02/02/2018 BBC News at One


02/02/2018

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Theresa May has refused to give

details about what she's seeking

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in Brexit negotiations with the EU.

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But she's insisting

she will deliver the deal

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that the British people want.

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What British people voted

for is for us to take back

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control of our money,

our borders and our laws and that's

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exactly what we are going to do.

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We'll have the latest

from Westminster.

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Also this lunchtime.

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Darren Osborne is sentenced to life

in prison for the terrorist attack

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outside Finsbury Park mosque

in London last year.

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For the first time, the number

of men dying from prostate cancer

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has overtaken the number of women

killed by breast cancer.

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I think it's really important

that people are aware

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of what their symptoms

are and I would actually urge men

0:00:500:00:53

to talk to their doctors

if they have any urinary

0:00:530:00:56

issues at all.

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Police in California say the actor

Robert Wagner is now a person

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of interest in the investigation

into the death of his wife,

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the film star Natalie Wood.

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High tech camera collars give

a birds-eye view of polar bears

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struggling to find food

on the shrinking Arctic ice.

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And coming up in the sport on BBC

News, can Liam Brodie recover

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from a difficult start

in Great Britain's opening Davis Cup

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rubber against Spain in Marbella?

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Good afternoon and welcome

to the BBC News at One.

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Theresa May is coming under

increasing pressure to spell out

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what she hopes to achieve

from the Brexit negotiations,

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including whether Britain should

remain part of the customs union

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after it leaves the EU.

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Some Leave-supporting Conservative

MPs have urged the Prime Minister

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to be more specific about her

priorities for future trade deals.

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Downing Street says Mrs May has

an open mind to the kind of customs

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arrangement the UK should pursue.

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Speaking to our political

editor Laura Kuenssberg,

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Theresa May said her visit to China

will help boost British

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trade prospects.

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This trip is an example of global

Britain. It's about Britain getting

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out around the world, and, yes,

enhancing our trade links and

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crucially what happened here is that

we have seen the businesses I have

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brought with me on this trip signing

deal which means more jobs for

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people back in Britain. That's good

news for Britain, it global Britain

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in action and that's what we are

seeing here.

On top of doing

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business around the world, your

party, the public, business, they

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want to know do you favour a really

close relationship with the European

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Union once we add or a more dramatic

break?

What a favour if a deal, an

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arrangement for trading with EU

which is going be good for trade

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between the UK and the European

Union and good for jobs in Britain.

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It's a fundamental choice here,

isn't there? Your Chancellor has

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said he believes the changes might

be very modest and one of your

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former Brexit ministers who is on

your side has said the government is

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yet to make clear choices and you

are risking end now but something

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which looks like meaningless waffle.

My choice is very simple, we take

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back control of our money, back

control of our borders, back control

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of our laws,.

You know very well

that the decision time is fast

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approaching. Which is more important

to you, less disruption to the

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economy or more control for the

parliament and politicians because

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the EU, many people in business,

many members of the public, people

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in your party believe you simply

can't have both.

I don't believe

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those are alternatives also what the

British people voted for is for us

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to take back control of our money,

borders and laws. And that's exactly

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what we're going to do. We also want

to ensure that we can trade a

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cross-border. We're at the start of

the negotiation. At the end of that

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negotiation, deal will be presented

to Parliament, and parliament will

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have a meaningful vote.

Do you want

to be the Tory leader at the next

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general I have been asked this

question on a number of occasions

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and I said very clearly drop my

political career I've served my

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country and I've served my party.

I'm not a quitter, I'm in this

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because there's a job to be done

here. And that is delivering for the

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Buddhist people and doing that in a

way that ensures the future

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prosperity of our country.

Our view

of the day after day the Tory party

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fighting amongst themselves. How do

you reassert your authority?

I am

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doing but the British people want,

delivering on Brexit also getting

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out around the world ensuring that

we bring jobs back to Britain.

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Companies will be selling the great

British projects to China as a

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result of this trip, more people in

jobs in the UK as a result of this

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trip, that global Britain in action.

The Prime Minister speaking earlier.

