29/04/2017

Download Subtitles

Transcript

:00:00. > :00:07.Hello, this is Breakfast, with Sally Nugent and Jon Kay.

:00:08. > :00:10.Calls for a public inquiry after a rogue breast surgeon

:00:11. > :00:13.is convicted of intentionally wounding his patients.

:00:14. > :00:15.Ian Paterson was accused of playing God by carrying out

:00:16. > :00:36.Lawyers think he could have hundreds or even thousands of victims.

:00:37. > :00:40.Good morning, it's Saturday 29th April.

:00:41. > :00:45.EU leaders meet in Brussels to discuss how to tackle future

:00:46. > :00:50.Another North Korean missile test, but the US military says

:00:51. > :00:55.the ballistic rocket blew up seconds after take off.

:00:56. > :01:01.Donald Trump becomes the first US President for more than three

:01:02. > :01:06.decades to address the American gun lobby.

:01:07. > :01:13.No longer Will Ferrell agencies be coming after law-abiding gun owners

:01:14. > :01:15.cash will federal agencies. In sport, it's the richest bout

:01:16. > :01:18.in British boxing history. The countdown is on

:01:19. > :01:20.for tonight's world heavyweight showdown

:01:21. > :01:22.as Anthony Joshua meets former And it's one of Britain's

:01:23. > :01:35.oldest sports. Well caught, Miss. A fine bit of

:01:36. > :01:38.fielding that will make her the pride of the school, ra ra.

:01:39. > :01:41.I've been finding out why stool ball is making a comeback.

:01:42. > :01:49.Good morning. A largely dry day-to-day with some sunshine

:01:50. > :01:51.around, some of us will see a little bit of rain tomorrow. A full

:01:52. > :01:53.forecast in 15 minutes. There are growing calls for a public

:01:54. > :01:58.inquiry following the conviction of a breast surgeon who carried out

:01:59. > :02:01.a series of needless operations. Ian Paterson was found

:02:02. > :02:03.guilty of intentionally wounding his patients at two private

:02:04. > :02:06.hospitals in the West Midlands. Now solicitors working on the case

:02:07. > :02:10.say the true number of his victims could be in the hundreds

:02:11. > :02:24.or even thousands. Patients are meant to be able to

:02:25. > :02:28.trust their doctor, but Ian Paterson practice at the exact opposite and

:02:29. > :02:33.betrayed his patients on some scale. He told people they were at risk of

:02:34. > :02:37.cancer and operated on them unnecessarily. The breast surgeon

:02:38. > :02:41.worked in private and NHS hospitals in the West Midlands, and while

:02:42. > :02:44.staff in the public sector now hold each other to account, lawyers

:02:45. > :02:48.representing some of the victims are today calling for a full,

:02:49. > :02:51.independent enquiry in two over site of private sector healthcare. One

:02:52. > :02:57.senior surgeon says there is some way to go. No matter what the

:02:58. > :03:02.quality of surgery is in the private sector, there is much less

:03:03. > :03:09.observation going on and much less recording of detail than there is in

:03:10. > :03:22.the NHS. The private provider where Patterson operated has told the BBC:

:03:23. > :03:29.Shirley Maroni's sister, Marie, was one of Ian Paterson's NHS patients.

:03:30. > :03:33.The surgeon originally carried out an incomplete mastectomy, instead of

:03:34. > :03:38.the double mastectomy she asked for. She then had a further double

:03:39. > :03:43.mastectomy, which delayed her chemotherapy. My sister was a police

:03:44. > :03:45.officer for 30 years, she believed in the justice system and she

:03:46. > :03:51.believed in fairness and quite frankly this wasn't fair, this

:03:52. > :03:54.wasn't just. Marie died in 2008 secondary cancer in her lungs, it's

:03:55. > :03:58.impossible to know the extent to which Ian Paterson's failures

:03:59. > :04:01.contributed to her death. The criminal case centred on the

:04:02. > :04:05.treatment of nine other women and one man but solicitors say there are

:04:06. > :04:10.hundreds of patients now looking for compensation. Ian Paterson has been

:04:11. > :04:11.told he'll face prison when he is sentenced next month. Simon

:04:12. > :04:12.Clemison, BBC News. European Union leaders are meeting

:04:13. > :04:15.in Brussels today to formally agree their negotiating

:04:16. > :04:17.stance for Brexit. Donald Tusk, has said the EU

:04:18. > :04:21.won't discuss its future relationship with the UK until it's

:04:22. > :04:24.happy that enough progress has been Those include a so-called

:04:25. > :04:33.divorce settlement. And we'll be live with all

:04:34. > :04:37.the latest reaction from Brussels Theresa May will campaign

:04:38. > :04:40.in Scotland today for the first time The Conservatives currently

:04:41. > :04:43.hold one Scottish seat at Westminster but opinion polls

:04:44. > :04:46.suggest support for the party Meanwhile, Jeremy Corbyn

:04:47. > :04:49.will urge young people to claim their future by voting

:04:50. > :04:52.Labour in the election He will highlight figures that show

:04:53. > :04:56.2.4 million young voters are missing from the

:04:57. > :05:03.electoral register. North Korea has test fired

:05:04. > :05:08.a ballistic missile. According to South Korean

:05:09. > :05:11.and American officials it exploded The launch, from an

:05:12. > :05:14.airfield in Pukchang, came just hours after a special

:05:15. > :05:17.session at the UN Security council in which the US pushed for tougher

:05:18. > :05:20.sanctions on the Pyongyang regime. Barbara Plett-Usher reports

:05:21. > :05:22.from the UN headquarters After weeks of mounting concern

:05:23. > :05:30.in Washington about North Korea, the Secretary of State arrived

:05:31. > :05:33.at the United Nations UN sanctions aren't

:05:34. > :05:36.working, was the message. There needs to be a new

:05:37. > :05:40.campaign of pressure. Ultimately this is being driven

:05:41. > :05:44.by America's own national security considerations, he said,

:05:45. > :05:47.so it is serious. With each successive

:05:48. > :05:51.detonation and missile test, North Korea pushes North-East Asia

:05:52. > :05:54.and the world closer to instability The threat of a North Korean nuclear

:05:55. > :06:02.attack on Seoul or Tokyo is real, and it is likely only a matter

