03/03/2017 BBC News at Six


03/03/2017

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Theresa May calls on the party faithful in Scotland to fight

:00:00.:00:00.

In a bid to stave off a second referendum on independence,

:00:07.:00:12.

she lays into the Scottish Nationalists.

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A tunnel vision nationalism, which focuses only on independence

:00:16.:00:17.

The SNP, for its part, has accused Mrs May of mind-boggling hypocrisy.

:00:18.:00:26.

The Shoreham Airshow disaster in which 11 people were killed.

:00:27.:00:33.

An inquiry concludes the pilot flew too low and was too slow.

:00:34.:00:38.

The Red Cross claims chemical weapons have been used in an attack

:00:39.:00:43.

Not fit for purpose - scathing criticism of

:00:44.:00:45.

Cumbria Police's botched investigation into the death

:00:46.:00:47.

The DUP and Sinn Fein are returned as the biggest parties in Northern

:00:48.:01:02.

Ireland's second election in a year, raising

:01:03.:01:03.

questions about the future of power-sharing.

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And the Pub of the Year, saved from closure by regulars

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and transformed into the best in the country.

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In Sportsday, world number one Andy Murray is playing for a place

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in the final at the Dubai Championships.

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Good evening and welcome to the BBC News at Six.

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mind-boggling hypocrisy on the other.

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The Prime Minister and the SNP traded accusations, as Theresa May

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addressed the Conservative Party conference in Glasgow.

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She claimed the SNP are pursuing independence at any cost and called

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on the party faithful to campaign for a united Britain post-Brexit.

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The SNP claimed she was making a power grab.

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A rather lonely little protest came out to greet the Prime Minister,

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who has come here to try and resist another referendum

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Theresa May has heard the warnings that the SNP really might

:02:14.:02:21.

She said they should focus on governing Scotland.

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Politics is not a game and government is not

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a platform from which to pursue constitutional obsessions.

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A tunnel vision nationalism, which focuses only on independence

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But just in case, she's already rehearsing the arguments

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against Scottish independence and for the union.

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We are four nations, but at heart we are one people.

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Let us live up to that high ideal, and let us never stop making loudly

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and clearly the positive optimistic and passionate case for our precious

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A key message there from Theresa May to Nicola Sturgeon, stop all this

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The people of Scotland don't want another referendum,

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It's certainly the very last thing she wants.

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No one here wants to fight a referendum whilst also

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Once written off, they are now the SNP's biggest challengers.

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They insist they want to stop another referendum because it

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would be divisive, not because they might lose.

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If there is to be another referendum on Scottish independence,

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I think there is every chance that the no campaign,

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the unionist campaign, the pro-UK campaign could win

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by even more because the economic case for independence has utterly

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collapsed and also, the SNP forcing this onto a public in Scotland that

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don't want it would see them have an immediate hit

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and make it a far harder mountain for them to climb.

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Outside the Conference, some people preparing for the fight.

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Senior SNP figures say it is the Prime Minister's refusal

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to consider a separate, bespoke Brexit deal for Scotland

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I think if the UK Government does not reach a compromise agreement

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with the Scottish Government to protect our place in Europe,

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there will be a referendum on Scotland's independence

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because we have to protect our place in Europe.

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Either the Prime Minister's rhetoric mean something and she respects

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the people of Scotland and respects the Scottish Government,

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Time's running out for the Prime Minister.

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It is the Scottish Conservative Party who will have to lead

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the fight for the union if there is to be

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another referendum. They may soon have a

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You heard Angus Robertson saying time is running out. What does he

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mean? The SNP say that if the UK Government want to avoid another

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referendum on Scottish independence, they must agree to a separate Brexit

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deal for Scotland, which would allow Scotland to stay in the EU single

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market. They say they want a commitment on that before Article 50

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is triggered later this month. The pilot of the plane which caused

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the Shoreham Airshow disaster, in which 11 people died,

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was flying too low and was too slow. Those are the findings of the final

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report into the crash in 2015 by air The pilot, who survived,

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says he remembers nothing about the crash, but investigators

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say he could have aborted his final manoeuvre to prevent the accident,

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as Richard Westcott reports. A vintage jet crashing out

