about this. This is the recipe I always use when I have a chocolate | :31:01. | :31:04. | |
recipe, it is four layers of cake and you carve it slightly at the | :31:05. | :31:07. | |
bottom, you cut away the bottom and cover it in buttercream. Mary is | :31:08. | :31:17. | |
made from modelling paste. She's made separately. Can you eat that? | :31:18. | :31:24. | |
No, she has got wire inside it, but the sugary bits are edible. We can | :31:25. | :31:31. | |
slide this across. We can't put a fork in that, but we have two. So | :31:32. | :31:34. | |
much mixed emotions. You were slightly anxious, John. I | :31:35. | :31:49. | |
am going to go from the back so it still looks good. It is important it | :31:50. | :32:03. | |
tastes good. Edible soil as well. What is the future of the Candace | :32:04. | :32:09. | |
then? She is made-for-TV, she is very quick, very sharp. Her time | :32:10. | :32:14. | |
management was good as well, managed to get everything done as well as | :32:15. | :32:23. | |
being clever and creative. Oh wow! I could have the whole of that. In one | :32:24. | :32:32. | |
sitting? In one sitting. I wouldn't sleep because of the amount of | :32:33. | :32:36. | |
sugar, but it is sensational. The amount of layers as well. Turn the | :32:37. | :32:43. | |
layers to the camera. All the same chocolate layers. That is edible | :32:44. | :32:54. | |
soil as well. It is not as easy as it is on the actual bake-off. They | :32:55. | :33:01. | |
are not live either. The future for Candace, what would you say? It is | :33:02. | :33:12. | |
whatever she wanted to be. It is a good platform for the contestants, | :33:13. | :33:17. | |
and I wish them all the best. I was quietly rooting for Candace. I think | :33:18. | :33:23. | |
anybody who gets onto the programme themselves are winners because they | :33:24. | :33:26. | |
have to go through rigorous interviews and tests. Thousands of | :33:27. | :33:31. | |
people applied. So just to get on there, as far as I am concerned, | :33:32. | :33:36. | |
they are all winners. It is an achievement in itself. Thank you all | :33:37. | :33:41. | |
for making such a monumental effort. Scott, choose a winner. They all | :33:42. | :33:47. | |
really good, but the one Mac gets it is this one. The chocolate cake. | :33:48. | :34:01. | |
Thank you for making such an effort. Thank you all of you as staying up | :34:02. | :34:03. | |
till 3:30am making the cakes. It's revealed that more | :34:04. | :34:06. | |
than a third of sixth form colleges have dropped | :34:07. | :34:09. | |
modern language courses. We'll be speaking to | :34:10. | :34:11. | |
the Chief Executive of the Sixth Form Colleges | :34:12. | :34:13. | |
Association, and a principal at one Almost 12 months on from | :34:14. | :34:15. | |
the Bataclan terrorist attacks, are clubs and music | :34:16. | :34:19. | |
venues any safer? We'll speaking to a counter | :34:20. | :34:21. | |
terrorism expert who worries that Let's get the news | :34:22. | :34:24. | |
from the BBC Newsroom. French officials say the Calais | :34:25. | :34:35. | |
migrant camp has been cleared, but there are still groups of people | :34:36. | :34:37. | |
lingering around the ruins The Calais prefect has said | :34:38. | :34:40. | |
they won't be resettled under the camp registration | :34:41. | :34:45. | |
programme, and must be, But around 100 unaccompanied under | :34:46. | :34:48. | |
18s are also thought to be wandering More than 5500 people have been | :34:49. | :34:53. | |
moved since Monday to centres The latest figures on how much | :34:54. | :34:57. | |
we spend on goods and services reveal Britain's economy barely | :34:58. | :35:06. | |
slowed in the three months to the end of September, | :35:07. | :35:07. | |
despite the Brexit vote. GDP, which stands for | :35:08. | :35:10. | |
Gross Domestic Product, gives a snapshot of the UK's | :35:11. | :35:11. | |
economic health. The official figures show it rose | :35:12. | :35:13. | |
0.5%, which is better than expected. The Office for National Statistics | :35:14. | :35:16. | |
says there's little evidence The Chancellor Philip Hammond said | :35:17. | :35:18. | |
it put the UK in a strong Very pleased to see that the economy | :35:19. | :35:24. | |
