10/02/2016 BBC News at Six


10/02/2016

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Almost 3,000 operations are cancelled at hospitals

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in England as junior doctors strike for the second time.

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They object to the proposed new pay and conditions

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The government insists they're fair.

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We are seriously concerned about this

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The door is open for discussions and I think what we are proposing

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is going to mean the vast majority of doctors don't see their pay cut.

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In fact, many of them will see their pay go up.

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But it will mean we can offer better care for patients.

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The government could just impose the new contracts.

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We'll be looking at what might happen if they do.

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Under pressure - now the head of Scotland Yard orders

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an independent review of police investigations into historic child

:00:52.:00:53.

Over 40 years on from the IRA bombings in Birmingham,

:00:54.:00:59.

can relatives of the victims get justice with an inquest?

:01:00.:01:10.

What will you do if there is no middle number?

:01:11.:01:14.

The growing shortage of teachers in England -

:01:15.:01:16.

how the government has missed its recruitment targets

:01:17.:01:18.

We are going to do something so good and so fast and the world will

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respect us again. And Donald Trump on bullish form,

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after a win in New Hampshire takes him closer to the Republican

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nomination for President. And on Reporting Scotland at 6.30:

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Police say organised football hooliganism is a problem for two

:01:33.:01:34.

thirds of Scottish clubs. Child abuse survivors accuse

:01:35.:01:37.

the government of "becoming complicit" in the cover-up

:01:38.:01:39.

of offences, for failing A second 24 hour strike by junior

:01:40.:01:42.

doctors in England is underway Almost 3,000 operations

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have been cancelled - The main bone of

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contention is a new pay The British Medical Association says

:02:10.:02:14.

the government should put The Health Secretary -

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Jeremy Hunt - insists junior But he's threatening

:02:18.:02:22.

to impose the contracts They came to protest at Westminster.

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And they mounted picket and demonstrations at hospitals around

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England. If we are working longer hours, we are tired and not getting

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the support and training that we need. I don't know how they expect

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that to happen. Junior doctors walked out of routine and

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nonemergency care in a dispute with the government over pay and working

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hours. We will stand firm for our patients and future generations in

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this country. A pensioners' group joined junior doctors demonstrating

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at Milton Keynes university hospital. Patients and visitors were

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divided in their view. I think they have got a genuine case. They work

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hard, long hours. Doctors shouldn't do that. They are professional

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people. They should support people. One visitor showed her sympathies by

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delivering food to the pickets. It is in middle of the day and the

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outpatient department here is usually pretty busy but not today

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because of the strike. The hospital says it has cancelled fewer

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outpatient appointments than it did on the last strike date in January,

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and it is the same story for routine operations. Where was Jeremy Hunt?

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He was making his case that the government had moved a long way to

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meet doctors' concerns and a fair deal was on the table. There is just

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the issue about pay rates for Saturdays. We are offering something

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that is better for doctors who work regularly on a Saturday and the

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nurses working in the same hospital and for the ambulance driver who

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takes a patient to the hospital and for the health care assistants. I

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think it is a good deal, it is a fair deal and we should work

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together to do the right thing for patients. The government has made

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pretty clear that, if negotiations don't get anywhere, it will impose a

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new junior doctors' contract, and that point seems to have got a lot

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closer given that talks have stalled again. In the fight for public

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opinion, doctors took to social media again to promote their cause.

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Both sides seem firmly entrenched in the doctors union says it is down to

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the government to make the next move.

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If a resolution can't be found, one option the government has

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up its sleeve is to impose the new contract on junior doctors.

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Christian Fraser is here, what's going wrong and could

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Let's just quickly remind ourselves of the new contract currently

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on the table - and where that negotiation has stalled

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So we know the government has offered this 11% rise in basic pay,

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In return for a cut in those hours that currently qualify

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The problem is that the government insists that in future Saturdays

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with unsociable hours - on Saturdays - starting after 5pm.

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Sundays will still attract the higher, premium pay.

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The BMA has rejected that putting forward a counter offer.