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of the blue a packed Today's report explains

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what happened. As pilot Andy Hill begins his loop,

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he's more than 300 feet too low and At the top of the manoeuvre,

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the engine should He's still too low

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and slow but doesn't And four seconds later,

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by around this point here, he could, potentially still

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have saved the plane. Andy Hill says he can't

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remember anything about the The investigators found

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that he was used to flying a much smaller plane and may

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have got confused. The pilot was also

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qualified to fly other aircraft at displays, including

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another vintage jet aircraft called We found that the Jet Provost,

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at the top of such a manoeuvre would achieve the speed

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and height very similar to that It's certainly a possibility that he

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had misremembered the figures from The report says a lack

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of safety planning was the reason this

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accident was so deadly. No-one was clear who was in charge

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of safety, was it the Plenty was done to protect people

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inside the airshow, but almost no thought went into protecting people

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who happened to be driving by. I remember seeing it hit the ground

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and at that moment I just instinctively turned away

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and covered my face. Thomas was standing on this spot

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when the Hunter crashed just feet away, the fireball

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burning his hands and legs. Slightly angry that not enough

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thought was put into the planning, into the risk

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assessment, the report showing there was a lax culture around

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the preparation of these displays. The feeling was that

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it was saved last year, if you put it on again

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it will be the same. Among the 11 who died

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was Mark Reeves, a 53-year-old plane enthusiast whose family

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gave their reaction. The early days of this crash

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were getting over, trying to move on with, you know,

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get back to normality, with the funeral but as time has

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gone on it has turned to the investigation,

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why this has It's turned to how it could happen

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and I don't see a near The family now know why this plane

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crashed but with the pilot still being investigated

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for manslaughter and the inquests to come, it may be months before

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they know if anyone will be held to I am standing on the bridge where

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thousands came from all over the world to lay flowers after the

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accident. In the background, the lights of the airfield. The safety

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team has done its job. All eyes move on to the police investigation and

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inquests. They have already changed the rules for air shows, tightening

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up risk assessments and training for pilots. But what is not clear is if

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they are going to change what they do for the aircraft. These vintage

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aircraft will no longer be allowed to perform aerobatics if flying over

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land and people, only over the sea. The results from yesterday's

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election to the Northern Ireland The Democratic Unionists have seen a

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drop in their vote but are on course to be the largest party. 35 of 90

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seats have been declared. The final results will not be

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known until tomorrow. Chris Buckler is at

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a count in Belfast. Fights between the DUP and Sinn Fein

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over a botched energy scheme, the Irish language and more, led to the

:09:43.:09:46.

collapse of power-sharing at storm on. But they have been returned as

:09:47.:09:50.

the two biggest parties in Northern Ireland. The votes are being counted

:09:51.:09:54.

but it is clear they may have made gains at the expense of the centre

:09:55.:10:00.

ground, the opposition parties. All of that raises questions about

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whether a power-sharing government can be formed again. This report

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contains flash photography. Belfast's reputation has long been

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linked to divisive politics and if anything, the latest election has

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cemented that. People returned to the ballot box to make their choice.

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After the collapse of Northern Ireland's power-sharing government,

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that is anything but a laughing matter. For those who find

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themselves voting again just ten months after the last election.

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There is too much bickering and fighting. Instead of looking after

:10:40.:10:44.

the people and trying to do something for the people. There is

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too much in-house fighting. They are trying to blame each other for what

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is happening in the country. Stalemate. The results of this vote

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look unlikely to make much difference to the stand-off at storm

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on. If walking out of government was a gamble for Sinn Fein, it has paid

:11:07.:11:11.

off. They have increased their share of the vote, narrowing the gap

:11:12.:11:15.

between them and their old coalition partners, the DUP. A personal

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success for their new leader and potential Deputy First Minister,

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Michelle O'Neill. The office of first and it is then needs to do

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more than anyone else elected. They need to step outside their comfort

:11:31.:11:33.

zone, be true to the principles of power-sharing and work on the basis

:11:34.:11:39.

of equality. That will be seen as a message to Arlene Foster, the DUP

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leader forced from the office of First Minister Win Sinn Fein brought

:11:43.:11:47.

down power-sharing. The ordinary man and woman in Northern Ireland want

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an assembly up and running and working for them with my party and

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all parties playing their role. We have proved we are up for that and

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we call on other parties to be up for it and stop messing about with

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devolution and wrecking the hope and aspirations of the entire community.

