26/03/2017 Breakfast


26/03/2017

Similar Content

Browse content similar to 26/03/2017. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!

Transcript


LineFromTo

with Rachel Burden and Roger Johnson.

:00:00.:00:00.

Police say the Westminster attacker Khalid Masood acted alone

:00:07.:00:09.

They also say the incident lasted just 82 seconds and there is no

:00:10.:00:15.

information to suggest further attacks are planned.

:00:16.:00:21.

The family of the police officer Keith Palmer who was killed have

:00:22.:00:24.

paid tribute to his selfless bravery and loving nature.

:00:25.:00:43.

Good morning, it's Sunday 26th March.

:00:44.:00:52.

More than 30 people are injured after a suspected gas explosion

:00:53.:00:55.

In sport, Lewis Hamilton says a fourth

:00:56.:01:00.

World Championship is there for the taking.

:01:01.:01:03.

The season is underway with Hamilton starting

:01:04.:01:05.

on pole for the first race in Melbourne, Australia.

:01:06.:01:09.

And the blue sky thinking that's led to new cloud formations

:01:10.:01:12.

The warmest day of the year so far yesterday with temperatures reaching

:01:13.:01:28.

19 in parts of Aberdeenshire. More of these glorious blue skies and

:01:29.:01:32.

sunshine for all of us today. Thank you very much, Chris.

:01:33.:01:34.

Police say they might never find out why Khalid Masood killed four people

:01:35.:01:39.

near the Houses of Parliament on Wednesday

:01:40.:01:41.

Scotland Yard now say they believe he was acting alone.

:01:42.:01:49.

The family of PC Keith Palmer, who was killed by Masood,

:01:50.:01:52.

have released a statement thanking those who were with him

:01:53.:01:55.

82 seconds. That's all it took. In that time Khalid Masood calls the

:01:56.:02:05.

deaths of three people on Westminster Bridge and injured many

:02:06.:02:10.

more. -- caused. He crashed his car into the railings, ran through a

:02:11.:02:14.

gate at the houses of parliament and stabbed PC Keith Palmer to death.

:02:15.:02:19.

Last night, his family paid tribute to his selfless bravery, saying:

:02:20.:02:32.

Police believe that Massoud carried out the terror attack on his own,

:02:33.:02:39.

but are trying to establish if he was encouraged or directed by

:02:40.:02:46.

others. -- Masood. Questions remain unanswered about his route to

:02:47.:02:50.

radicalisation. He was a violent criminal before converting to Islam

:02:51.:02:54.

more than a decade ago. Since Wednesday more than 11 people have

:02:55.:02:58.

been arrested. All have now been released apart from a 58-year-old

:02:59.:03:02.

man from Birmingham. Detained under the terrorism act he can be held

:03:03.:03:06.

without charge for 14 days. Members of the public have come to the scene

:03:07.:03:11.

of Wednesday's attack to pay their respects to the four people who lost

:03:12.:03:16.

their lives. Also to remember the many who were injured and those who

:03:17.:03:19.

remain in hospital. Alexandra Mackenzie, BBC News.

:03:20.:03:21.

Alexandra Mackenzie is in Westminster this morning

:03:22.:03:23.

Alexandra, what next for the investigation?

:03:24.:03:36.

So far this has been a fast paced investigation and police are saying

:03:37.:03:42.

they are still appealing for anyone with any information to come

:03:43.:03:46.

forward, particularly anyone who had ever met Khalid Masood or knew

:03:47.:03:51.

anything about him. They have said that on the day they do believe that

:03:52.:03:56.

he acted alone, but the questions they have now is did anyone help him

:03:57.:04:00.

with his preparation? Was he encouraged in anyway? And what

:04:01.:04:05.

police have said in terms of the? , we may never know the answer to

:04:06.:04:12.

that. As I said in my report, PC Keith Palmer's family have put out a

:04:13.:04:16.

statement. They have also said they've been overwhelmed by the

:04:17.:04:21.

messages of support that they've had at this very difficult time and

:04:22.:04:24.

they've said that they want to thank everyone who has reached out to

:04:25.:04:29.

them. It has obviously been a very sad and difficult time for them as a

:04:30.:04:34.

family and also the families of all the other victims. What the police

:04:35.:04:37.

have said is yes, what happened here may have been over in seconds but

:04:38.:04:42.

the impact of that will be with people for the rest of their lives.

:04:43.:04:48.

Alexandra, thank you very much indeed. Alexandra Mackenzie live for

:04:49.:04:50.

us in Westminster this morning. More than 30 people have been hurt,

:04:51.:04:55.

two of them seriously, after a suspected gas

:04:56.:04:58.

explosion in Merseyside. A dance centre for children

:04:59.:05:00.

was destroyed and customers at a Chinese restaurant were caught

:05:01.:05:01.

in the blast in Bebington The scale of the devastation shows

:05:02.:05:04.

just how powerful the explosion was. One building housing three

:05:05.:05:19.

businesses totally destroyed. This is what it looked like before last

:05:20.:05:25.

night. The blast was heard up to six miles away. The sound of the

:05:26.:05:28.

building blowing up was captured by a car's dashboard camera. What was

:05:29.:05:33.

that? Two people were taken to a trauma

:05:34.:05:38.

unit in Liverpool with serious injuries. 32 others were treated at

:05:39.:05:43.

hospitals in Wirral and Chester. There's a multitude of injuries that

:05:44.:05:48.

have happened but the two patients that have gone through to the major

:05:49.:05:52.

trauma unit at Aintree have significant injuries. This has

:05:53.:05:56.

clearly been a huge explosion, powerful enough not only to bring

:05:57.:06:01.

down the main building and scattered debris for hundreds of yards, but

:06:02.:06:05.

also to punch huge holes in the walls of nearby buildings. --

:06:06.:06:10.

scatter. The emergency services won't speculate on the cause of the

:06:11.:06:15.

blast but a number of local people said they smell gas yesterday and on

:06:16.:06:18.

Friday. National Grid engineers are on the scene. This incident is

:06:19.:06:25.

likely to be protracted, this is likely to last several days. Very

:06:26.:06:30.

significant damage as you can tell. So it will be some time before

:06:31.:06:34.

people will be allowed back into their homes. Some people whose homes

:06:35.:06:38.

had to be evacuated spent the night in a local church. Nearby roads are

:06:39.:06:43.

likely to be closed for some time. Andy Gill, BBC News, Wirral.

:06:44.:06:46.

There's growing concern about the fate of civilians

:06:47.:06:48.

in the Iraqi city of Mosul, where government forces are trying

:06:49.:06:51.

to drive out so-called Islamic State.

:06:52.:06:53.

The United Nations has warned of a terrible loss of life

:06:54.:06:55.

and the US-led coalition said it was behind an airstrike

:06:56.:06:58.

which is believed to have killed dozens of civilians last week.

:06:59.:07:01.

Our Middle East editor Jeremy Bowen is in western Mosul.

:07:02.:07:12.

Thousands of people have arrived and have walked out of those parts of

:07:13.:07:20.

Mosul still controlled by Islamic State, and it's a big area, in the

:07:21.:07:24.

last couple of days and they've arrived really with just the clothes

:07:25.:07:28.

they're standing up in and maybe a few spare odds and ends. They need

:07:29.:07:33.

food, they need water, they need chocolate. It's a massive

:07:34.:07:35.

humanitarian challenge and it's not nearly as big as one that may be

:07:36.:07:40.

coming, literally coming down that road in the next weeks, from where

:07:41.:07:45.

the black smoke is, which is where the Islamic State positions are here

:07:46.:07:50.

in Mosul, they are apparently 800 metres or a kilometre down that way.

:07:51.:08:02.

This is very much a theatre of war. The people who have been coming in

:08:03.:08:06.

have been talking about what they've been through. They have talked about

:08:07.:08:11.

air strikes that have come in in the last few days and killed, as well as

:08:12.:08:16.

killing people from the Islamic State, have killed hundreds of

:08:17.:08:21.

civilians. They complaint of the jihadists have used them as human

:08:22.:08:25.

shields but they have also, in tears and anger, spoken very bitterly

:08:26.:08:29.

about the effects of airstrikes on civilians. I spoke to multiple

:08:30.:08:37.

witnesses who said that there are perhaps hundreds of bodies still

:08:38.:08:42.

lying in the rubble that people can't get to. Jeremy Bowen, BBC

:08:43.:08:46.

News, Mosul. And after 7am we'll speak to an aid

:08:47.:08:46.

worker from the UN's Refugee agency, who has spent part of the last week

:08:47.:08:50.

in refugee camps just near Mosul. The government will publish

:08:51.:08:54.

a significant part of its Brexit legislation on Thursday,

:08:55.:08:57.

a day after Theresa May formally tells Brussels that Britain intends

:08:58.:08:59.

to leave the European Union. The Great Repeal Bill will give

:09:00.:09:02.

ministers the powers to change some aspects

:09:03.:09:04.

of current European laws, without needing the

:09:05.:09:06.

approval of Parliament. Our political

:09:07.:09:18.

correspondent Mark Lobel Mark, this could prove to be

:09:19.:09:19.

controversial couldn't it? That's right. What could be

:09:20.:09:30.

controversial is this power given to ministers to translate parts of EU

:09:31.:09:35.

law into domestic law rather than seeking the approval of parliament

:09:36.:09:39.

and having parliament scrutinise it as well. And the committee of laws

:09:40.:09:43.

and a former Attorney General are seeking assurances from the

:09:44.:09:46.

government that that power will be used in that way and that they

:09:47.:09:50.

weren't just try and change the law at will without other people having

:09:51.:09:55.

a say, MPs and peers -- Fay white. What the government wants is

:09:56.:10:01.

uncertainty, -- they won't. Businesses and workers need to know

:10:02.:10:05.

where based and in two years time and they want to get rid of all the

:10:06.:10:09.

EU jargon currently in the laws, because that won't apply any more

:10:10.:10:13.

and it won't make sense so they need to make those changes, that's why

:10:14.:10:16.

they want these powers. What they're saying is they want to use this

:10:17.:10:20.

power for ministers to be able to speed through all that technical

:10:21.:10:23.

stuff that needs to be changed anyway to leave more time for the

:10:24.:10:28.

actual policy changes, such as new immigration controls, a different

:10:29.:10:33.

customs agreement, which needs all the time in Parliament, and to spend

:10:34.:10:37.

time doing that when they have about 40 years of laws to change in just

:10:38.:10:41.

over two years because they'd have a little bit of extra time just after

:10:42.:10:45.

we finished negotiating, but some of those decisions might come right at

:10:46.:10:48.

the end because negotiations might go right down to the wire so they're

:10:49.:10:52.

trying to prioritise those kinds of decisions. Mark Lobel, many thanks.

:10:53.:10:55.

The taxi firm Uber has suspended its pilot programme

:10:56.:10:58.

for driverless cars after an early model of its self-driving car

:10:59.:11:01.

The accident is the latest in a series of crashes

:11:02.:11:05.

It's not yet known whether the car was in self driving mode at the time

:11:06.:11:10.

Uber said it caused no serious injuries.

:11:11.:11:19.

In case you missed it the clocks went forward today. It is 6:10am. We

:11:20.:11:25.

didn't miss it here! In case you missed it,

:11:26.:11:26.

the clocks went forward this morning and some people working in the UK's

:11:27.:11:29.

tourism sector are calling The British Association

:11:30.:11:32.

of Leisure Parks, Piers and Attractions says an extra 80,000

:11:33.:11:36.

jobs will be created due Our business correspondent

:11:37.:11:39.

Joe Lynam has more. Half of all tourist visits to

:11:40.:11:46.

Britain take in a leisure or amusement park, such as Alton

:11:47.:11:49.

Towers, Thorpe Park and the London Eye. Now the group that represents

:11:50.:11:53.

these parks is calling for Britain to be on the same time zone as

:11:54.:11:57.

France or Italy. It says doing so would create a boost worth ?2.5

:11:58.:12:02.

billion-?3.5 billion to the economy. It's a bright evenings could cut CO2

:12:03.:12:07.

emissions by half 1 billion tons a year and prevent a road deaths

:12:08.:12:13.

annually. Harper also says shipping time zones would encourage more

:12:14.:12:17.

outdoor activity and cut obesity levels, especially among children.

:12:18.:12:20.

But it has been tried before in the early 1970s when many Scottish

:12:21.:12:24.

children had to go to school in the dark. It had, according to one SNP

:12:25.:12:29.

politician, and absolutely devastating impact. Joe Lynam, BBC

:12:30.:12:32.

News. Cheryl Fernandez-Versini has

:12:33.:12:33.

announced that she's given birth The singer posted a photo

:12:34.:12:35.

of her popstar partner Liam Payne, from the band One Direction,

:12:36.:12:40.

cradling the newborn In the post Cheryl said

:12:41.:12:42.

she gave birth on Wednesday, but the couple have yet to decide

:12:43.:12:46.

on a name for their son. Of course if they need any help with

:12:47.:12:58.

childcare then bring them into Charlie and he will be ready any

:12:59.:13:04.

time! Are you sure? He will appreciate you volunteering him for

:13:05.:13:06.

that! Those are the main

:13:07.:13:06.

stories this morning. Chris will be here with the weather

:13:07.:13:08.

in around five minutes. Sheryl -- Cheryl Fernandez-Versini

:13:09.:13:17.

is on the front page of the Sun. They also look at 82 seconds, all it

:13:18.:13:22.

took for Khalid Masood to cause so much devastation. The big political

:13:23.:13:27.

story that broke yesterday was the resignation of Douglas Carswell from

:13:28.:13:31.

UKIP, the Sunday Telegraph this morning predicting there would be

:13:32.:13:35.

civil war in UKIP after he quit the party and they feel betrayed but

:13:36.:13:38.

they say they are better off without him, saying he's been having all

:13:39.:13:41.

sorts of disagreements with senior members of the party in recent weeks

:13:42.:13:46.

and months. Front page of the Sunday Times, a picture of one of the two

:13:47.:13:51.

daughters of the Westminster attack on the front page, saying she defied

:13:52.:13:56.

her father and didn't convert to wearing more Islamic style dress.

:13:57.:14:03.

Ukip's does Douglas Carswell on there. At the paper says another

:14:04.:14:09.

Tory manifesto pledge at risk -- the paper. Ministers could violate

:14:10.:14:16.

another manifesto pledge as Theresa May fires the starting gun on Brexit

:14:17.:14:20.

this week, that's what the Sunday Times says. This from the Mail on

:14:21.:14:25.

Sunday, their reporting a near miss involving one of Prince William's

:14:26.:14:30.

air ambulances and a drone, one of those little drones we know are

:14:31.:14:34.

beginning to cause bother for all sorts of other aircraft at the

:14:35.:14:37.

moment. Lots of people saying there should be stiffer legislation

:14:38.:14:42.

regulating when and how those kinds of drones can be used. They've

:14:43.:14:46.

changed the world of television, though, lots of pictures from on

:14:47.:14:47.

high these days! You're watching

:14:48.:14:48.

Breakfast from BBC News. Khalid Masood, who carried out

:14:49.:14:50.

Wednesday's terror attack in Westminster, acted alone

:14:51.:14:54.

and there is no information to suggest further

:14:55.:14:57.

attacks are planned. A suspected gas explosion leaves two

:14:58.:14:59.

people seriously injured and 32 others hurt after the collapse

:15:00.:15:03.

of several buildings on Merseyside. This Catholic mass was performed

:15:04.:15:08.

nearly 500 years ago in front As it's recreated using 3D sound

:15:09.:15:13.

technology, we find out why it played such a pivotal role

:15:14.:15:18.

in the Reformation. Here's Chris with a look

:15:19.:15:35.

at this morning's weather. Will the beautiful weather continue?

:15:36.:15:39.

We had glorious blue skies and more of the same Evan Bates few days. For

:15:40.:15:46.

some of us, a bit longer. Here is a picture from a boy in Aberdeenshire.

:15:47.:15:57.

-- Aboyne. 19 Celsius. New top tablature is set in Wales and parts

:15:58.:16:01.

of northern England and Northern Ireland. This morning, just like

:16:02.:16:05.

yesterday, a cold start to the day. Widespread frost in rural parts of

:16:06.:16:09.

northern Ireland, Scotland and northern England. Square -- clear

:16:10.:16:14.

skies. Things to the high pressure. One of two areas and up differently.

:16:15.:16:21.

A bit of mist and fog. A little on the cloudy start -- side. Mainland

:16:22.:16:30.

Scotland getting up to 19 Celsius. We will be there or thereabouts for

:16:31.:16:34.

getting up to the highest temperature. Northern Ireland could

:16:35.:16:39.

be temperatures high temperatures. High-teens. Northwest England as

:16:40.:16:45.

well. A bit further east, temperatures at degree down.

:16:46.:16:52.

England is taking on Lithuania at Wembley. It will also stay dry.

:16:53.:17:02.

Clear skies lasting throughout the evening. Overnight, days and it

:17:03.:17:08.

stays dry. Cabbages falling off quickly. Risk of frost patches. --

:17:09.:17:17.

temperatures. Looking at the week ahead, generally high pressure.

:17:18.:17:22.

Sunny spells and staying on the warm side. Across the north and west of

:17:23.:17:26.

the UK, outbreaks of rain towards the middle part of the week. Some

:17:27.:17:31.

changes in the forecast by Wednesday. Here is Wednesday. A bit

:17:32.:17:36.

of clout to start the day. Maybe a bit misty. Most of that should burn

:17:37.:17:41.

away. Tomorrow, some decent spells of sunshine with light winds coming

:17:42.:17:45.

in from a south-easterly direction. A bit warmer across the south-east

:17:46.:17:51.

England. Past of wet -- parts of western Wales doing well as well.

:17:52.:17:57.

Some more warriors of blue skies and shuns -- sunshine coming up. Make

:17:58.:18:04.

the most of it for Mothering Sunday. We will be back with a more news at

:18:05.:18:09.

half past six. Now it's time for the Film Review

:18:10.:18:11.

with Jane Hill and Mark Kermode. Hello, and welcome to

:18:12.:18:26.

the Film Review on BBC News. To take us through this week's

:18:27.:18:29.

cinema releases is Mark Kermode. We have Life, a science-fiction

:18:30.:18:35.

movie with Jake Gyllenhaal. And we have a real-life

:18:36.:18:41.

tale of exploration. Set in the International

:18:42.:18:45.

Space Station? A soil sample from Mars is sent back

:18:46.:18:58.

from the International Space They find a single cell organism,

:18:59.:19:04.

they are excited because it is proof They decide, against the advice

:19:05.:19:11.

from the entire audience, to give it a bit of an electric

:19:12.:19:18.

shock and see what it does. Lowering oxygen,

:19:19.:19:26.

more carbon dioxide. Every single cell is

:19:27.:19:36.

a muscle and nerve cell. It's in between my fingers

:19:37.:19:55.

and it's not letting go. I was laughing before,

:19:56.:19:58.

but I'm not now. The organism picks them off getting

:19:59.:20:21.

more agile. It starts out as Gravity,

:20:22.:20:40.

then turns into Alien, There is not a lot of originality,

:20:41.:20:43.

however, what it does is that it All the characters are best

:20:44.:20:53.

described as thumbnail sketches. He is the scientist person,

:20:54.:21:16.

this is the person with the... Alien was drawing on a series

:21:17.:21:21.

of other horror movies. This is nothing you

:21:22.:21:32.

haven't seen before. Here's the thing, I thought this

:21:33.:21:40.

was meant to be a horror film. I have noticed a smile

:21:41.:21:45.

playing on your lips. There are things in it that

:21:46.:21:50.

are creepy, I enjoyed it. There is a very famous moment

:21:51.:21:54.

in Alien that is much more revolting But when that happened,

:21:55.:22:10.

nobody had ever seen It has been referred to as a popcorn

:22:11.:22:13.

movie for very good reason. I enjoyed it, but it

:22:14.:22:21.

is not at all original. If you have a naff 80's TV

:22:22.:22:25.

franchise, you just reboot it now. What you have is this rebooting,

:22:26.:22:32.

it is basically the Breakfast Club It addresses things like autism,

:22:33.:22:35.

