09/10/2013 BBC News at Six


09/10/2013

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A new cap on some rail fares in the New Year. Ministers say they are

:00:04.:00:10.

cutting the cost of living. Train operators are told they can't

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increase fares by more than two per cent, that's still an

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inflation-busting rise. Everything is more expensive, food

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shopping, travel, everything. Even for people on high incomes, it is

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quite a struggle sometimes. We will be asking how many passengers will

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gain. Also tonight. He is responsible for

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thousands of deaths in Pakistan, now the Taliban leader says he is ready

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to talk. An exclusive report. The half-a-billion-pound electronic

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border system that is just not working, a third of passengers get

:00:42.:00:47.

through unchecked. The passenger who landed this plane

:00:47.:00:50.

after the pilot collapsed at the controls, he is hailed as a hero. We

:00:50.:01:01.

touched and there were a couple of months. I suppose it was a

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controlled crash. Jack Wilshere's advice on team

:01:06.:01:08.

selection, only English players should get to wear the England kit.

:01:08.:01:18.

And in the sport, the FA wants to increase the number of English

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players in top-level football but the Premier League have refused to

:01:22.:01:23.

be a formal part of the commission. Good evening and welcome to the BBC

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News at Six. A new cap on rail fare increases has been announced, the

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first part of what ministers say will be a government drive to cut

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the cost of living. From the New Year, the amount by which train

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companies can increase some fares in England, including season tickets,

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is to be restricted. Until now, some prices could have risen by more than

:02:00.:02:07.

nine per cent. But as our transport correspondent Richard Westcott

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reports, even under the new rules, travellers will still see

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inflation-busting increases. For many of us, the weekly bills

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feel like they just keep going up while wages stay the same. And guess

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what the average family spends most on each week? Not the mortgage,

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transport. The daily travel to work is getting

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more pricey. So now the politicians The daily travel to work is getting

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are queueing up to reassure us they understand the impact of sky high

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living costs. This is one of a series of measures to be announced

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to try and address some of the pressures which hard-working people

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are put under. This latest measure will not cut

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ticket prices or even freeze them, it is simply a limit on how high

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regulated fares can go. The average rise next January will still be

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4.1%, more than inflation. What until now, train firms could raise

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some fares by 9.1%. As long as they cut similar tickets elsewhere. That

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maximum will now be capped at 6.1%. There are races have been

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remorseless for the past decade said this is the government saying, we

:03:29.:03:34.

feel your pain -- the rise of travel fares. But there could still be

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double the rate of inflation rises. Even if I am a good earner, there is

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an assumption I can cope with these increases. With a large family, I

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cannot. People earning money are still struggling to pay the bills so

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even for people on middle and high incomes, it is quite a struggle

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sometimes. This change could add up to a £30,

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sometimes. £40 a month saving for some communes

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has -- commuters. But one train company says the majority of

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customers will not see any benefit. Today's announcement is part of a

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big political fight, who has got the best policies to help ease the

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burden on our wallets? There is a cost of living crisis, energy bills

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are rising and he supports the energy companies, not the consumer.

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We have a Prime Minister who always stands up for the wrong people! We

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know his cost of living policy, more spending, more borrowing and more

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debt. Expect more announcements and more arguments over the cost of

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living over the next couple of weeks.

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Our deputy political editor, James Landale, is at Westminster for us

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now. James. It does seem the cost of living is now the new battle line

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between the coalition and labour. There are two battles, one is over

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which party is offering the best solution to the cost of living

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crisis. Labour two weeks ago I missed to freeze energy rises if

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elected and today, the government is responding with a cap on rail fare

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increases and there will be further announcements ahead on energy bills,

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water bills, bank fees. But there is a second battle over whether or not

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the cost of living should be the central issue of the next general

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election. Labour hope it will be because they say it is their

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territory and they say it allows them to come forward with policies

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to ensure the benefits of any economic recovery spread fairly. But

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the Conservatives say the economy should be the central issue for the

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next election, fix the economy and fixed odds and keep rates down and

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that will secure the cost of living. As a Downing Street aide

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said, you have to fix the economic disease before you deal with the

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symptoms. So those are the battles and whoever wins the second battle

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will do very well at the next election.

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He is a man with a $5 million FBI bounty on his head and accused of

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ordering the deaths of thousands of Pakistani civilians. In a rare

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interview at his hideout in Pakistan's tribal areas, Hakimullah

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Mehsud, the head of the extremist Pakistan's tribal areas, Hakimullah

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Pakistani Taliban, told the BBC he is ready for talks with the

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government there. But as Aleem Maqbool reports from Islamabad, any

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negotiations with him would be controversial.