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The DUP and Sinn Fein have three weeks to do a deal, otherwise people

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face the prospect of the Westminster government is taking over the

:12:14.:12:16.

running of Northern Ireland, at least for a period. To avoid that,

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Irish nationalists and British Unionists must come together again.

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What might matter is how much they value power.

:12:26.:12:28.

Officials in Ireland say human remains of a significant number

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of babies and infant children have been discovered in underground

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chambers at the site of a former church-run mother and baby home.

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Excavations were ordered at Tuam in County Galway by a commission set

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up by the Irish government last October, following allegations

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about the deaths of nearly 800 infants at the home

:12:42.:12:44.

The Red Cross says chemical weapons appear to have been used

:12:45.:13:06.

in the Iraqi city of Mosul, which government forces

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are trying to liberate from so-called Islamic State.

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12 people have been hospitalised but exactly what chemical has been

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Wyre Davies has been to the hospital in the city

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It is what local civilians, the Iraqi government and international

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aid agencies had most feared, an 11-year-old boy lying in a hospital

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ward with serious burns, blisters and breathing difficulties. Doctors

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are in no doubt that this is a deliberate attack with chemical

:13:32.:13:38.

weapons. We have the mainly it has affected the respiratory tract, so

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some people have breathing problems, like an asthma attack. The majority

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of patients have developed different sizes of blisters, especially in

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exposed areas. When the patients come, we have to take care that they

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are properly decontaminated with water and soap, the whole body. We

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destroy their clothes. They will get new clothes. If they need

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medication, mainly for the respirator it, for the lungs, they

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get medication. Fighting between government forces and so-called

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Islamic State has driven thousands from their homes to refugee camps.

:14:17.:14:22.

But with 700,000 civilians still trapped in Western Mosul, that

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Islamic State might now be using chemical weapons is a huge concern.

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Fighting is still heavy but government troops say they are

:14:34.:14:36.

easing Islamic State's grip on Mosul, its last major stronghold in

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Iraq. With Islamic State threatening to kill those who leave the city,

:14:45.:14:48.

and relentless shelling from the government side, escape is not easy.

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This family was inside the western part of the city this morning and as

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they escaped, there was fighting inside their house. Two members of

:14:57.:15:00.

the security forces that freed them were killed, and according to them,

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many more are being kept by so-called Islamic State as human

:15:05.:15:11.

shields. Sammy Mahmud and his family survived the warped logic of Islamic

:15:12.:15:14.

State and count themselves lucky to have escaped with nothing but their

:15:15.:15:22.

lives. Under IAS, having a simple SIMM card for a phone, or a woman

:15:23.:15:26.

refusing to cover her face, could mean certain death. My kids have not

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been to school for three years, and we lived in constant fear of

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upsetting the Islamists. Islamic State may be facing imminent defeat

:15:37.:15:41.

in Mosul, but as the latest incident has demonstrated, no one is safe

:15:42.:15:45.

from an organisation that is showing its own people precious little

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humanity. Theresa May calls on Scottish Tories

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to fight for the union and warns the SNP against 'tunnel vision'

:15:50.:15:56.

nationalism. And I'll be reporting

:15:57.:16:02.

from the North Yorkshire inn which has been crowned Pub

:16:03.:16:05.

of the Year by the Campaign for Real Ale for its beer,

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its open fires and its atmosphere. Coming up in Sportsday in the next

:16:09.:16:15.

15 minutes on BBC News, England's cricketers have started

:16:16.:16:18.

strongly in Antigua as they look to make a winning start

:16:19.:16:22.

in their one-day series The number of workers on zero hours

:16:23.:16:24.

contracts has reached a record high over the course of last year -

:16:25.:16:37.

close to a million people. For 2016, that meant nearly 14% more

:16:38.:16:41.

people than the year before were employed on the controversial

:16:42.:16:46.

contracts that don't guarantee But the new figures also reveal

:16:47.:16:49.

an indication that big companies may now be going off the idea of zero

:16:50.:16:54.

hours contracts, as our Economics Nadine Cooper from

:16:55.:16:57.