LGBTIQ issues, which is interesting given a huge amount of the target

:22:36.:22:46.

audience for Power Rangers Already today I have seen people

:22:47.:22:49.

asking if they can take their four It's a weird film, it has a little

:22:50.:23:10.

bit of violence in it. They are Power Rangers,

:23:11.:23:38.

they kill people. It is less leering than

:23:39.:23:41.

Transformers, less fun than Real Steel, it's too long

:23:42.:23:43.

and it makes no sense I love it when he tells me something

:23:44.:24:12.

that can go on a poster. It's not terrible, there you have it.

:24:13.:24:14.

That's what Power Rangers looks like when you stick it up

:24:15.:24:17.

Yes, Percy Fawcett's early 20th-century explorations.

:24:18.:24:21.

The man who was described as having made an unfortunate

:24:22.:24:28.

He is told that if he goes on this exploration,

:24:29.:24:37.

it will restore his great family name.

:24:38.:24:42.

The more he explores, he discovers that this

:24:43.:24:44.

is what he wants to do with his life.

:24:45.:24:46.

However, where he is travelling to is dangerous and surprising.

:24:47.:24:59.

# We're soldiers of the dream, my lad...#

:25:00.:25:46.

There are moments that are very strange.

:25:47.:25:55.

Robert Pattinson is almost unrecognisable.

:25:56.:26:00.

More so than most mainstream audiences will likely be able

:26:01.:26:10.

There are individual moments in it that are really striking.

:26:11.:26:16.

There is a moment when they come across a musical being in the jungle

:26:17.:26:20.

There is also a sequence in it which is reminiscent of another

:26:21.:26:29.

While I was watching it, it was strangely and even. -- uneven.

:26:30.:26:42.

It has been five days since I saw it and it has lingered in my mind.

:26:43.:26:47.

There are images that are very arresting, it is beautiful.

:26:48.:26:49.

A terrific performance by Sienna Miller, his wife

:26:50.:26:52.

It is a very thankless role but she makes something of it.

:26:53.:26:57.

She really made something of this role.

:26:58.:26:58.

She is the toughest character in this movie.

:26:59.:27:01.

I would rather see something aim high and fail in certain areas

:27:02.:27:06.

than something which felt like franchise fodder.

:27:07.:27:09.

It has a strangely old-fashioned feeling to it.

:27:10.:27:13.

There are moments, there is a dream sequence which is oddly reminiscent

:27:14.:27:16.

That is not something you would expect from a film like this.

:27:17.:27:22.

It is really unusual, definitely flawed but very interesting.

:27:23.:27:27.

The best way of describing and is, it is kind of a horror movie.

:27:28.:27:44.

A young African-American meets his girlfriend's family

:27:45.:27:46.

and there is something creepy underneath.

:27:47.:27:48.

It is sharp and scary when it needs to be.

:27:49.:27:59.

I know you're not a horror film fan, but it's a thriller.

:28:00.:28:02.

It is a horror film, but it's a thriller.

:28:03.:28:08.

His relationships outrage the government.

:28:09.:28:24.

It takes the personal and the political and puts them

:28:25.:28:33.

together in a way which is completely understandable

:28:34.:28:35.

and enjoyable, but also tells a great story.

:28:36.:28:37.

A quick reminder that you can find all the film news you would ever

:28:38.:28:44.

You can find all of our previous programmes on iPlayer as well.

:28:45.:28:51.

That's all for this week, thanks very much for watching.

:28:52.:30:14.

with Rachel Burden and Roger Johnson.

:30:15.:30:16.

a summary of this morning's main news.

:30:17.:30:22.

Police say they might never find out why Khalid Masood killed four people

:30:23.:30:25.

near the Houses of Parliament on Wednesday

:30:26.:30:27.

According to investigating officers the attack lasted

:30:28.:30:29.

Police believe that Masood acted alone but are trying to establish

:30:30.:30:39.

if he was encouraged or directed by others.

:30:40.:30:44.

In that time Khalid Masood caused the deaths of three people

:30:45.:30:50.

on Westminster Bridge and injured many more.

:30:51.:30:54.

He crashed his car into the railings, ran through a gate

:30:55.:30:58.

at the Houses of Parliament and stabbed PC Keith Palmer to death.

:30:59.:31:03.

Last night, his family paid tribute to his selfless bravery,

:31:04.:31:06.

Police believe that Masood carried out the terror attack

:31:07.:31:22.

on his own, but are trying to establish if he was encouraged

:31:23.:31:25.

Questions remain unanswered about his route to radicalisation.

:31:26.:31:33.

He was a violent criminal before converting to Islam more

:31:34.:31:35.

Since Wednesday, 11 people have been arrested.

:31:36.:31:46.

All have now been released except for a 58-year-old

:31:47.:31:49.

Detained under the Terrorism Act, he can be held without charge

:31:50.:31:54.

Members of the public have come to the scene of Wednesday's attack

:31:55.:31:58.

to pay their respects to the four people who lost their lives.

:31:59.:32:01.

Also to remember the many who were injured and those

:32:02.:32:04.

two of them seriously, after a suspected gas

:32:05.:32:19.

A dance centre for children was destroyed and customers

:32:20.:32:22.

at a Chinese restaurant were caught in the blast

:32:23.:32:23.

The scale of the devastation shows just how powerful the explosion was.

:32:24.:32:31.

One building housing three businesses totally destroyed.

:32:32.:32:33.

This is what it looked like before last night.

:32:34.:32:41.

The blast was heard up to six miles away.

:32:42.:32:44.

The sound of the building blowing up was captured

:32:45.:32:46.

Two people were taken to a trauma unit in Liverpool

:32:47.:32:54.

32 others were treated at hospitals in Wirral and Chester.

:32:55.:33:04.

There's a multitude of injuries that have happened but the two patients

:33:05.:33:07.

that have gone through to the major trauma unit at Aintree

:33:08.:33:10.

This has clearly been a huge explosion, powerful enough not only

:33:11.:33:14.

to bring down the main building and scatter debris for hundreds

:33:15.:33:17.

of yards, but also to punch huge holes in the walls

:33:18.:33:23.

The emergency services won't speculate on the cause

:33:24.:33:29.

of the blast but a number of local people said they smell gas yesterday

:33:30.:33:33.

National Grid engineers are on the scene.

:33:34.:33:39.

This incident is likely to be protracted, this is likely

:33:40.:33:42.

Very significant damage as you can tell.

:33:43.:33:49.

So it will be some time before people will be allowed back

:33:50.:33:52.

Some people whose homes had to be evacuated spent the night

:33:53.:33:56.

Nearby roads are likely to be closed for some time.

:33:57.:34:01.

US Central Command says it has opened an investigation into an air

:34:02.:34:11.

strike on the Iraqi city of Mosul which is reported to have killed

:34:12.:34:15.

dozens of civilians earlier this month.

:34:16.:34:16.

American officials have acknowledged that US-led coalition

:34:17.:34:18.

aircraft took part in the attack on part of the city controlled

:34:19.:34:22.

The United Nations has warned of a terrible loss of life.

:34:23.:34:32.

The government will set out details of its plans to bring EU law

:34:33.:34:35.

into domestic legislation on Thursday, the day

:34:36.:34:37.

after Theresa May is set to start the formal Brexit process.

:34:38.:34:40.

The Great Repeal Bill will bring EU regulations

:34:41.:34:43.

into domestic law, allowing them to be amended

:34:44.:34:45.

The bill will allow ministers to alter regulations

:34:46.:34:48.

without the full scrutiny of MPs and peers.

:34:49.:35:07.

Hong Kong's new chief executive has been chosen.

:35:08.:35:08.

is believed to be Beijing's preferred candidate.

:35:09.:35:12.

She won in the first round of voting by a specially chosen committee.

:35:13.:35:16.

Pro-democracy activists had denounced the poll as a sham,

:35:17.:35:18.

arguing that everyone should have a vote.

:35:19.:35:20.

The taxi firm Uber has suspended its pilot programme

:35:21.:35:23.

for driverless cars after an early model of its self-driving car

:35:24.:35:26.

The accident is the latest in a series of crashes

:35:27.:35:30.

It's not yet known whether the car was in self driving mode at the time

:35:31.:35:35.

Uber said it caused no serious injuries.

:35:36.:35:41.

In case you missed it, the clocks went forward this morning

:35:42.:35:44.

and some people working in the UK's tourism sector are calling

:35:45.:35:47.

The British Association of Leisure Parks, Piers

:35:48.:35:56.

and Attractions says an extra 80,000 jobs will be created due

:35:57.:35:59.

It also says shifting time zones would encourage more outdoor

:36:00.:36:03.

activity and cut obesity levels, especially among children.

:36:04.:36:14.

As we celebrate Mothering Sunday today...

:36:15.:36:20.

Cheryl Fernandez-Versini has announced that she's given birth

:36:21.:36:22.

The singer posted a photo of her popstar partner Liam Payne,

:36:23.:36:29.

from the band One Direction, cradling the newborn

:36:30.:36:31.

In the post Cheryl said she gave birth on Wednesday,

:36:32.:36:34.

but the couple have yet to decide on a name for their son.

:36:35.:36:40.

I'm sure there will be a fervent speculation over what it might be!

:36:41.:36:47.

The F1 season has kicked off, John, it has begun. It's here. Lewis

:36:48.:36:52.

Hamilton was looking really strong as he started in pole position, how

:36:53.:36:56.

is it going? He has to be very confident going into the new season,

:36:57.:37:01.

no Nico Rosberg, his teammate last year, he won the drivers title then

:37:02.:37:06.

retired, surprising everybody. In the dominant team, dominant car,

:37:07.:37:10.

should be faster this season, should play into his favour, you can see

:37:11.:37:16.

why he is confident. Should we be warning ardent F1 fans not to

:37:17.:37:20.

listen? They should be watching it live. May be listening to it on 5

:37:21.:37:25.

Live! The 2017 Formula 1 season

:37:26.:37:26.

is under way in Australia. Lewis Hamilton started on pole

:37:27.:37:28.

position in his mercedes and despite complaining

:37:29.:37:31.

that the grip on the grid was poor he got off to the perfect

:37:32.:37:34.

start leading the Ferrari of Sebastian Vettel and his

:37:35.:37:37.

team-mate Valtteri Bottas We've had 21 laps so far and Vettel

:37:38.:37:44.

has inherited the lead, Lewis Hamilton has made his first pit stop

:37:45.:37:46.

and has now dropped down to fifth. England, Scotland and Northern

:37:47.:37:48.

Ireland are all in action this evening in their latest qualifiers

:37:49.:37:51.

for next year's World Cup. There'll be a minute's

:37:52.:37:54.

silence at Wembley ahead of England's match

:37:55.:37:56.

against Lithuania for victims of the Westminster attack

:37:57.:37:58.

and manager Gareth Southgate understands the power of sport

:37:59.:38:00.

in such difficult circumstances. We know how important the national

:38:01.:38:12.

football team is for the feeling of the nation, and it's a great

:38:13.:38:17.

opportunity for everybody to pay their respects at that moment and to

:38:18.:38:22.

show that as a country we go on, you know, not only London but a country

:38:23.:38:27.

as a whole. That's our identity historically.

:38:28.:38:29.

There's arguably most at stake for Scotland tonight,

:38:30.:38:32.

they're in the same group as England, but are fifth

:38:33.:38:34.

and if they don't beat Slovenia, their hopes of qualifying would look

:38:35.:38:38.

Sometimes it's easy for a manager to say this is what we're going to do.

:38:39.:38:47.

Sometimes you're in a position where you need a draw, win, lose or

:38:48.:38:51.

draw... We have to win. What we don't have to do is win it in the

:38:52.:38:56.

first five, six, seven, ten minutes. You never know in big games when

:38:57.:38:57.

your opportunity comes along. Northern Ireland are

:38:58.:39:00.

well placed heading They're second in the group,

:39:01.:39:05.

five points behind Germany, and on course to clinch

:39:06.:39:09.

a play off place. We have the opportunity to put seven

:39:10.:39:15.

points between ourselves and Norway, the opportunity to get to ten points

:39:16.:39:19.

and I think when you get to that stage of any campaign you start to

:39:20.:39:22.

really believe it's possible and to put yourself in a position to

:39:23.:39:25.

qualify. Suddenly the experience of qualifying for France, we've been

:39:26.:39:28.

through that, and these experience we know we've worked so hard to get

:39:29.:39:30.

there now. The Netherlands are struggling,

:39:31.:39:33.

they lost to Bulgaria, and Belgium only managed

:39:34.:39:36.

a draw against Greece but Cristiano Ronaldo scored

:39:37.:39:38.

twice as the European Ronaldo now has 70 international

:39:39.:39:40.

goals. Belgium needed the Everton striker

:39:41.:39:53.

Romelu Lukaku to rescue He equalised in the 89th minute

:39:54.:39:56.

but Belgium remain top Tony Andreu scored a cracking

:39:57.:39:59.

goal for Dundee United, as they lifted the Scottish

:40:00.:40:04.

Challenge Cup for the first time. They beat St Mirren 2-1

:40:05.:40:07.

in the final at Fir Park, this competition is for the under-20

:40:08.:40:10.

teams from the Scottish Premiership, as well as the lower

:40:11.:40:13.

divisions and sides Anthony Crolla was outclassed

:40:14.:40:15.

in his bid to regain the WBA lightweight title in

:40:16.:40:19.

Manchester last night. He lost his rematch

:40:20.:40:21.

with Jorge Linares on points. In front of a home crowd,

:40:22.:40:23.

Crolla went down in the seventh And though he responded well,

:40:24.:40:26.

Linares retained the belt Leicester took a big stride

:40:27.:40:30.

towards the play-offs in rugby union's Premiership,

:40:31.:40:34.

beating local rivals Northampton Owen Williams' huge penalty

:40:35.:40:36.

in the last minute of the game sealed the win for Leicester

:40:37.:40:39.

and took them into that Elsewhere there were wins

:40:40.:40:42.

for Harlequins and Exeter. And Leinster strengthened

:40:43.:40:47.

their position at the top of the Pro-12

:40:48.:40:51.

after beating Cardiff Blues 22-21. Ross Moloney just managing to touch

:40:52.:40:54.

down in the corner for what proved England's Ross Fisher is out

:40:55.:40:57.

of the World Golf Championship Match He lost to Japan's Hideto Tanihara

:40:58.:41:06.

in the quarter finals but secured his place

:41:07.:41:09.

at the first major of the year, Chris Froome's hopes of victory

:41:10.:41:14.

at the Volta a Catalunya were ruined yesterday as the Team Sky

:41:15.:41:25.

rider lost 26 minutes on his rivals in the

:41:26.:41:27.

penultimate stage. The Briton, riding his first

:41:28.:41:29.

European race of 2017, had moved to second,

:41:30.:41:32.

but he and his team failed to latch on to an early breakaway

:41:33.:41:35.

and he was well beaten. Alejandro Valverde

:41:36.:41:38.

extended his overall lead. The stage was won by Daryl Impey

:41:39.:41:39.

in a sprint to the line. Britain's Adam Yates is in fourth,

:41:40.:41:43.

Froome is now 31st. There were All Around golds

:41:44.:41:59.

for Ellie Downie and Joe Fraser at the British Gymnastics

:42:00.:42:02.

Championships in Liverpool. Downie was part of the hugely

:42:03.:42:04.

successful GB team at last year's Olympics in Rio

:42:05.:42:06.

and took the title for the first time with a string of

:42:07.:42:10.

confident performances. And 18-year old Fraser

:42:11.:42:12.

was a surprise winner in the men's competition, in his

:42:13.:42:15.

first senior year. Great for them to compete in front

:42:16.:42:20.

of a home crowd and medals as well. The bar is so high in British

:42:21.:42:22.

gymnastics! Thanks very much indeed! After King Henry VIII severed ties

:42:23.:42:24.

with the Catholic Church, he attended a latin mass at a Tudor

:42:25.:42:27.

chapel in Hampshire. That visit was actually a pivotal

:42:28.:42:29.

point in the Reformation Now that rare mass is being

:42:30.:42:32.

recreated at the same chapel using state-of-the-art

:42:33.:42:36.

3D sound recording. The last time this Catholic Mass

:42:37.:42:54.

resonated around these walls was nearly 500 years ago, and in the

:42:55.:42:59.

congregation was King Henry VIII. The chapel as it would have been

:43:00.:43:03.

experienced here is not what you would think of in a parish church.

:43:04.:43:07.

You wouldn't have come in and sat down at a pew and listened to a

:43:08.:43:11.

service, in fact the Lord of the house would have sat above and

:43:12.:43:14.

experienced the worship going on before him. Choirboys singing the

:43:15.:43:18.

Mass, the priest at the altar, it would have been a different

:43:19.:43:24.

experience to what we have today. Lady Mass has been recreated in

:43:25.:43:28.

immersive sound, which means you can hear different parts of it as you

:43:29.:43:34.

move through the chapel. What you're trying to do is create

:43:35.:43:41.

an audio illusion, so if you were to walk into the chapel, close your

:43:42.:43:46.

eyes, you hopefully would get the impression there was a service, a

:43:47.:43:51.

maths, going on. Obviously if you open your eyes there is no one

:43:52.:43:56.

there. At these sounds accompanied a pivotal moment in our history. --

:43:57.:44:01.

and. Henry was here trying to stifle a rebellion after his break from

:44:02.:44:06.

Rome. This was the very place that, on the 17th of October 15 35, Henry

:44:07.:44:11.

would have been to listen to the mass. And it wasn't just about

:44:12.:44:15.

religious worship, his courtiers said it was the only time they could

:44:16.:44:19.

guarantee the king was sitting still long enough to deal with matters of

:44:20.:44:24.

state. Which included securing the valuable loyalty of William, Lord

:44:25.:44:28.

Sands, a devout Catholic. Of the other people who were rumoured to be

:44:29.:44:34.

involved in the rebellion do indeed rebel, but Sans, the owner, doesn't.

:44:35.:44:38.

Visits like this kept people like Sans onside, helped cement the

:44:39.:44:44.

Reformation. So it's really crucial transformative moment in British

:44:45.:44:47.

history. And with those political undertones

:44:48.:44:52.

long gone, the past can now meet the present in perfect harmony. Benmore,

:44:53.:45:00.

BBC News. The Metropolitan Police says

:45:01.:45:01.

Khalid Masood, who carried out Wednesday's terror attack

:45:02.:45:16.

in Westminster, acted alone, and there is no information to

:45:17.:45:18.

suggest further attacks are planned. A suspected gas explosion leaves two

:45:19.:45:21.

people seriously injured and 32 others hurt, after the collapse

:45:22.:45:24.

of several buildings in Merseyside. We will be talking about people that

:45:25.:45:41.

night-time activities later on. If you are one of those who need to get

:45:42.:45:47.

up and go to the loo late at night, there is a new theory about what

:45:48.:45:51.

that might be happening. In the meantime, at 645, how is the

:45:52.:45:53.

weather? Looking pretty good, Rachel, a

:45:54.:46:01.

decent day for Mother's Day. For most of us, we will have these blue,

:46:02.:46:07.

sunny skies. This was seen them to us yesterday from Aboyne in

:46:08.:46:11.

Aberdeenshire. Here we saw temperatures up to 19.1 C. The

:46:12.:46:16.

warmest we have seen all year. New marks being set also for Wales and

:46:17.:46:20.

Northern Ireland, northern England not far behind. The cold start of

:46:21.:46:24.

the morning this morning, once again. Clear skies at leading to

:46:25.:46:28.

quite a widespread frost or parts of northern England, Northern Ireland

:46:29.:46:31.

Scotland. The frost is in the countryside, towns cities.

:46:32.:46:35.