:06:03. > :06:06.of time before North Korea develops the capability to strike

:06:07. > :06:13.the US mainland. Despite UN pressure,

:06:14. > :06:16.North Korea's been able to accelerate its weapons programme,

:06:17. > :06:19.and shortly after Mr Tillerson spoke, it fired another missile,

:06:20. > :06:21.although that test seems But the Trump administration

:06:22. > :06:34.is keeping open the threat of military action in case

:06:35. > :06:36.of further provocations. The latest missile test probably

:06:37. > :06:39.won't be enough of a trigger for that, but it may help strengthen

:06:40. > :06:42.international resolve to put the economic squeeze on North

:06:43. > :06:44.Korea's determined young leader. Barbara Plett-Usher, BBC News,

:06:45. > :06:47.at the United Nations in New York. President Trump responded overnight

:06:48. > :06:50.to the missile launch. Well, last night, Donald Trump

:06:51. > :07:05.became the first US President in 30 gun lobby, the National Rifle

:07:06. > :07:08.Association. On the eve of his 100th day

:07:09. > :07:11.in office, he told a rally in Georgia what his administration

:07:12. > :07:15.had achieved so far and pledged The eight-year assault

:07:16. > :07:23.on your Second Amendment freedoms You have a true friend

:07:24. > :07:38.and champion in the White House. No longer will federal agencies be

:07:39. > :07:42.coming after law-abiding gun owners. A man is due to appear in court,

:07:43. > :07:53.charged with the murder of a former Royal Navy officer during a car

:07:54. > :07:56.theft in Manchester. Mike Samwell was knocked down

:07:57. > :07:59.as he tried to stop thieves taking his car in

:08:00. > :08:03.Chorlton last weekend. Ryan Gibbons, who's 29,

:08:04. > :08:05.is also accused of burglary. arrested on suspicion of murder

:08:06. > :08:09.have been released on police bail,

:08:10. > :08:14.pending further inquiries. Head teachers will today be asked

:08:15. > :08:17.to vigorously oppose the expansion of grammar

:08:18. > :08:19.schools in England. School leaders gathering

:08:20. > :08:20.at their annual conference are warning of a perfect storm

:08:21. > :08:24.of pressures which could have dire consequences for

:08:25. > :08:25.standards and pupils. The Conservatives are planning

:08:26. > :08:27.a fresh wave of grammars, but Labour and the Lib Dems

:08:28. > :08:30.are strongly against them. Here's our education

:08:31. > :08:49.correspondent Marc Ashdown. This tuition centre in Kent is

:08:50. > :08:53.popular with parents who hope it will help their children when a

:08:54. > :08:57.plate at a low salt -- place at a local grammar school. A wave of new

:08:58. > :09:01.grammars is likely to be a key plank of the Conservative manifesto,

:09:02. > :09:07.Theresa May feel strongly they can boost social mobility. Absolutely

:09:08. > :09:11.the mix and the Democratic we have of children coming to any of our

:09:12. > :09:16.centres is not exclusively middle-class at all -- demographic.

:09:17. > :09:20.I think it's aspirational parents, especially in areas where those

:09:21. > :09:24.opportunities are available. But today at their annual conference,

:09:25. > :09:29.head teachers will be asked to vote on a motion to vigorously oppose the

:09:30. > :09:33.expansion of selective schools, it's a policy they'll be told for the

:09:34. > :09:39.view at the expense of the many. Grammars might be the hot topic but

:09:40. > :09:42.heads say there are also facing increasing difficulties recruiting

:09:43. > :09:52.and retaining staff. Brexit is a source of uncertainty and the debate

:09:53. > :09:56.continues over funding. It is, heads claim, a perfect storm of pressures.

:09:57. > :09:59.A storm it is feared will have dire consequences for standards and

:10:00. > :10:02.pupils. We've got new GCSEs and new A-levels that we can't afford to

:10:03. > :10:06.give them textbooks for, so teachers are constantly having to make up the

:10:07. > :10:08.things they're doing to make sure those students are still successful.

:10:09. > :10:11.The Department of Education maintains that schools have had

:10:12. > :10:15.record levels of investment but with Labour and Liberal and is strongly

:10:16. > :10:20.opposing more grammars, is likely to be a key policy battle in the run-up

:10:21. > :10:28.to the election. Marc Ashdown, BBC News.

:10:29. > :10:34.The eighth biggest firms build more than half of all new homes and they

:10:35. > :10:38.are calling on the government to do more to is help smaller builders

:10:39. > :10:41.that don't have the same scale to build these projects.

:10:42. > :10:47.We all know Britain is not building enough homes to meet demand, that's

:10:48. > :10:51.why house prices are out of reach for many, especially in the South.

:10:52. > :10:54.But an all-party group of MPs says we could be building far more if

:10:55. > :10:58.smaller house builders were supported. The communities and local

:10:59. > :11:02.government committee says the top eight builders in the UK account for

:11:03. > :11:05.more than half of new homes constructive. It says smaller

:11:06. > :11:10.builders should get support from government to help them buy land.

:11:11. > :11:13.And local authorities should help them provide more infrastructure

:11:14. > :11:17.such as road and public transport to an elbow housebuilding. And Britain

:11:18. > :11:20.should encourage more people to build their own homes, already

:11:21. > :11:24.popular in Europe. We aren't building enough homes, we need to be

:11:25. > :11:27.building at least 200,000 homes a year and probably quite a few more

:11:28. > :11:34.to keep pace with household formation. It's dominated by a small

:11:35. > :11:37.number of developers. They will build a certain of properties to

:11:38. > :11:41.maximise their profits and they won't build the total number needed,

:11:42. > :11:45.so we need to take action on a whole range of fronts to make sure we get

:11:46. > :11:48.that number up. The home builders Federation welcomes the report but

:11:49. > :11:52.says only larger firms could spread risks and costs associated with how

:11:53. > :11:55.housebuilding across dozens of sites.

:11:56. > :11:57.Now, you can keep your fancy sports cars,

:11:58. > :12:00.just look at this for a show-stopping mode of transport.

:12:01. > :12:02.A British inventor has built an Iron Man-style suit

:12:03. > :12:06.and taken it for a spin to the delight of crowds at a design

:12:07. > :12:10.Richard Browning said he's had a huge amount of interest

:12:11. > :12:15.since posting a video of its maiden flight.

:12:16. > :12:19.But he insists the project in just a bit of fun and is unlikely

:12:20. > :12:27.to become a mainstream method of transportation.