Spalding in Lincolnshire. She sorts and packs potatoes

:16:58.:17:03.

and is on a zero hours contract - no guarantee about the amount

:17:04.:17:06.

of work she will do each week. It is flexible and it fits

:17:07.:17:09.

with her family life. Nadine is one of that large

:17:10.:17:13.

band of employees happy It is good for me because it gives

:17:14.:17:15.

me family quality time as well. When my wife is at work,

:17:16.:17:25.

I look after our little boy. When my wife is on her four days

:17:26.:17:29.

off, I come in for two days But then I also get two

:17:30.:17:34.

days as a family with my A very different story

:17:35.:17:39.

for Sophie Shaw, who worked for seven years on zero hours

:17:40.:17:42.

contracts in the I was working in restaurants

:17:43.:17:44.

on zero-hour contracts. I started off with one but I would

:17:45.:17:51.

get three hours one week, You couldn't live like that,

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so I ended up taking on two other jobs in order to have some

:17:55.:17:58.

kind of security. I ended up having to move

:17:59.:18:00.

all the way from York to London Sports Direct was criticised

:18:01.:18:06.

for Victorian working practices after it was revealed that thousands

:18:07.:18:12.

of its staff were on zero hours. That company has reformed and many

:18:13.:18:18.

other firms are seeing zero hours as a hindrance,

:18:19.:18:20.

not a help. The rate of growth in the number

:18:21.:18:24.

of contracts has slowed markedly. A JD Wetherspoon pub

:18:25.:18:27.

in central London. But what happened at this company

:18:28.:18:30.

is really interesting. Tens of thousands of staff at this

:18:31.:18:33.

pub chain used to be on zero hours contracts,

:18:34.:18:38.

but the company decided to change and encouraged people

:18:39.:18:41.

onto guaranteed hours. Yes, the number of people on zero

:18:42.:18:44.

hours is at a record, but lots of businesses are coming

:18:45.:18:46.

away from them. No-one wants to have their

:18:47.:18:50.

employment practices dragged through the media or even

:18:51.:18:54.

Westminster, so I think weighing up the different options

:18:55.:18:56.

they have available to them You know, we have seen the zero

:18:57.:19:01.

hours contracts workers If you're worried about putting food

:19:02.:19:08.

on the table and how many hours you will get,

:19:09.:19:12.

it is not the ideal recipe And that issue of low pay

:19:13.:19:14.

is worrying for this man, the Chancellor, planning

:19:15.:19:18.

for his budget next week. Because low pay means less

:19:19.:19:20.

tax for the Treasury, not good if you're trying

:19:21.:19:22.

to balance the books. Expect action when Philip Hammond

:19:23.:19:25.

unveils the contents of the famous The government says it's likely

:19:26.:19:27.

to refer a proposed ?12 billion merger between Sky and 21st

:19:28.:19:37.

Century Fox to the media Concerns have been raised over

:19:38.:19:39.

what would be one of the biggest ever media mergers in UK history -

:19:40.:19:46.

about broadcasting Rupert Murdoch tried

:19:47.:19:48.

this before and failed, Rupert Murdoch tried this in 2010,

:19:49.:20:00.

when News Corporation, his company, placed a bid for BSkyB and we had

:20:01.:20:04.

the phone hacking scandal leading to the closure of the The News of the

:20:05.:20:09.

World and the Leveson Inquiry and he calculate it that it was too toxic.

:20:10.:20:13.

Since then he has split the company in two between the news division and

:20:14.:20:18.

21st Century Fox, the entertainment division, and the bid is coming from

:20:19.:20:21.

the entertainment division and he thinks that tactic will be enough to

:20:22.:20:25.

convince the mega later not to worry about this on competition grounds.

:20:26.:20:29.

Thank you for joining us. -- the regulator to worry.

:20:30.:20:31.

Cumbria Police has unreservedly accepted the criticism

:20:32.:20:33.

of an investigation into the death of 13-month-old Poppi

:20:34.:20:35.