Temperatures above freezing. Same area of high pressure as we had

:46:36.:46:40.

yesterday so similar weather. For the Western Isles first thing this

:46:41.:46:44.

morning, it is taking its time to clear. For Shetland, begin after

:46:45.:46:47.

bring spots of drizzle but mainland Scotland, clear, blue skies once

:46:48.:46:51.

again. The highs of 19 degrees. We might see a few tenths of a degree

:46:52.:46:55.

higher than the two bridges were got to yesterday. We may well set the

:46:56.:47:00.

new temperature record for the UK later on this afternoon. Sunshine

:47:01.:47:04.

per Northern Ireland, England and Wales. Western areas favoured

:47:05.:47:08.

forcing the highest temperatures. We have the chilly breeze coming in

:47:09.:47:12.

from the North Sea. For the qualifiers later on, sunny spells at

:47:13.:47:19.

Wembley. Clear spells but for all of these weather, -- matches, the

:47:20.:47:27.

weather will become. -- will be calm. Maybe parts of northern

:47:28.:47:34.

England, maybe a bit more in the way of clout. Coming in from the North

:47:35.:47:39.

Sea. The week ahead and starts off on a decent note. -- cloud. The same

:47:40.:47:44.

area of high pressure dominating initially but we will see changes

:47:45.:47:48.

midweek as rain moves into the north and west by Wednesday. Before we get

:47:49.:47:52.

back, Monday looks like another decent day. Cloudy to start with

:47:53.:47:56.

parts of eastern England having missed patches taking their time to

:47:57.:48:06.

clear. -- mist. It should get a warm through south-east England where

:48:07.:48:12.

temperatures reach 17- 18. Western counties of Northern Ireland,

:48:13.:48:15.

western side of Scotland and the western side of Wales should see

:48:16.:48:18.

temperatures up to the high-teens. Whether looking decent for the next

:48:19.:48:24.

few days. You can come again with news like that, Chris.

:48:25.:48:31.

How many clouds can you name? There are now 12 new ones to learn.

:48:32.:48:38.

For the first time since 1987, the World Meteorological

:48:39.:48:41.

organisation is releasing an updated version of its International Cloud

:48:42.:48:44.

Atlas, the global reference book for identifying clouds.

:48:45.:48:46.

We'll be hearing a bit more about that in just a moment,

:48:47.:48:49.

but if you want to know what you're looking at next time you look up -

:48:50.:48:53.

Gavin Pretor-Pinney is the founder of the Cloud Appreciation Society.

:48:54.:50:02.

Just looking at some of those clouds, are they the sort of clout

:50:03.:50:08.

we will see here in the UK? Yes. They are not exotic in that sense.

:50:09.:50:16.

They sound exotic. Give something a Latin name and it sounds exotic but

:50:17.:50:23.

you can see all of those here. Why clouds? What engenders such passion

:50:24.:50:31.

for you? They are omnipresent so you can forget they are there but when

:50:32.:50:35.

you stop to look at them, I think they are the most evocative and

:50:36.:50:41.

dynamic and poetic aspect of our surroundings. They also kind of have

:50:42.:50:45.

this quality to them that makes you think about thoughts and feelings.

:50:46.:50:52.

These are beautiful. What are they? The wavy ones, those are the new

:50:53.:50:55.

classification of clout that has come out in the Cloud Appreciation

:50:56.:51:04.

Society called Asperitas. Presume ugly, they have been there since

:51:05.:51:08.

time began. Was it difficult to get a new one on the books? None of

:51:09.:51:12.

these clubs that have never appeared before. They are not something to do

:51:13.:51:16.

with climate change but we have new terms. In the case of the Asperitas

:51:17.:51:21.

one that came out of the society, we get sent photographs from our

:51:22.:51:25.

members all over the world. We are seeing some of them now. Some

:51:26.:51:30.

chaotic, turbulent waves, that is another one with a new name,

:51:31.:51:45.

Velutas. Quite often you can see them up ahead of storms. There is a

:51:46.:51:50.

storm coming ahead and you can get a roll cloud coming. They roll along

:51:51.:51:56.

maybe ten miles an hour, 20 mph. It shows you that you really know your

:51:57.:52:03.

stuff. You just know them just like that. Somebody has got to know them.

:52:04.:52:12.

When you see a cloudless sky comedy think it is boring? It would take

:52:13.:52:18.

too long before we started missing something. Monotonous, day after

:52:19.:52:23.

day, blue sky. Lots of people would be like Yate, southern California!

:52:24.:52:27.

But after a bit, we would start to feel like something was missing. --

:52:28.:52:34.

yay. They bring some variety and drama to our day. There is something

:52:35.:52:38.

that you always wish you were someone else -- Max something --

:52:39.:52:44.

somewhere else. They often give an indication of what weather is to

:52:45.:52:51.

come, don't they? And it is not like you can tell that from a glimpse. If

:52:52.:52:55.

you were to look outside the window and then look away, you wouldn't be

:52:56.:52:59.

able to tell but it is the way they change. If you think about clouds as

:53:00.:53:03.

the expressions on the face of the atmosphere, the wavy expression

:53:04.:53:06.

changes gives you an idea of the mood of the atmosphere. I love the

:53:07.:53:10.

fact that we have Cloud Appreciation Society in this country but it has

:53:11.:53:21.

gone global, hasn't it? Yes, we have 43,000 members now I think in 110

:53:22.:53:24.

countries. It is pretty international. We are all under the

:53:25.:53:31.

same sky. And a little app. There are people spotting it around the

:53:32.:53:36.

world. Clouds are changing? We hear a lot about climate change. Is it

:53:37.:53:42.

changing or... It is inconclusive as to whether changing temperatures or

:53:43.:53:46.

how changing temperatures are changing the clouds. There is some

:53:47.:53:52.

indication that they are getting higher but don't think that is quite

:53:53.:53:57.

rice. -- right. We don't know whether in a changing or warming

:53:58.:54:01.

environment, that means more clouds or fewer or whether it means more

:54:02.:54:06.

low clouds or more high clouds. The important thing that is that the

:54:07.:54:09.

effect clouds have on temperatures depends on whether they are low or

:54:10.:54:15.

high. Low ones are cooling, high ones overall warming. It makes the

:54:16.:54:18.

ability to predict what is happening in the climate in 50 years time

:54:19.:54:22.

really unpredictable because you don't get that feedback. I remember

:54:23.:54:31.

geography O level. Cumulonimbus was my favourite. I can remember three.

:54:32.:54:41.

Cirrus. The wispy ones. Cumulonimbus, what you said and the

:54:42.:54:45.

third one has escaped my mind. Cumulus. Years of journalism

:54:46.:54:54.

training, has built out to this question. Do you have a favourite

:54:55.:55:00.

cloud? One of the clouds that have new name is -- was called the Kelvin

:55:01.:55:10.

Helmuth cloud because it is a bit of a tongue twister. It looks like a

:55:11.:55:18.

breaking wave. It has a new name. Fluctus. Lovely. You might see it at

:55:19.:55:27.

the top of another cloud. It is a feature you can see sometimes over

:55:28.:55:30.

the top of another cloud. Fascinating. If you have cloud

:55:31.:55:36.

questions, feel free to ask them. Lim the floodgates will open. -- the

:55:37.:55:44.

floodgates. Nice that we were thinking about the best question.

:55:45.:55:51.

What is your favourite. Get into the heart of the matter.

:55:52.:55:52.

If you've just endured another night's sleep that was interrupted

:55:53.:55:55.

by multiple trips to the loo, you might be interested

:55:56.:55:57.

Scientists in Japan say cutting back on salt can reduce

:55:58.:56:02.

the need to go to the toilet at night.

:56:03.:56:04.

Let's get more on this from Marcus Drake, a urologist,

:56:05.:56:07.

Thanks very much for your time. A lot of people will be interested, me

:56:08.:56:20.

included. It sold playing a part? One of the things we have discovered

:56:21.:56:26.

is if you drink a lot of water, you have to give -- get rid of that

:56:27.:56:29.

surplus but another thing is assault. You need a good balance of

:56:30.:56:33.

water and salt. If you have too much salt, you can only get rid of it

:56:34.:56:38.

inside your durian. If you have too much, you will P more. -- urine. --

:56:39.:56:49.

pee more. People worry that if they go to be loo through the night, it

:56:50.:56:55.

is an interest -- indication of something more serious. It might be

:56:56.:57:01.

something underlying it. If you have a heart problem, you might

:57:02.:57:04.

accumulate too much salt and that leads to difficulties that might

:57:05.:57:08.

make the situation worse. What is the best way to regulate the amount

:57:09.:57:13.

of salt that you taking? It is a very simple, sensible, following a

:57:14.:57:19.

healthy diet. There is a lot of salt in processed food and fizzy drinks.

:57:20.:57:24.

You will have to get rid of the surplus and that will happen through

:57:25.:57:28.

the night. And yet we need salt so it is the case of finding the right,

:57:29.:57:33.

safe level, of course. There is a low amount of salt in healthy food

:57:34.:57:37.

flecked vegetables and meat and that is fine but the difficulty comes

:57:38.:57:42.

with the additional salt that is added. -- fresh vegetables. Looking

:57:43.:57:51.

at the background information, the current advice is to lie down for an

:57:52.:57:57.

hour during the day. Does that help? It is relatively marginal. It is

:57:58.:58:01.

important that if you do that, you keep your feet high. We tend to say

:58:02.:58:08.

lie down on the sofar with your feet above your heart and that's how you

:58:09.:58:14.

get rid of surplus water but whether that is helpful is not proven. --

:58:15.:58:18.

sofa. What about cutting down salt and the fact that it can help you

:58:19.:58:23.

get a better night 's sleep. Is it likely to make inroads on helping us

:58:24.:58:29.

cut down our salt intake? Extremely. The real health benefits of salt go

:58:30.:58:33.

way beyond improving your sleep. The earlier you do it the better. The

:58:34.:58:38.

health benefits are really important, even as early as your

:58:39.:58:42.

30s. It is interesting because people think often over 60. Or

:58:43.:58:51.

indeed over 40. It can go down a -- as young as your 30s. If you cut

:58:52.:58:55.

down on your salt now, you reduce the risk of there being a problem in

:58:56.:58:59.

your 40s. Professor Drake, thank you. A professor of urology. I found

:59:00.:59:09.

that rather helpful. Anyway, there you are. Too much information!

:59:10.:59:14.

Coming up in the next half-hour, is it time to rewrite history when it

:59:15.:59:16.

comes to dinosaurs? As a major re-assessment of some

:59:17.:59:19.

long held theories is published, we find out why it now appears

:59:20.:59:22.

dinosaurs could have even with Rachel Burden and Roger

:59:23.:59:25.

Johnson. Police say the Westminster attacker

:59:26.:00:19.

Khalid Masood acted alone They also say the incident lasted

:00:20.:00:24.

just 82 seconds and there is no information to suggest further

:00:25.:00:29.

attacks are planned. The family of the police officer

:00:30.:00:33.

Keith Palmer who was killed have paid tribute to his selfless

:00:34.:00:37.

bravery and loving nature. Good morning, it's

:00:38.:00:54.

Sunday the 26th March. More than 30 people are injured

:00:55.:00:58.

after a suspected gas explosion In sport,

:00:59.:01:04.

Lewis Hamilton says a fourth World Championship is

:01:05.:01:11.

there for the taking. The season is underway

:01:12.:01:13.

with Hamilton starting on pole for the first race

:01:14.:01:15.

in Melbourne, Australia. A great pit stop by the Ferrari team

:01:16.:01:25.

saw Sebastian Vettel emerge ahead of Hamilton in Melbourne.

:01:26.:01:26.

The warmest day of the year so far yesterday with temperatures reaching

:01:27.:01:32.

More of these glorious blue skies and

:01:33.:01:35.

A full forecast coming up in the next half an hour.

:01:36.:01:40.

Police say they might never find out why Khalid Masood killed four people

:01:41.:01:47.

near the Houses of Parliament on Wednesday

:01:48.:01:48.

Scotland Yard now say they believe he was acting alone.

:01:49.:01:51.

The family of PC Keith Palmer, who was killed by Masood,

:01:52.:01:54.

have released a statement thanking those who were with him

:01:55.:01:57.

In that time, Khalid Masood caused the deaths of three people

:01:58.:02:08.

on Westminster Bridge and injured many more.

:02:09.:02:14.

He crashed his car into the railings, ran through a gate

:02:15.:02:17.

at the Houses of Parliament and stabbed PC Keith Palmer to death.

:02:18.:02:21.

to his selfless bravery, saying:

:02:22.:02:34.

Police believe that Masood carried out the terror attack

:02:35.:02:37.

on his own, but are trying to establish if he was encouraged

:02:38.:02:40.

Questions remain unanswered about his route to radicalisation.

:02:41.:02:49.

He was a violent criminal before converting to Islam more

:02:50.:02:52.

Since Wednesday, 11 people have been arrested.

:02:53.:02:58.

All have now been released except for a 58-year-old

:02:59.:03:01.

Detained under the Terrorism Act, he can be held without charge

:03:02.:03:05.

Members of the public have come to the scene of Wednesday's attack

:03:06.:03:12.

to pay their respects to the four people who lost their lives.

:03:13.:03:16.

Also to remember the many who were injured and those

:03:17.:03:18.

Alexandra Mackenzie is in Westminster this morning

:03:19.:03:26.

We can see that sea of floral tributes behind you is really

:03:27.:03:38.

growing as the days go by and we're finding out more and more about what

:03:39.:03:42.

happened and why it may have happened, but where does the

:03:43.:03:47.

investigation go from here? Yes, absolutely. So far over the last

:03:48.:03:54.

three or four days, the investigation has been fast paced

:03:55.:03:59.

since Wednesday, and as we said, police have established they are

:04:00.:04:02.

confident that Khalid Masood acted alone on the day of the attack. Now

:04:03.:04:07.

what they want to do in the next stage of that investigation is

:04:08.:04:10.

gather as much information as possible to paint a wider picture of

:04:11.:04:15.

what happened. The questions they have now is did he have any help in

:04:16.:04:19.

the preparation in the lead up to the attack, and how was he

:04:20.:04:24.

motivated? In terms of that and in terms of the question why he did it,

:04:25.:04:28.

police have said we may never get an answer to that. As you said, I am

:04:29.:04:33.

here at Westminster, there's an increased police presence, some of

:04:34.:04:37.

these police officers have been here overnight and they said members of

:04:38.:04:40.

the public have even been coming through the night and laying flowers

:04:41.:04:44.

and they've also been very encouraged the public support.

:04:45.:04:49.

Indeed just a few moments ago a taxi driver rolled down the window and

:04:50.:04:53.

gave condolences for their colleague, PC Keith Palmer, and

:04:54.:04:57.

others who died in the attack. He said to the police officers, he said

:04:58.:05:02.

thank you very much for doing your job. I've also had a chance to have

:05:03.:05:06.

a look at some of the flowers and there are messages from across the

:05:07.:05:10.

country, from across the world, and there's a bouquet from the Prime

:05:11.:05:14.

Minister also sending her condolences for those who died in

:05:15.:05:17.

what she called an evil and a cowardly act. Still a very poignant

:05:18.:05:24.

time. Alexandra, thank you very much indeed. Alexandra Mackenzie live for

:05:25.:05:26.

us in Westminster this morning. More than 30 people have been hurt,

:05:27.:05:29.

two of them seriously, after a suspected gas

:05:30.:05:33.

explosion in Merseyside. A dance centre for children

:05:34.:05:34.

was destroyed and customers at a Chinese restaurant were caught

:05:35.:05:37.

in the blast in Bebington The scale of the devastation shows

:05:38.:05:40.

just how powerful the explosion was. One building housing three

:05:41.:05:45.

businesses totally destroyed. This is what it looked

:05:46.:05:49.

like before last night. The blast was heard

:05:50.:05:53.

up to six miles away. An almighty bang but as well as the

:05:54.:06:06.

Bang there was pressure as well, I felt a lot of pressure, my window

:06:07.:06:11.

was shot, I thought initially it was in the house, I ran around like a

:06:12.:06:16.

maniac initially just looking round thinking we'd been attacked.

:06:17.:06:17.

The sound of the building blowing up was captured

:06:18.:06:20.

Two people were taken to a trauma unit in Liverpool

:06:21.:06:25.

32 others were treated at hospitals in Wirral and Chester.

:06:26.:06:35.

There's a multitude of injuries that have happened but the two patients

:06:36.:06:39.

that have gone through to the major trauma unit at Aintree

:06:40.:06:42.

This has clearly been a huge explosion, powerful enough not only

:06:43.:06:45.

to bring down the main building and scatter debris for hundreds

:06:46.:06:48.

of yards, but also to punch huge holes in the walls

:06:49.:06:52.

The emergency services won't speculate on the cause

:06:53.:06:58.

of the blast but a number of local people said they smell gas yesterday

:06:59.:07:01.

National Grid engineers are on the scene.

:07:02.:07:08.

This incident is likely to be protracted, this is likely

:07:09.:07:11.

Very significant damage as you can tell.

:07:12.:07:17.

So it will be some time before people will be allowed back

:07:18.:07:20.

Some people whose homes had to be evacuated spent the night

:07:21.:07:24.

Nearby roads are likely to be closed for some time.

:07:25.:07:32.

The government will publish a significant part of its Brexit

:07:33.:07:40.

legislation on Thursday, a day after Theresa May formally

:07:41.:07:42.

tells Brussels that Britain intends to leave the European Union.

:07:43.:07:45.

The Great Repeal Bill will give ministers the powers to change some

:07:46.:07:48.

aspects of current European laws, without needing

:07:49.:07:50.

Our political correspondent Mark Lobel is in our

:07:51.:07:56.

We know that a lot of people are not terribly happy about the way this

:07:57.:08:07.

Bill is being put forward. Why is that? That's because ministers will

:08:08.:08:12.

be given the power to translate parts of this EU law that's turning

:08:13.:08:16.

into domestic law by themselves without the full scrutiny of

:08:17.:08:20.

Parliament. And so a committee of lords and a former attorney general

:08:21.:08:23.

want reassurances from the government probably as early as

:08:24.:08:26.

Thursday when the plans for this process are being published that

:08:27.:08:31.

ministers just won't change laws at will, that they'll stick to what

:08:32.:08:35.

they're meant to be doing. And that's because the Great Repeal Bill

:08:36.:08:39.

is being brought in to add certainty to British businesses, British

:08:40.:08:42.

workers, about what their rights will be going forward. What the

:08:43.:08:46.

government wants to do, though, is big through all the EU jargon, get

:08:47.:08:51.

it out of there and get it fitting so it makes sense for British law so

:08:52.:08:56.

more time can be spent on policy changes, like new immigration laws

:08:57.:09:02.

and new rules on customs, and that they want to go through full

:09:03.:09:05.

parliamentary scrutiny but with over 40 years worth of laws to change in

:09:06.:09:09.

just two years, you can see why the government want to be able to speed

:09:10.:09:13.

through other parts and they say those parts they do is speed through

:09:14.:09:16.

won't be substantial changes. Thank you. -- do speed through. Mark

:09:17.:09:20.

Lobel, our political correspondent. Hong Kong's new chief

:09:21.:09:21.

executive has been chosen. is believed to be Beijing's

:09:22.:09:23.

preferred candidate. She won in the first round of voting

:09:24.:09:27.

by a specially chosen committee. Pro-democracy activists had

:09:28.:09:30.

denounced the poll as a sham, arguing that everyone

:09:31.:09:33.

should have a vote. The taxi firm Uber has

:09:34.:09:35.

suspended its pilot programme for driverless cars after an early

:09:36.:09:38.

model of its self-driving car The accident is the latest

:09:39.:09:41.

in a series of crashes It's not yet known whether the car

:09:42.:09:45.

was in self driving mode at the time Uber said it caused

:09:46.:09:50.

no serious injuries. In case you missed it,

:09:51.:09:57.

the clocks went forward this morning and some people working in the UK's

:09:58.:10:00.

tourism sector are calling The British Association

:10:01.:10:03.

of Leisure Parks, Piers and Attractions says an extra 80,000

:10:04.:10:09.

jobs will be created due Half of all tourist visits

:10:10.:10:12.

to Britain take in a leisure or amusement park, such

:10:13.:10:39.

as Alton Towers, Thorpe Park Now the group that represents these

:10:40.:10:42.

parks is calling for Britain to be on the same time zone

:10:43.:10:46.

as France or Italy. It says doing so would create

:10:47.:10:49.

a boost worth ?2.5 billion-?3.5 It says brighter evenings could cut

:10:50.:10:52.