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Lets talk with

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our political correspondent

Eleanor Garnier is in Westminster.

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This was an important

trip for trade.

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Has it been overshadowed

by speculation about her leadership?

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certainly, Theresa May will want to

emphasise the success of her trip to

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China.

Coming back with billions of

pounds worth of business deals, and

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that phrase she wants to push global

Britain in action, an image, if you

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like, the confident UK as it leaves

the EU, but it's certainly not a

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Conservative Party brimming with

confidence she comes back to full

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for BS, there is a continuing

infighting and spits and her cabinet

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she needs to get control of, but the

real problem for Theresa May is the

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concern that some have in her party

over her own leadership. Some are

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talking of despondency, dissolution,

some are questioning her own

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decisiveness and lack of it, and

even some who have supported her in

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the past are becoming more wobbly in

their confidence in her leadership

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and she is being accused of

blocking, not delivering radical

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change when it comes to domestic

policy. So she comes home from China

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under pressure to keep her party

united, under pressure to spell out

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her priorities when it comes to

trading relationships after Brexit,

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but also under pressure to secure

her own leadership and I think as we

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have seen this week, the Tories'

tiles and tip relations have

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continued to follow her around the

globe and it is clearly an issue she

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needs to get a grip of.

Eleanor,

thank you.

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Darren Osborne has been

sentenced to life in prison,

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for the terrorist attack outside

Finsbury Park mosque

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in London last year.

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He was found guilty yesterday

of murder and attempted murder

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after driving a van into worshippers

in June, killing one man

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and injuring several others.

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Our Home Affairs Correspondent

Daniel Sandford is at

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Woolwich Crown Court.

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Daniel.

Yes, the sentencing hearing

today began with a victim impact

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statement from the daughter of the

man who was murdered by Darren

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Osborne during this terrorist

attack. She said her mother is still

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constantly having nightmares and

constantly feeling lonely and her

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brothers, 13 and 14, will now grow

up without the help and support of

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their father. My son, she said, is

always asking where his grandad is.

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Talking about her father, she said

his life was taken in a very cruel

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way I have very narrow-minded,

heartless man. In the last half an

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hour, the judge has come to pass

sentence, talking about Baron

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Osborne that was defence and a

mysterious man called Dave had been

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driving and vanished and she said

you have been convicted on

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overwhelming evidence of the jury

was also your pathetic last ditch

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attempt to deceive them. She talked

about how he was rapidly radicalised

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over the Internet, had allowed his

mind to be poisoned and he ignored

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the good sense of those people

around him who tried to put him on

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to a proper path. She said this was

a terrorist act, a murder done for

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the purposes of advancing a

religious racial and political

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clause and then coming to sentence

she said that a life sentence was

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inevitable for murder and also pass

a life sentence for attempted murder

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and the minimum term that Darren

Osborne would serve in prison was 43

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years behind bars which means he

won't be released until after his

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90th birthday, that's the earliest

he could be released.

Daniel

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Sandford, thank you.

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For the first time, the number

of men dying from prostate cancer

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has overtaken the number of women

dying from breast cancer.

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It makes prostate cancer the third

biggest cancer killer in the UK.

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The charity, Prostate Cancer UK,

says advances in diagnosis

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and treatment of breast cancer have

paid off and argues similar benefits

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could be seen if more money

was allocated to the fight

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against prostate cancer.

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Our health correspondent

Dominic Hughes reports.

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Prostate cancer does

not discriminate.

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Last year, keen runner

Tony Collier discovered he had

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the disease while training

for an ultra marathon.

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His diagnosis was late,

and he knows cancer will

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eventually take his life.

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So Tony is using the time

he has left to warn other

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men about the dangers.

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I think it's really important

that people are aware

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of what their symptoms

are and I would actually urge men

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to talk to their doctors

if they have any urinary

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issues at all.

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My issue is that I didn't

actually have any symptoms

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and they think I had the cancer

for ten years beforehand.

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More men are living to an age

where they have a greater chance

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of developing prostate cancer,

so in 2015, more than 11,800 men

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died from the disease.