is still resilient, very strong third quarter growth, | :35:25. | :35:33. | |
that tells us that we go into the period for negotiating our | :35:34. | :35:35. | |
exit from the EU from a position of strength with the | :35:36. | :35:45. | |
economy doing very well. Seven people have been arrested | :35:46. | :35:51. | |
following violence at a EFL Cup match between West Ham and Chelsea | :35:52. | :35:53. | |
at the former Olympic Stadium. Plastic bottles, seats and coins | :35:54. | :35:56. | |
were thrown during the Hammers' 2-1 victory at London Stadium | :35:57. | :35:59. | |
as hundreds of supporters clashed and riot police | :36:00. | :36:01. | |
entered the concourse. It is the latest outbreak | :36:02. | :36:02. | |
of disorder at West Ham's A 19-year-old man is due to appear | :36:03. | :36:05. | |
in court this morning, charged in connection | :36:06. | :36:16. | |
with the discovery of a suspicious device | :36:17. | :36:18. | |
on a London Underground Damon Smith, who's from south east | :36:19. | :36:20. | |
London, is accused of possessing an explosive substance with intent | :36:21. | :36:24. | |
to endanger life. The device was found | :36:25. | :36:26. | |
at North Greenwich station a week That's a summary of the latest | :36:27. | :36:28. | |
news, join me for BBC Manchester United manager | :36:29. | :36:32. | |
Jose Mourinho has been charged with misconduct by the FA, | :36:33. | :36:41. | |
following his comments about referee He has until Monday evening | :36:42. | :36:43. | |
to respond to the charge. But more positive news | :36:44. | :36:49. | |
for the Portuguese, his side are through to the quarter-finals | :36:50. | :36:52. | |
of the EFL Cup, after edging past A goal from Juan Mata | :36:53. | :36:55. | |
separated the sides. United will face West Ham | :36:56. | :37:00. | |
in the last eight. Crowd trouble marred the end | :37:01. | :37:03. | |
of their 2-1 win over Chelsea. In the other quarter-finals, | :37:04. | :37:07. | |
Liverpool will play Leeds, Hull are at home to Newcastle | :37:08. | :37:10. | |
and Arsenal face Southampton. Andy Murray is closing in on world | :37:11. | :37:14. | |
number one status. He's through to the second | :37:15. | :37:19. | |
round of the Vienna Open after victory over world | :37:20. | :37:22. | |
number 35 Martin Klizan. And England will host the 2021 | :37:23. | :37:24. | |
Rugby League World Cup. It was selected ahead of rival bids | :37:25. | :37:27. | |
from the US and Canada. England last hosted the tournament | :37:28. | :37:32. | |
in 2013, when Australia beat New Zealand in the final | :37:33. | :37:36. | |
at Old Trafford. That's all the sport for an hour. | :37:37. | :37:49. | |
More across the BBC News Channel at 1115 a.m.. | :37:50. | :37:53. | |
Music venues need to do more to protect against the threat | :37:54. | :37:56. | |
of a terror attack, according to the former head of the private | :37:57. | :37:58. | |
We will speak to him live in a few minutes. | :37:59. | :38:05. | |
It comes almost a year since 130 people were killed | :38:06. | :38:08. | |
Islamist militants used suicide vests and gunmen to attack bars, | :38:09. | :38:11. | |
restaurants, a major stadium and a concert hall | :38:12. | :38:13. | |
At the Bataclan Theatre gunmen trapped fans watching a gig | :38:14. | :38:17. | |
Our reporter Chi Chi Izundu has more. | :38:18. | :38:26. | |
Almost 28 million tickets were sold for live music in the UK last year | :38:27. | :38:30. | |
for the thousands of music venues and festivals around the country. | :38:31. | :38:35. | |
None of those events suffered a terror attack, | :38:36. | :38:38. | |
but in July this year some venues in Camden in North London were | :38:39. | :38:41. | |
evacuated when a suspicious device in a car was reported to police. | :38:42. | :38:44. | |
I actually heard a lot of commotion outside. | :38:45. | :38:52. | |
It was unusual for Camden because normally it is just voices | :38:53. | :38:55. | |
rise is one, but there was a bit of a commotion so I had to peek out | :38:56. | :39:01. | |
through the window and the police were marshalling loads of people out | :39:02. | :39:04. | |
of the various clubs and venues and there are many | :39:05. | :39:06. | |