CO2 emissions by half 1 billion tons tons

:10:53.:10:57.

a year and prevent BALPPA also says shipping time zones

:10:58.:10:59.

would encourage more outdoor activity and cut obesity levels,

:11:00.:11:03.

especially among children. But it has been tried before

:11:04.:11:05.

in the early 1970s when many Scottish children had to go

:11:06.:11:09.

to school in the dark. It had, according to

:11:10.:11:11.

one SNP politician, Cheryl Fernandez-Versini has

:11:12.:11:13.

announced that she's given birth The singer posted a photo

:11:14.:11:18.

of her popstar partner Liam Payne, from the band One Direction,

:11:19.:11:23.

cradling the newborn In the post Cheryl said

:11:24.:11:25.

she gave birth on Wednesday, but the couple have yet to decide

:11:26.:11:28.

on a name for their son. Of course if they need any help

:11:29.:11:32.

with childcare then bring them A good weight and a good head of

:11:33.:11:42.

hair! Well done to both mom, baby and dad! And on Mothering Sunday as

:11:43.:11:46.

well if you've forgotten and you've got a few minutes to get down to the

:11:47.:11:49.

garage! Chris will have the weather in about

:11:50.:11:52.

five minutes time. As we've been hearing,

:11:53.:11:55.

two people are seriously injured after a suspected gas explosion

:11:56.:11:58.

in Merseyside last night. Adam Dingwall was out with his wife

:11:59.:12:00.

when a huge fireball and dance centre in Bebington,

:12:01.:12:03.

Wirral. We can speak to him now. Adam, good

:12:04.:12:23.

morning. Good morning. Adam, we were hearing the sound from the phone,

:12:24.:12:26.

saw a bit of footage from your phone, it was clear when the sound

:12:27.:12:31.

went off something was happening. Did you have any idea? At that point

:12:32.:12:37.

I had no idea what it was. What did you see? I couldn't see anything,

:12:38.:12:47.

I've pulled over the car, look around expecting to see flames,

:12:48.:12:51.

smoke, something, but there was no sign of anything at that point. How

:12:52.:12:56.

close were you to where the explosion happened? It turned out we

:12:57.:13:02.

were only 500 yards down the road. When did you get an idea of the kind

:13:03.:13:13.

of damage it actually caused? As we were pulling up... We headed in the

:13:14.:13:17.

direction of the noise to find out what was going on and Sue see if

:13:18.:13:32.

anyone was injured. As we pulled up the windows were smashed in -- to

:13:33.:13:40.

see. As you can see from the pictures, the building was almost

:13:41.:13:42.

entirely destroyed. Were people around at the time? What were people

:13:43.:13:48.

doing and saying to each other -- were people. At that point there

:13:49.:13:52.

weren't many around. A couple of people were standing and looking to

:13:53.:13:57.

see what was going on. I noticed someone in the road surrounded by

:13:58.:14:11.

rubble. I've saw what I could do. You looked in and saw if you could

:14:12.:14:17.

help and see if people were OK -- I saw. I saw someone lying in the road

:14:18.:14:22.

so I went over and someone said, who are you? I said I was a first aid to

:14:23.:14:31.

see if I could help. He said he was a police officer. There were three

:14:32.:14:38.

houses opposite the building, all the windows smashed in, and he said

:14:39.:14:42.

to go and check the houses. I went into each of those to see no one was

:14:43.:14:50.

injured and hurt. Emergency services were on the scene quite quickly?

:14:51.:14:59.

Yeah, they arrived a couple of minutes after I got back. To

:15:00.:15:05.

reiterate, two seriously injured and a number of others wounded. We will

:15:06.:15:10.

get more from the scene later on Breakfast.

:15:11.:15:15.

You're watching Breakfast from BBC News.

:15:16.:15:16.

The Metropolitan Police says Khalid Masood, who carried out

:15:17.:15:20.

Wednesday's terror attack in Westminster, acted alone,

:15:21.:15:22.

and there is no information to suggest further attacks are planned.

:15:23.:15:27.

A suspected gas explosion leaves two people seriously injured and 32

:15:28.:15:30.

others hurt, after the collapse of several buildings in Merseyside.

:15:31.:15:39.

Here's Chris with a look at this morning's weather.

:15:40.:15:46.

It's been so nice the last couple of days! So that feature is the warmest

:15:47.:15:57.

place in the UK? Yes, Aboyne in Aberdeenshire. The warmest day we

:15:58.:16:03.

have had so far this year. It was also pretty warm for the north-west

:16:04.:16:09.

of Wales. 19 Celsius is the new mark. It was Northern Ireland 's

:16:10.:16:17.

warmest day of the year so far as well. Back to a frosty scene across

:16:18.:16:22.

Northern Ireland and England and Wales. Clear skies helping

:16:23.:16:29.

temperatures fall overnight. The weather broadly similar. For most of

:16:30.:16:33.

us, sunshine from the word go and that is the way it will stay all

:16:34.:16:38.

day. Some mist patches taking their time to clear. Some thicker cloud

:16:39.:16:44.

and spots of drizzle potential in Shetland. 19 point something I think

:16:45.:16:51.

is quite likely this afternoon. Northern Ireland, 18 degrees in a

:16:52.:16:55.

few spots and 18 as well for Western Wales, parts of north-west England

:16:56.:16:59.

but come to the south-east. Chilly winds blowing and it will keep the

:17:00.:17:04.

temperature is cooler and fresher. For the World Cup qualifiers, it is

:17:05.:17:08.

dry at Wembley. Temperatures into double figures for all of these

:17:09.:17:12.

matches so the weather no problem at all for playing football. Overnight

:17:13.:17:16.

tonight, we will keep the clear skies for most of us. Perhaps a bit

:17:17.:17:20.

of cloud developing over the North Sea coasts, drifting inland across

:17:21.:17:24.

parts of Lincolnshire and Yorkshire and temperatures falling low enough

:17:25.:17:27.

to give us some frost patches again for Northern Ireland and Scotland.

:17:28.:17:30.

Looking at the weather for the week ahead, some sunny spells and staying

:17:31.:17:34.

on the warm side we will see some changes coming in particularly on

:17:35.:17:37.

Wednesday with outbreaks of rain working into the north and west.

:17:38.:17:41.

Before we get that, we have some dry, sunny weather to look forward

:17:42.:17:45.

to. Anywhere in the eastern counties, taking a few to break

:17:46.:17:51.

apart the clouds. In the warmest spots, temperatures pushing into the

:17:52.:17:54.

upper teens. Western areas favoured, a gay and that with the winds coming

:17:55.:18:00.

in from a south-easterly direction, it is should get warmer. -- again.

:18:01.:18:07.

During the week across a eastern England, 12 spots could hit 20

:18:08.:18:11.

degrees, would you believe it. Yes, some more sunshine to come for the

:18:12.:18:15.

next few days. Look forward to it, thank you, Chris.

:18:16.:18:16.

US Central Command says it has opened an investigation into an air

:18:17.:18:19.

strike on the Iraqi city of Mosul which is reported to have killed

:18:20.:18:23.

dozens of civilians earlier this month.

:18:24.:18:24.

American officials have acknowledged that US-led coalition aircraft took

:18:25.:18:27.

part in the attack on part of the city controlled

:18:28.:18:34.

The United Nations has warned of a "terrible loss of life".

:18:35.:18:38.

Our Middle East Editor Jeremy Bowen is in western Mosul.

:18:39.:18:41.

Thousands of people have arrived and have walked out of those parts

:18:42.:18:45.

of Mosul still controlled by Islamic State, and it's a big

:18:46.:18:49.

area, in the last couple of days and they've arrived really with just

:18:50.:18:53.

the clothes they're standing up in and maybe a few spare

:18:54.:18:56.

They need food, they need water, they need shelter.

:18:57.:19:02.

It's a massive humanitarian challenge and it's not nearly as big

:19:03.:19:06.

as one that may be coming, literally coming down that road

:19:07.:19:09.

in the next weeks, from where the black smoke is,

:19:10.:19:12.

which is where the Islamic State positions are here in Mosul,

:19:13.:19:15.

they are apparently 800 metres or a kilometre down that way.

:19:16.:19:19.

The people who have been coming in have been talking

:19:20.:19:32.

They have talked about air strikes that have come in in the last few

:19:33.:19:41.

days and killed, as well as killing people from the Islamic State,

:19:42.:19:44.

They complained of the jihadists have used them as human shields

:19:45.:19:48.

but they have also, in tears and anger, spoken very bitterly

:19:49.:19:54.

about the effects of airstrikes on civilians.

:19:55.:19:59.

I spoke to multiple witnesses who said that there are perhaps

:20:00.:20:02.

hundreds of bodies still lying in the rubble that people

:20:03.:20:05.

Caroline Gluck from the UN's Refugee Agency has been visiting

:20:06.:20:18.

refugee camps near Mosul this week - she joins us live now from Baghdad.

:20:19.:20:27.

Thank you for joining us. Thank you for your time. Can you just explain

:20:28.:20:36.

the situation as you found it when you visited the camps? What we have

:20:37.:20:42.

seen in the last week has been an enormous spike in the numbers of

:20:43.:20:47.

people coming out. Most of the families leaving West Mosul whether

:20:48.:20:51.

current offence are under way, have to transit through a place called

:20:52.:20:55.

how Mum Lille where visited last week. -- Hammam al-Alil. They come

:20:56.:21:07.

off buses traumatised with almost nothing, mostly the close they are

:21:08.:21:11.

wearing. Last week, with very, very heavy rainfall and it muddy so

:21:12.:21:16.

people were in a grim situation. They arrived with nothing. The

:21:17.:21:21.

conditions were bad on the ground. The site is very overcrowded and

:21:22.:21:25.

fall. After the security screening for the men and boys, families are

:21:26.:21:30.

then taken by buses to other camps. Many families don't want to leave,

:21:31.:21:34.

they want to stay at that site because it is about 20 kilometres

:21:35.:21:38.

from Mosul and they prefer to be closer to where their homes are.

:21:39.:21:42.

UNHCR is building a new camp adjacent to the current one and that

:21:43.:21:47.

should open this week and hopefully ease some congestion that the

:21:48.:21:49.

conditions have been difficult indeed. The choice they are faced

:21:50.:21:56.

with is impossible. In some ways it is not even a choice because the

:21:57.:22:01.

risks of staying are as great as the risks of trying to get out?

:22:02.:22:06.

Absolutely. Families have told us they are facing death or death. If

:22:07.:22:13.

they stay, many facing the risk of starvation. They are surviving a

:22:14.:22:18.

meal at day and just flour and water. It has been cold, they have

:22:19.:22:23.

been burning furniture and scrubs of rubbish. There is the intensified

:22:24.:22:30.

fighting as well, airstrikes. They face the risk of death if they

:22:31.:22:34.

leave. If they are caught, they could be execution or sniper fire or

:22:35.:22:40.

IEDs along the way. Their safety is not guaranteed. The families told us

:22:41.:22:46.

that they would rather the second option because they have children

:22:47.:22:49.

and there is the future for children if they leave the war zone at the

:22:50.:22:53.

moment. This is what most at choosing to do when they know that

:22:54.:22:57.

the Iraqi security forces are close by and there is a higher chance they

:22:58.:23:03.

can flee to safety. From the security forces point of view, this

:23:04.:23:07.

is a difficult situation to try to flush out what number of Islamic

:23:08.:23:11.

State fighters are left in this part of the city, particularly the old

:23:12.:23:15.

part of Mosul which I understand is densely populated? Correct.

:23:16.:23:22.

Incredibly difficult. When the offensive from Mosul began in

:23:23.:23:26.

October, the eastern half was relatively easy because the

:23:27.:23:30.

neighbourhoods were apart, the security forces had urged people to

:23:31.:23:34.

stay at home and not take the risk of fleeing however the West is

:23:35.:23:38.

different. We estimate around 600,000 people may still be there

:23:39.:23:43.

and the majority 400,000 or so are thought to be in the old part of the

:23:44.:23:48.

city. The city is very narrow, tiny, twisting lanes, people living very

:23:49.:23:52.

close together. We have heard from residents that the armed Chris have

:23:53.:24:00.

positioned themselves very close to civilians -- armed groups. They have

:24:01.:24:03.

taken over buildings. It is difficult for the Iraqi security

:24:04.:24:08.

forces and the coalition to target very precise target when the targets

:24:09.:24:12.

are very closely mingled with the civilian populations. We were

:24:13.:24:17.

extremely concerned by the reports of civilian casualties in the last

:24:18.:24:28.

few days and week. Civilians should not be targeted in a war. Thank you

:24:29.:24:34.

very much were taking the time to talk to us.

:24:35.:24:36.

You're watching Breakfast from BBC News.

:24:37.:24:38.

Time now for a look at the newspapers.

:24:39.:24:47.

Poet Ian McMillan is here to tell us what's caught his eye.

:24:48.:24:50.

Good morning. Up bright and early. I just noticed that. A rude awakening.

:24:51.:25:03.

Lets get into the papers you have chosen. Observer, a setback for the

:25:04.:25:10.

President. Wanting to get his health-care policy through and

:25:11.:25:13.

didn't get it through. The subtitle to this headline should be, "Things

:25:14.:25:18.

are quite public hated, Mr Trump". There is a saying that you

:25:19.:25:27.

campaigned and Govan. He is governing in flatpack furniture

:25:28.:25:32.

handouts. He thought he could get it through. You must stuff and you

:25:33.:25:36.

can't manage it. Yes, it would be dead easy to get his health-care

:25:37.:25:40.

reform through and in the end he couldn't manage it. We all do this,

:25:41.:25:45.

I can do this, we think it will be easier than we think. This

:25:46.:25:48.

afternoon, I will say, it will be easy forgetting that the grand --

:25:49.:25:55.

grandkids are coming. I will be like Donald Trump. Promising stuff and

:25:56.:25:59.

can't do it. You need to take a step back and say actually, life is more

:26:00.:26:03.

complicated. Leigh it seems to more people that he campaigned in 140

:26:04.:26:09.

characters. It wasn't the greatest campaign, I didn't think. We know

:26:10.:26:14.

from Obama, it will explode, premiums are going up. It is

:26:15.:26:18.

difficult for a lot of American people. It is reduced to a can of

:26:19.:26:25.

very simple chess games in his head with a leaf three pork pieces left.

:26:26.:26:33.

In fact, it is a fantastic game of Go or a competent Chinese game. My

:26:34.:26:41.

theory. --3 pieces left. A lot of praise coming wafer that will

:26:42.:26:50.

Bournemouth MP? We lampoon MPs. We see them as characters or strident

:26:51.:26:57.

people elbowing each other to get to the top. This reminds us that MPs

:26:58.:27:01.

are people, ordinary people who are doing a job. Trying their best.

:27:02.:27:05.

Whatever side they are coming from, they are trying their best to help

:27:06.:27:10.

people. Suddenly, this is absolute stark reality that here he is

:27:11.:27:14.

trained to give somebody the kiss of life and you think yes, let's take a

:27:15.:27:19.

step back and think actually, this is a human being. Doing their best.

:27:20.:27:23.

People may well be a way that he lost his own brother in the Bali

:27:24.:27:27.

terror attack. Goodness knows what type of emotions. We were talking

:27:28.:27:36.

about the new coin and the new supermarkets are not ready for them

:27:37.:27:40.

with the trolleys and cash registers and everything else that it is

:27:41.:27:44.

smoother than you might think? I'm disappointed by that because I was

:27:45.:27:48.

looking forward to a 12 sided Pound coin which is like the old one.

:27:49.:27:53.

Slightly less rough, as you say. I was looking forward to some pocket

:27:54.:27:57.

-based comedy. Nothing better than it is washed up and your money rolls

:27:58.:28:02.

out of your pocket. It is a way to meet new friends. Your money rolls

:28:03.:28:07.

away. Now it be too smooth to do that. I like a new coin but there

:28:08.:28:11.

will be less of a farce. The Royal Mint should look again. Now you are

:28:12.:28:17.

aware of that, fake pound coin is that you come across. This is one of

:28:18.:28:20.

the reason they are introducing these new ones to stop the

:28:21.:28:25.

forgeries. There are a lot in circulation. They roll out of your

:28:26.:28:32.

pocket. They seem to roll server. -- fervour. -- further. A delight for

:28:33.:28:47.

you. Sell-out festivals, soaring sales, poetry, enjoys a renaissance.

:28:48.:28:52.

No thanks to you. All Mac it's actually Kate Tempest. -- it's

:28:53.:29:00.

actually Kate campus. This time the revival has legs. It is partly

:29:01.:29:05.

because it is a response to austerity. It is cheap. You can

:29:06.:29:11.

speak a poll if you can't write. People flock to poetry events Acres

:29:12.:29:17.

it is people speaking like them. -- poem. People can write columns and

:29:18.:29:24.

spout them. Long may it continue. I hope it does. Poetry slams at quite

:29:25.:29:33.

popular. They are. To attract the audiences attention. It is like the

:29:34.:29:42.

equivalent of poetry tossing. It strikes me that these days everybody

:29:43.:29:47.

feels they can do it and everybody is right, everybody can. Let this

:29:48.:29:54.

poetry revival continue. Everybody has a voice inside, everybody has a

:29:55.:29:59.

poet inside. We think we can't do it because our rhymes and our rhythm

:30:00.:30:04.

are not fantastic, our images aren't great that in fact, if such a

:30:05.:30:07.

democratic form that anybody, anybody can have a go. Will be take

:30:08.:30:12.

it that you will be watching this afternoon? I will be watching with a

:30:13.:30:19.

couple of giants. The money will fall from my pocket.

:30:20.:30:23.

It will eat you have grandchildren around.

:30:24.:30:28.

The Andrew Marr Programme is on BBC One this morning at 9:00.

:30:29.:30:36.

Andrew, what have you got coming up?

:30:37.:30:38.

You probably want a quote at the moment. "That's The way the world

:30:39.:30:46.

ends, that way the world ends, not with a bang but with a whimper." We

:30:47.:30:51.

have the Home Secretary herself and the right Docking many questions

:30:52.:30:54.

about the terrorism event. We have Labour's except situation. We are

:30:55.:31:01.

talking to David Tennant from Doctor Who about many things including hell

:31:02.:31:07.

and we have someone telling that British Muslims and what they face

:31:08.:31:11.

after these attacks. They went to your talent. Always ready with a

:31:12.:31:13.

John Cooper quote. Well done. We'll be hearing from FIFA's

:31:14.:31:16.

former medical director as he warns that the abuse of legal

:31:17.:31:20.

painkillers by elite footballers could potentially have

:31:21.:31:23.

life-threatening consequences. with Rachel Burden and Roger

:31:24.:31:25.

Johnson. Coming up before 8am,

:31:26.:32:07.

Chris will be here with the weather. But first a summary of this

:32:08.:32:11.

morning's main news. Police say they might never find out

:32:12.:32:19.

why Khalid Masood killed four people near the Houses

:32:20.:32:22.

of Parliament on Wednesday. According to investigating

:32:23.:32:24.

officers the attack lasted Police believe that Masood acted

:32:25.:32:26.

alone but are trying to establish if he was encouraged

:32:27.:32:30.

or directed by others. The family of the police officer

:32:31.:32:33.