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That compares with just over 11,400

deaths in 2015 due to breast cancer.

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And while the proportion of people

dying from prostate cancer,

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the mortality rate has fallen over

the past decade, down by 6%,

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the decline in deaths from breast

cancer has been even greater,

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more than 10%.

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Prostate cancer has not had as much

investment and has therefore tended

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to lag behind and it's now time

realising it's the third

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biggest cancer killer,

it is the most common cancer in men,

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it really is time to actually get

behind this and to realise

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that we need to get on top of it now

because it's just going to become

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more common and it's actually

going to kill more men if we aren't

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able to do that.

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Cancers of the lung and bowel

remain the biggest killers

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but even here there has

been significant progress.

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Improved treatments and years

of research are now showing results.

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The really exciting things that

are going on in the cancer research

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field at the moment is personalised

medicines were getting to know

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tumours inside and out,

the genes that make them tick

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and the faulty molecules that also

are fuelling the tumour's growth

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and the more that we know

about individual cancers the more

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personalised we can make treatments

and that's where we think we can

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make real progress in developing

new treatments and helping

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more people survive.

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Meanwhile, Tony has joined those

calling for increased funding

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for prostate research

and the development of a reliable

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screening programme.

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So the gain seen in the fight

against other cancers can be matched

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when combating the disease

that he knows will eventually

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claim his life too.

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Dominic Hughes, BBC News.

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Police in the United States say

the actor Robert Wagner is now

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being treated as a person

of interest in an investigation

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into the death of his wife,

the film star Natalie Wood.

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She was found drowned in 1981

during a California yachting trip

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with Wagner and her death was ruled

to have been an accident.

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They were a Hollywood

golden couple at the time.

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Natalie Wood had been a child star,

in Miracle on 34th Street

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and got her first Oscar nomination

while still a teenager

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for Rebel Without A Cause.

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This report from David Sillito.

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# I feel pretty and witty and gay...

Natalie Wood, the star of West side

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story. She won an Oscar for Rebel

without a cause. And then in 1981

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she was found dead. She had been

sailing with their husband,

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heart-to-heart star Robert Wagner

for the 's captain, Dennis Toobin.

I

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remember people coming on the boat

saying that they had found Natalie

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Wood floating, just couldn't believe

it.

The verdict, accidental

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drowning. The actor Christopher

Walken was also on board at the time

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but how it all happened was a

mystery and then 30 is later new

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information emerged about the couple

that night. The captain now said he

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had heard arguing.

I believe Robert

Wagoner was with her up until the

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moment she went into the water.

In

2011, the case was reopened.

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Evidence of bruising led to the

cause of death being changed to

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drowning and other undetermined

factors.

Recently, we have received

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information which we felt was

substantial enough to make us take

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another look at this case.

And now

detectives say two more people have

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come forward saying they also heard

raised voices on the night and one

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said she saw figures in the back of

the splendour, male and female,

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whose voices they recognised as

being Robert Wagoner and Natalie

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Wood.

Arguing in the back of the

boat.

Back in 2011, that family

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issued a statement saying it

supported the police 's efforts and

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the detectives at the time had this

to say about Robert Wagoner.

Any

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questions?

Is Robert Wagoner a

suspect?

No. Six years on?

I think

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it suspicious enough to make us

think something happened for them I

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don't think she got into the what

else, she fell into the water. As

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we've investigated the case over the

last six years, I think he's more of

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a person of interest now. We know

his last person to be would Natalie

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before she disappeared.

Ladies and

gentlemen, Robert Wagoner.

So not a

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suspect, a person of interest.

Robert Wagoner has made no comment

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about these latest developers. But

37 years on, the story of this

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golden Hollywood couple and the

investigation into the death of

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Natalie Wood is still very much

ongoing. David Sillitoe, BBC News.

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A woman has been giving evidence for

a third day at the trial for rape of

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two Ulster and Ireland rugby

players. Paddy Jackson and she would

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building deny raping the woman at a

house in south Belfast in 26 team. A

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la Island correspond and Chris Page

have been following the trial.