So they deployed that and that shimmied and ended up rolling down | :39:07. | :39:13. | |
the street and I could only have a very acute angle from it, | :39:14. | :39:16. | |
but it looked like obviously it was investigating | :39:17. | :39:18. | |
There was no bomb in that car, but Josh was worried about the way | :39:19. | :39:25. | |
people from the various bars and venues were ushered | :39:26. | :39:28. | |
You have got to keep people somewhere safe as opposed | :39:29. | :39:34. | |
to a choke point where something bad could happen. | :39:35. | :39:36. | |
You don't want to cause too much chaos. | :39:37. | :39:38. | |
It is also a one-way street too so it can be a nightmare | :39:39. | :39:41. | |
when traffic starts log-jamming at one end. | :39:42. | :39:45. | |
Under health and safety rules music venues have to have emergency plans | :39:46. | :39:48. | |
in place in the event of a fire, but at the moment it is not same | :39:49. | :39:52. | |
So how have venues reacted to the Bataclan attacks? | :39:53. | :40:07. | |
The medium-sized Troxy in East London. | :40:08. | :40:13. | |
And one of the busiest venues in the world, the O2 Arena. | :40:14. | :40:18. | |
After things that happened in France, there is a spotlight | :40:19. | :40:22. | |
on security and we are no different, we are trying to refine our | :40:23. | :40:25. | |
processes, always change and adapt our security. | :40:26. | :40:29. | |
Behind the scenes our security operation is in full swing. | :40:30. | :40:36. | |
So things are being monitored and you will see staff around. | :40:37. | :40:40. | |
We've got plainclothes as well and we have a police | :40:41. | :40:43. | |
We got in contact with the police after it had happened and the night | :40:44. | :41:06. | |
after the Bataclan in Paris we had a boxing fight and then a Russian | :41:07. | :41:10. | |
concert the following night so there was a nervousness taking | :41:11. | :41:12. | |
However, we got in contact with the police and we had | :41:13. | :41:18. | |
conversation in terms of is there anything additional | :41:19. | :41:20. | |
They suggested we look at other measures. | :41:21. | :41:26. | |
We put all the management team through Operation Griffin. | :41:27. | :41:29. | |
We had the local counterterrorism team come down to induct us and that | :41:30. | :41:32. | |
has been fed down to the front-line team and the security here as well. | :41:33. | :41:43. | |
Baroness Ruth Henig, former head of the regulator | :41:44. | :41:48. | |
of private security firms wants to change the law to force venues | :41:49. | :41:50. | |
to prioritise counter-terror training. | :41:51. | :41:52. | |
Often larger venues, I think, but not always only large venues, | :41:53. | :41:55. | |
who do have airport-style security and who have metal detectors, | :41:56. | :41:58. | |
and who do have very well-trained security personnel and they top up | :41:59. | :42:05. | |
So there are people out there who are taking security very | :42:06. | :42:12. | |
seriously, but I think at the other end there are a lot of venues | :42:13. | :42:16. | |
who aren't taking it seriously - we know this from the police - | :42:17. | :42:21. | |
who don't cooperate and who don't take up the offers that are made | :42:22. | :42:24. | |
to them and where I think there are concerns. | :42:25. | :42:27. | |
The issue is, how do you get to that tail of security venues | :42:28. | :42:30. | |
who are perhaps not doing as much as they should do about security? | :42:31. | :42:37. | |
And how do you get to them, what is the solution? | :42:38. | :42:39. | |
All clubs and bars and similar venues are licensed under | :42:40. | :42:42. | |
If you were to make the legislation more specific in terms | :42:43. | :42:51. | |
of counterterrorism then these venues would have two show | :42:52. | :42:56. | |
that they are actually taking security seriously | :42:57. | :42:57. | |
Let's talk to Chris Phillips, the former head of the National | :42:58. | :43:04. | |
Counter Terrorism Security Office who has worked on improving | :43:05. | :43:06. | |
To what extent do you think is a security risk in our country? There | :43:07. | :43:31. | |