Keith Palmer who was killed have paid tribute to his selfless

:32:34.:32:37.

bravery and loving nature. In a statement, they

:32:38.:32:41.

expressed their gratitude to the people who helped him

:32:42.:32:47.

after the attack saying, "There was nothing more

:32:48.:32:51.

you could have done." In the last few days people many

:32:52.:32:53.

have been laying flowers at Westminster in

:32:54.:32:56.

memory of the victims. More than 30 people have been hurt,

:32:57.:32:58.

two of them seriously, after a suspected gas

:32:59.:33:01.

explosion in Merseyside. A dance centre for children

:33:02.:33:03.

was destroyed and customers at a Chinese restaurant

:33:04.:33:05.

were caught in the blast The government will set out details

:33:06.:33:08.

of its plans to bring EU law into domestic legislation

:33:09.:33:15.

on Thursday, the day after Theresa May is set to start

:33:16.:33:17.

the formal Brexit process. The Great Repeal Bill

:33:18.:33:21.

will bring EU regulations into domestic law,

:33:22.:33:23.

allowing them to be amended The bill will allow ministers

:33:24.:33:26.

to alter regulations without the full scrutiny

:33:27.:33:30.

of MPs and peers. Hong Kong's new chief

:33:31.:33:34.

executive has been chosen. is believed to be Beijing's

:33:35.:33:37.

preferred candidate. She won in the first round of voting

:33:38.:33:41.

by a specially chosen committee. Pro-democracy activists had

:33:42.:33:44.

denounced the poll as a sham, arguing that everyone

:33:45.:33:47.

should have a vote. The taxi firm Uber has

:33:48.:33:52.

suspended its pilot programme for driverless cars after an early

:33:53.:33:56.

model of its self-driving car The accident is the latest

:33:57.:33:59.

in a series of crashes It's not yet known whether the car

:34:00.:34:03.

was in self driving mode at the time Uber said it caused

:34:04.:34:10.

no serious injuries. In case you missed it,

:34:11.:34:15.

the clocks went forward this morning and some people working in the UK's

:34:16.:34:18.

tourism sector are calling The British Association

:34:19.:34:21.

of Leisure Parks, Piers and Attractions says an extra 80,000

:34:22.:34:33.

jobs will be created due It also says shifting time zones

:34:34.:34:36.

would encourage more outdoor activity and cut obesity levels,

:34:37.:34:39.

especially among children. Cheryl Fernandez-Versini has

:34:40.:34:47.

announced that she's given birth The singer posted a photo

:34:48.:34:49.

of her popstar partner Liam Payne, from the band One Direction,

:34:50.:34:56.

cradling the newborn In the post Cheryl said

:34:57.:34:58.

she gave birth on Wednesday, but the couple have yet to decide

:34:59.:35:03.

on a name for their son. Best of luck to them and welcome to

:35:04.:35:17.

the world of no sleep! Let's catch up with the sport and John, you said

:35:18.:35:23.

an hour ago, people interested in the start of the F1 will be watching

:35:24.:35:27.

the Grand Prix, but if you want to watch it later then put your fingers

:35:28.:35:34.

in your ear. You can probably see already that there is a red Ferrari

:35:35.:35:39.

and not a silver Mercedes. Could be coincidental! It could tell you the

:35:40.:35:45.

outcome! Sebastian Vettel has won the first Grand Prix of the season.

:35:46.:35:49.

Lewis Hamilton won't be happy, a poor pitstop from Mercedes, Ferrari

:35:50.:35:54.

male bears and that meant Sebastian Vettel came out in the lead and

:35:55.:35:59.

Lewis Hamilton couldn't make up the gap -- male bears. It has just

:36:00.:36:05.

finished and we could be in for a real tussle. -- and there's. --

:36:06.:36:10.

mailed there's. Mercedes domination of Formula 1

:36:11.:36:11.

could be under threat after Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel

:36:12.:36:14.

won the opening race Lewis Hamilton was

:36:15.:36:16.

the favourite to win after starting from pole and leading

:36:17.:36:19.

until he stopped for fresh tyres But Mercedes got

:36:20.:36:22.

their tactics wrong. Ferrari kept Vettel out

:36:23.:36:25.

for another six laps, he inherited the lead after his stop

:36:26.:36:28.

and stayed comfortably in front till the chequered flag to claim his

:36:29.:36:31.

first win since September 2015. Lewis Hamilton won't be happy, will

:36:32.:36:34.

the? Nailed -- will he? England, Scotland and Northern

:36:35.:36:39.

Ireland are all in action this evening in their latest qualifiers

:36:40.:36:41.

for next year's World Cup. There'll be a minute's

:36:42.:36:44.

silence at Wembley ahead of England's match

:36:45.:36:46.

against Lithuania for victims of the Westminster attack

:36:47.:36:48.

and manager Gareth Southgate understands the power of sport

:36:49.:36:50.

in such difficult circumstances. We know how important the national

:36:51.:36:53.

football team is for the feeling of the nation, and it's a great

:36:54.:36:57.

opportunity for everybody to pay their respects at that moment

:36:58.:37:00.

and to show that as a country we go on, you know, not only London

:37:01.:37:07.

but a country as a whole. There's arguably most at stake

:37:08.:37:10.

for Scotland tonight, they're in the same group

:37:11.:37:14.

as England, but are fifth and if they don't beat Slovenia,

:37:15.:37:17.

their hopes of qualifying would look Sometimes it's easy for a manager

:37:18.:37:20.

to say this is what we're Sometimes you're in a position,

:37:21.:37:29.

well, if we draw, win, What we don't have to do is win

:37:30.:37:32.

it in the first five, You never know in big games

:37:33.:37:39.

when your opportunity comes along. Northern Ireland are

:37:40.:37:43.

well placed heading They're second in the group,

:37:44.:37:45.

five points behind Germany, and on course to clinch

:37:46.:37:49.

a play off place. We have the opportunity to put seven

:37:50.:37:52.

points between ourselves and Norway, the opportunity to get to ten points

:37:53.:37:55.

and I think when you get to that stage of any campaign you start

:37:56.:37:59.

to really believe it's possible and to put yourself

:38:00.:38:02.

in a position to qualify. Certainly the experience

:38:03.:38:04.

of qualifying for France, we've been through that,

:38:05.:38:06.

and these experiences, we know what's required

:38:07.:38:08.

to get there now. The Netherlands are struggling,

:38:09.:38:10.

they lost to Bulgaria, and Belgium only managed

:38:11.:38:16.

a draw against Greece but Cristiano Ronaldo scored

:38:17.:38:18.

twice as the European Ronaldo now has 70 international

:38:19.:38:20.

goals. This was the pick of his goals. A

:38:21.:38:25.

great goal also from... Everton striker

:38:26.:38:31.

Romelu Lukaku to rescue He equalised in the 89th minute

:38:32.:38:33.

but Belgium remain top Tony Andreu scored a cracking

:38:34.:38:36.

goal for Dundee United, as they lifted the Scottish

:38:37.:38:43.

Challenge Cup for the first time. They beat St Mirren 2-1

:38:44.:38:46.

in the final at Fir Park, this competition is for the under-20

:38:47.:38:48.

teams from the Scottish Premiership, as well as the lower

:38:49.:38:51.

divisions and sides Anthony Crolla was outclassed

:38:52.:38:54.

in his bid to regain the WBA lightweight title in

:38:55.:39:00.

Manchester last night. He lost his rematch

:39:01.:39:01.

with Jorge Linares on points. In front of a home crowd,

:39:02.:39:04.

Crolla went down in the seventh And though he responded well,

:39:05.:39:05.

Linares retained the belt Leicester took a big stride

:39:06.:39:13.

towards the play-offs in rugby union's Premiership,

:39:14.:39:17.

beating local rivals Northampton Owen Williams' huge penalty

:39:18.:39:19.

in the last minute of the game sealed the win for Leicester

:39:20.:39:23.

and took them into that Elsewhere there were wins

:39:24.:39:26.

for Harlequins and Exeter. And Leinster strengthened

:39:27.:39:35.

their position at the top of the Pro-12

:39:36.:39:40.

after beating Cardiff Blues 22-21. Ross Moloney just managing to touch

:39:41.:39:43.

down in the corner for what proved England's Ross Fisher is out

:39:44.:39:46.

of the World Golf Championship Match He lost to Japan's Hideto Tanihara

:39:47.:39:51.

in the quarter finals but he did leave with a decent

:39:52.:40:08.

consolation prize, his win over Bubba Watson in the previous

:40:09.:40:11.

round took Fisher into the world's top 50 and earned him a place

:40:12.:40:14.

in the Masters next month. Chris Froome's hopes of victory

:40:15.:40:18.

at the Volta a Catalunya were ruined yesterday as the Team Sky

:40:19.:40:21.

rider lost 26 minutes on his rivals in the

:40:22.:40:23.

penultimate stage. The Briton, riding his first

:40:24.:40:25.

European race of 2017, had moved to second,

:40:26.:40:28.

but he and his team failed to latch on to an early breakaway

:40:29.:40:31.

and he was well beaten. Alejandro Valverde

:40:32.:40:34.

extended his overall lead. The stage was won by Daryl Impey

:40:35.:40:35.

in a sprint to the line. Britain's Adam Yates is in fourth,

:40:36.:40:39.

Froome is now 31st. Team Sky getting their plans badly

:40:40.:40:45.

wrong yesterday, but I guess they have bigger fish to fry! Lots coming

:40:46.:40:49.

up later in the year! Thanks very much, John.

:40:50.:40:53.

Fifa's former medical director has spoken out about the abuse of legal

:40:54.:40:56.

painkillers by elite footballers,

:40:57.:40:59.

Jiri Dvorak claims around half of players

:41:00.:41:11.

involved in the past three World Cups regularly took

:41:12.:41:14.

non-steroidal, anti-inflammatory drugs.

:41:15.:41:16.

He spoke to David Ornstein as part of the BBC's State of Sport week.

:41:17.:41:20.

It's known as the beautiful game but the pursuit of glory can be ugly.

:41:21.:41:25.

When injury occurs there is pressure to play through the pain and now a

:41:26.:41:30.

leading doctor says the use of legal medication is one of football's

:41:31.:41:36.

biggest problems. If you cover up symptoms of years or decades, this

:41:37.:41:43.

is general in medicine, if you have an underlying pathology and you

:41:44.:41:48.

constantly cover up with medication, the underlying pathology of disease

:41:49.:41:53.

is not cured. The doctor warned about this in 2012 when he found

:41:54.:41:58.

almost 40% of players at the 2010 World Cup took painkillers before

:41:59.:42:03.

every game. Football's governing body Fifa said they are providing

:42:04.:42:08.

education on the well-being of athletes, while the professional

:42:09.:42:11.

footballers Association insist it is not a major issue in the English

:42:12.:42:17.

game. But doctor Dvorak argues that lessons have not been learned. When

:42:18.:42:21.

I put on the way on the scale the impact of doping and the abuse of

:42:22.:42:27.

medication is much more alarming. Wake up and be careful. It's not as

:42:28.:42:31.

harmless as you think, that you can take it like cookies. It has side

:42:32.:42:41.

effects. This isn't about ban or hard to come by these substances or

:42:42.:42:48.

supplements, it's about everyday anti-inflammatories like iview

:42:49.:42:51.

profile and the extent to weather these are being misused by

:42:52.:42:56.

footballers -- iview prison. It's widespread in football. As a player

:42:57.:43:02.

you first ask if it is illegal, if it isn't, fine, is it going to help

:43:03.:43:07.

you get through a game, yes. Generally without too many

:43:08.:43:10.

questions, without too much concern, you will take what you've been

:43:11.:43:15.

offered. The overuse of medication feeds into the wider topic of

:43:16.:43:20.

athlete welfare, an issue the government is taking seriously with

:43:21.:43:26.

a duty of care review due to be published shortly. David Ornstein,

:43:27.:43:29.

You're watching Breakfast from BBC News.

:43:30.:43:32.

The Metropolitan Police says Khalid Masood, who carried out

:43:33.:43:39.

Wednesday's terror attack in Westminster, acted alone,

:43:40.:43:41.

and there is no information to suggest further attacks

:43:42.:43:43.

A suspected gas explosion leaves two people seriously injured and 32

:43:44.:43:47.

others hurt after the collapse of several buildings in Merseyside.

:43:48.:43:56.

Could dinosaurs have actually originated in Britain?

:43:57.:43:59.

As new research makes some surprising findings,

:44:00.:44:01.

we find out whether the dinosaur theories we've relied on for over

:44:02.:44:04.

Either way, on the clock change this morning, lots of people getting in

:44:05.:44:22.

including John on Twitter who said his car radio will tell the correct

:44:23.:44:27.

time for the first time in six months -- by the way. He hasn't

:44:28.:44:33.

changed it all that time! Thankfully Chris has changed his clocks this

:44:34.:44:37.

morning and he is here with us bright and early. The wonder of the

:44:38.:44:43.

smart phone but I was nervous about going to bed last night!

:44:44.:44:47.

This was the scene yesterday in Aboyne, Aberdeenshire, the warmest

:44:48.:44:54.

place so far this year. A whisker away from that in north-west Wales,

:44:55.:45:00.

19, the warmest day so far in Wales, Northern Ireland also setting the

:45:01.:45:05.

year's Mark too. A cold start, temperatures this morning in the

:45:06.:45:08.

coldest spots in Northern Ireland and Scotland got two -4, a chilly

:45:09.:45:11.

start. High pressure dominating today. Chilly winds blowing across

:45:12.:45:18.

the south of England, southern parts of Wales. A bit of mist to the

:45:19.:45:23.

western parts of Scotland, taking time to lift, the mainland Scotland

:45:24.:45:30.

could see temperatures a few tenths of a degree higher today, 19 point

:45:31.:45:34.

something, the likely top temperature this afternoon. 18 in

:45:35.:45:38.

Northern Ireland, Western counties favoured for those temperatures.

:45:39.:45:42.

North-west England, west and Wales seeing temperatures up to 18 or so.

:45:43.:45:47.

Further east, cooled by these easterly onshore winds. For the fur

:45:48.:45:50.

ball matches tonight, all looking dry. -- football matches. Clear

:45:51.:45:56.

skies in Northern Ireland and Scotland, like day sunshine for the

:45:57.:45:59.

Wembley match. Overnight we will keep clear skies -- late day

:46:00.:46:04.

sunshine. For Scotland and Northern Ireland, once again that means we

:46:05.:46:07.

will have areas of frost developing. A subtle change to the east, a few

:46:08.:46:12.

more patches of cloud developing from the North Sea, affecting

:46:13.:46:15.

Lincolnshire and Yorkshire to start the day on Monday. But looking at

:46:16.:46:19.

the week ahead, high pressure with us for the start of the week so more

:46:20.:46:24.

than trying to look forward to. Rain developing in northern and western

:46:25.:46:27.

areas by the time we get to the Middle Park of the week. Monday, any

:46:28.:46:33.

low cloud in eastern areas will burn away by the afternoon -- middle

:46:34.:46:39.

Park. Most will see some fun from dawn to dusk. -- middle part.

:46:40.:46:44.

South-east England will begin to warm up, temperatures here reaching

:46:45.:46:48.

around 17 or 18. Again western areas of Wales, parts of north-west

:46:49.:46:53.

England, west Scotland and western Northern Ireland seeing high

:46:54.:46:56.

temperatures into the upper teens. Rachel, Roger, that's the weather

:46:57.:46:57.

for the next few days. One thing your phone doesn't do, it

:46:58.:47:05.

doesn't do your watch, but presumably you wound on your watch

:47:06.:47:09.

and our overnight low yellow I did that this morning but I haven't the

:47:10.:47:15.

car radio, -- an our. There's no point in doing your watch forward if

:47:16.:47:20.

its top three months ago at 350 a.m. . That's what minded. I think it

:47:21.:47:26.

needs a new battery. I wear it because -- that's what my indeed.

:47:27.:47:31.

god of We'll be back with

:47:32.:47:33.

Now it's time for the latest technology round-up, with Click.

:47:34.:48:06.

The roads are crammed and the horn is omnipresent and the rules are...

:48:07.:48:13.

Well, they're there somewhere, I'm sure.

:48:14.:48:17.

And that's why we will not be doing a story about self driving cars

:48:18.:48:21.

And despite the fact that it seems like everybody here owns a car,

:48:22.:48:37.

Many people choose to travel by train instead.

:48:38.:48:40.

But if you think that is any less intense...

:48:41.:48:42.

Mumbai Central Station is a massive, heaving hub connecting the city

:48:43.:48:50.

But if you look closely, you will see something else

:48:51.:48:55.

connecting the commuters to the rest of the world.

:48:56.:48:58.

116 wireless access points provide free Wi-Fi to anybody

:48:59.:49:01.

It is provided by Google which says that about 2.5 TB

:49:02.:49:07.

And here is the interesting part, this is not just about this station.

:49:08.:49:15.

Along India's railway tracks lie 45,000 kilometres of optical fibre

:49:16.:49:23.

and Google is piping Internet access down those cables to feed Wi-Fi

:49:24.:49:27.

access to 114 other train stations as well.

:49:28.:49:29.

The man overseeing the project is Gulzar Azad, who I caught up

:49:30.:49:32.

with while he was waiting for a train.

:49:33.:49:36.

If you had to take one place in the country where you wanted

:49:37.:49:40.

tremendous fibre and you had to have reliable power,

:49:41.:49:49.

relatively speaking, power is a challenge

:49:50.:49:52.

across the country, and you had to have the entire country walking

:49:53.:49:55.

through it there is only one place, that is a railway station.

:49:56.:50:02.

Can you guarantee that all services on Google's Wi-Fi

:50:03.:50:04.

I think the whole motivation for us, if you look at the reason why we did

:50:05.:50:17.

this was to see if we could provide an open Internet, completely open

:50:18.:50:21.

So, there is a fibre optic network rolling out from train stations

:50:22.:50:30.

like this to the vast rural areas of this enormous country.

:50:31.:50:33.

And David hopped on a train to find out what effect that's having

:50:34.:50:36.

It is hard not to be romantic about the railways of India.

:50:37.:50:40.

British colonial rulers laid track for control,

:50:41.:50:47.

shifting resources - mostly out - and prising open markets.

:50:48.:50:58.

Now it is about moving people, millions a day.

:50:59.:51:07.

I took the train to Jaipur station to investigate.

:51:08.:51:19.

It has proper broadband and it is free.

:51:20.:51:31.

Apart from some controversy, at another station where commuters

:51:32.:51:34.

were using free Wi-Fi to download hard-core pornography,

:51:35.:51:37.

the provision of high-speed Wi-Fi has been almost universally praised.

:51:38.:51:39.

90,000 people pass through Jaipur station every day.

:51:40.:51:46.

I use the Internet for news and entertainment.

:51:47.:51:51.

For student journalist Urja Sharma, it means she can keep tabs

:51:52.:52:04.

Early in the morning, the world changes like...

:52:05.:52:07.

Indian stations are full of thriving businesses,

:52:08.:52:22.

feeding off or simply feeding the thousands streaming

:52:23.:52:24.

Free Wi-Fi has been a boon to local businesses here.

:52:25.:52:28.

Ashok runs a tea stall on the platform.

:52:29.:52:30.

He makes more money now that his customers can make online

:52:31.:52:33.

I use the Wi-Fi when my 4G signal does not catch.

:52:34.:52:41.

When that does not work, I use Wi-Fi, especially

:52:42.:52:43.

I need it to confirm I have received the payment.

:52:44.:52:47.

Digital payments are worth about 30%-50% of my takings.

:52:48.:52:57.

This is music to the years of people managing the railways of India.

:52:58.:53:00.

A nationalised industry that runs at a loss.

:53:01.:53:03.

They think that high-speed Wi-Fi could be a good pull

:53:04.:53:05.

They plan to build a huge concourse and attract retail

:53:06.:53:12.

As Wi-Fi expands and it becomes taken for granted then I think

:53:13.:53:26.

people will transfer more and more of their business.

:53:27.:53:29.

Jaipur is a domestic and international tourist hub

:53:30.:53:31.

People come out here from all parts of the world.

:53:32.:53:35.

And when you have a huge concourse it becomes an area where you can

:53:36.:53:38.

For Google, more people online is more people to sell to.

:53:39.:53:43.

India's railway is the country's backbone.

:53:44.:53:44.

Its public Wi-Fi is poised to be at least as far reaching.

:53:45.:53:48.