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Two Ulster rugby players are charged

with raping a woman in June, 2016.

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Alongside those men are two others,

Glenn Maxwell Roy, charged with

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exposure, and Rory Harrison, accused

of perverting the course of justice

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and all four denied the charges

against them. The alleged victim,

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aged 21, has been giving evidence

for three days. The court has heard

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she was out at a nightclub in

Belfast and went into a VIP area

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where some Ulster rugby players

were. She went back to Paddy

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Jackson's house and says she was

raped by Paddy Jackson and Stuart

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Olding an upstairs bedroom.

According to the prosecution the day

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after the attack, and a WhatsApp

message was sent to a group of

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friends boasting about the events of

the night. The alleged victim has

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been questioned today and yesterday.

She has previously said she didn't

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follow rugby. This morning a

barrister showed the court and

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alleged text message to a friend,

the text said just pretend you don't

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know they are from rugby. The

alleged victim denied watering down

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her knowledge of rugby. The trial

continues. It is expected to last

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for another four weeks.

Chris Page, thank you.

0:16:370:16:41

Our top story this lunchtime.

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Theresa May has refused to give

details about what she's seeking

0:16:420:16:45

in Brexit negotiations with the EU -

but insists she will deliver the

0:16:450:16:48

deal that the British people want.

0:16:480:16:49

Coming up - a big

weekend for rugby fans.

0:16:490:16:52

The Six Nations kicks off

tomorrow in Cardiff.

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Coming up in sport -

England select Ben Te'o

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for inside centre for this weekend's

Six Nations opener against Italy

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in Rome, but it will be his first

match since October due

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to an ankle injury.

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High-tech tracking collars

with cameras attached have given us

0:17:200:17:23

this incredible bear's-eye view

of polar bears' life in the Arctic.

0:17:230:17:28

Cameras have been fitted

to nine female polar bears,

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in an attempt to discover how

the animals are managing

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to find enough food

on the diminishing Arctic ice.

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Our science correspondent

Victoria Gill has more.

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A polar bear's view of the Arctic.

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These remarkable images were

captured by cameras inside tracking

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collars that scientists fitted

to nine solitary female polar bears.

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The researchers had to work for

three Arctic spring seasons come

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from 2014, two 2016, to capture and

collar nine solitary bears. Each

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animal war collar for around ten

days before the cameras inside were

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retrieved, revealing these unique

insights into their behaviour. The

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aim was to understand whether the

animals were getting enough to eat

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during the critical springs forth.

-- spring thaw. Arctic sea ice is

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decreasing at about 14% every

decade. The bears use that ice to

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hunt for their prey, seals. So as

well as fitting them with tracking

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and camera containing collars the

researchers injected the bears with

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a metabolic tracer. This showed that

wild bears have a higher metabolic

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rate than previously thought and

that most of them were unable to

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catch enough food to meet their

energy needs.

It's really quite

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fascinating to learn the basic

behaviours of these animals and how

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they are using the sea ice

environment. This is in the spring,

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where temperatures can get down to

-20, -30 Celsius, so it's pretty

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inhospitable. It would be almost

impossible for research are to be

0:19:210:19:25

out on the sea ice in those

conditions for an extended period of

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time. There's very little

information that exists on the basic

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behaviours of these animals on the

sea ice and so this camera collar

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provides us with an insight into

what the bears are doing.

The

0:19:370:19:43

scientists say this new technology,

following their every move and every

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meal, reveals just how the predators

will be affected as their icy

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environments transforms around them.

Victoria Gill, BBC News.

0:19:500:19:55

The latest figures from

the technology giant Apple show

0:19:550:19:58

that it sold slightly fewer iPhones

in the final three months of last

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year, compared to the year before.

0:20:010:20:02

But higher prices compensated

for the dip - and it still made

0:20:020:20:05

a £14 billion profit in that period.

0:20:050:20:07

Our technology correspondent

Rory Cellan-Jones is with me.

0:20:070:20:14

Still making a lot of money?