will always be the threat of terrorism, because it is exactly the | :43:32. | :43:35. | |
type of people but terrorists want to attack. Not only do they want to | :43:36. | :43:40. | |
commit mass casualty attacks, they also want to attack the way we run | :43:41. | :43:46. | |
society. The alcohol, night-time economy thing is really against what | :43:47. | :43:51. | |
they believe in. The terror threat level in the UK is severe and has | :43:52. | :43:57. | |
been for some time, which means an attack is highly likely. That should | :43:58. | :44:03. | |
not stop people going about their business, should it? The whole point | :44:04. | :44:07. | |
is the carry on as usual, business as usual for people. We must carry | :44:08. | :44:14. | |
on what we want to do, that includes nightclubs, bars, clubs and | :44:15. | :44:18. | |
nightclubs and also music venues. Particularly after what we saw in | :44:19. | :44:23. | |
Paris, everyone needs to take this seriously and at least have some | :44:24. | :44:26. | |
plans in place for what they would do if an incident like the Bataclan | :44:27. | :44:32. | |
happened to them. What do you think about this suggestion legislation | :44:33. | :44:38. | |
should be brought into force venues do have a plan in place? It has | :44:39. | :44:44. | |
evolved over many years and it is because mistakes have been made. | :44:45. | :44:48. | |
Bataclan, why do we want to learn from our own mistake rather than | :44:49. | :44:54. | |
learn from what happened in Paris. The great example is the fire | :44:55. | :45:01. | |
system. We plan for fire and do evacuation plans. But if it is a | :45:02. | :45:06. | |
terrorist attack, you might not want to evacuate, so music venues and | :45:07. | :45:10. | |
nightclubs need to have a different plan. It is criminal, after what we | :45:11. | :45:15. | |
saw in Paris, if clubs have thrown their hands up and saying it is | :45:16. | :45:19. | |
nothing to do it does, it is too difficult and will cost too much | :45:20. | :45:22. | |
money. The consequences of not doing something could be tragic. | :45:23. | :45:27. | |
Do you need legislation? We have had terrorist attacks in London, Tiger | :45:28. | :45:35. | |
Tiger was attacked of years ago, and we have what happened in Paris | :45:36. | :45:41. | |
recently. -- a couple of years ago. If clubs and bars and nightclubs | :45:42. | :45:45. | |
haven't done anything yet, I think it will have to move towards | :45:46. | :45:51. | |
legislation. Right. Are you able to tell us how security at venues in | :45:52. | :45:55. | |
the UK compares to other European countries? It is absolutely no worse | :45:56. | :46:02. | |
than anywhere else, and at the big venues, it is actually much better | :46:03. | :46:06. | |
here. We do have some well thought out security locations and also | :46:07. | :46:11. | |
companies that have provided security advice. We have | :46:12. | :46:16. | |
counterterrorism and we have been doing that in the UK for so long | :46:17. | :46:20. | |
that we actually know what we need to do in order to prevent this from | :46:21. | :46:23. | |
happening. But of course we can always get better and the time to | :46:24. | :46:28. | |
make your plans is not when the terrorists are running around with | :46:29. | :46:31. | |
guns, the time to make laws is not when they have run around with guns, | :46:32. | :46:36. | |
it is before that so we can protect as many people as possible. In your | :46:37. | :46:40. | |
considered opinion, do you think then use are taking this threat | :46:41. | :46:45. | |
seriously enough? The big venues almost certainly are and I think | :46:46. | :46:50. | |
they have some highly trained people and they have looked at what needs | :46:51. | :46:53. | |
to be done and they have taken government advice, but we have | :46:54. | :46:58. | |
hundreds of venues. Some of them are effectively pop up of venues, bars | :46:59. | :47:01. | |
and nightclubs which become a music venue suddenly. They need to take | :47:02. | :47:07. | |
this seriously. Once an attack has taken place it is too late. Thanks | :47:08. | :47:12. | |
for joining us. Chris Phillips, the former head of the National | :47:13. | :47:16. | |