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The leader of the Pakistani Taliban, he has wreaked havoc across this

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The leader of the Pakistani Taliban, country and now says if the

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The leader of the Pakistani Taliban, government wants to talk, it has to

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come to him. We believe in talks but the

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government has taken no serious steps to approach us. The government

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needs to sit with us and then we will present our conditions.

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This is how we used to seeing Hakimullah Mehsud in propaganda

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videos. On the left, next to the man who blew himself up to kill seven

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CIA officers in Afghanistan. It is why there is a $5 million bounty on

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his head. Praise be to God, we have targeted those who are with America

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and we will continue to do that. But as for the attacks against property

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and the lives of Muslims, we deny any link to them.

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But with his track record, who would believe him? In the most recent in a

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series of horrific attacks, a car packed with explosives went off in

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the heart of the ancient storytellers market. The results

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were devastating. Especially for this man, 20 members of his family

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were in a minibus passing by the bomb. 15 died, including his wife,

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three daughters, his son and his grandchildren.

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What should I say about the people who did this? It makes no difference

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now. My home was like a garden of roses at it has all gone.

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Either the Taliban did carry out those attacks that caused such

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misery here even after they said they wanted peace, or Hakimullah

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Mehsud did not have control over the militants who did this. The question

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is, why bother speaking to him? This extraordinary footage shows the

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Taliban, including Hakimullah Mehsud, then men thought to be

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responsible for murdering thousands. -- their men. Whether it is

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coalition troops leaving Afghanistan or the Pakistani government agreed

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in -- agreeing to enter into dialogue, it is clear it is the

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militants in this region who feel more and more that they are calling

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the shots. With me now is our world affairs

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editor, John Simpson. How significant would it be if there

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were talks with this man? It would be really significant.

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Until fairly recently, people were talking about Pakistan as a failed

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state, a black hole. Your main opponent has asked to have talks

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with you, he does not do that if he thinks so. It shows a strength in

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Pakistan. These are not nice people. These are the same group. You

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remember the schoolgirl Malala Yousafzai, who was on television the

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other day? They shot her. And their spokesman said the other day they

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would do it again if they could catch her. But many of the

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conditions they will want to impose catch her. But many of the

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on the talks are impossible. I think it is just quite important that they

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think it is worth suggesting talking at all.

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Thank you very much. A multi-million-pound electronic

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border system that was meant to keep track of criminals and terror

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suspects travelling to and from the UK has failed to meet its target. A

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third of all passengers, that is 76-million journeys, have not been

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checked and not one person has been prevented from boarding a flight to

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Britain. Our home affairs correspondent, June Kelly, has more.

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Police at Heathrow heading for a plane with a wanted man on board.

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They know he is on the flight because under the e-Borders

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programme, airlines provide information about passengers to the

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authorities. Suspects can be stopped on arrival or prevented from leaving

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the UK. This is the one area where the e-Borders scheme has achieved

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some success. It is partially delivered on some -- it has

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partially delivered on some targets but not on most. One big ambition

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was to prevent those regarded as a threat to this country from getting

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on a plane here and there has been a complete failure on this front.

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According to the author of today's report. One purpose is that people

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who have been subject of immigration and other offences are preventing

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dust prevented from boarding a flight to the UK. But that has not

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happened, nobody has been stopped, on that basis. They are dealt with

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when they get here. The programme is supposed to have information on

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passengers coming into and leaving the UK but to spring this year, it

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had details of only 65% of passenger movements. The original target had

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been 95%. This means that for 76 million journeys, the programme had

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no advance information on who was travelling. Regardless of the

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advance information we have, we check everybody at the Bordeaux

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which did not happen under the previous government wherein there

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were significant cues, they relaxed border controls -- at the border. We

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were significant cues, they relaxed check everybody at the border and we

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dealt with queueing issues at major airports.

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In a report long on criticism, there are positives. At Heathrow, it says

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a high-profile alert system is in place to stop high risk individuals

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coming into the country. But the report says this is not happening at

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any other port or airport. And it describes how records relating to

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potential drugs and tobacco smuggling were wiped from a computer

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system. Just one issue for officials facing a parliamentary commission

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this afternoon. That suggests chaos in customs control and looks as

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though you have lost control. 650,000! The explanation? The system

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was getting overloaded. The government wants to appear tough

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when it comes to who is being allowed into the country. It knows

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on border security, it must do better.