This is the Andumen Irdu Primary School in Calcutta.

:53:49.:53:57.

There are 155 kids here from Grade 1 through to 7,

:53:58.:54:09.

and a whole bunch of dedicated teachers.

:54:10.:54:11.

And this is how they start their day.

:54:12.:54:22.

Over in Virjaya Nijak's classroom, things are

:54:23.:54:35.

So, at the back of the projector, there's a device which is plugged

:54:36.:54:44.

in and is running videos on English, maths and science.

:54:45.:54:47.

The videos are made for the entire region.

:54:48.:54:55.

But then they're dubbed in different dialects,

:54:56.:54:58.

different languages, depending on where they're sent to.

:54:59.:55:00.

Today, we're learning about fractions.

:55:01.:55:02.

It is great teaching tool - as long as there is electricity...

:55:03.:55:11.

But there are plenty of times when there isn't.

:55:12.:55:16.

Earlier, it would be difficult to teach because of power cuts.

:55:17.:55:21.

As the day passed by in the afternoon, we would have power

:55:22.:55:24.

That's why the projector and tablet are hooked up to this box,

:55:25.:55:32.

which is itself attached to a solar panel on the roof.

:55:33.:55:34.

Together, they can provide up to five hours of electricity a day,

:55:35.:55:38.

meaning that classes don't have to be interrupted or cancelled

:55:39.:55:40.

Then, we started using solar power, as it is an easy and natural source

:55:41.:55:49.

We have introduced a study of generating power through solar

:55:50.:55:53.

energy to our students, and are teaching them the importance

:55:54.:55:56.

We also explain to our students that this process will help us

:55:57.:56:00.

in the future to generate electricity.

:56:01.:56:02.

This whole system has been provided by the Selco Foundation,

:56:03.:56:04.

an Indian charity with the aim of hoping to alleviate poverty

:56:05.:56:07.

With this, they will get a better education through audiovisual

:56:08.:56:11.

teaching, and there is no problem of electricity.

:56:12.:56:21.

So any time teachers can take their students

:56:22.:56:23.

to the classroom, they can teach through this medium.

:56:24.:56:31.

Selco and other NGOs they work with pay for half of the cost

:56:32.:56:35.

of installing the projector and solar system -

:56:36.:56:37.

the other half comes from local schools or local governments.

:56:38.:56:40.

TRANSLATION: Before this project came in to use it,

:56:41.:56:44.

But since, we have started using the solar power,

:56:45.:56:53.

our number of students has increased in a good way.

:56:54.:57:00.

We have students coming to us from different villages to learn,

:57:01.:57:03.

and not only students - we have other schools coming down

:57:04.:57:06.

The smart class is a good way of teaching kids these days.

:57:07.:57:11.

They seem to enjoy and learn more than usual.

:57:12.:57:13.

After we introduced smart class, our school stands proudly

:57:14.:57:16.

We plan to grow larger as the years pass by.

:57:17.:57:20.

The same system is already in hundreds of rural schools,

:57:21.:57:27.

and they're aiming to add hundreds more this year.

:57:28.:57:29.

And it's not just key for schools - across rural India, businesses can

:57:30.:57:33.

be helped massively by having a reliable power supply.

:57:34.:57:37.

Somana is a seamstress who lives a short drive from Kindapur.

:57:38.:57:45.

She became the breadwinner for her family after her father

:57:46.:57:48.

The more clothing she can prepare, the more she gets paid.

:57:49.:57:52.

With her old method, she could fix a couple

:57:53.:57:54.

But thanks to the solar panel on her roof, she can whiz

:57:55.:58:00.

Plus, she has a fan, a TV and a light, so she can work

:58:01.:58:06.

One-quarter of India's rural population lives below the official

:58:07.:58:22.

poverty line - that's 216 million people whose livelihoods could be

:58:23.:58:24.

improved by the addition of basic facilities like electricity.

:58:25.:58:27.

And of course, one key way of helping people out

:58:28.:58:37.

It's always such a privilege to come to a place like this and see how

:58:38.:58:42.

the simplest technology can make a world of difference.

:58:43.:58:45.

You can see plenty of photos and more backstage

:58:46.:58:49.

Hello, this is Breakfast, with Rachel Burden and Roger Johnson.

:58:50.:59:57.

Police say the Westminster attacker Khalid Masood acted alone

:59:58.:00:00.

They also say the incident lasted just 82 seconds and there is

:00:01.:00:07.

no information to suggest further attacks are planned.

:00:08.:00:12.

The family of the police officer Keith Palmer who was killed have

:00:13.:00:15.

paid tribute to his selfless bravery and loving nature.

:00:16.:00:33.

Good morning. It's Sunday 26th March.

:00:34.:00:36.

More than 30 people are injured after a suspected gas explosion

:00:37.:00:44.

In sport, Lewis Hamilton trails Sebastian Vettel in the first race

:00:45.:00:51.

Ferrari got a tactics spot on as Sebastian Vettel past Lewis

:00:52.:01:03.

Hamilton, signalling an end to Mercedes' domination.

:01:04.:01:08.

And the blues guide thinking that has led to new cloud formation being

:01:09.:01:16.

recognised officially. Yesterday was the warmest day of the

:01:17.:01:19.

year so far today, more of that glorious sunshine for custody, so

:01:20.:01:22.

you can expect more of these blue skies. A full forecast in the next

:01:23.:01:25.

half hour. Police say they might never find out

:01:26.:01:27.

why Khalid Masood killed four people near the Houses of Parliament

:01:28.:01:32.

on Wednesday. Scotland Yard now say they believe

:01:33.:01:34.

he was acting alone. The family of PC Keith Palmer

:01:35.:01:36.

who was killed by Masood have released a statement,

:01:37.:01:39.

thanking those who were 82 seconds. That is all it took. In

:01:40.:01:53.

that time, Khalid Masood caused the deaths of three people on

:01:54.:01:57.

Westminster Bridge, and injured many more. He crashed his car into the

:01:58.:02:03.

railings, ran through a gate upper houses of parliament, and stabbed PC

:02:04.:02:09.

Keith Wallis -- PC Keith Palmer to death. Last night, his family paid

:02:10.:02:13.

tribute to his selfless bravery, saying...

:02:14.:02:23.

Police believe that Khalid Masood carried out the terror attack on his

:02:24.:02:30.

own, but are trying to establish if he was encouraged directed by

:02:31.:02:37.

others. Questions remain unanswered about his route to radicalisation.

:02:38.:02:41.

He was a violent criminal before converting to Islam more than a

:02:42.:02:44.

decade ago. Since Wednesday, 11 people have been arrested, and all

:02:45.:02:49.

have now been released except for a 58-year-old man from Birmingham.

:02:50.:02:54.

Detained under the terrorism act, he can be held without charge for 14

:02:55.:02:59.

days. Members of the public have come to the scene of Wednesday's

:03:00.:03:03.

attack to pay their respects to the four people who lost their lives.

:03:04.:03:06.

Also to remember the many who were injured, and those who remain in

:03:07.:03:15.

hospital. Alexandra joins us from Westminster. The floral tributes

:03:16.:03:22.

behind you, they are growing on a daily basis. As we have heard, the

:03:23.:03:25.

police think they may never know why Khalid Masood did this. But the

:03:26.:03:29.

investigation, nonetheless, is still continuing.

:03:30.:03:34.

Yes, absolutely. This is now entering the fourth full day of

:03:35.:03:40.

this, what is being described by police as a fast-moving

:03:41.:03:43.

investigation. What they are doing now is appealing for witnesses,

:03:44.:03:47.

appealing for more information, as they said this morning, Khalid

:03:48.:03:51.

Masood, the police have said they do not believe that he acted with

:03:52.:03:56.

anyone on the actual day of the attack. But what about the days

:03:57.:03:59.

before that, the weeks before that, the month before that? That is the

:04:00.:04:03.

picture police want to piece together, and to do that they want

:04:04.:04:08.

to speak to anyone who knew Khalid Masood in the time before. And they

:04:09.:04:15.

want them to come forward with any information that they might have.

:04:16.:04:17.

And as you say, a tribute growing here for the victims, the people

:04:18.:04:24.

lost their lives. Thank you very much indeed for

:04:25.:04:27.

joining us this morning from Parliament Square.

:04:28.:04:29.

More than 30 people have been hurt - two of them seriously -

:04:30.:04:33.

after a suspected gas explosion in Merseyside.

:04:34.:04:34.

A dance centre for children was destroyed and customers

:04:35.:04:36.

at a Chinese restaurant were caught in the blast

:04:37.:04:38.

The scale of the devastation shows just how powerful the explosion was.

:04:39.:04:51.

One building housing three businesses totally destroyed. This

:04:52.:04:56.

is what it looked like before last night. The blast was heard up to six

:04:57.:05:03.

miles away. I heard an almighty bang, at as well

:05:04.:05:08.

as the Bang there was pressure as well, I felt a lot of pressure. I

:05:09.:05:12.

originally thought it was in the house. I ran around like a maniac

:05:13.:05:19.

looking around, stuff like that. The sound of the building growing up

:05:20.:05:23.

was captured by a car's dashboard camera. -- blowing up. Two people

:05:24.:05:30.

were taken to a trauma unit in Liverpool with serious injuries. 32

:05:31.:05:35.

others were treated in hospitals in Wirral and Chester.

:05:36.:05:39.

There is a multitude of injuries that have happened with the two

:05:40.:05:42.

patients who have gone through to the major trauma unit. They have

:05:43.:05:48.

significant injuries. This has clearly been a huge

:05:49.:05:51.

explosion, powerful enough not only to bring down the main building and

:05:52.:05:55.

scattered debris for hundreds of yards, but also to punch huge holes

:05:56.:06:02.

in the walls of nearby buildings. The emergency services will not

:06:03.:06:06.

speculate on the cause of the blast, but a number of local people have

:06:07.:06:11.

said they smell gas yesterday and Friday. National Grid engineers are

:06:12.:06:16.

on the scene. This incident is likely to be

:06:17.:06:19.

protracted. This is likely to last several days, very significant

:06:20.:06:23.

damage as you can tell. So it will be some time before people will be

:06:24.:06:30.

allowed back into their homes. Some people whose homes had to be

:06:31.:06:33.

evacuated spent the night in the local church. Nearby roads are

:06:34.:06:35.

likely to be closed for some time. The government will publish

:06:36.:06:38.

a significant part of its Brexit legislation on Thursday -

:06:39.:06:41.

a day after Theresa May formally tells Brussels that Britain intends

:06:42.:06:44.

to leave the European Union. The Great Repeal Bill will give

:06:45.:06:48.

ministers the powers to change some aspects of current European laws,

:06:49.:06:51.

without needing the Our Political

:06:52.:06:55.

Correspondent Mark Lobel Mark, this could prove to be

:06:56.:07:01.

controversial couldn't it? Not everyone totally happy with

:07:02.:07:12.

this, why not? That's because ministers will be

:07:13.:07:15.

given the power to translate some of this EU law into domestic law

:07:16.:07:19.

without having to consult MPs and peers, and without having the full

:07:20.:07:21.

Parliamentary scrutiny for some aspects of this. And MPs and peers

:07:22.:07:25.

want reassurances from the government, robbery as early as

:07:26.:07:32.

Thursday, -- probably, that those ministers cannot change the meaning

:07:33.:07:35.

of the laws as well, and it is just a tidying up exercise. The whole

:07:36.:07:39.

point of the bill is to give clarification and certainty for UK

:07:40.:07:43.

businesses and workers as to what the law is going to look like in two

:07:44.:07:47.

years' time. And what the government want to do is get rid of all of the

:07:48.:07:50.

EU jargon and make the laws make sense, by giving the fast-track

:07:51.:07:55.

powers to ministers to get rid of all those little bits that need to

:07:56.:07:59.

be done and technicalities. So that real policy-making on customs and

:08:00.:08:04.

immigration can have a proper time in Parliament. We are talking about

:08:05.:08:08.

40 years of lawmaking that has to be tidied up in just two years. The

:08:09.:08:14.

government assures people that in fact those ministers will not be

:08:15.:08:16.

making substantial changes with these new powers.

:08:17.:08:18.

Thank you very much. Hong Kong's new chief

:08:19.:08:20.

executive has been chosen. Carrie Lam, seen in the middle here,

:08:21.:08:22.

is believed to be Beijing's She won in the first round of voting

:08:23.:08:25.

by a specially chosen committee. Pro-democracy activists had

:08:26.:08:30.

denounced the poll as a sham, arguing that everyone

:08:31.:08:33.

should have a vote. The taxi firm Uber has

:08:34.:08:37.

suspended its pilot program for driverless cars after an early

:08:38.:08:39.

model of its self-driving car The accident is the latest

:08:40.:08:43.

in a series of crashes involving It's not yet known whether the car

:08:44.:08:49.

was in self driving mode at the time of the crash.Uber said it caused

:08:50.:08:55.

no serious injuries. In case you missed it,

:08:56.:09:00.

the clocks went forward this morning and some people working in the UK's

:09:01.:09:04.

tourism sector are calling The British Association

:09:05.:09:08.

of Leisure Parks, Piers and Attractions says an extra

:09:09.:09:14.

80,000 jobs will be created due Our Business Correspondent

:09:15.:09:17.

Joe Lynam has more. Half of all tourist visits

:09:18.:09:25.

to Britain take in a leisure or amusement park, such

:09:26.:09:28.

as Alton Towers, Thorpe Park Now the group that represents these

:09:29.:09:31.

parks is calling for Britain to be on the same time zone

:09:32.:09:36.

as France or Italy. It says doing so would create

:09:37.:09:40.

a boost worth ?2.5 billion-?3.5 It says brighter evenings could cut

:09:41.:09:43.

CO2 emissions by half 500 million tons a year and prevent

:09:44.:09:48.

a road deaths annually. BALPPA also says shipping time zones

:09:49.:09:53.

would encourage more outdoor activity and cut obesity levels,

:09:54.:09:56.

especially among children. But it has been tried before

:09:57.:10:01.

in the early 1970s when many Scottish children had to go

:10:02.:10:04.

to school in the dark. It had, according to

:10:05.:10:07.

one SNP politician, And waistcoat which once belonged to

:10:08.:10:23.

Captain James Cook has failed to sell at auction. Nobody wanted it.

:10:24.:10:29.

It was supposed to sell $1.1 billion, at bidding fell short of

:10:30.:10:32.

that estimate. It's floral design is said to be inspired by the Explorer

:10:33.:10:38.

Breakfast travels around Australia. -- the Explorer's travels.

:10:39.:10:46.

It is ten past eight. We will have a weather forecast in just around five

:10:47.:10:49.

minutes with Chris. First, coping with the death of a loved one is a

:10:50.:10:54.

huge challenge, but many people have to come to terms with their own

:10:55.:10:58.

personal grief while also trying to stay strong for their children.

:10:59.:11:01.

It's an issue that the former England captain Rio Ferdinand has

:11:02.:11:04.

experienced first-hand after the loss of his wife

:11:05.:11:06.

He's shared his story in a new documentary, Being Mum Dad.

:11:07.:11:10.

This is one of the only things in life that I have not got the answer

:11:11.:11:26.

from. And that is quite worrying thought. You are just sitting there

:11:27.:11:32.

going, what are they thinking, where are they? Are they worried, happy,

:11:33.:11:38.

sad? I am desperate to know, but I don't want to scare them. I want the

:11:39.:11:44.

best case for my kids, and the only way I see that happening is for me

:11:45.:11:48.

to ask questions. I need help, I do need help, I know that.

:11:49.:11:51.

Let's talk about this now with Dan Naylor who lost his wife

:11:52.:11:54.

Helen in December 2012, when his son was just two years old.

:11:55.:11:58.

Also joining us is Linda Magistris from the bereavement charity,

:11:59.:12:00.

Thank you both very much indeed for coming in. Damn, I appreciate it is

:12:01.:12:13.

difficult to explain, but can you tell us what happened?

:12:14.:12:18.

Helen went to work the week before Christmas, did a bit of Christmas

:12:19.:12:20.

shopping at lunchtime, on the way back to work stopped at a pelican

:12:21.:12:25.

crossing, the Green man came on, the traffic light went to red, and a guy

:12:26.:12:31.

just rolled through the red light and hit her on the pelican crossing,

:12:32.:12:34.

and she never woke up. And at the time, your son was

:12:35.:12:38.

just... Two and a half.

:12:39.:12:44.

How difficult was it you coming to terms with something that is

:12:45.:12:47.

unimaginable to most of us? Helen never woke up, but the

:12:48.:12:52.

ambulance crews managed to keep her alive to get to the hospital and

:12:53.:12:55.

they managed to keep her on life support for a few days so we

:12:56.:13:00.

conceded by. But I had to get Jamie and put him on the bed and tell him

:13:01.:13:03.

he had to say goodbye, that his mum was not going to come home, and his

:13:04.:13:07.

mum had died and she wasn't going to come home to see him. So it was

:13:08.:13:12.

pretty tough, but he did really well. For a two and a half year old,

:13:13.:13:19.

he did very well. A very difficult one.

:13:20.:13:24.

Most people will not be able to get their heads around how you get

:13:25.:13:27.

through the day today. What did you do initially? Added you manage?

:13:28.:13:34.

It is tricky, a lot of it is a blur. Jamie helps. Having Jimmy to look

:13:35.:13:39.

after and having to make sure that he is fed and thwarted and dressed

:13:40.:13:45.

and go into nursery, meant that I had to get up and they had to be

:13:46.:13:48.

sober and seen and go through the day-to-day stuff.

:13:49.:13:53.

But it also forces you to keep yourself together. It doesn't

:13:54.:13:56.

necessarily give you time to really grieve, perhaps was to mark?

:13:57.:14:04.

I would take into nursery and then sit on the steps and cry and get him

:14:05.:14:09.

from nursery in the afternoon. Linda, to have read than's story,

:14:10.:14:14.

you went through something similar as well. For those who have not been

:14:15.:14:19.

through it, it is quite shocking and you wonder how on earth you get

:14:20.:14:22.

through it. But reading the statistics about the number of

:14:23.:14:26.

parents, young parents, who lose a partner, I was shocked when I read

:14:27.:14:31.

the numbers. It is shocking, and grief is

:14:32.:14:34.

completely debilitating and can take over your life. This is why we have

:14:35.:14:38.

put together the the Good Grief Trust rumour I lost my partner two

:14:39.:14:43.

years ago. We have launched this charity because we want to bring

:14:44.:14:46.

everybody together, we want people to share these experiences, bring

:14:47.:14:51.

all those services, all those organisations around the country

:14:52.:14:53.

together because at the moment it is very difficult to find the help and

:14:54.:14:57.

support that you really need at the time you need it most. I, luckily,

:14:58.:15:04.

very accidentally, found a charity which was my lifeline. But nobody

:15:05.:15:08.

seemed to know about it. Health professionals, GPs, they did not

:15:09.:15:13.

sign post me to it. I was baffled as to why that happened. I have now

:15:14.:15:18.

spent two years researching this, and we know there are excellent

:15:19.:15:21.

organisations that can help people like Dan, whether you have lost a

:15:22.:15:25.

child, a parent, a partner, a sibling, a friend. Wreath is

:15:26.:15:28.

catastrophic and needs to be acknowledged and recognised --

:15:29.:15:32.

grief. Those numbers that I mentioned, in

:15:33.:15:42.

2015, 23,600 parents died in the UK leading independent children. That

:15:43.:15:48.

is one every 22 minutes. Exactly, and in a classroom, one out

:15:49.:15:53.

of every 29 of these children will be believed and will have lost a

:15:54.:15:55.

parent. It really is absolutely shocking, and we did -- we need to

:15:56.:16:03.

do something about that. We are now going to go into every hospital,

:16:04.:16:06.

every hospice, every GP surgery, every funeral director, and give

:16:07.:16:10.

them a card that will signpost them to that help. It is all going to be

:16:11.:16:14.

under that one umbrella because you need help quickly. We all grieve

:16:15.:16:18.

completely differently, but the thread that runs through it, because

:16:19.:16:22.

you have now started your own Facebook, ringing the guys together,

:16:23.:16:28.

is we need to talk to each other who have been through a similar

:16:29.:16:31.

circumstance. I think people had said to you

:16:32.:16:34.

initially, perhaps you need to share with other people who have had

:16:35.:16:37.

similar experiences, and you are reluctant at first, but that is what

:16:38.:16:42.

you did and I think that is how you came into contact with Rio

:16:43.:16:47.