The police complaints watchdog found it wasn't fit for purpose and that

:20:36.:20:41.

officers didn't look sufficiently into whether she had been abused

:20:42.:20:43.

A family court judge ruled she had probably been sexually

:20:44.:20:47.

assaulted by her father, who denies any wrongdoing.

:20:48.:20:48.

Poppi Worthington only lived for 13 months. She was found with serious

:20:49.:21:02.

injuries at her home in Barrow in 2012. The investigation which

:21:03.:21:05.

followed her death was so flawed that more than four years on,

:21:06.:21:08.

serious failings are still coming to light. The watchdog the IPCC has

:21:09.:21:14.

published a report levelling heavy criticism and Cumbria police. The

:21:15.:21:19.

investigator found evidence that there had been an unstructured

:21:20.:21:23.

investigation, that it was not fit for purpose. Concerns into the way

:21:24.:21:33.

that the scene had been managed. It details a catalogue of mistakes made

:21:34.:21:36.

by detectives saying that crucial evidence was thrown away, when

:21:37.:21:40.

weren't interviewed for eight months and there was enough evidence to

:21:41.:21:46.

arrest Poppi's father on day one. A High Court judge ruled that Paul

:21:47.:21:48.

Worthington probably sexually assaulted his daughter just before

:21:49.:21:53.

her death. He denies this and has never been charged, and there is

:21:54.:21:57.

strong criticism of the slowness to investigate him. His DNA is there.

:21:58.:22:03.

Paul Worthington's sister says it means he cannot clear his name. They

:22:04.:22:08.

have lost the evidence, it has ruined his life, he cannot prove his

:22:09.:22:12.

innocence without the evidence and they have lost it. They've ruined

:22:13.:22:15.

his life, he's lost his children over it. He only wanted to know what

:22:16.:22:21.

happened to Poppi and he doesn't know that. The IPCC found that both

:22:22.:22:26.

of the Cumbria police detectives who led the investigation had cases to

:22:27.:22:30.

answer for gross misconduct but one retired before any action could be

:22:31.:22:33.

taken and the other was demoted on lesser grounds and has also since

:22:34.:22:39.

taken retirement. They twittered until they got a firm report from

:22:40.:22:45.

the pathologist with firm conclusions, which took seven months

:22:46.:22:51.

-- they waited. In that time, the investigation went into suspended

:22:52.:22:55.

animation and that was unacceptable because it was seven months lost. A

:22:56.:23:00.

new inquest will be held in May and Poppi's mother says that the police

:23:01.:23:05.

failings have left her profoundly distressed and she wants justice so

:23:06.:23:06.

her daughter can be at peace. All drivers applying for a minicab

:23:07.:23:11.

license in London will have to pass a test to prove their English skills

:23:12.:23:14.

before they can get That's because the taxi app, Uber,

:23:15.:23:16.

has lost its High Court battle Uber claims that the requirement

:23:17.:23:20.

was discriminatory was thrown The taxi firm says tens of thousands

:23:21.:23:32.

of drivers could now lose their jobs as they can't pass the written

:23:33.:23:37.

English test. The British graffiti artist Banksy

:23:38.:23:38.

has opened a hotel next to Israel's The Palestinian guesthouse -

:23:39.:23:41.

called the Walled Off Hotel - is four metres from the wall

:23:42.:23:45.

which cuts through the occupied It's been described as "the hotel

:23:46.:23:47.

with the worst view in the world". The traditional pub has long been

:23:48.:23:55.

in decline but for one group of villagers in North Yorkshire,

:23:56.:23:58.

calling time on their They clubbed together to raise

:23:59.:24:01.

the money to refurbish and reopen the George Dragon -

:24:02.:24:06.

and today they were rewarded Danny Savage - never one to turn

:24:07.:24:08.

down the chance of being down the pub on a Friday evening -

:24:09.:24:14.

is there for us. There are worse places to be on

:24:15.:24:17.

Friday night, welcome to the George Friday night, welcome to the George

:24:18.:24:27.