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They want to retain extra pay for Saturdays in return

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for a smaller rise in that basic salary -

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And that's because some junior doctors complain that under

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the government's offer their pay is going to fall.

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They also say it is about safe working hours.

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So could the Health Secretary decide to impose it?

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Well, it seems he won't accept a precedent that complicates his

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negotiations with other groups in the NHS, like consultants

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What's more - he might think he has to.

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The next intake of junior doctors will start work in August -

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their contracts have to be sent out mid February,

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and that deadline is fast approaching.

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New doctors coming into the NHS, and they have no existing contracts,

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so you simply say, "Here are the terms,

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If they are existing employees of the NHS,

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doctors employed by the NHS, who have indefinite term contracts,

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it is much more difficult, because you have to effectively

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terminate the existing terms and conditions and impose new ones.

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More complicated for those with existing contracts.

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Health is devolved to the nations of the UK, and there's no sign

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Scotland, Wales and N Ireland are going to change

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Perhaps in the future more lucrative employment will lie

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And in that scenario England could risk losing some of its best

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talent - to the other parts of the UK.

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investigations into historic child abuse cases.

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It follows angry criticism over the handling of inquiries

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Our Home Affairs Correspondent Tom Symonds reports

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The most serious allegations possible have been made against men

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The Met said it would examine them without fear or favour.

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But no one has been arrested and no charges are being considered.

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And as Scotland Yard appears to be admitting it can learn some lessons

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from the way this sort of case is handled.

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Surely it is right that someone should look at that and try

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approach these difficult, historic allegations were sometimes

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It is so easy to make allegations, but then how do you prove them?

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It is something we need to all talk about seriously.

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The Henriques Review review will examine past sexual allegations

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Examining police procedures rather than evidence.

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Findings and recommendations will be published.

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But not sensitive or confidential information.

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A key question, whether the Met went too far, when one alleged victim

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known by the pseudonym Nick came forward, describing abuse and child

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With no bodies and uncertainty about who might have died,

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the Met has faced a bitter criticism, that it has been

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too willing to believe Nick's allegations.

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And if they have, investigated, quickly, and a decision made

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So those people not left in the public domain not hung out

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to dry and not given natural justice.

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The Met Commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan Howe

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Shortly he will face the family of the late Lord Brittan to discuss

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the handling of a rape case against him.

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Today he has effectively asked a judge to decide is what his force

:09:19.:09:22.

The family of the murdered Surrey schoolgirl, Milly Dowler,

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on hearing the details revealed by her killer of what took place

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Levi Bellfield was jailed for Milly's murder in 2011,

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but admitted his guilt only last year.

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In a statement, the Dowlers said he had confessed to her repeated

:09:45.:09:54.

The Republican Donald Trump - and the left-wing Democrat

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Bernie Sanders - are a step closer to winning their parties' nomination

:09:57.:09:59.

for the US presidential election in November.

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Despite losing out in the last round in Iowa, this time they both

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won clear victories in the New Hampshire primary.

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Mr Trump got twice as many votes as his nearest rival -

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while Mr Sanders beat Hillary Clinton by more

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Our North America editor Jon Sopel has more.

:10:14.:10:20.

At 8pm last night news of unusual seismic activity in what they call

:10:21.:10:24.

Heralding a political earthquake and two landslides.

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One on the left and the other on the right.

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At Trump headquarters, the news that their man had won

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I wanted to congratulate the other candidates, OK.

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It is always tough for them tomorrow.

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And then it was onto his favourite riff, winning.

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We are going to start winning again and we are going to win so much

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We are going to make America so great again.

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# They say you want a revolution...

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Donald Trump is leaving the stage to the tune of Revolution

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What he has done, he has turned hype into reality.

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He has turned large rallies into votes at polling stations.

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And who would bet now against him going all the way and winning

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Record numbers due to reach polling stations to vote in this revolution.

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People expressing unhappiness with their economic prospects,

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Washington politics, America's place in the world.

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And what did the revolutionary leader of the left do?

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While waiting to make his victory speech, he played basketball

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On stage he was taking a shot at more familiar targets.