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A passenger who managed to land a plane after the pilot collapsed has

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been hailed as a hero. The drama unfolded at Humberside Airport last

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night. John Wildey was talked down by a flight instructor on the

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ground. We spoke exclusively to him. On the tarmac, the plain surrounded

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by Imogen is the services after it had been blinded by a man who had

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never had a flying lesson in his life. At the controls was

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77-year-old John Wildey. After his friend the pilot had come -- had

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collapsed thousands of feet in the air. I did not know what to do, I

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thought, how long can I keep it going? My mouth was so dry, I would

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have given £1 million for a drink of water. A full-scale emergency had

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been called and he was asked to water. A full-scale emergency had

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bring the aircraft to Humberside Airport. I had plenty of doubts

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because I did not know what was going to happen. It is the

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uncertainty of it. I think it was Mark who said, you are going to do

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it anyway, you will do fine, so that gave me confidence. And this is the

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friend Mark who gave him the confidence. One of two flight

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instructors brought in to help him land the plane. There was a

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particular moment when I was on the runway surrounded by the helicopters

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and the plane and the fire service and the emergency services and there

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was everything going on and I cannot describe it. It is an image that

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will stay with me. Not only was this the first time he

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was at the controls of any plane, it was incomplete darkness and he did

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was at the controls of any plane, it not even know where the switch was

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to write up the instruments in the cockpit. -- light up. After three

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failed attempts, next came the landing. We touched and there were a

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couple of bumps. I suppose it was a controlled crash really. What was

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couple of bumps. I suppose it was a keeping you going? Survival. And

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amazingly, John Wildey says he will keeping you going? Survival. And

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fly again. 4th the Government announces a

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limit on welfare prices in a plan that it says will help the cost of

:15:40.:15:45.

living. Pizza is the most delightful thing invented and for

:15:45.:15:54.

me, it is dangerous. We talk to Tom Hanks about pizza, politics and his

:15:54.:15:57.

latest film Captain Phillips. And coming up on BBC News, should

:15:58.:16:04.

English players be English-born? Jack Wilshere thinks so, but the FA

:16:04.:16:08.

chairman Greg Dyke said that England will look to foreign-born

:16:08.:16:17.

players to represent the country. It is now five years since the

:16:17.:16:20.

banking crisis, which was followed by the Government's austerity

:16:20.:16:23.

programme. On the News at Six, we have often reported on the budget

:16:23.:16:26.

cuts that followed. Now BBC News has asked people what they think

:16:26.:16:29.

has happened to the quality of public services. Despite reductions

:16:29.:16:34.

in funding many people, 42 per cent, say the quality of services has not

:16:34.:16:39.

been affected. 40 per cent of those questioned said public services are

:16:39.:16:42.

now worse to some degree. But 15% said they are better, with many

:16:42.:16:44.

people mentioning libraries, recycling, parks, schools and bus

:16:45.:16:59.

services. 50,000 people marched at the Tory conference in Manchester

:16:59.:17:03.

against spending cuts they say hit the most bomb rubble. After five

:17:03.:17:09.

years of austerity, an opinion poll suggests six out of ten people

:17:09.:17:12.

think that public services have stayed the same, or actually

:17:12.:17:18.

improved. When you look at individual services, in many areas,

:17:18.:17:22.

more people think they have got better than words, such as

:17:22.:17:27.

recycling, 48% think that services are better, giving a score of plus

:17:27.:17:37.

36 percentage points. What about parks? The opinion poll gives green

:17:37.:17:42.

spaces a score of plus 19, and similarly with leisure centres,

:17:42.:17:44.

which the survey suggests positive view. Three years ago

:17:44.:17:53.

there were predictions of the end of local government as we knew it

:17:53.:17:59.

which has proved to be rubbish. This survey suggests people who use

:17:59.:18:03.

a service are more likely to say it has got better than the general

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population. Such as the scoring for meals on wheels. Among the losers

:18:11.:18:15.

of the services, the figure is higher. And libraries, the subject

:18:15.:18:23.

of protests about cuts, plus three say they have got better, but among

:18:23.:18:29.

users it is plus six. A in any rational world, people

:18:29.:18:34.

would say well done to the Government. Some areas court

:18:34.:18:41.