counterterrorism security office who has worked on improving security for | :47:17. | :47:17. | |
music venues. Now, there's supposed to be a big | :47:18. | :47:29. | |
push to get more of us to speak a foreign language - | :47:30. | :47:32. | |
that's particularly after a study found that our failures in this | :47:33. | :47:34. | |
could be costing the country around But now it's revealed that more | :47:35. | :47:37. | |
than a third of sixth form colleges have dropped modern | :47:38. | :47:41. | |
language courses. The Sixth Form Colleges Association, | :47:42. | :47:43. | |
which represents 90 dedicated colleges in England, | :47:44. | :47:51. | |
says some can no longer afford classes like | :47:52. | :47:53. | |
A-Level French or Italian. It says the funding for each 16 | :47:54. | :47:55. | |
to 19-year-old is a fifth lower than a secondary school gets | :47:56. | :47:59. | |
for each 11 to 16-year-old, and it's been dropping, | :48:00. | :48:01. | |
despite government assurances Let's talk to Bill Watkin | :48:02. | :48:03. | |
who is the Chief Executive of the Sixth Form Colleges | :48:04. | :48:10. | |
Association. Karen Hucker is the principal | :48:11. | :48:12. | |
at Bexhill College. Thank you for your patience. Why is | :48:13. | :48:25. | |
this a big problem? We published the report this morning because there | :48:26. | :48:28. | |
are concerns about the impact of low level funding of the education of 16 | :48:29. | :48:33. | |
to 19-year-olds, the report found four key things. Students are only | :48:34. | :48:38. | |
being offered three subjects now increasingly, rather than four we | :48:39. | :48:46. | |
have been used to. At a level? Yes. And minority subjects are being cut, | :48:47. | :48:51. | |
the number of colleges have had to cut a level subjects in French, | :48:52. | :48:55. | |
German, Spanish, Italian. Not enough students want to take them? Partly | :48:56. | :49:01. | |
that, but also because the number of A-levels you offer dropping from | :49:02. | :49:05. | |
four to three means students are choosing subjects they are not | :49:06. | :49:09. | |
choosing the minority subjects. It is not just the history of art and | :49:10. | :49:14. | |
archaeology, it is what the government describes as facilitating | :49:15. | :49:18. | |
subjects which are so important to getting into university and beyond. | :49:19. | :49:21. | |
If they were that important they would be chosen by students? They | :49:22. | :49:26. | |
word, and they do, but not enough to make them viable, and for a class to | :49:27. | :49:31. | |
be viable, they have got to be bigger otherwise they are not | :49:32. | :49:34. | |
affordable -- they would. You need more students choosing classes, but | :49:35. | :49:40. | |
fewer students are choosing them because they are choosing fewer | :49:41. | :49:44. | |
subjects. Hanley students do you need to make it commercially viable? | :49:45. | :49:50. | |
-- how many. 16-17, anything less than that and you look at the | :49:51. | :49:54. | |
viability. You must be worried about people are choosing other languages? | :49:55. | :50:00. | |
Yes, we have cut Italian already, German is Chris Polk on as well. If | :50:01. | :50:08. | |
the government funded 16 to 19-year-olds the way they did at | :50:09. | :50:10. | |
secondary school, you wouldn't have to cut those classes? Yes, you would | :50:11. | :50:18. | |
not have to cut the smaller classes. The government says they have sorted | :50:19. | :50:24. | |
out the funding for 16 to 19-year-olds, is ring-fenced, and so | :50:25. | :50:28. | |
what you are saying and what they are saying does not marry up. They | :50:29. | :50:32. | |
have protected the funding level that you get for every 16-year-old | :50:33. | :50:36. | |
that you teach which is true for the course of this Parliament, but they | :50:37. | :50:41. | |
have set the bar very low because there have been three major funding | :50:42. | :50:44. | |
cuts since 2011 and if you compare the amount we fund our 16-year-olds | :50:45. | :50:49. | |
compared to other high performing countries around the world, in | :50:50. | :50:55. | |
Singapore they are funded for 30 hours tuition for every student, and | :50:56. | :50:59. | |