Yeah,

it continues to be one of the most

0:20:140:20:20

profitable, if not the most

profitable companies we've ever

0:20:200:20:23

seen, and its iPhone the single most

profitable product in history. When

0:20:230:20:28

you think how many have been sold

and how much cash it has generated.

0:20:280:20:32

The one shadow, that slight fall in

sales in the last quarter, compared

0:20:320:20:38

with a year ago. So 77.3 million

iPhone sales, just a bit down on the

0:20:380:20:45

year before. So has it peaked or has

it not? It doesn't look quite so bad

0:20:450:20:49

when you look at the global sales of

smartphones over the last quarter,

0:20:490:20:52

which actually suffered quite a

sharp drop, down 6.3%. So has the

0:20:520:20:58

appetite for smartphones globally

now peaked? And of those numbers

0:20:580:21:02

Apple actually came out top,

overtook Samsung as the world's

0:21:020:21:06

leading smartphone player. So even

if we are getting a bit less keen on

0:21:060:21:10

paying those high prices, Apple is

still ruling the roost in terms of

0:21:100:21:13

making profits from smartphones.

There have been a lot of results

0:21:130:21:17

this week from a variety of tech

firms. What does it tell us, the

0:21:170:21:22

broader picture, the state of the

industry?

We've had Google, Amazon,

0:21:220:21:25

Facebook. I picked as an out of

those three. Amazon making its

0:21:250:21:30

biggest profit ever. Amazon Nevin

tries to make much profit, it tries

0:21:300:21:34

to plunge any money turns back into

continuing its quest for global

0:21:340:21:39

domination and that has continued --

Amazon never tries to make much

0:21:390:21:44

profit. It making huge inroads into

the e-commerce industry, really

0:21:440:21:48

dominant there. Overall the figures

show the American giants

0:21:480:21:52

increasingly dominant and that's

going to cause alarm bells for

0:21:520:21:53

regulators around the world.

Rory

Cellan-Jones, thank you.

0:21:530:22:02

The authorities in the French port

of Calais have called

0:22:020:22:05

for extra security measures,

after clashes erupted

0:22:050:22:06

between crowds of migrants.

0:22:060:22:07

Four Eritreans are reported to be

in a critical condition in hospital,

0:22:070:22:10

after they were shot during fights

between Afghan and African migrants.

0:22:100:22:16

Let's find out more from our

reporter, Gavin Lee, who is in

0:22:160:22:20

Calais. Explain more about what's

been going on and what the

0:22:200:22:25

authorities there want done about

it?

What we know is for the past few

0:22:250:22:31

months, in fact building up since

the closure of the so-called Jungle

0:22:310:22:35

camp, where there were 7000 or so

migrants here, there have been small

0:22:350:22:38

numbers gathering since that camp

closed. Now they are up to 700 or

0:22:380:22:44

800 migrants in different clusters

across the Calais region. What

0:22:440:22:47

happened yesterday was according to

the charity workers, some migrants

0:22:470:22:50

here, there was food distribution

being given out by one charity and

0:22:500:22:55

something flared between a group of

Afghans and a group of Eritrean man.

0:22:550:22:58

We're talking about 200 Eritrean

men, about 30 Afghan men. Shots was

0:22:580:23:03

fired. Four many a hospital in a

serious condition, one said to be a

0:23:030:23:08

life-threatening condition. 22

others with minor injuries including

0:23:080:23:11

two police officers. The Interior

Ministry of France came here this

0:23:110:23:14

morning and said this is the worst

violence there has been in many

0:23:140:23:18

months in Calais and what you can

see

0:23:180:23:24

see at the moment here is more

charities bringing out further food

0:23:250:23:27

distribution. One of the big issues

we are hearing about is the lack of

0:23:270:23:31

any type of sanitation and bad food

for the migrants here, and the fact

0:23:310:23:34

the French position from the police

is to move them on quickly. One

0:23:340:23:38

brief point, Emmanuel Macron gave a

speech here a week ago, talking

0:23:380:23:40

about how they will be no new Jungle

camp, but there will be more

0:23:400:23:44

swapping and moving those

unaccompanied minors under 17 to the

0:23:440:23:48

UK, a deal with Theresa May we are

told from charities that brought

0:23:480:23:51

about 200 migrants here in the last

week or so believing they may have a

0:23:510:23:55

chance. That's added to the

frustrations here and sparked the

0:23:550:23:59

violence.