:12:28. > :12:39.Who knows! I think he's right. Just hovering around. It's like he is

:12:40. > :12:44.using giant aerosol cans. I worry about his health and safety. He is

:12:45. > :12:53.getting higher. We could stay with this all morning. Do you want one,

:12:54. > :12:58.be honest? Yes. Of course you do. Everyone wants one. No, I don't. You

:12:59. > :13:02.don't, when is your birthday? I'm too scared, don't even think about

:13:03. > :13:09.it, I'm not sure we could afford one, they are very expensive. They

:13:10. > :13:13.are home-made! Let's look at the papers, the Telegraph leads with the

:13:14. > :13:19.story we are talking about this morning, the cover-up over a rogue

:13:20. > :13:23.surgeon playing God, and there are calls for a public enquiry into what

:13:24. > :13:27.happened with Mr Paterson and what lessons can be learned from his

:13:28. > :13:31.case. Front page of the Times has a picture from the raid in Willesden

:13:32. > :13:36.we were reporting yesterday that happened on Thursday night, they're

:13:37. > :13:45.saying a Yemeni born in Britain is being held over what police say is

:13:46. > :13:49.an active terror plot. The Daily Mail also asking this morning, why

:13:50. > :13:52.did the NHS failed to stop the butcher surgeon? And a photograph at

:13:53. > :13:57.the side, and exclusive first photograph of Marine a, Mr Blackman,

:13:58. > :14:04.released yesterday from prison after completing his revised sentence, now

:14:05. > :14:11.back, and in their first interview she says she has her hero back. The

:14:12. > :14:17.Mirror has the same lead, they are suggesting maybe up to 1000 patients

:14:18. > :14:21.may have been affected by the doctor, Ian Paterson. We will look

:14:22. > :14:25.inside the paper is a bit later and Mike will tell us about what is in

:14:26. > :14:27.the sports papers. Simon Fanshawe is reviewing the papers with us this

:14:28. > :14:28.morning. You're watching

:14:29. > :14:29.Breakfast from BBC News. The main stories this morning:

:14:30. > :14:33.The number of victims of breast surgeon Ian Paterson

:14:34. > :14:34.could run into hundreds, or even thousands,

:14:35. > :14:36.according to solicitors. Ian Paterson was convicted yesterday

:14:37. > :14:39.of carrying out needless North Korea has launched

:14:40. > :14:43.another ballistic missile, hours after Washington called

:14:44. > :14:46.for a tougher international approach According to South Korean

:14:47. > :14:52.and American officials, the missile exploded

:14:53. > :14:54.shortly after lift-off. Also coming up in the programme:

:14:55. > :14:58.Click investigates a company claiming to offer "absolute

:14:59. > :15:18.security" and discovers all is not Bank holiday weekend. What's it

:15:19. > :15:24.going to be like? Mixed, I imagine. Good morning. The weather is

:15:25. > :15:28.behaving fairly well today but many of us are fine and dry. Things will

:15:29. > :15:32.be turning a little bit warmer through the bank holiday weekend.

:15:33. > :15:36.Quite breezy, but there is a chance that some of us will see rain,

:15:37. > :15:40.especially during Sunday and into Monday. Certainly not all of us.

:15:41. > :15:44.Front is approaching from the. Before it gets there, high pressure

:15:45. > :15:50.dominating the weather for many of us. A cloudy day, but the cloud

:15:51. > :15:54.should be in and break up and looking dry almost across. A few

:15:55. > :15:58.showers dotted around through the morning. At 9am plenty of sunshine

:15:59. > :16:03.in southern counties of England, with temperatures about 9- 10

:16:04. > :16:07.degrees. Patchy cloud working north across Wales, northern England, the

:16:08. > :16:12.Isle of Man could catch a light shower and a couple in Scotland. For

:16:13. > :16:15.Northern Ireland, central and northern Scotland, a lot of dry and

:16:16. > :16:19.pretty decent looking weather. As we had through the day the breeze will

:16:20. > :16:23.pick up, especially across the western side of the country. The

:16:24. > :16:28.breeze comes in from the south, central and eastern areas less

:16:29. > :16:32.windy. Temperatures 17- 18 degrees. A touch warmer today than it has

:16:33. > :16:36.been. If you are planning a barbecue this evening things are looking dry

:16:37. > :16:41.and clear for many. Late sunshine, largely clear skies into the night

:16:42. > :16:46.and we start to see cloud working in from the south-west on the early

:16:47. > :16:51.hours of Sunday morning. For most of our Sunday looks for us free. A bit

:16:52. > :16:56.of a mixed picture into Sunday. -- frost free. With low pressure

:16:57. > :16:59.approaching there will be wet weather in south-west England and

:17:00. > :17:03.Wales. With the squeeze in the isobars it will be a breezy viewing

:17:04. > :17:07.day. The breeze coming from the south-east. If you have the breeze

:17:08. > :17:12.around the east coast it will be cool. Inland, looking pretty decent.

:17:13. > :17:17.Towards Wales, Northern Ireland and south-west England the rain moves in

:17:18. > :17:23.from the south-west. A bit of uncertainty. Exactly how far north

:17:24. > :17:27.and east it will get is unclear. Still a few showers towards the

:17:28. > :17:33.south. Temperatures about 12- 16 degrees or so. A bit of rain but all

:17:34. > :17:38.in all quite a bit of dry weather through the bank holiday as well.

:17:39. > :17:44.Great news. Thank you. We will be back with the news at 6:30am. Time

:17:45. > :17:58.now to take a look at the latest cinema releases.

:17:59. > :18:01.Hello and welcome to The Film Review on BBC News.

:18:02. > :18:04.To take us through this week's cinema releases is Jason Solomons.

:18:05. > :18:14.Long weekend, a visit to the cinema is on the agenda for many families,

:18:15. > :18:16.and they can climb aboard a spaceship if they like.

:18:17. > :18:19.Those saviours of space, the Guardians of The Galaxy, are back,

:18:20. > :18:21.complete with talking raccoon for volume two

:18:22. > :18:26.The terrible atrocities of the Armenian genocide

:18:27. > :18:29.in the First World War era Turkey are on the agenda in

:18:30. > :18:36.The Promise, getting big screen love treatment

:18:37. > :18:39.with Christian Bale, and rising star Florence Pugh takes

:18:40. > :18:42.centre stage for Lady Macbeth, a low-budget British chiller that has

:18:43. > :18:49.I was at the cinema at the weekend and I

:18:50. > :18:51.saw the trailer for Guardians Of The Galaxy Vol 2.