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Given the enormous crises facing our country, it is just too

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late for the same old, same old establishment politics,

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Hillary Clinton put on a brave face last night.

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And in a drawn-out battle with Bernie Sanders

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But a few months ago she would have been the favourite to win here.

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The England and Sunderland footballer Adam Johnson has pleaded

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guilty to sexual activity with a child - and to grooming.

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The 28 year old has denied two other charges.

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At the time it was the worst ever terrorist attack on British soil.

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In November 1974, 21 people were killed and over 180 injured

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in Birmingham when the IRA exploded bombs in two city centre pubs.

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Six men were wrongly convicted of the crime.

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Now, over 40 years later, relatives of three of the victims

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are asking a coroner to resume an inquest into their deaths.

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They are the families who have campaigned for 41 years for answers.

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Sisters and brothers of some of the 21 who were killed.

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Making the case now for the inquests into their deaths to be resumed.

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On the 21st of November, 1974, two bombs exploded in the heart

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of Birmingham city centre, in two pubs, full mostly

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A terrible atrocity which killed the innocent and injured

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18-year-old Maxine Hamilton was one of those who died.

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When I ran upstairs, I jumped on the bed and I gave her a hug,

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And it was the last time I saw her alive.

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Six men were convicted of the murders in 1975 and served 16

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The moment they walk free from court.

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Their convictions overturned in what became known

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as the miscarriage of justice of the Birmingham Six.

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Paddy Hill was one of those wrongly convicted, and today he is also

:14:33.:14:34.

We never got justice, but the one thing we can get

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is the thing we deserve the most, and that is the truth.

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After hearing legal argument, the coroner will decide

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whether the inquests can be held four decades on.

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Representing the victims' families, Ashley Underwood QC told her

:14:58.:15:02.

that many questions remain,

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including what West Midlands Police knew in advance of the threat.

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He said they might have been tipped off by an IRA informant.

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Who carried out the Birmingham pub bombings remains unanswered,

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West Midlands Police told the court the investigation remains open.

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They argued the coroner has no legal power to resume the inquests

:15:19.:15:23.

Almost 3,000 operations are cancelled as junior doctors

:15:24.:15:36.

in England strike for a second time in a dispute over new contracts.

:15:37.:15:41.

And still to come, the growing number of teachers in secondary

:15:42.:15:44.

schools in England teaching subjects they only have an A level in.

:15:45.:15:48.

And coming up on Reporting Scotland at 630:

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Riding high - stunt cyclist Danny MacAskill helps launch

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And pitch imperfect - are artificial surfaces

:15:56.:16:01.

There's a week to go before the crucial European summit

:16:02.:16:13.

at which the prime minister hopes he will be able to agree the final

:16:14.:16:17.

terms of Britain's new relationship with the EU.

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Terms he hopes will be enough to keep Britain in the EU.

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It will of course be voters, not politicians, who take the final

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So, along with pollsters 'Britain Thinks', we've assembled

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a jury of undecided voters to consider the issues.

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Our Home Editor Mark Easton was with them in Lichfield

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Across its long and troubled history, Lichfield Cathedral has

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often borne witness to a nation's divisions and its search for common

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ground. Thank you for coming to Lichfield Cathedral, a building

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dripping with the artefacts of Britain and Empire. What you think

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about Britain's relationship with Europe? What is one word which comes

:17:01.:17:07.

to mind when I say European Union? None of the Jerry has made how they

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will vote in the referendum and many say they did not know enough about

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the issues -- none of the jury. Using clips from reports, we asked

:17:15.:17:21.

about identity, whether EU membership dilutes or enhances the

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British way of life. We can be part of the EU, but also keep our

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identity and we have managed to do this for so many years, as it is.