Ferdinand, isn't it? Yes, at the very beginning of that,

:16:48.:16:54.

my friend a widower lost our waves in similar circumstances. So I

:16:55.:16:59.

contacted him and said we are both in the same boat, let's have a chat.

:17:00.:17:05.

And from that we have ended up helping him, we have made a private

:17:06.:17:08.

group on Facebook that is just for widows, and widowers, a safe place

:17:09.:17:16.

fermented law of steam, talk about why things work and why things don't

:17:17.:17:21.

work -- a safe place for men to let off steam.

:17:22.:17:26.

And how difficult was it for someone like Rio Ferdinand? When you are so

:17:27.:17:31.

well known as well. The privacy of yourself, your children, to open up

:17:32.:17:38.

of others is even more of challenge. You cannot trust people that you

:17:39.:17:42.

don't know. With Rio Ferdinand's public persona, he cannot quite get

:17:43.:17:48.

blitzed on a Friday night. He just cannot do that. He has a public

:17:49.:17:59.

persona, he has to remain a part of. He found a lot of strength being in

:18:00.:18:02.

touch with you. You will see on the filming Tuesday.

:18:03.:18:09.

We got to tell our stories, and it was good to tell our own stories.

:18:10.:18:15.

Is it harder for men than four women?

:18:16.:18:21.

You have to talk. You do have to talk, and women talk

:18:22.:18:26.

more naturally, I guess, than the guys do. I just need to read you

:18:27.:18:31.

this post. Our Facebook has reached over 500,000 people in seven months.

:18:32.:18:36.

This is a really important issue, and it says here, this has been shed

:18:37.:18:42.

5600 times, if you know someone who has lost a very important person in

:18:43.:18:45.

their life and are afraid to mention them because you think you may make

:18:46.:18:48.

them sad by reminding them that they died, you are not reminding them.

:18:49.:18:52.

They did not forget that they died. What you're reminding them of is

:18:53.:18:56.

that you remember that they live. And that is a really great gift.

:18:57.:19:02.

If they know someone in that situation, the best thing. What was

:19:03.:19:05.

the best thing in terms of you feeling that you have support?

:19:06.:19:15.

I have talk about this quite a lot. I families did, my in-laws on the

:19:16.:19:21.

other side are very good, I have got a lot of help that way around.

:19:22.:19:27.

That really is key. I know so many people, family and

:19:28.:19:33.

friends and in-laws, who distanced themselves. They don't know what to

:19:34.:19:38.

do. You knock on the door, you don't say

:19:39.:19:41.

to someone phoned me if you need me. Turn up and take the children out of

:19:42.:19:45.

the park. Turn up with a lasagne something. This is across the board.

:19:46.:19:52.

If you phone me, I have the opportunity to put the phone down or

:19:53.:19:59.

answer. If you text me I have the option to read it and delete it or

:20:00.:20:04.

apply. But if you do not do that I will not phone you because I'm not

:20:05.:20:08.

going to myself on the other end. If you don't know what to say, just

:20:09.:20:12.

say I don't know what to say but I am here for you. Be there for that

:20:13.:20:16.

person, and all the way through, because it is not just at the

:20:17.:20:21.

beginning. Somebody could be in denial, and like Rio Ferdinand, he

:20:22.:20:24.

has put it aside to look after his children. You need to keep in touch

:20:25.:20:29.

with people. I find those statistics utterly

:20:30.:20:31.

shocking. Thank you both very much indeed.

:20:32.:20:38.

Add all the first -- and all the best to Jamie as well.

:20:39.:20:40.

Rio Ferdinand: Being Mum And Dad is on BBC One on Tuesday night at 9pm.

:20:41.:20:44.

You're watching Breakfast from BBC News.

:20:45.:20:49.

Let's take a look at the weather forecast.

:20:50.:20:58.

A glorious start to the morning. This was our early picture, sent in

:20:59.:21:04.

showing the sunrise. Thanks for sending that glorious picture in.

:21:05.:21:10.

The old adage, red sky in the morning, Shepards' warning. The

:21:11.:21:14.

shepherds do not need to be worried, it is going to be a glorious day. We

:21:15.:21:18.

have got temperatures up to 19 Celsius in the morning, the warmest

:21:19.:21:23.

day of the year so far yesterday. Temperatures could go to attend the

:21:24.:21:28.

higher than that later this afternoon -- one tenth higher than

:21:29.:21:35.

that. We have got clear skies, the sun is up and those temperatures are

:21:36.:21:38.

going to go shooting up but he quickly. Early morning mist patches

:21:39.:21:42.

clearing up over the Western Isles of Scotland. For Shetland,

:21:43.:21:47.

occasional spot of drizzle, quite breezy, temperatures 9 degrees. The

:21:48.:21:51.

mainland of Scotland is bathed in sunshine, and the northern areas,

:21:52.:21:56.

temperatures a feud tends of a degree higher than they were

:21:57.:22:00.

yesterday. The warmer spots across western counties, 18 degrees, 19

:22:01.:22:06.

possible across parts of West Wales. Mainly north-west England as well.

:22:07.:22:10.

Sheltered from these wins that will make it feel little on the fresh

:22:11.:22:14.

side across eastern parts of England today. No problems for the World Cup

:22:15.:22:18.

qualifying football matches. Staying dry at Wembley, winds are Park and

:22:19.:22:23.

Hamdan. A bit of late day sunshine at Wembley. We will keep that clear

:22:24.:22:30.

and dry weather this evening. It will be called for Northern Ireland

:22:31.:22:35.

and Scotland, maybe a little bit of cloud moving in from the North Sea

:22:36.:22:40.

affecting eastern England. High pressure still with us for the week

:22:41.:22:44.

ahead, more warm sunshine to come, but we will see changes by the time

:22:45.:22:47.

we get the middle part of the week, outbreaks of rain in the north and

:22:48.:22:51.

west. Here is Monday's forecast, another dry day for everyone just

:22:52.:22:55.

about. Cloudy start across eastern areas, that will then and break-up

:22:56.:22:59.

with sunny spells coming through. Early morning frost coming through,

:23:00.:23:05.

and in the sunshine feeling presently warm -- pleasantly warm.

:23:06.:23:09.

It will start to get a little warmer across south-east England,

:23:10.:23:12.

temperatures reaching around 17-18 . That is the latest weather.

:23:13.:23:18.

Thanks very much indeed. You're watching

:23:19.:23:20.

Breakfast from BBC News. It's time now for a look

:23:21.:23:24.

at the newspapers. And the poet Ian McMillan is going

:23:25.:23:32.

to tell us what has caught his eye this morning. Inside the Observer,

:23:33.:23:36.

we should just acknowledge the picture is of one of the refugees

:23:37.:23:40.

from Mosul fleeing the city, which is still under attack from Islamic

:23:41.:23:48.

State. There is a real refugee crisis brewing there. Elsewhere,

:23:49.:23:53.

looking back of the attack on Westminster earlier this week, and

:23:54.:23:56.

the revelation that the whole act was just 82 seconds, Ian, which is

:23:57.:24:00.

astonishing. That is the amazing thinkers we

:24:01.:24:06.

think about time a lot this morning. The mystery of Time, and what time

:24:07.:24:11.

is. And yet all that happened, that terrible event happened in 82

:24:12.:24:14.

seconds. I was just intrigued and shocked and horrified by the

:24:15.:24:21.

specific nature of that. 82 seconds. It was not 90 seconds, or a minute.

:24:22.:24:24.

It makes you think that every cataclysmic event actually happens

:24:25.:24:28.

in a small amount of time. There is a kind of ripple effect a slipstream

:24:29.:24:34.

around these things. That these things just happen in a very tiny

:24:35.:24:38.

space of time, you start thinking, what if?

:24:39.:24:43.

A split-second either way, and consequences would have been

:24:44.:24:45.

different for all the people involved.

:24:46.:24:50.

In every news item, in every day, you think about that. That amazing

:24:51.:24:54.

phrase, a split-second, isn't that interesting? A split-second that

:24:55.:24:58.

could send something one thing or the other. -- one way or the other.

:24:59.:25:05.

Plays into the conversation we were having with Dan. Inside the Sunday

:25:06.:25:10.

Mirror, hundreds of libraries face the axe in cuts. This is a story

:25:11.:25:16.

that has been around for awhile. Lots of have already gone, lots of

:25:17.:25:21.

local councils have found they cannot keep going.

:25:22.:25:26.

It has been going throughout this decade of austerity. In decades to

:25:27.:25:30.

come, people are going to go, they did what, they shut libraries?

:25:31.:25:35.

But do you think they will, given that so much of reading is now done

:25:36.:25:41.

on tablets? But I'll be think the library can be

:25:42.:25:45.

the moral and cultural centre. It is where people can go for nothing and

:25:46.:25:49.

access the world, and be sitting there in a place that is about

:25:50.:25:54.

bringing people together. And I just think maybe it is not a good thing.

:25:55.:25:59.

I know it is an old story, but it is good to keep saying, do we have to

:26:00.:26:04.

do this? It is interesting the way libraries

:26:05.:26:08.

have evolved. They are real community hub, the ones that work

:26:09.:26:11.

well, there is Internet access for people who might not have it at

:26:12.:26:14.

home. Free newspapers, children' sessions.

:26:15.:26:19.

We are getting a new one in Barnsley. We got a lovely new one in

:26:20.:26:25.

my village, but before it was Mrs Dove, who used to terrify us, she

:26:26.:26:31.

would ask to see our hands! The Royal Family has long had

:26:32.:26:36.

associations with dogs. The Telegraph is saying that Queen

:26:37.:26:40.

Victoria used to sketch her dogs. I think that's fantastic. It amused

:26:41.:26:46.

me, I was amused, unlike Queen Victoria, to think that her and

:26:47.:26:50.

Prince Albert would sit there and say, what shall we do? Let sketch a

:26:51.:26:59.

dog with HP pencil. They would make the dog sit quietly, and Albert, you

:27:00.:27:01.

always imagine them dressed in their royal gear, they would sit there,

:27:02.:27:07.

and it shows a human side may be of the Queen and Prince Albert. I don't

:27:08.:27:12.

think we got the whiskers right, have you got the tail, Albert Costa

:27:13.:27:19.

Mark? My children were drawing, and my

:27:20.:27:22.

50-year-old brother sat down and drew a rabbit with them. I looked

:27:23.:27:27.

down and I was try to keep the children quite, and I saw he was

:27:28.:27:32.

observed in this pencil sketch. It is an absorbing thing. And when

:27:33.:27:36.

you are tormented by the affairs of state, maybe the best thing is to

:27:37.:27:39.

sit down and draw a dog. I don't think the current Queen

:27:40.:27:44.

would have time to draw all the corgis.

:27:45.:27:50.

The Times, slow radio. I do a show on Radio 3, so I'm a bit

:27:51.:27:54.

biased. But they do this fantastic idea where the presenter is going to

:27:55.:28:00.

go from walk, and they are going to broadcast it for four hours on the

:28:01.:28:03.

radio. Just the footsteps?

:28:04.:28:08.

Not just the footsteps, there may be birdsong, he will meet people.

:28:09.:28:14.

Is this a bit like Clare balding's ramblings on Radio 4?

:28:15.:28:20.

A little bit. I am interested in audio of all forms. You can also

:28:21.:28:26.

have very tiny one minute podcast, and it is very exciting, I would

:28:27.:28:31.

like to go on that slow walk. I don't do slow radio, because I

:28:32.:28:35.

work on radio five live! And finally, John Redwood, he does not

:28:36.:28:40.

like digital radio. John Redwood has done what we have

:28:41.:28:44.

all done, my radio works, but there is one room in the house, I can

:28:45.:28:48.

normally get a signal by balancing act the radio high on the book case.

:28:49.:28:54.

We have all been there, we have balanced on things. Can you hear it

:28:55.:29:00.

yet? From the top of the bookcase thinking, do I look silly, but at

:29:01.:29:06.

least I am getting good slow radio. It is the only way I can listen to

:29:07.:29:10.

my football team, to go into a certain room and point the aerial in

:29:11.:29:15.

a certain direction. People come into the house, are you

:29:16.:29:18.

all right? Yes, thanks will stop just on the bookcase.

:29:19.:29:23.

Thank you very much, Ian. Safe journey back to Barnsley.

:29:24.:29:29.

Still to come, something to calm you down if you are feeling a bit

:29:30.:29:33.

frazzled. It is not sketching dogs or slow radio, but amazing images of

:29:34.:29:37.

new types of cloud that have made it into the official international

:29:38.:29:40.

Cloud Atlas. It has been revised for the first time in 20 years. Stay

:29:41.:29:44.

with us, the headlines are coming. Hello, this is Breakfast, with

:29:45.:30:17.

Rachel Burden and Roger Johnson. Coming up before 9am,

:30:18.:30:19.

Chris will be here with the weather. But first, a summary of this

:30:20.:30:22.

morning's main news. Police say they might never find out

:30:23.:30:29.

why Khalid Masood killed four people near the Houses

:30:30.:30:32.

of Parliament on Wednesday. According to investigating officers

:30:33.:30:35.

the attack lasted only 82 seconds. Police believe that Masood acted

:30:36.:30:39.

alone but are trying to establish if he was encouraged

:30:40.:30:41.

or directed by others. The family of the police officer

:30:42.:30:48.

Keith Palmer who was killed have paid tribute to his selfless bravery

:30:49.:30:51.

and loving nature. In a statement they expressed

:30:52.:30:55.

their gratitude to the people who helped him after the attack

:30:56.:30:57.

saying "there was nothing more In the last few days people many

:30:58.:31:00.

have been laying flowers at Westminster in memory

:31:01.:31:06.

of the victims. More than 30 people have been hurt,

:31:07.:31:09.

two of them seriously, after a suspected gas

:31:10.:31:12.

explosion in Merseyside. A dance centre for children

:31:13.:31:15.

was destroyed and customers at a Chinese restaurant were caught

:31:16.:31:19.

in the blast in Earlier we spoke to someone

:31:20.:31:22.

who saw what happened. The building was, well, wasn't

:31:23.:31:39.

there. The bricks had flown a massive distance a way and all the

:31:40.:31:44.

windows were smashed in. I noticed someone in the road, surrounded by

:31:45.:31:49.

rouble, but they had a couple of people with them. I headed straight

:31:50.:31:54.

over to them to see if there was anything I could do.

:31:55.:31:58.

US Central Command says it has opened an investigation into an air

:31:59.:32:00.

strike on the Iraqi city of Mosul which is reported to have

:32:01.:32:03.

killed dozens of civilians earlier this month.

:32:04.:32:05.

American officials have acknowledged that US-led coalition aircraft took

:32:06.:32:08.

part in the attack on part of the city controlled

:32:09.:32:11.

The United Nations has warned of a "terrible loss of life".

:32:12.:32:16.

The government will set out details of its plans to bring EU law

:32:17.:32:21.

into domestic legislation on Thursday; the day

:32:22.:32:24.

after Theresa May is set to start the formal Brexit process.

:32:25.:32:27.

The Great Repeal Bill will bring EU regulations into domestic law,

:32:28.:32:30.

allowing them to be amended or removed after Brexit.

:32:31.:32:33.

The bill will allow ministers to alter regulations

:32:34.:32:36.

without the full scrutiny of MPs and peers.

:32:37.:32:45.

The taxi firm Uber has suspended its pilot program

:32:46.:32:47.

for driverless cars after an early model of its self-driving car

:32:48.:32:50.

The accident is the latest in a series of crashes involving

:32:51.:32:54.

It's not yet known whether the car was in self driving mode at the time

:32:55.:32:59.

Uber said it caused no serious injuries.

:33:00.:33:04.

In case you missed it, the clocks went forward this morning

:33:05.:33:06.

and some people working in the UK's tourism sector are calling

:33:07.:33:09.

The British Association of Leisure Parks, Piers

:33:10.:33:14.

and Attractions says an extra 80,000 jobs will be created due

:33:15.:33:17.

It also says shifting time zones would encourage more outdoor

:33:18.:33:22.

activity and cut obesity levels, especially among children.

:33:23.:33:31.

Cheryl Fernandez-Versini has announced that she's given

:33:32.:33:33.

birth to her first child, a baby boy.

:33:34.:33:36.

The singer posted a photo of her popstar partner Liam Payne,

:33:37.:33:39.

from the band One Direction, cradling the newborn

:33:40.:33:41.

In the post Cheryl said she gave birth on Wednesday,

:33:42.:33:46.

but the couple have yet to decide on a name for their son.

:33:47.:33:55.

He has got lots of hair. So has his dad!

:33:56.:33:59.

And his mother! Good morning. If ever a picture

:34:00.:34:11.

tells a story, I think that one does. The first race of the new

:34:12.:34:19.

Formula 1 season. We are used to seeing Lewis Hamilton, but not this

:34:20.:34:25.

morning. It was poor strategy. Interesting to see how it will pan

:34:26.:34:30.

out this season because they have been new rule changes which should

:34:31.:34:35.

make cars faster. Will we see a potential end to the Mercedes

:34:36.:34:37.

procession that we have seen in recent years? This morning suggests

:34:38.:34:39.

so. Mercedes domination of Formula One

:34:40.:34:41.

could be under threat after Ferrari's Sebastian Vettel won

:34:42.:34:44.

the opening race of Lewis Hamilton was the favourite

:34:45.:34:46.

to win after starting from pole and leading until he stopped

:34:47.:34:51.

for fresh tyres But Mercedes got

:34:52.:34:53.

their tactics wrong. Ferrari kept Vettel out

:34:54.:34:55.

for another six laps, he inherited the lead after his stop

:34:56.:34:57.

and stayed comfortably in front till the chequered flag

:34:58.:35:00.

to claim his first win England, Scotland and Northern

:35:01.:35:03.

Ireland are all in action this evening, in their latest qualifiers

:35:04.:35:11.

for next year's World Cup. There'll be a minute's silence

:35:12.:35:14.

at Wembley, ahead of England's match against Lithuania,

:35:15.:35:17.

for victims of the Westminster attack, and manager Gareth Southgate

:35:18.:35:20.

understands the power of sport We know how important the national

:35:21.:35:22.

football team is for the feeling of the nation, and it's a great

:35:23.:35:32.

opportunity for everybody to pay their respects at that moment

:35:33.:35:35.

and to show that as a country we go on, you know, not only London

:35:36.:35:40.

but a country as a whole. There's arguably most at stake

:35:41.:35:43.

for Scotland tonight - they're in the same group

:35:44.:35:51.

as England, but are fifth and if they don't beat Slovenia,

:35:52.:35:53.

their hopes of qualifying would look Sometimes it's easy

:35:54.:35:56.

for a manager to say this Sometimes you're in a position,

:35:57.:36:00.

well, if we draw, win, What we don't have to do is win

:36:01.:36:05.

it in the first five, You never know in big games

:36:06.:36:11.

when your opportunity comes along. Northern Ireland are

:36:12.:36:16.

well placed heading They're second in the group,

:36:17.:36:18.

five points behind Germany, and on course to clinch

:36:19.:36:23.

a play-off place. We have the opportunity to put seven

:36:24.:36:34.

points between ourselves and Norway, the opportunity to get to ten

:36:35.:36:38.

points. Once you get to that stage of any campaign, you start to

:36:39.:36:40.

believe that it really is possible, and to put yourself in a position to

:36:41.:36:44.

modify. Certainly with the experience of qualifying for France,

:36:45.:36:48.

we have been through that and those experiences, we know what is

:36:49.:36:49.

required to get there. The Netherlands are struggling -

:36:50.:36:52.

they lost to Bulgaria. Cristiano Ronaldo though scored

:36:53.:36:54.

twice as the European champions There was a great goal too

:36:55.:36:56.

from the Everton striker Romelu Lukaku and a late one

:36:57.:37:03.

at that, his equaliser coming in the 89th minute as Belgium

:37:04.:37:05.

salvaged a draw against Greece And if we're talking good

:37:06.:37:08.

goals, this morning. This one is going to take some

:37:09.:37:14.

topping as Dundee United lifted the Scottish Challenge Cup

:37:15.:37:18.

for the first time. Tony Andreu's strike,

:37:19.:37:21.

and what a strike, helping them This competition for the Under-20

:37:22.:37:23.

teams from the Scottish Premiership, as well as the lower divisions

:37:24.:37:29.

and sides from Northern Anthony Crolla was outclassed

:37:30.:37:31.

in his bid to regain the WBA lightweight title

:37:32.:37:39.

in Manchester last night. He lost his rematch

:37:40.:37:41.

with Jorge Linares on points. In front of a home crowd, Crolla

:37:42.:37:43.

went down in the seventh round, And though he responded well,

:37:44.:37:46.