:18:52. > :18:55.even watching the trailer, I felt like I was bombarded

:18:56. > :18:58.with this wall of noise and fury and funny little creatures.

:18:59. > :19:10.There a talking raccoon, a talking tree, it doesn't say much.

:19:11. > :19:18.That tree has now been cut down to a tiny tree which is very cute.

:19:19. > :19:23.I don't know what they do, they save the galaxy

:19:24. > :19:26.from something, although the raccoon who is voiced by Bradley Cooper

:19:27. > :19:28.steals some stuff which means that half

:19:29. > :19:34.of the galaxy is after them in a kind of Flash Gordon style chase.

:19:35. > :19:36.As we join the action now, as they like to say

:19:37. > :19:39.in the Crucible in Sheffield, they are being

:19:40. > :19:44.This is weird, we've got a sovereign fleet approaching from the rear.

:19:45. > :19:48.Probably because Rocket stole some of their batteries.

:19:49. > :20:06.Dude, they were really easy to steal.

:20:07. > :20:10.Come on, you saw how that high priestess talked down to

:20:11. > :20:18.I didn't realise your motivation was on altruism.

:20:19. > :20:21.It is a shame that the sovereign had mistaken your intentions

:20:22. > :20:26.You're supposed to use a sarcastic voice!

:20:27. > :20:30.Can you put the bickering on hold until after we

:20:31. > :20:40.It is a film about banter and insult and very little else.

:20:41. > :20:43.I kind of enjoyed it in a kind of lobotomised

:20:44. > :20:55.There is a plot about Chris Pratt's character going to find

:20:56. > :20:58.his father played by Kurt Russell who has luxuriant hair and delivers

:20:59. > :21:01.every line like he's looking in the bathroom mirror.

:21:02. > :21:03.They have to explode this guy because he

:21:04. > :21:09.It is kind of a pity, because if it had that it would

:21:10. > :21:12.be a much better superhero movie than normal.

:21:13. > :21:14.The colours are good, and if you like green,

:21:15. > :21:18.Zoe Saldana, and the other guy who is a Benjamin thing type person,

:21:19. > :21:22.Visually it has a prog rock album cover look.

:21:23. > :21:25.It looks a bit like Mike Hodges' Flash Gordon all those years

:21:26. > :21:27.It doesn't really go anywhere, and I feel

:21:28. > :21:31.that plotless in space leaves you a bit lost.

:21:32. > :21:33.You are - you're not selling it to me.

:21:34. > :21:35.I hate... I better stop saying that.

:21:36. > :21:42.It is not going to convert people who weren't there

:21:43. > :21:47.If you did like the first one, there is nothing here

:21:48. > :21:53.it, it feels like it is treading water into Volume 3.

:21:54. > :21:57.Thanks for leaving me with that thought.

:21:58. > :22:00.To something that is not volume two of anything.

:22:01. > :22:03.This is a change of pace, this is The

:22:04. > :22:06.Promise which stars Christian Bale and Oscar Isaac and a French

:22:07. > :22:09.She is no relation to the Duran Duran singer.

:22:10. > :22:12.This is set against the terrible atrocities of the Armenian

:22:13. > :22:17.genocide, which took place in 1914, 1915 in Turkey.

:22:18. > :22:19.1.5 million Armenians were killed in that.

:22:20. > :22:21.Yet to be acknowledged as a genocide.

:22:22. > :22:23.It has never had a big-screen treatment,

:22:24. > :22:26.only a few times been dealt with in popular culture.

:22:27. > :22:29.And here it is really fronted in what has become a sort of love

:22:30. > :22:31.war-torn epic with this love triangle.

:22:32. > :22:34.Christian Bale, as we can see him there, Oscar Isaac, and

:22:35. > :22:41.They try to stay together during the terrors of this war

:22:42. > :22:43.where Armenians are being turfed out of villages,

:22:44. > :22:45.ethnically cleansed is the modern term.

:22:46. > :22:50.The Turks are joined with the Germans in this war and it

:22:51. > :22:52.becomes a sort of uneasy mix of terrible

:22:53. > :22:54.tragedy with this kind of beating heart love story.

:22:55. > :22:57.Is that the director trying to inform us all

:22:58. > :23:00.History that he clearly feels we should know more

:23:01. > :23:03.about by using that ge-old tradition of a love story.

:23:04. > :23:08.Love triangle, but still a love story.

:23:09. > :23:12.That is a sort of thing we have seen in Second World War movies

:23:13. > :23:13.and First World War movies countless times.

:23:14. > :23:16.But here, I didn't really know about the Armenian

:23:17. > :23:21.And I don't really know much more about it

:23:22. > :23:24.having seen the film, which I think is a pity,

:23:25. > :23:28.There are some terrible things that were done to

:23:29. > :23:29.the Armenian population, concentration camps,

:23:30. > :23:32.train transport, in a way which sort of foreshadow holocaust movies

:23:33. > :23:36.Kristallnacht-style kind of riot in the streets where the

:23:37. > :23:38.Armenian shop owners were rounded up.

:23:39. > :23:40.These are a very interesting kind of foreshadowing.

:23:41. > :23:42.It is partly interesting to the point where

:23:43. > :23:45.a love story didn't interest me at all,

:23:46. > :23:47.I wanted to find out what was happening to the Armenians.

:23:48. > :23:51.But you need that love story to give you

:23:52. > :23:55.They play it very well, Oscar Isaac is good,

:23:56. > :23:57.Christian Bale is good as a gruff AP news reporter,

:23:58. > :24:01.and Charlotte Le Bon lacks a bit of star power in the middle of it.

:24:02. > :24:05.But I don't think it is going to be the

:24:06. > :24:11.monument that the Armenian genocide deserves in terms of cinema.

:24:12. > :24:14.Let's move on to a film I feel a lot of

:24:15. > :24:17.Lady Macbeth, not to do with the Shakespeare play.

:24:18. > :24:20.If Shakespeare is not your thing don't

:24:21. > :24:23.But she is a Lady Macbeth like character.

:24:24. > :24:26.This is played by a British rising star called Florence Pugh,

:24:27. > :24:29.who was in Carol Morley's film, The Falling.