negatively with carrots the elderly getting -11. This woman said her

:18:41.:18:47.

care package got noticeably worse after a budget cuts. It has

:18:47.:18:51.

improved recently, but she worries about cameras being put under too

:18:51.:18:56.

much pressure. It was not knowing, you were not sure if somebody would

:18:56.:19:01.

come, what their capability was, if they did come, would they be

:19:01.:19:06.

rushed? Would they be trained to do what they are supposed to do? There

:19:06.:19:11.

is one area that schools negatively. More than any other. Potholes. Road

:19:11.:19:17.

maintenance budgets have been cut by many authorities and services

:19:17.:19:26.

scored minus 55. Every council can be more efficient but we cannot

:19:26.:19:31.

make the savings to counter a reduction of 40% in the grant from

:19:31.:19:35.

central government. We are not immune to the impact and that is

:19:35.:19:39.

what you see in services where people are less happy. Protesters

:19:39.:19:45.

will say that the cuts have further to go and we are barely halfway

:19:45.:19:50.

through. The survey suggests an explanation as to why so far

:19:50.:19:54.

Britain hasn't got more angry about austerity. The Queen's Baton Relay

:19:54.:20:04.

for the 2014 Commonwealth Games began this morning from Buckingham

:20:04.:20:06.

Palace, with her message to the Commonwealth placed inside the

:20:06.:20:09.

baton. It will travel to all 70 Commonwealth nations and

:20:09.:20:11.

territories, before arriving in Glasgow next July. Our Royal

:20:11.:20:13.

correspondent Nick Witchell watched the relay begin. The Olympic Games

:20:13.:20:23.

have a torch with a flame from a Greek temple and the Commonwealth

:20:23.:20:27.

Games have a baton with a message from the Queen. And he's been

:20:27.:20:33.

Glasgow's games, Sir Chris Hoy brought the baton to Buckingham

:20:33.:20:37.

Palace for the launch. It will inspire a generation not just in

:20:37.:20:42.

Scotland, but wider than that, with the partnership with Unicef

:20:42.:20:46.

improving the lives of children across the Commonwealth. So much

:20:46.:20:49.

positive will come out of these Commonwealth Games. The Queen was

:20:50.:20:53.

accompanied by the Duke of Edinburgh, recovered from surgery.

:20:53.:20:59.

She placed the message in the baton, an invitation to athletes to

:20:59.:21:04.

compete in Glasgow. It then began its journey around the Commonwealth,

:21:04.:21:09.

taken first by the former Olympic sprinter Allan Wells, accompanied

:21:09.:21:16.

by a youth ambassador for Unicef. Ahead lie the 70 countries and

:21:16.:21:20.

territories that make up the Commonwealth. The relay will take

:21:20.:21:25.

nine months until the baton arrives in Glasgow for the opening ceremony.

:21:25.:21:32.

It was handed on to Julie McIlroy, who will promote the para sport

:21:32.:21:38.

programme. It was the start of a journey that will culminate next

:21:38.:21:41.

July in what is hoped to be 12 memorable days for Sport and the

:21:41.:21:52.

City of Glasgow. The England footballer Jack

:21:52.:21:54.

Wilshere has stirred up a row by saying only people born in England

:21:55.:21:58.

should be allowed to play for their country. It follows claims that the

:21:58.:22:02.

Football Association made inquiries about the player Adnan Januzaj. He

:22:02.:22:12.

was born in Belgium. The three lions, one of the most potent

:22:12.:22:17.

symbols of national pride. Do you have to be born in England to where

:22:17.:22:23.

it? It is a divisive question. The lightning rod for the debate is

:22:23.:22:29.

Manchester United's Adnan Januzaj, who was born in Belgium to Albanian

:22:29.:22:36.

and cost of an parents. He could be eligible to play for England if he

:22:36.:22:39.

still lives here in five years. eligible to play for England if he

:22:39.:22:43.

Jack Wilshere said it is wrong and only players born in England should

:22:43.:22:49.

play for England. Others agreed. Because of the state of English

:22:49.:22:54.

football we do not have enough world class players and Adnan

:22:54.:22:56.