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Why can't we continue? We have already submerged to little bit

:17:37.:17:42.

already, I think. Sad, really. British identity has been dilutes,

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but I think quite positively, because it makes us more open to

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greater integration. I still maintain a certain degree of my

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cultural roots while living in the UK and feeling part of Europe. They

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can stick the money where the sun does not shine. They were also asked

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to consider the financial impact. It cost something like 39 and in pounds

:18:08.:18:13.

per day to be in the EU, but we are not informed about what benefits we

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are getting -- ?39 million per day. I feel quite ignorant about what we

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are told. When you think about it, ?39 million, where does that come

:18:24.:18:27.

from? We are forgetting the major issues in this country, poverty,

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homelessness, within this country. If we come out of Europe we will

:18:34.:18:39.

have to pay more to deal with migrants, said the cost of things

:18:40.:18:44.

will have to go up. If we pull out of the EU there will be bad

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feelings, and it would raise the prices for us, not the general

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public, but for businesses and where trading is done and the deals that

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are made. Al final discussion focused on whether the benefits of

:18:59.:19:02.

membership outweigh the loss of control in terms of British law and

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the UK border. I think it is a positive thing that I can work

:19:08.:19:10.

anywhere, and many of my friends work in other European countries and

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is very good that we have that passport to go all around. The

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problem is, we're getting people from Romania or Poland, other

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countries, very poor country, they can come here and not necessarily

:19:24.:19:27.

have a job and they can get benefits straightaway, they have free health

:19:28.:19:31.

care straightaway. There are people that have come from Poland that I

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know who are doing jobs without being rude to British people, jobs

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that the younger people in our generation just won't do. We are

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only small and there is only so many we can take before it strains our

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resources to the point where we are one of the countries who will be

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struggling. I'm wondering whether this is safe to pull up the

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drawbridge down. Otherwise we will be completely sucked up and dried up

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and Great Britain will not exist any more. You cannot live in splendid

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isolation, I don't think you can. We do need other countries. I know it

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has been hard, but we are going to make you choose, as you will have

:20:11.:20:15.

two in the referendum. In our case we will ask you a simple question,

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in or out? A narrow 9-7 victory for staying in, but our divided jury

:20:25.:20:28.

were in total agreement on one thing, they all wanted to learn more

:20:29.:20:31.

and think more before referendum day.

:20:32.:20:37.

Let's take a brief look at some of the day's other

:20:38.:20:40.

The daughter of murdered businessman Akhtar Javeed has appealed

:20:41.:20:44.

for witnesses to come forward to try to gain more information

:20:45.:20:47.

Mr Javeed, who ran a soft drinks company, was fatally shot

:20:48.:20:53.

during a raid at a warehouse in Birmingham last week.

:20:54.:20:55.

The Government has announced a review into whether tidal energy

:20:56.:20:57.

As we reported last night, a proposed ?1 billion tidal lagoon

:20:58.:21:02.

in Swansea bay has already been delayed by a year.

:21:03.:21:06.

The company who'd build it say they need a go-ahead within six

:21:07.:21:09.

weeks, but the government says it won't make any decisions

:21:10.:21:11.

The SNP said today that Scotland could lose ?3 billion of funding

:21:12.:21:17.

under plans to adjust the grant it receives from the UK Treasury.

:21:18.:21:20.

The Prime Minister assured MPs that negotiations were ongoing -

:21:21.:21:23.

but said there must be fairness across the rest

:21:24.:21:28.

There's a growing shortage of teachers in England -

:21:29.:21:35.

according to the official spending watchdog.

:21:36.:21:38.

The National Audit Office says the Government has

:21:39.:21:40.

missed its teacher recruitment targets for the last four years

:21:41.:21:42.

despite investment in teacher training.

:21:43.:21:44.

And that more secondary school pupils are being taught by teachers

:21:45.:21:46.

Our Education Editor Branwen Jeffreys has more.

:21:47.:21:53.

Matt is a newly qualified PE teacher so what has tempted him to come back

:21:54.:21:56.

My teachers inspired me when I was in school and it really

:21:57.:22:05.

We've been doing some work on averages and we've looked

:22:06.:22:13.

at the mean, the median, and the range...

:22:14.:22:14.

Getting people to do this is a lot harder.

:22:15.:22:17.

Maths teachers are in short supply, even with government money on offer

:22:18.:22:19.

Hello, I'm the head of the Dean Trust, a group

:22:20.:22:23.

This school has resorted to adverts on local radio but in core subjects

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like maths, English and sciences, quality is an issue.