Linares retained the belt Leicester took a big stride

:37:47.:37:51.

towards the play-offs in Rugby Union's Premiership,

:37:52.:37:57.

beating local rivals Owen Williams' huge penalty

:37:58.:37:59.

in the last minute of the game sealed the win for Leicester

:38:00.:38:04.

and took them into that Elsewhere there were wins

:38:05.:38:07.

for Harlequins and Exeter. And Leinster strengthened

:38:08.:38:14.

their position at the top of the Pro-12 after beating

:38:15.:38:16.

Cardiff Blues 22-21 - Ross Moloney just managing to touch

:38:17.:38:18.

down in the corner for what proved England's Ross Fisher is out

:38:19.:38:22.

of the World Golf Championship He lost to Japan's Hideto Tanihara

:38:23.:38:28.

in the quarter-finals - but he did leave with a decent

:38:29.:38:34.

consolation prize - his win over Bubba Watson

:38:35.:38:36.

in the previous round took Fisher into the world's top 50

:38:37.:38:39.

and earned him a place There were All Around gold medals

:38:40.:38:41.

for Ellie Downie and Joe Fraser at the British Gymnastics

:38:42.:38:53.

Championships in Liverpool. Downie was part of the hugely

:38:54.:38:54.

successful GB team at last year's Olympics in Rio and took the title

:38:55.:38:57.

for the first time with a string And 18-year-old Fraser

:38:58.:39:01.

was a surprise winner in the men's competition -

:39:02.:39:03.

this is his first senior year. To be honest, it is unbelievable. It

:39:04.:39:24.

is my first year as a senior, and I was using this competition to try my

:39:25.:39:28.

new elements and see how they were in addition, and for to come away

:39:29.:39:33.

with two golds, a silver and a bronze is something I would never

:39:34.:39:35.

have expected before the competition.

:39:36.:39:41.

Chris Froome's hopes of victory at the Volta a Catalunya were ruined

:39:42.:39:44.

yesterday as he lost 26 minutes on his rivals in the

:39:45.:39:46.

Froome was in second place but he and Team Sky failed to latch

:39:47.:39:50.

on to an early breakaway and he was well beaten

:39:51.:39:53.

as Alejandro Valverde extended his overall lead.

:39:54.:39:55.

Daryl Impey won the stage in that sprint to the line.

:39:56.:39:57.

Britain's Adam Yates is fourth overall.

:39:58.:40:04.

So, not date strategy from some teams there, strategy is the talking

:40:05.:40:15.

point this morning. Gymnastics is one of those exports

:40:16.:40:18.

that has benefited from exposure and their brilliance, and there medal

:40:19.:40:26.

winning. Yes, it is in a strong place. It has

:40:27.:40:31.

managed to maintain that depth of talent because of all the interest

:40:32.:40:34.

from young people coming through and joining gymnastics clubs around the

:40:35.:40:38.

country. It is fantastic, new names are winning medals. Yes, we will be

:40:39.:40:45.

following them over the years. To win a gold medal at 18, it is not

:40:46.:40:49.

old but it is getting advanced in gymnastics years.

:40:50.:40:56.

It is very, very young! I can see you doing a bit of that, Roger. I am

:40:57.:41:00.

passed it in more ways than one! FIFA's former medical director has

:41:01.:41:04.

spoken out about the abuse of legal painkillers by elite footballers -

:41:05.:41:06.

something he says could have Jiri Dvorak claims around half

:41:07.:41:10.

of players involved in the past three World Cups regularly took

:41:11.:41:14.

non-steroidal, He spoke to David Ornstein as part

:41:15.:41:15.

of the BBC's State of Sport week. It's known as the beautiful

:41:16.:41:30.

game, but the pursuit When injury occurs there is pressure

:41:31.:41:32.

to play through the pain and now a leading doctor says the use

:41:33.:41:38.

of legal medication is one If you cover up symptoms

:41:39.:41:40.

over years or decades, this is general in medicine,

:41:41.:41:49.

if you have an underlying pathology and you constantly

:41:50.:41:54.

cover up with medication, the underlying pathology

:41:55.:41:58.

or disease is not cured. Dr Dvorak warned about this in 2012

:41:59.:42:02.

when he found almost 40% of players at the 2010 World Cup took

:42:03.:42:06.

painkillers before every game. Football's governing body Fifa say

:42:07.:42:11.

they are providing education on the well-being of athletes,

:42:12.:42:15.

while the Professional Footballers' Association insist it is not a major

:42:16.:42:18.

issue in the English game. But Dr Dvorak argues that lessons

:42:19.:42:22.

have not been learned. When I put on the weight

:42:23.:42:31.

on the scale, the doping can be abuse of medication,

:42:32.:42:38.

the abuse of medication It's not as harmless as you think,

:42:39.:42:40.

that you can take it like cookies. Well, this isn't about banned

:42:41.:42:46.

or hard to come by substances or supplements, it's about everyday

:42:47.:42:52.

over-the-counter anti-inflammatories like Ibuprofen, and the question

:42:53.:42:57.

is whether and to what extent these As a player you first

:42:58.:43:00.

ask is, it is legal? Is it going to help

:43:01.:43:13.

you get through a game? Generally, without too many

:43:14.:43:19.

questions, without too much concern, you'll take

:43:20.:43:23.

what you've been offered. The overuse of medication

:43:24.:43:25.

feeds into the wider topic of athlete welfare,

:43:26.:43:28.

an issue the government is taking seriously with a duty of care review

:43:29.:43:30.

due to be published shortly. You're watching

:43:31.:43:34.

Breakfast from BBC News. Khalid Masood, who carried out

:43:35.:43:44.

Wednesday's terror attack in Westminster, acted alone,

:43:45.:43:50.

and there is no information to suggest further

:43:51.:43:53.

attacks are planned. A suspected gas explosion leads to

:43:54.:44:04.

people seriously injured and 32 others hurt after the collapse of

:44:05.:44:06.

several buildings in Merseyside. Could dinosaurs have actually

:44:07.:44:10.

originated in Britain? As new research makes some

:44:11.:44:13.

surprising findings, we find out whether the dinosaur

:44:14.:44:15.

theories we've relied on for over This is where we say goodbye

:44:16.:44:18.

to Roger, who's going to read Here's Chris with a look

:44:19.:44:25.

at this morning's weather. Is that from this morning?

:44:26.:44:41.

Wow! Isn't it beautiful. This is the scene sent to us half an hour ago

:44:42.:44:44.

showing the beautiful sunrise in the North Yorkshire area. Thank you for

:44:45.:44:53.

this photograph. You know that old saying, red sky in the morning,

:44:54.:44:58.

shepherd's warning. Well, the shepherds can keep on looking after

:44:59.:45:01.

the sheep and not worry about the weather. There will be plenty of

:45:02.:45:05.

sunshine. Yes, yesterday was the warmest day of the year so far, and

:45:06.:45:10.

we could go a little bit higher than that this afternoon. Another cold

:45:11.:45:16.

start to the day. Northern England, Northern Ireland and Scotland have

:45:17.:45:19.

patches of force to contend with first thing this morning, and there

:45:20.:45:26.

is some fog around as well. Northern Scotland and Shetland have cloudy

:45:27.:45:30.

skies and a bit of drizzle, but just about everywhere else is based in

:45:31.:45:34.

glorious sunshine. Northern Scotland is where the highest temperatures

:45:35.:45:40.

will be today, and it will get to just over 19 degrees, so it could

:45:41.:45:44.

well be the warmest day of the year so far. Similar warmth for the

:45:45.:45:50.

western side of Wales parts of north-west England. Generally, the

:45:51.:45:55.

further east you go, the cold the wins so temperatures will be pegged

:45:56.:46:01.

back along those coasts. For the World Cup qualifier matches, some

:46:02.:46:06.

late sunshine for Wembley. Temperatures in double figures

:46:07.:46:13.

around kick-off. Overnight tonight, we keep that clear and dry weather.

:46:14.:46:18.

There will be some fog moving into the coastline of northern Scotland,

:46:19.:46:22.

some low cloud of the North Sea to affect parts of eastern England. But

:46:23.:46:25.

by and large it will be another fine start to the week with high pressure

:46:26.:46:29.

and some warm sunshine to look forward to. Still some patches of

:46:30.:46:34.

frost, but there will be some changes in the weather towards the

:46:35.:46:39.

middle of the week. On Monday, the fog will take a little time to clear

:46:40.:46:44.

around the coastline of north-west Scotland, but another glorious day

:46:45.:46:47.

with plenty of blue skies and sunshine to look forward to. In the

:46:48.:46:52.

sunshine, with lighter winds, it will get a little bit warmer, but

:46:53.:46:55.

generally the highest temperatures will be across western parts of the

:46:56.:47:00.

UK. The weather is set fair for the next few days.

:47:01.:47:02.

Looks wonderful, thank you. Landline and broadband customers

:47:03.:47:08.

who suffer poor service could be compensated automatically under

:47:09.:47:10.

new plans put forward If the proposals go ahead affected

:47:11.:47:12.

customers would receive ?10 for every day their service

:47:13.:47:18.

is not repaired. ?30 if an engineer doesn't turn

:47:19.:47:21.

up for an appointment or if it's cancelled with less

:47:22.:47:24.

than 24 hours notice. And, they would get ?6 for each day

:47:25.:47:28.

that a new service is delayed For more, let's speak

:47:29.:47:32.

to the Telecoms Analyst, Matthew Howett who's

:47:33.:47:37.

in our London newsroom. Good morning to you. Thank you for

:47:38.:47:48.

joining us this morning. How would this compensation scheme work in

:47:49.:47:53.

practice, would you have two notify somebody? Well, that is the

:47:54.:47:57.

important thing about that it is automatic. Consumers that find

:47:58.:48:00.

themselves in the situation of having to take a day off work to

:48:01.:48:05.

wait for an engineer to fix a line, or install a new line after moving

:48:06.:48:09.

house, will no longer has to chase the company because the compensation

:48:10.:48:12.

will come automatically. The customer can choose whether they

:48:13.:48:15.

have that added to their bill so it gets taken off and it is a cheaper

:48:16.:48:19.

bill for that month, or whether they get it in another form, where their

:48:20.:48:23.

cash into their bank account or a voucher. How big a problem is this

:48:24.:48:29.

in general? On the whole, I think most customers have a pretty good

:48:30.:48:34.

experience with their broadband. Research from off, rape their

:48:35.:48:41.

broadband -- rate their broadband as good or very good, but there is a

:48:42.:48:45.

problem when you get stuck in the situation of not being able to get a

:48:46.:48:53.

connection or get a fault six. Dash-macro fixed. Customers feel

:48:54.:48:57.

helpless with their provider very often, so they are putting in this

:48:58.:49:00.

to encourage providers to make a better experience for consumers to

:49:01.:49:06.

avoid this in the first place. Isn't this mostly BT open beta because

:49:07.:49:10.

they look after the infrastructure? That's right because Openreach are

:49:11.:49:18.

responsible for the connection into homes or businesses, and the

:49:19.:49:22.

responsibility is mainly on them, the regulator is pushing through

:49:23.:49:26.

reforms as we speak, and one of the key aspects of that is the consumer

:49:27.:49:31.

element, how does it benefit the end user? Yes, it is mainly focused on

:49:32.:49:40.

Openreach who is responsible for the network. A lot of people will be

:49:41.:49:47.

wishing we had compensation for a hopeless phone signal. Yes, at the

:49:48.:49:52.

moment it does not apply to mobile because on the insulation within

:49:53.:49:55.

mobile is already pretty good, operators try to recover things

:49:56.:49:58.

fairly quickly when things do go wrong. This does apply to broadband,

:49:59.:50:03.

so when things go wrong with your broadband connection you will

:50:04.:50:07.

benefit from this automatic compensation, but on the whole,

:50:08.:50:11.

things are pretty good and there are a lot of mechanisms in place to

:50:12.:50:14.

ensure that consumers continue to benefit from the competition, for

:50:15.:50:19.

example, that means services are fairly good. Thank you very much.

:50:20.:50:20.

Worth knowing will now, the first dinosaurs may have

:50:21.:50:32.

originated in the northern hemisphere and perhaps even in

:50:33.:50:34.

Britain. It is one of the findings published

:50:35.:50:39.

in the journal Nature, which suggests some of our accepted

:50:40.:50:41.

theories about dinosaurs could be more. Dash-macro wrong.

:50:42.:50:47.

Fossilised bones that capture a time that dinosaurs ruled the earth, more

:50:48.:50:54.

than 65 million years ago. By measuring how they changed over the

:50:55.:50:58.

years, researchers worked out how they are related, and how they

:50:59.:51:05.

evolved. But a new assessment published in the journal Nature,

:51:06.:51:08.

which suggests that that theory which has lasted 130 years, maybe

:51:09.:51:12.

wrong. The current theory is that there are two main groups of

:51:13.:51:17.

dinosaurs. One, including the Stegosaurus, and another which has

:51:18.:51:21.

two branches. The vegetarians such as the brontosaurus, and the meat

:51:22.:51:26.

eaters such as the Savage Joanna Soros racks. It turns out that the

:51:27.:51:32.

meat eaters are in the wrong group and should be with the Stegosaurus.

:51:33.:51:37.

It also shows that the very first dinosaurs did not originate in East

:51:38.:51:42.

Africa, but much further north, possibly in an area which is now

:51:43.:51:47.

Britain. We have taken dinosaur origins, which artificially thought

:51:48.:51:50.

to be Southern Hemisphere and brought them into the northern

:51:51.:51:53.

hemisphere, and it could well be that dinosaurs originated even

:51:54.:51:59.

within Britain itself. What we have here is a key specimen in this

:52:00.:52:04.

analysis. And here is the fossil that led to this shock finding, a

:52:05.:52:08.

primitive dinosaur the size of a cat was found in Lossiemouth in

:52:09.:52:12.

Scotland. It was an animal like this that led to the creatures that

:52:13.:52:15.

dominated this planet for 165 million years. The new family tree

:52:16.:52:20.

will mean that we will have to rethink our ideas of how they

:52:21.:52:26.

evolved and spread across the globe. This is a fairly major change to our

:52:27.:52:30.

knowledge of dinosaurs. We have had a system in place for 130 years, we

:52:31.:52:35.

thought we understood the ships of these big groups of animals, but it

:52:36.:52:39.

may be that we have a major rearrangement of the dinosaur tree.

:52:40.:52:43.

This re-evaluation of fossils challenge is a theory that has been

:52:44.:52:47.

accepted since the Victorian Iraq, and so will be controversial. But if

:52:48.:52:52.

it is proved to be correct, textbooks on the subject will have

:52:53.:52:53.

to be rewritten. Perhaps not many, but there are now

:52:54.:53:01.

12 new ones to learn. For the first time since 1987,

:53:02.:53:06.

the World Meteorological Organization is releasing an updated

:53:07.:53:08.

version of its International Cloud Atlas, the global reference book

:53:09.:53:12.

for identifying clouds. We'll be hearing a bit more

:53:13.:53:17.

about that in just a moment, but if you want to know what you're

:53:18.:53:20.

looking at next time you look up - Gavin Pretor-Pinney is the founder

:53:21.:53:24.

of the Cloud Appreciation Society. This is like one of those games, I

:53:25.:54:32.

am now going to get you to name all the clouds you have just seen. Well,

:54:33.:54:38.

we have got a few new terms added, soap one example might be Cavum,

:54:39.:54:47.

which is when you have a whole cut out of eight loud. It now has a

:54:48.:54:59.

Latin system. The other one I love is Asperitas, this is stunning. You

:55:00.:55:04.

do CDs around the UK. These are not foreign clouds, are they must remark

:55:05.:55:10.

-- you do see these around the UK. They look exotic and otherworldly

:55:11.:55:16.

but with so much variety in the clouds over Britain, you can see all

:55:17.:55:20.

of these at one time or another. Some of these were spotted over

:55:21.:55:24.

Dorset not so long ago, and we have some great examples of Asperitas

:55:25.:55:30.

clouds. Let's have a look at Volutus. This is eight very

:55:31.:55:37.

particular type of cloud. This is also called a roll cloud. Now it has

:55:38.:55:42.

been given the name Volutus. I once saw a cloud like this in Australia,

:55:43.:55:47.

it is in weaves and called the morning Glory cloud and glider

:55:48.:55:53.

pilots go and serve it. This is a low role of cloud that travels

:55:54.:56:00.

along. This is another one. Are those streaks in the sky not vapour

:56:01.:56:12.

trails? Yes, these have been given a Latin name, Homogenitus Contrails,

:56:13.:56:22.

which mean man-made cloud. You encourage people to go out and look

:56:23.:56:29.

up. Yes, it is funny when the clouds are always there, this ever present

:56:30.:56:34.

backdrop to our lives, how we can become blind to its beauty, blind to

:56:35.:56:39.

the beauty of the sky. I think it is a good idea to be reminded, to be

:56:40.:56:43.

tapped on the shoulder every now and then that sometimes the most

:56:44.:56:46.

beautiful things are the everyday things. You have been encouraging

:56:47.:56:51.

people this morning to go out and look up, so we have got a couple of

:56:52.:56:56.

pictures that viewers have sent in. John in Sussex sent in this

:56:57.:57:00.

beautiful picture. There we have got some low cloud and high cloud. The

:57:01.:57:09.

low cloud is cumulus. The high cloud would have started off as a

:57:10.:57:12.

condensation trail, and has now spread out in the high wind. Ken

:57:13.:57:19.

sent in this picture, looking toward Liverpool. Yes, I think this is

:57:20.:57:24.

sunrise this morning. We have got high cloud, high patches of cirrus

:57:25.:57:30.

cloud. That is high ice crystal cloud. And Wendy took this picture.

:57:31.:57:40.

Interestingly, I guess the kind of environment may affect the cloud

:57:41.:57:44.

formation. If you have a power station, would that be right? They

:57:45.:57:49.

would, but this looks like a good example of Volutus. That is amazing,

:57:50.:57:58.

that picture. Power stations can produce clouds, and that will be

:57:59.:58:05.

another example of Homogenitus, man-made clouds. That is a classic

:58:06.:58:14.

roll cloud, Volutus. Clouds can be quite threatening, can't they? They

:58:15.:58:21.

reveal the moods of the sky, they are like expressions on the face of

:58:22.:58:25.

the atmosphere. Certainly, when the atmosphere is angry, the clouds

:58:26.:58:31.

reveal that. So, when you see the sky darkening that is because they

:58:32.:58:34.

are deepening and thickening, and whenever clouds get tall, it is the

:58:35.:58:38.

first indication of the possibility of rain. I think everyone will be

:58:39.:58:42.

looking at the sky in a different way. Thank you for joining us this

:58:43.:58:44.

morning. That's all for today. Happy

:58:45.:58:53.

Mothering Sunday. Enjoy the rest of the weekend, goodbye.

:58:54.:58:59.

Download Subtitles

SRT

ASS