:24:30. > :24:32.second major role and she completely devours this role.

:24:33. > :24:34.It is like watching someone blossom on screen.

:24:35. > :24:38.She plays a woman called Katherine who is sold to a

:24:39. > :24:40.wealthy mine-owning family up north and becomes

:24:41. > :24:43.a wife, imprisoned in this terrible house which creaks and cracks

:24:44. > :24:59.She is left to rule the house herself and gets

:25:00. > :25:03.drunk on the power and takes a fancy to herself as Lady of the Manor and

:25:04. > :25:06.takes a fancy to Sebastian the stable boy played by Cosmo Jarvis.

:25:07. > :25:09.They have a torrid affair and here they are out on the moors.

:25:10. > :25:14.It's husbands and wives that kiss like that.

:25:15. > :25:34.You know I shant be parted from your life, Sebastian.

:25:35. > :25:39.Through hell and high water, I will follow you.

:25:40. > :25:43.To the cross, to the prison, to the grave, to the sky.

:25:44. > :25:55.I'd rather stop you breathing than have you doubt how I feel.

:25:56. > :25:58.Florence Pugh, as you say, a lot of people talking about her,

:25:59. > :26:00.she was only 19 when that was filmed.

:26:01. > :26:04.It is a debut by the director as well.

:26:05. > :26:06.Yes, William Oldroyd, he is an opera director,

:26:07. > :26:09.and the story has been made into an opera before.

:26:10. > :26:11.It was banned by Joseph Stalin because it was

:26:12. > :26:14.feared that women would take instruction from this film

:26:15. > :26:15.and become rebellious from that opera.

:26:16. > :26:18.Yes, it's terrible, it should never happen!

:26:19. > :26:23.The way that she does it in this film it is perhaps a good

:26:24. > :26:25.idea, she has a terrible consequence for her thirst.

:26:26. > :26:28.We admire her and love her, and think she is brilliant,

:26:29. > :26:35.I think this is one of the best British debuts I have seen

:26:36. > :26:38.in ages, and if you think it is a costume drama, think again.

:26:39. > :26:41.It kind of subverts all those frills and furbelows

:26:42. > :26:44.It is stark and lean and kind of frightening and

:26:45. > :26:48.It has a fairly mixed race cast with two black characters which

:26:49. > :26:51.bring another shade of class and race to that period drama.

:26:52. > :26:55.I think it is a superb film, five stars from me.

:26:56. > :26:59.There is the bank holiday viewing sorted.

:27:00. > :27:05.One, to my shame, I have still not had a chance to see and I am

:27:06. > :27:09.This is an Oscar-nominated documentary called

:27:10. > :27:13.It is still out at select cinemas if you can find it.

:27:14. > :27:15.Or find it on some streaming channel somewhere.

:27:16. > :27:17.It is a terrific documentary examining race in

:27:18. > :27:20.America through the eyes of a forgotten activist, James Baldwin,

:27:21. > :27:23.who is a sort of poet, kind of jazz era writer

:27:24. > :27:27.An extraordinary figure who's put front and centre of

:27:28. > :27:29.this, an examination of the civil rights

:27:30. > :27:32.movement hrough him, but it is an angry and powerful film.

:27:33. > :27:36.I'm surprised it didn't win the Best Picture at the Oscars.

:27:37. > :27:39.It is voiced by Samuel L Jackson doing James Baldwin's narrative.

:27:40. > :27:43.I think it's one of the best things Samuel L Jackson has ever done.

:27:44. > :27:45.The DVD, have you picked this just for me?

:27:46. > :27:49.Your choice is reminding me how old I am, normally it is something

:27:50. > :27:54.I would never do that, remind a lady of her age.

:27:55. > :27:56.Now you've taken us back to the 1980s.

:27:57. > :27:58.1985, Letter to Brezhnev, which is like me delving

:27:59. > :28:01.into my albums and coming out Now That's What I Call

:28:02. > :28:12.It is very much a soundtrack album from that era.

:28:13. > :28:15.It is a film that everyone went to see, it is the story

:28:16. > :28:20.on a night out and falling in love with two Russian sailors,

:28:21. > :28:23.played by Peter Firth and Alfred Molina, who have gone

:28:24. > :28:27.Margi Clark as well is one of the girls.

:28:28. > :28:35.It was about working-class Liverpool, Thatcher era

:28:36. > :28:41.But it was also bleak in that classic British way.

:28:42. > :28:43.Restored and put on Blu-ray, I wonder if the grit

:28:44. > :28:47.will still hold to it, but I think it is a real snapshot

:28:48. > :28:49.of Britain that might have been forgotten.

:28:50. > :28:52.A kind of lost classic film, but one, as you hear the name,

:28:53. > :28:55.Letter to Brezhnev, you are reminded of it.

:28:56. > :28:57.It is a cult classic from the British archives

:28:58. > :29:00.and I'm delighted it is out for a new generation

:29:01. > :29:04.And for you to be reminded of your youth.

:29:05. > :29:08.Thank you very much and enjoy your bank holiday viewing.

:29:09. > :29:14.Enjoy your cinema going and we'll see you next time.

:29:15. > :29:21.Hello, this is Breakfast, with Sally Nugent and Jon Kay.

:29:22. > :29:24.Coming up before 7am, Sarah will have the weekend's

:29:25. > :29:35.Mike will also have the sport and the big fight preview.

:29:36. > :29:38.a summary of this morning's main news.

:29:39. > :29:41.There are growing calls for a public inquiry following the conviction

:29:42. > :29:44.of a breast surgeon who carried out a series of needless operations.

:29:45. > :29:46.Ian Paterson was found guilty of intentionally

:29:47. > :29:49.wounding his patients at two private hospitals in the West Midlands.

:29:50. > :29:52.Now solicitors working on the case say the true number of his victims

:29:53. > :29:55.could be in the hundreds or even thousands.

:29:56. > :29:57.Ian Paterson was told he will likely face prison when he's

:29:58. > :30:03.European Union leaders are meeting in Brussels today to formally

:30:04. > :30:05.agree their negotiating stance for Brexit.

:30:06. > :30:09.Donald Tusk, has said the EU won't discuss its future

:30:10. > :30:12.relationship with the UK until it's happy that enough progress has been

:30:13. > :30:17.Those include the so-called divorce settlement which is the money the EU

:30:18. > :30:27.believes it would still be owed by the UK.