Gavin Lee, thank you.

0:23:590:24:05

violence.

Gavin Lee, thank you. A

man has pleaded not guilty to the

0:24:050:24:07

murder of two schoolgirls in Sussex

30 years ago. The two girls were

0:24:070:24:14

found dead in woods on the outskirts

of Brighton in October 19 86.

0:24:140:24:18

Russell Bishop, who is 51, was

remanded in custody and will stand

0:24:180:24:22

trial at the Old Bailey this

October.

0:24:220:24:27

Five people have been killed

after two army helicopters in France

0:24:270:24:30

crashed near the southern resort

town of St Tropez.

0:24:300:24:32

Both helicopters belonged

to a military flying school,

0:24:320:24:34

which trains pilots.

0:24:340:24:35

Local officials say all those

on board died when the helicopters

0:24:350:24:37

collided, but what caused

the accident is still not clear.

0:24:370:24:45

The NSPCC has accused the government

of dragging its feet when it comes

0:24:500:24:53

to protecting children online. The

charity says about half the

0:24:530:24:56

recommendations made in a report

commissioned a decade ago still

0:24:560:25:00

haven't been introduced. Ministers

say they are working to make the UK

0:25:000:25:04

the safest place to be online. Sarah

Campbell reports.

0:25:040:25:09

This is the online generation.

0:25:090:25:11

Over the past decade the internet

and its use has expanded rapidly.

0:25:110:25:16

It can be hard to keep up.

I think

she's a bit behind with Snapchat and

0:25:160:25:21

stuff them and my dad is as well.

They get their names a bit confused.

0:25:210:25:27

Most of the time. But she knows

about them and she knows how to use

0:25:270:25:31

them, kind of.

Before the likes of

WhatsApp, Snapchat and Instagram

0:25:310:25:37

even existed, just ten years ago,

Professor Tanya Byron, a clinical

0:25:370:25:41

psychologist, was asked by the then

government to look into children's

0:25:410:25:45

safety online. A decade later the

NSPCC say fewer than half of her

0:25:450:25:50

recommendations have been put into

place. UK Council of Child Internet

0:25:500:25:56

Safety was established. Video games

now have to have an age rating. But

0:25:560:25:59

the charity says there's been no

improvement to parental controls for

0:25:590:26:04

games consoles, and no code of

practice is yet in place for the

0:26:040:26:06

online industry. And even though the

government says it does plan to

0:26:060:26:11

introduce a voluntary code of

practice, in 2018 Professor Byron

0:26:110:26:16

argues any code now must be

mandatory.

We're talking about

0:26:160:26:21

children at risk of Sexual

Exploitation Service, of grooming,

0:26:210:26:23

and those kinds of contacts. It has

to happen now. There has been ten

0:26:230:26:28

years for the voluntary code to be

put together. It hasn't happened. So

0:26:280:26:32

now we need a mandatory code. If you

look at Germany for example, they

0:26:320:26:36

will find social media -- they will

find social media companies that

0:26:360:26:40

don't take down extremist content.

The technology is there.

Rebecca

0:26:400:26:45

Lury is Amanda headteacher and

agrees social networks can't be left

0:26:450:26:51

to voluntarily police themselves --

Rebecca is a mum, and a headteacher.

0:26:510:26:55

It would be good to have something

concrete and everybody has to abide

0:26:550:27:00

by it and then we can learn from

each other and make sure that

0:27:000:27:03

happens. I understand why companies

might not wish to do that but for

0:27:030:27:06

children's safety it is important.

In response to the NSPCC's report

0:27:060:27:11

the government says social media

companies must go further and faster

0:27:110:27:14

in reducing the risks their

platforms prose, particularly to

0:27:140:27:18

children, and we are considering all

options to make this happen

0:27:180:27:21

including changes to the law when

necessary. The question is whether

0:27:210:27:26

legislation can catch up with the

ever evolving Internet will stop

0:27:260:27:29

Sarah Campbell, BBC News.