in Canada it is 26 hours, Australia over 20 hours and in the UK it is 15 | :51:00. | :51:05. | |
hours. There is not enough money to pay for more subjects to be studied. | :51:06. | :51:10. | |
The government, yes, it has set the bar for the course of the next few | :51:11. | :51:14. | |
years, but the bar is so low that colleges are having to cut courses | :51:15. | :51:19. | |
and they are having to cut support services whether that is to do with | :51:20. | :51:21. | |
mental health counselling and careers advice or be after college | :51:22. | :51:28. | |
activities like music, art and drama clubs, sports activities, and this | :51:29. | :51:32. | |
is the impact. The danger is that employers and universities who are | :51:33. | :51:35. | |
looking for a certain set of skills are going to be not able to find | :51:36. | :51:42. | |
them so easily in college leavers. They are, but they will be European | :51:43. | :51:45. | |
students, rather than British students. This is a message about | :51:46. | :51:50. | |
students getting jobs in the end, isn't it? Absolutely. Although the | :51:51. | :51:59. | |
funding has been frozen, the costs around it have not been frozen and | :52:00. | :52:06. | |
so we have got to cover the costs of facilities and cost to pensions, all | :52:07. | :52:09. | |
of those things, and something has to give at some point. As Bill | :52:10. | :52:13. | |
pointed out, we are looking at those different areas where we still have | :52:14. | :52:18. | |
flexibility that we can address the funding cuts. Coming back to the | :52:19. | :52:24. | |
point, I don't see sixth formers marching to Westminster saying, | :52:25. | :52:31. | |
please teach us Battalion. -- Italian. One of the key government | :52:32. | :52:37. | |
drives in recent years is to push modern languages as part of the | :52:38. | :52:41. | |
English baccalaureate, the custom subjects that those before 16 are | :52:42. | :52:47. | |
encouraged to aspire to. If you are going to promote modern languages | :52:48. | :52:53. | |
before 16, if it is so important, and formerly I was a French teacher, | :52:54. | :52:57. | |
so my heart is totally in favour of the teaching of modern marriages, | :52:58. | :53:01. | |
but if you are going to promote it before 16 you have got to enable | :53:02. | :53:06. | |
colleges to deliver it after the age of 16. Schools are in a similar | :53:07. | :53:10. | |
position, so many schools, they can't afford in the current funding | :53:11. | :53:14. | |
climate to put on as many courses as they would have done in the past. | :53:15. | :53:20. | |
Sixth form colleges might have 2000 students, but a small school six | :53:21. | :53:24. | |
forward only have 200. What we are saying, let's not have so many small | :53:25. | :53:28. | |
schools six forms soaking up government funding, let's direct it | :53:29. | :53:33. | |
more to the efficient economically sensible way of doing it in the | :53:34. | :53:38. | |
colleges. We would like the government to carry out a review of | :53:39. | :53:41. | |
post-16 funding to see what it actually costs to deliver a really | :53:42. | :53:46. | |
good sixth form curriculum and what are the current funding levels and | :53:47. | :53:49. | |
what are they around the world and what should we do about them to make | :53:50. | :53:54. | |
sure that our 16 to 19-year-olds are getting a fair deal in their | :53:55. | :53:58. | |
education. Thanks for joining us. Thanks for your patience. | :53:59. | :54:02. | |
The Department for Education told us that it has protected the base rate | :54:03. | :54:05. | |
of funding for all post-16 students until 2020. | :54:06. | :54:10. | |
Well, we've been discussing the economic growth figures | :54:11. | :54:16. | |
And very shortly we'll have the Shadow Chancellor outlining | :54:17. | :54:29. | |
Labour's vision for the future as the UK negotiates out of the EU. | :54:30. | :54:32. | |
John McDonnell's expected to say that only his party can make | :54:33. | :54:35. | |
Our political guru Norman Smith will I hope be able | :54:36. | :54:39. | |
to explain some of that - Norman. | :54:40. | :54:41. | |
John McDonnell will set out how Labour believes they can make an | :54:42. | :54:48. | |