:30:28. > :30:32.Theresa May will campaign in Scotland today for the first time

:30:33. > :30:40.since calling the general election, the Conservatives hold one seat in

:30:41. > :30:45.Westminster. Jeremy Corbyn will say young people should reclaim their

:30:46. > :30:51.future by voting Labour when he speaks in London later. He says 2.5

:30:52. > :30:55.million voters are missing from the electoral adjuster. -- electoral

:30:56. > :30:55.register. North Korea has test fired

:30:56. > :30:57.a ballistic missile. According to South Korean

:30:58. > :31:00.and American officials It exploded The launch, from an

:31:01. > :31:02.airfield in Pukchang, came just hours after a special

:31:03. > :31:06.session at the UN Security council in which the US pushed for tougher

:31:07. > :31:09.sanctions on the Pyongyang regime. President Trump says North Korea's

:31:10. > :31:25.latest missile test disrespects We can speak to Alex Jenson, a

:31:26. > :31:29.journalist in the South Korean capital of soul. Thanks for joining

:31:30. > :31:35.us on Breakfast. From what you have been able to piece together so far,

:31:36. > :31:39.what has happened overnight? What's happened around 5:30am is North

:31:40. > :31:42.Korea has rather predictably gone ahead with a missile test, I

:31:43. > :31:47.predicted this on social media earlier this week because of the

:31:48. > :31:51.news about the UN Security Council, North Korean rhetoric throughout the

:31:52. > :31:56.week was unhappy this meeting was taking place, a special meeting, the

:31:57. > :32:01.first time dedicated to North Korea. It sees it as being very unfair and

:32:02. > :32:05.hypocritical, but especially from the US perspective, so what North

:32:06. > :32:14.Korea did is it went ahead with some sort of ballistic missile, something

:32:15. > :32:17.closer to its cutting edge of development because it failed, just

:32:18. > :32:21.as it did a couple of weeks back with another launch attempt, also on

:32:22. > :32:24.a weekend, and by the way this is the 50th missile launch under Kim

:32:25. > :32:28.Jong-un since he came to power at the end of 2011. The timing, just

:32:29. > :32:33.hours after the UN meeting, is significant, isn't it? It's almost

:32:34. > :32:37.like a message in itself. It is just defiance, pure defiance, and Donald

:32:38. > :32:41.Trump may have responded with his usual tweet by suggesting that there

:32:42. > :32:46.was a wedge being driven between North Korea and China but that would

:32:47. > :32:51.be such a simplistic reading of the situation. The fact is Donald Trump

:32:52. > :32:53.is providing the uncertainty here, it's the flip-flopping of Washington

:32:54. > :32:59.between the sensible and less sensible heads. The seeming working

:33:00. > :33:03.out of this situation so publicly, that's quite worrying. North Korea

:33:04. > :33:06.is just doing its thing, as it's been doing for years. The other

:33:07. > :33:10.changing factor could be South Korea, we've got a big election here

:33:11. > :33:14.from May the ninth and that will likely elect a Liberal leader who

:33:15. > :33:17.would be far more will include co-operate with North Korea. So from

:33:18. > :33:22.the perspective of Pyongyang, they can sit back in the knowledge that

:33:23. > :33:26.it is business as usual but the uncertainty here is really from the

:33:27. > :33:30.US side. Talking of South Korea, where you are in Seoul, what's the

:33:31. > :33:33.reaction on the streets among voters and normal people going on about

:33:34. > :33:37.their lives when they hear about another one of these tests. Does it

:33:38. > :33:45.frighten them or does it almost become another weekly event, it

:33:46. > :33:48.passes by unnoticed? Definitely the index of concern is risen but that

:33:49. > :33:53.doesn't mean we are anything like at fever pitch to be perfectly honest,

:33:54. > :33:56.and it is business as usual, part of that is because you get used to

:33:57. > :34:01.anything in life over a period of months and years. The other major

:34:02. > :34:05.reason is I think people generally don't believe North Korea wants to

:34:06. > :34:08.do anything, North Korea has its own very specific agenda, it wants to

:34:09. > :34:13.control this peninsula but it doesn't want to aggressively expand

:34:14. > :34:17.into other territories, it has already been able to fire on soul

:34:18. > :34:22.but has desired it not to do that. The key indicator would be for that

:34:23. > :34:27.election. If we were to see a Conservative candidate when it would

:34:28. > :34:31.inject a genuine fear because they would take security very seriously,

:34:32. > :34:35.but we are seeing the front runner, Moon Jae-in, who worked as chief of

:34:36. > :34:39.staff during the sunshine policy era of the mid to thousands of the first

:34:40. > :34:44.decade of this new century when South Korea was doing a lot to help

:34:45. > :34:49.North Korea, sending aid to co-operate. While we might not see

:34:50. > :34:52.that fully come into place again, we would see more cooperation, if

:34:53. > :34:56.people vote them in they can't be that worried that North Korea is

:34:57. > :34:58.impossible to deal with. Alex Jenson, thank you for joining us

:34:59. > :35:08.from Seoul. Mike is here and there is one big

:35:09. > :35:12.story in town? There is. A fascinating contrast between Anthony

:35:13. > :35:17.Joshua at 27 and Vladimir Klitschko, 41. The Guardian has said they have

:35:18. > :35:24.been so respectful of each other they might elope. It's if refreshing

:35:25. > :35:30.-- refreshing. It's great. They stand out as role models. Is it a

:35:31. > :35:34.bit boring? I don't think so, they will do their talking in the ring.

:35:35. > :35:39.Fascinating matchup, Joshua was six years old when Klitschko won his

:35:40. > :35:43.Olympic gold in 96 in Atlanta, many years later Joshua won his Olympic

:35:44. > :35:45.gold in 2012 before turning professional as well.

:35:46. > :35:47.The countdown is on then for tonight's world heavyweight

:35:48. > :35:49.title fight as Anthony Joshua meets former champion

:35:50. > :35:52.The fighters weighed-in, with Joshua 10lb heavier

:35:53. > :35:57.It's his his first fight since losing his belts

:35:58. > :36:01.But this is Klitschko's 69th professional fight,

:36:02. > :36:23.Eye to eye, six foot six apiece, a good fighter, but one that will have

:36:24. > :36:28.to come up against the mammoth that myself and we'll get it on and I'm

:36:29. > :36:32.ready to go as far as I need to go to get the win, you know what I

:36:33. > :36:35.mean? I've shown it before, that's all it is, I've got the skill and

:36:36. > :36:36.determination but I'm really willing to dig deep.