0:27:290:27:33

Rugby's Six Nations

tournament begins tomorrow,

0:27:330:27:34

with hopes high in Scotland

that they have their

0:27:340:27:36

best team in decades.

0:27:360:27:37

Defending champions England

are playing in Rome on Sunday.

0:27:370:27:39

But it all begins tomorrow

in Cardiff, as Wales host Scotland -

0:27:390:27:43

a rugby nation anticipating

a renaissance which defies the odds.

0:27:430:27:47

Joe Wilson reports.

0:27:470:27:51

Scottish Borders - working land.

0:27:510:27:54

But embedded deep in this

region's history - rugby.

0:27:540:27:59

Gala's population is 15,000.

0:27:590:28:01

The town's rugby union club has

produced some 46 full

0:28:010:28:05

internationals for Scotland.

0:28:050:28:07

You can see them all on the proudly

maintained clubhouse walls.

0:28:070:28:10

This man is better

known by another pose.

0:28:100:28:14

That's Peter Dods.

0:28:140:28:16

COMMENTATOR:

Peter Dods,

with this vital conversion kick...

0:28:160:28:19

In 1984, Scotland beat everyone.

0:28:190:28:21

Five Nations grand slam.

0:28:210:28:23

Dods kicked the points for a team

filled with Borderers.

0:28:230:28:27

In the border culture

we are fighters.

0:28:270:28:29

You could put us into a dogfight

and the strongest dog wins.

0:28:290:28:34

I think that culture is still there.

0:28:340:28:37

I think with Gregor Townsend

being the coach now,

0:28:370:28:40

he will bring that culture

into the national team.

0:28:400:28:45

He's there, Gregor Townsend.

0:28:450:28:47

Perhaps Gala's most famous

rugby son, now the coach

0:28:470:28:51

of a resurgent Scotland team.

0:28:510:28:53

Under his guidance they've beaten

Australia, home and away,

0:28:530:28:55

with exciting attacking rugby.

0:28:550:28:58

COMMENTATOR:

Hugh Jones

trying to make it...

0:28:580:29:03

The maths?

0:29:030:29:04

In England there are nearly 400,000

registered rugby players.

0:29:040:29:07

In Scotland, 49,000.

0:29:070:29:10

You are by far the smallest nation

and yet you are able

0:29:100:29:13

to beat Australia twice,

you're able to go into

0:29:130:29:15

the Six Nations with real belief.

0:29:150:29:17

How come?

0:29:170:29:18

This is a good question.

0:29:180:29:22

I believe being small

has its advantages.

0:29:220:29:25

It has its advantages in that

you can recognise and identify

0:29:250:29:28

players quicker that

are maybe standing out.

0:29:280:29:33

Small means we can

work together closer.

0:29:330:29:37

Well a coach can only

pick players who are fit

0:29:370:29:39

and injuries are everywhere.

0:29:390:29:40

As Wales completed their

preparations here they can think

0:29:400:29:43

of a dozen players they could have

had in their squad,

0:29:430:29:46

but they are out injured.

0:29:460:29:47

So tomorrow the Welsh team

will be experimental.

0:29:470:29:53

England, winners of the past two

Six Nations, begin this

0:29:530:29:55

year in Italy on Sunday.

0:29:550:29:57

They are well resourced

and well rehearsed.

0:29:570:29:59

Only Ireland have beaten

England in recent years.

0:29:590:30:01

The 2015 champions are

looking strong again.

0:30:010:30:04

They start in France.

0:30:040:30:06

I've been there with Ireland many

times and within 20 or 30 minutes

0:30:060:30:09

we're 20 or 30 points down

and the game's over because they've

0:30:090:30:12

got out of the blocks with raw

emotion and had a fantastic start.

0:30:120:30:15

So for me it's a really,

really tough place to go and play.

0:30:150:30:19

Back in Gala, rugby has

returned to amateur status.