Januzaj looks like a fantastic world class players and Adnan

:22:56.:22:58.

talent and without putting pressure on him too soon, but just because

:22:59.:23:04.

you have -- you have lived in England for five years does not

:23:04.:23:07.

mean you can play for a national team. With concerns about home-

:23:07.:23:10.

mean you can play for a national grown talent, the FA wants to widen

:23:10.:23:14.

the net. The question of nationality in English football has

:23:14.:23:18.

always been sensitive, even though of the sport has embraced foreign-

:23:18.:23:25.

born players, such as Kevin Pietersen, the best example of the

:23:25.:23:31.

open policy. Today, he hit back at Jack

:23:31.:23:32.

I do not think that being born here... We would not have had Mo

:23:32.:23:53.

Farah on that basis. That is too extreme. It is an issue the FA will

:23:53.:23:59.

the cat. This is a big week for England. -- look at. Unfortunately

:23:59.:24:05.

for Roy Hodgson, the debate will not be decided in time to boost his

:24:05.:24:14.

World Cup chances. He is one of the best-known Hollywood actors, with a

:24:15.:24:18.

career spanning four decades. But Tom Hanks has revealed his Oscar-

:24:18.:24:20.

winning ability to transform himself into almost any character

:24:21.:24:23.

may have led to him developing type 2 diabetes. Tom Hanks as captain

:24:23.:24:35.

Richard Phillips, in a cargo ship hijacked by Somali pirates. Of all

:24:35.:24:39.

the roles he could have taken, what attracted him to this? It is the

:24:39.:24:45.

details of someone like Richard Phillips, I found it fascinating.

:24:45.:24:52.

The problems that he had to deal with that come after the moment

:24:52.:24:58.

that two skiffs with bad guy sure what. It is black and white. -- bad

:24:58.:25:11.

guys show up. They are bad guys and good guys. They are from Somalia, a

:25:11.:25:16.

place where unless you can get out good guys. They are from Somalia, a

:25:16.:25:22.

of there, a land of hopelessness. Tom Hanks has made films for over

:25:23.:25:27.

three decades. Has the business changed? With the advent of

:25:27.:25:35.

fabulous long form television, it has changed the game, but the

:25:35.:25:40.

expectation of going to the movies is different. The audience has an

:25:40.:25:47.

access to so much visual storytelling, it has to be somehow

:25:47.:25:54.

more special. Tom Hanks has lost weight for some films and gained it

:25:54.:25:58.

farmers. Physical changes that have not been good for his health. I

:25:58.:26:07.

have always had high blood sugar. It is genetic, but also lifestyle.

:26:07.:26:16.

What can you do? I have type 2 diabetes. I am 57. It is time to

:26:16.:26:23.

get a wake up call. You have to maintain the temple. I have to

:26:23.:26:28.

maintain the temple. What is your guilty pleasure? Pizza is the most

:26:29.:26:34.

delightful thing invented and for me it is dangerous. If you were not

:26:35.:26:40.

an actor, what would you be? I would be the Park Ranger, saying,

:26:40.:26:45.

let me tell you the history of national parks. I would be a guide

:26:45.:26:49.

at an historical place. That would national parks. I would be a guide

:26:49.:26:52.

be the greatest job in the world for me. He has been getting in

:26:52.:26:58.

practice, at Disneyland, plain Walt Disney, the other Tom Hanks film

:26:58.:27:04.

showing at the London Film Festival. -- playing Walt Disney. Now it is

:27:04.:27:06.

time for the weather. The premiere is happening at the

:27:06.:27:15.

moment in London. A changes on the way. It is much colder. Colder

:27:15.:27:29.

weather is moving southwards. Behind, the wind is strong. Heavy

:27:29.:27:38.

showers in eastern parts of England. Breezy elsewhere. Clearer skies in

:27:38.:27:45.

the West. Tomorrow morning, temperatures between four degrees

:27:45.:27:54.

and seven degrees. It will be feeling colder with the strength of

:27:54.:28:02.

the wind. In eastern England, showers. Maybe showers in the West

:28:02.:28:08.

to begin with. But largely a sunny day. In eastern parts, given the

:28:08.:28:18.

strong wind, touching gale-force around the coast, and showers, it

:28:18.:28:24.

will feel like six degrees and seven degrees. Rough seas around

:28:24.:28:32.

the coast are also to bear in mind. Getting stronger later tomorrow.

:28:33.:28:40.

The rain becoming more persistent. Further outbreaks of rain on Friday.

:28:40.:28:42.

But high pressure in the north and Further outbreaks of rain on Friday.

:28:42.:28:47.

west will bring lighter winds. And a lovely afternoon. Feeling cold in

:28:47.:28:53.

the south-east.

:28:53.:28:57.

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