:36:37. > :36:44.Now is the right time, the opportunity is there. Opportunities

:36:45. > :36:49.are not coming every day, the opportunity's there. I have one of

:36:50. > :36:54.the rising stars in Anthony Joshua, it's perfect. Who would have else

:36:55. > :36:55.have fought if Joshua wouldn't have been there? Nobody.

:36:56. > :36:59.And there's coverage of Joshua versus Klitschko on BBC Radio 5 live

:37:00. > :37:02.as well as the BBC Sport website and the app.

:37:03. > :37:04.A strange old week for Newcastle in which they were promoted

:37:05. > :37:08.to the Premier League and raided as part of a fraud

:37:09. > :37:11.They beat Cardiff 2-0 thanks to a brilliant free kick

:37:12. > :37:15.Isaac Heydon added the second as they close in on leaders

:37:16. > :37:17.Brighton but Brighton will still win the title

:37:18. > :37:31.In the Scottish Premiership, Liam Boyce scored all four goals

:37:32. > :37:33.as Ross County beat Inverness in the Highland Derby.

:37:34. > :37:36.Boyce scored twice from open play and twice from the penalty

:37:37. > :37:45.spot to keep Inverness bottom by five points.

:37:46. > :37:49.Less than a week after being beaten in the Scottish Cup semi-final

:37:50. > :37:51.by their biggest rivals, Rangers today have the chance

:37:52. > :37:56.Celtic have already won the title and beat their Glasgow neighbours

:37:57. > :38:01.The midday kick off at Ibrox will see Rangers try to inflict

:38:02. > :38:05.Celtic's first domestic defeat of the season.

:38:06. > :38:08.In the Premier League it could be a sad afternoon

:38:09. > :38:11.on Bournemouth at the Stadium of Light.

:38:12. > :38:15.David Moyes' side can be relegated if they fail to at least match

:38:16. > :38:26.We'll need a really, really good run of results for things to go our way

:38:27. > :38:31.but while there's a chance we're not going to admit to anything else. So

:38:32. > :38:36.we've got to try and win. We have done and said in every other game

:38:37. > :38:40.that we've got to try and win and we've not done so. What I'd say

:38:41. > :38:44.about this one is we're at home, we've got a great chance, we played

:38:45. > :38:46.quite well in recent games so we'll take that into the game and hope we

:38:47. > :38:48.can get a decent result from it. Andy Murray is through to

:38:49. > :38:51.the semi-final of the Barcelona Open after a hard-fought victory

:38:52. > :38:53.against Albert Ramos-Vinolas. The Spaniard knocked Murray out

:38:54. > :38:55.of the Monte Carlo Masters last

:38:56. > :38:57.week and took the first set here, but the world number one fought

:38:58. > :39:00.back to take the match Meanwhile, Maria Sharapova

:39:01. > :39:05.is through to the semi-final of Stuttgart's WTA tournament

:39:06. > :39:07.as she continues her comeback Sharapova saw off Estonian

:39:08. > :39:11.qualifier Anett Kontaveit for her third-straight win after 15

:39:12. > :39:18.months out of the game. Sebastian Vettel looks determined

:39:19. > :39:21.to increase his lead in the Formula 1 Drivers' Championship

:39:22. > :39:22.after topping the timesheets in Friday's practice

:39:23. > :39:24.ahead of this weekend's The Ferrari driver was

:39:25. > :39:28.a quarter of a second ahead of his team-mate Kimi Raikkonen

:39:29. > :39:32.and more than half a second ahead and championship

:39:33. > :39:39.rival Lewis Hamilton. Final practice gets under way

:39:40. > :39:45.at 10am with qualifying from 1pm. The first stage of the Tour de

:39:46. > :39:50.Yorkshire was marred by a big Harlequins beat top

:39:51. > :39:57.of the table Wasps even though their captain,

:39:58. > :40:01.England scrum-half Danny Care, went off early

:40:02. > :40:03.with a stomach muscle injury. Nick Evans, who's due to retire

:40:04. > :40:07.at the end of the season, kicked 22 points in his last

:40:08. > :40:10.home game as Quins won 32-13. Newcastle beat Worcester 16-14

:40:11. > :40:12.in last night's other match. In the Pro 12, a last-minute

:40:13. > :40:15.try from captain Grant Gilchrist gave

:40:16. > :40:17.Edinburgh a 24-20 win There were also wins

:40:18. > :40:23.for Cardiff and Leinster. Hull FC have gone top of rugby

:40:24. > :40:26.league's Super League after a convincing victory

:40:27. > :40:29.over Warrington Wolves. 20 unanswered second-half

:40:30. > :40:31.points, including this try

:40:32. > :40:32.from Jamie Shaul, helped Elsewhere, St Helens

:40:33. > :40:40.beat Leigh 28-6. You just can't separate

:40:41. > :40:43.them in the semi-finals After two sessions it's neck

:40:44. > :40:52.and neck between defending champion the man he beat in last year's

:40:53. > :40:56.final. clearing up with a break

:40:57. > :41:02.of 135 in the last frame In the other semi-final,

:41:03. > :41:12.John Higgins is 10-6 up against Barry Hawkins after winning

:41:13. > :41:14.a marathon final frame They start again at

:41:15. > :41:18.10am this morning. In the week that England's

:41:19. > :41:25.cricketers start their summer with a one-day international

:41:26. > :41:29.against Ireland, the sport that gave the world its first wicket is also

:41:30. > :41:32.into its new season. It's been played since the 15th

:41:33. > :41:35.century and, as I've been finding out, stool ball has been enjoying

:41:36. > :41:46.a resurgence in recent years. Old Father Time on the clubhouse and

:41:47. > :41:51.the familiar sound of bat on ball in the evening sunshine. But this isn't

:41:52. > :41:57.cricket. This is a sport that dates back even further. And in stool

:41:58. > :42:02.ball, the wicket is up in the air. The wicket in the air because

:42:03. > :42:06.basically when you bowl, the ball leaves the bolder's hand, it doesn't

:42:07. > :42:11.touch the ground. You're actually batting strip doesn't need to be as

:42:12. > :42:16.well prepared as a cricket strip. It's thought the game was originally

:42:17. > :42:20.played in churchyards in the 15th century by people who just wanted to

:42:21. > :42:24.throw a stone or a ball at a tree stump, another name for which is a

:42:25. > :42:29.stool. Trouble is with tree stumps you can't move them anywhere. So

:42:30. > :42:33.stool ball players then started using church gates, also known as

:42:34. > :42:36.wicket gates, they could be lifted off and played with and this is

:42:37. > :42:41.where it's believed the word wicket comes from. The sport was

:42:42. > :42:45.flourishing at the turn of last century when keeping your top hat on

:42:46. > :42:50.was an extra challenge for the batsmen and women running between

:42:51. > :42:56.the wickets, which, by now, was side boards attached to the top of posts.