economic success of Brexit but the figures we have had out today | :54:49. | :54:51. | |
suggest that actually things are going much better than many of the | :54:52. | :54:55. | |
merchants of doom had been predicting. The growth figures out | :54:56. | :55:01. | |
this morning suggests the economy has grown in the past three months, | :55:02. | :55:06. | |
since we left or voted to leave the EU by half a percent, which is much | :55:07. | :55:12. | |
better than many had predicted, and if you look at the forecast on the | :55:13. | :55:17. | |
Treasury before the referendum, they were suggesting the economy would | :55:18. | :55:22. | |
begin to shrink. Even Philip Hammond, the current Chancellor, | :55:23. | :55:27. | |
before the referendum he said there would be a chilling effect on | :55:28. | :55:30. | |
growth, but far from it, we still seem to be doing pretty well. Very | :55:31. | :55:37. | |
significant announcement, Nissan, become on a factual, they have | :55:38. | :55:40. | |
announced they are going to build their new model in Britain. There | :55:41. | :55:48. | |
were alarm bells ringing because of Brexit, maybe they would relocate to | :55:49. | :55:53. | |
the continent, but not so. They say they have received assurances from | :55:54. | :55:56. | |
the government which means the new model will be built in the North | :55:57. | :56:01. | |
East safeguarding 7000 jobs and that will be seen as a massive vote of | :56:02. | :56:05. | |
confidence in Britain after the Brexit referendum. What is going on | :56:06. | :56:12. | |
here? A couple of things, it seems to be down to you and I, consumers, | :56:13. | :56:17. | |
we are still spending like video, we have not been freaked by the Brexit | :56:18. | :56:22. | |
vote and we are still spending -- we are still spending plenty for top | :56:23. | :56:29. | |
Bay city and the services sector, growth is underpinned by both, and | :56:30. | :56:34. | |
if you look at other areas, they have not done so well -- the City | :56:35. | :56:39. | |
and the services sector. Manufacturing has gone down by 1%, | :56:40. | :56:45. | |
construction by nearly 1.5%, so we are increasingly reliant on the | :56:46. | :56:48. | |
City. This is the verdict of the Chancellor. Please to see the | :56:49. | :56:54. | |
economy is still resilient, very strong third-quarter growth and that | :56:55. | :56:57. | |
tells us that we go into the period of negotiation for our exit from the | :56:58. | :57:02. | |
EU from a position of strength with the economy doing very well. What | :57:03. | :57:07. | |
was interesting though, the Chancellor was talking about it | :57:08. | :57:11. | |
putting us in a position of strength for negotiations with the rest of | :57:12. | :57:16. | |
the EU, it strengthens our hand when we have to get down to the | :57:17. | :57:21. | |
deal-making with the EU because the argument would be, hang on, you do | :57:22. | :57:25. | |
want to say goodbye to us because we are doing pretty well and we are | :57:26. | :57:31. | |
predicted to be the stunt growing economy in the G7 this year, in | :57:32. | :57:35. | |
other words the rest of the EU might be less about trying to punch is | :57:36. | :57:39. | |
about the head and they might want to give us a pretty good deal -- | :57:40. | :57:43. | |
predicted to be the fastest-growing economy. We are doing much better | :57:44. | :57:50. | |
than people had predicted, and we are now quite well-placed compared | :57:51. | :57:54. | |
to the rest of the EU and what that might mean when we get down to the | :57:55. | :57:58. | |
actual nitty-gritty of a deal, we could actually get potentially a | :57:59. | :58:02. | |
better deal than many people had been predicting. By and large, thing | :58:03. | :58:07. | |
crossed, things are going better than thought. Thanks, Norman. Donald | :58:08. | :58:15. | |
has sent an e-mail about Bake Off, he says the real joy is the nature | :58:16. | :58:22. | |
of the people in the programme, they are not self obsessed, they make me | :58:23. | :58:27. | |
proud to be British. Thank you, Donald. Thanks for watching, see you | :58:28. | :58:32. | |
next time. | :58:33. | :58:33. |