Dragon near Hudswell near Richmond. It's not just a pub, it

:24:28.:24:31.

has won this award because it is the hub of the community, it has a shop

:24:32.:24:36.

to the side, there is a library around the back too. It's really

:24:37.:24:40.

something that the whole community have got involved with. A real

:24:41.:24:46.

turnaround for this place because in 2008 it closed. It reopened in 2010

:24:47.:24:49.

when the locals got together and bought it. Prince Charles has even

:24:50.:24:54.

been behind the bar, pulling a point in his time. Let's talk to some of

:24:55.:25:01.

the locals and the landlord. Let's talk to the manager here, Stu.

:25:02.:25:05.

Congratulations, what is your secret? It's a friendly Yorkshire

:25:06.:25:10.

Dales pub that serves some good beers and decent grub. It's got a

:25:11.:25:16.

good atmosphere, the locals support the pub and it has been amazing. You

:25:17.:25:21.

are in quite a small village but you are very busy, do you think that

:25:22.:25:26.

people are drawn in locally? They are, the community supports ask we

:25:27.:25:30.

have the wider catchment area and people visit us as a destination pub

:25:31.:25:33.

because are well-known for our good ales. What stands out here? You have

:25:34.:25:38.

another job as well, what stands out? There is something for

:25:39.:25:44.

everyone, the breadth of beer that Stu has is the nominal considering

:25:45.:25:53.

how small did pub is. All types of beers. The wine list is outstanding

:25:54.:25:59.

as well. How flattered are you to get it? Absolutely, I'm so proud of

:26:00.:26:03.

him, this is amazing. I never thought I would end up here when I

:26:04.:26:06.

left Canada ten years ago. Congratulations to you both. Let's

:26:07.:26:12.

talk to run, I mentioned that the locals bought this pub and got it

:26:13.:26:15.

running again, why did you do it, Ron? The pub closed in 2008 and the

:26:16.:26:24.

pub is the heart of the community and when it closed, we were

:26:25.:26:30.

devastated. As a group we got together, galvanised the community,

:26:31.:26:35.

raised the money and we managed to reopen it in 2010. You done a great

:26:36.:26:39.

job, well done. Congratulations. Of course other pubs are available but

:26:40.:26:42.

according to the campaign for real ale, none of them are as good as

:26:43.:26:44.

this one! Thanks. It is a changeable weekend ahead,

:26:45.:26:56.

but today the best sunshine was to be found in northern Scotland, a

:26:57.:27:00.

lovely day and a lovely sunset. For many of us we had quite leaden skies

:27:01.:27:06.

and quite a bit of rain. A change ahead, there will be some dry and

:27:07.:27:12.

bright interludes but you will see some rain. Some rain working at the

:27:13.:27:17.

North followed by a good crop of showers in the South and West. The

:27:18.:27:22.

main band of rain moving north this evening and overnight and further

:27:23.:27:26.

rain coming from the south. Some wintry weather over the high ground

:27:27.:27:30.

of Scotland but most of it will be rain, temperatures around four, 5

:27:31.:27:34.

degrees in Glasgow and Belfast, seven, 8 degrees by Dawn in Cardiff

:27:35.:27:40.

and London. A miserable start in the east of Scotland, windy, wet and

:27:41.:27:45.

cold. Quite wet into Northern Ireland as well. Any rain in eastern

:27:46.:27:48.

England shouldn't last very long through the morning, and for most of

:27:49.:27:53.

England it is a decent day. Some cloud but a lot of dry weather. To

:27:54.:27:59.

the west of Wales, a few showers waiting in the wings, the breeze

:28:00.:28:04.

picking up as well. A few showers in Wales and the south-west, some

:28:05.:28:08.

inland, but generally dry and bright for Eastern England. It should

:28:09.:28:14.

eventually dry up from the South in Northern Ireland. Some wintry

:28:15.:28:17.

weather on the high ground in Scotland. Through the evening the

:28:18.:28:22.

rain is going to move to the north of Scotland, scattered showers

:28:23.:28:26.

following behind. Sunday looks like England and Wales will see the

:28:27.:28:31.

wettest weather, rain followed by sunshine and showers, just a

:28:32.:28:33.

scattering over Scotland and Northern Ireland.

:28:34.:28:39.

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

:28:40.:28:40.

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