:22:36.:22:37.

We interviewed recently for a core subject.

:22:38.:22:38.

We didn't appoint because we didn't feel they met the standard.

:22:39.:22:41.

I've since found out that those teachers have all got jobs.

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And it tells us how desperate some schools are.

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I don't blame them, because they need teachers

:22:49.:22:51.

in front of children, but they are not just the teachers

:22:52.:22:54.

who we would put in front of our children.

:22:55.:22:57.

For the last four years, recruitment targets for teacher

:22:58.:23:00.

training have been missed in England, leaving gaps in 14 out

:23:01.:23:02.

In physics, 28% of lessons are taken by someone with no

:23:03.:23:09.

Headteachers in many parts of England are telling us

:23:10.:23:15.

it is incredibly difficult to recruit enough good teachers.

:23:16.:23:18.

There is a huge gap between the difficulties

:23:19.:23:22.

they are describing and the picture the government is painting.

:23:23.:23:25.

This report suggests that ministers should be paying far more attention

:23:26.:23:29.

to what is actually going on in schools.

:23:30.:23:34.

Overall, we are seeing more people coming into teaching than leaving,

:23:35.:23:37.

we are seeing more people returning to the profession than ever before

:23:38.:23:42.

and there are record numbers of people in teaching than ever

:23:43.:23:44.

before, but we are facing the twin challenges of increasing pupil

:23:45.:23:47.

So keeping Matt and other graduates in teaching could get harder.

:23:48.:23:55.

It is a challenge not just in England but across the UK.

:23:56.:23:58.

Now have you ever wondered if your pet can tell how

:23:59.:24:11.

Well, a team of scientists from Sussex University have

:24:12.:24:15.

concluded that horses are able to recognise

:24:16.:24:16.

They showed photographs of angry or happy human faces to a group

:24:17.:24:21.

of horses which responded negatively to the angry ones.

:24:22.:24:23.

They also caused the horses' heart rates to rise significantly.

:24:24.:24:28.

I hope the horses will react positively to a good weather

:24:29.:24:42.

forecast! We have a view hurdles to cross first, though. It is going to

:24:43.:24:46.

be very cold in the next week. -- we have a few.

:24:47.:24:52.

Sharp showers in the South West of England and South Wales, and wintry

:24:53.:24:58.

showers in the north of Scotland. Temperatures dipping down in the

:24:59.:25:02.

rural areas and the suburbs. It could be an icy start, across parts

:25:03.:25:08.

of Scotland, the wintry showers slowly drifting across the North

:25:09.:25:13.

East of Scotland. We will have fog patches, but they should lift, and

:25:14.:25:16.

many places will have a dry start to the day, but there will be some

:25:17.:25:23.

areas of cloud floating around. Temperatures close to zero, milder

:25:24.:25:27.

in the South West and south Wales, rain shower set, primarily, around

:25:28.:25:34.

the coast. Sawmill drift in man. -- some will drift inland. Most other

:25:35.:25:42.

places enjoying plenty of dry weather, if not sunny weather,

:25:43.:25:48.

around 5-9d north to south. Tomorrow night, a frost developing for many,

:25:49.:25:52.

wintry showers in northern England, and the area of low pressure

:25:53.:25:56.

bringing wet weather close to South West England and by Friday sharp

:25:57.:26:01.

showers across the South. Another band of wintry showers going to

:26:02.:26:04.

Scotland, and most places on Friday will also have dry weather, but

:26:05.:26:09.

quite chilly. The weekend is a very interesting, quite challenging, it

:26:10.:26:13.

looks like it will be cold for many, rain in the South, and the chance or

:26:14.:26:20.

the risk of some of that rain turning to snow across parts of

:26:21.:26:23.

central Britain. We will keep you posted. Thanks for joining us.

:26:24.:26:29.

Almost 3000 operations are cancelled as junior doctors in England strike

:26:30.:26:39.

for a second time in a dispute over new contracts.

:26:40.:26:42.

That's all from the BBC News at Six - so it's goodbye from me -

:26:43.:26:44.

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