0:30:190:30:23

Training under lights

after work for the love of it.

0:30:230:30:29

The more this sport changes the more

important that spirit seems.

0:30:290:30:34

Joe Wilson, BBC News.

0:30:340:30:42

What's the weather doing this

weekend and today?

0:30:430:30:47

Here's Lucy Martin.

0:30:470:30:50

It's going to be cold. Cold as the

theme of the weather. Today, there's

0:30:530:30:57

been some brightness and blue skies.

A scattering of showers for coastal

0:30:570:31:00

areas. We are starting to see more

cloud filtering into the West and

0:31:000:31:04

that is linked to this weather front

that's going to bring change as we

0:31:040:31:07

move through this evening and

overnight. Increasing amounts of

0:31:070:31:09

cloud and some outbreaks of rain.

Through this afternoon it will be

0:31:090:31:13

largely dry. A few showers in

coastal areas fizzling out.

0:31:130:31:16

Temperatures about eight Celsius.

0:31:160:31:22

Feeling than yesterday thanks to

light a winds. This evening and

0:31:290:31:31

overnight temperatures will fall

away quite quickly. A touch of frost

0:31:310:31:34

with the clearest guys. Cloud will

increase, outbreaks of rain

0:31:340:31:36

spreading from the West. It could

fall as snow over the hills. There

0:31:360:31:39

are going to be patches of ice.

Rulli it will be colder than this. A

0:31:390:31:42

cold start tomorrow and in the east

it will be frosty. The weather front

0:31:420:31:46

is sitting across western parts to

begin with. It will edge eastwards

0:31:460:31:48

as we move through the day. Becoming

increasingly light and patchy. The

0:31:480:31:52

far east just staying dry but if you

are heading to the game in Cardiff

0:31:520:31:55

tomorrow, it does look like it will

be cold and damp. Slightly brighter

0:31:550:31:59

in the north and west into the

afternoon.

0:31:590:32:06

afternoon. Temperatures struggling.

A maximum of six Celsius and in the

0:32:090:32:11

wind it will feel a touch colder

still. On Sunday the same weather

0:32:110:32:14

front is with us. It will start to

pull out to the West. For England

0:32:140:32:18

and Wales Cricket Board start to

drag in a north-easterly breeze.

0:32:180:32:20

That's a particularly cold wind

direction -- for England and why is,

0:32:200:32:24

we start to drag in a north-easterly

breeze. A few brighter intervals

0:32:240:32:28

across England and why is. The

north-easterly wind, the chance of

0:32:280:32:33

seeing some snow showers in the

south-east. Again, temperatures not

0:32:330:32:37

particularly warm. A chance of one

of two snow showers in the

0:32:370:32:40

south-east as we start Monday the

frosty start, but a lot of dry,

0:32:400:32:44

bright weather waiting in the wings

in the West is the next weather

0:32:440:32:48

front that will come in from the

West. A bit of a repeat of what

0:32:480:32:52

we've seen as we go through tonight.

It's going to clash into some very

0:32:520:32:55

cold air. It does mean we could see

some snow again as we move into

0:32:550:33:01

Tuesday. Some uncertainty exactly

how much snow and where exactly that

0:33:010:33:04

snow will be, how far across to the

east the weather front will come,

0:33:040:33:08

but it could cause some disruption.

Do stay tuned to the forecasts as we

0:33:080:33:13

move through the next few days.

0:33:130:33:15

A reminder of our main

story this lunchtime.

0:33:170:33:21

Theresa

story this lunchtime.

0:33:210:33:22

Theresa May

story this lunchtime.

0:33:220:33:22

Theresa May has

story this lunchtime.

0:33:220:33:22

Theresa May has refused

story this lunchtime.

0:33:220:33:22

Theresa May has refused to

story this lunchtime.

0:33:220:33:23

Theresa May has refused to give

story this lunchtime.

0:33:230:33:23

Theresa May has refused to give

details about what she's thinking in

0:33:230:33:24

the Brexit negotiations with the EU

bit insists she will deliver the

0:33:240:33:29

deal the British people want.

0:33:290:33:47

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