:42:57. > :43:01.And here it is in progress in the Kentish village green. In the 1940s

:43:02. > :43:05.and 50s when there were 3000 stool ball clubs competing in leagues and

:43:06. > :43:09.schools, the attire was much more suitable for batters and fielders

:43:10. > :43:14.are like. Well caught, Miss, the pride of fielding that will make the

:43:15. > :43:19.pride of the school, rara. Shirley was starting to play back in those

:43:20. > :43:23.days and she still is, now aged 80, as the new season starts for dozens

:43:24. > :43:30.of teams, mostly across the south of the UK, and in Birmingham. I just

:43:31. > :43:34.love having a team that plays, there are balls and bats and you just

:43:35. > :43:40.catch it and, oh, it's a wonderful game. It's a case of defending the

:43:41. > :43:45.wicket with your hand but now luckily there are these fine

:43:46. > :43:50.hand-held bats. It has so much in common with cricket except there are

:43:51. > :43:54.eight balls per overturned, not six, and bowling is underarm. But because

:43:55. > :44:00.it's also a forerunner of baseball and rounders, the ball is

:44:01. > :44:04.surprisingly small and hard. It so hard, especially when your hands are

:44:05. > :44:08.cold as well. But as you warm up through the season your hands get

:44:09. > :44:13.used to it. Being accessible to beginners and also being one of the

:44:14. > :44:15.country's oldest sports, two reasons why stool ball is enjoying a

:44:16. > :44:22.revival. Unlucky! Having seen the wonderful footage

:44:23. > :44:25.from the 1920s, it is a shame we don't wear hats. I'm disappointed

:44:26. > :44:29.you didn't wear a top hat for the peace. I think you would have stood

:44:30. > :44:35.out. Has your hand recovered? Just about after that first catch. It is

:44:36. > :44:39.so close to baseball, rounders and cricket but eight balls per over.

:44:40. > :44:46.And underarm bowling. Yes, which makes it much more accessible. Rara,

:44:47. > :44:51.we like stool ball! If you want to go and play, go and find your local

:44:52. > :44:51.club! Thanks very much and see you later.

:44:52. > :44:52.You're watching Breakfast from BBC News.

:44:53. > :44:56.The number of victims of breast surgeon Ian Paterson

:44:57. > :44:59.or even thousands according to solicitors.

:45:00. > :45:03.of carrying out needless operations.

:45:04. > :45:05.North Korea has launched another ballistic missile hours

:45:06. > :45:07.after Washington called for a tougher international approach

:45:08. > :45:25.Bank holiday weekend. All important weather forecast now.

:45:26. > :45:31.What's it going to be like? Well, it is looking a little bit mixed

:45:32. > :45:34.through the bank holiday weekend, but most of us should see sunshine

:45:35. > :45:39.and it will be turning warmer. This was taken by one of our Weather

:45:40. > :45:44.Watchers. It. As in Peacehaven. It will skies in many parts of the

:45:45. > :45:47.country. Through the weekend temperatures will be warmer than

:45:48. > :45:52.they have been over the past week. Breezy weather developing. For some

:45:53. > :45:55.of us there's a chance of rain, especially tomorrow and into Monday,

:45:56. > :46:00.but not everywhere seem wet weather. A weather front is approaching from

:46:01. > :46:03.the west, but before it gets to our shores high-pressure is dominating.

:46:04. > :46:09.This is how we start. Quite a lot of cloud around, but it should in and

:46:10. > :46:13.break up. Showers around in Wales, north-west England and Scotland.

:46:14. > :46:18.Further south, sunshine breaking through the cloud from the word go.

:46:19. > :46:22.At 9am, temperatures about 9- 10 degrees in England and Wales. Patchy

:46:23. > :46:26.cloud and a couple of light showers in Wales, but they should ease

:46:27. > :46:29.quickly. Showers in the north-west England and southern Scotland.

:46:30. > :46:35.Northern Ireland, central and southern Scotland is looking largely

:46:36. > :46:38.dry. The cloud we've got this morning should be on in the

:46:39. > :46:43.afternoon, allowing sunny spells to develop. Things turned breezy,

:46:44. > :46:47.especially towards the west, whereas further east we have lighter winds.

:46:48. > :46:52.Ted Richards reaching 17 degrees also in the south-east. Things

:46:53. > :46:59.looking fine across the board into this evening. -- temperatures

:47:00. > :47:03.reaching. More cloud working in from the south-west in the early hours of

:47:04. > :47:07.Sunday morning. That's the arrival of this weather front. On Sunday we

:47:08. > :47:11.are likely to see wet and windy weather in the south-west of England

:47:12. > :47:15.and Wales. If you are out camping it will be soggy and blustery in the

:47:16. > :47:19.south-west. Then the rain slowly edges further north-eastwards, but

:47:20. > :47:23.much of the country having quite a decent day. A big breezy in northern

:47:24. > :47:27.England and Scotland, or that we should stay largely dry. On the bank

:47:28. > :47:30.holiday Monday it looks like the low pressure is easing its way further

:47:31. > :47:34.eastwards. We still have a scattering of showers on bank

:47:35. > :47:38.holiday Monday, but sunshine in between. The driest weather in

:47:39. > :47:39.Scotland and Northern Ireland, but temperatures still in the mid-

:47:40. > :47:43.teens. The news is coming up in a few

:47:44. > :47:48.moments here on Breakfast. Over the last few years,

:47:49. > :48:15.billions of e-mail accounts Last year, Yahoo announced that over

:48:16. > :48:26.1.5 billion e-mail accounts were compromised between 2013

:48:27. > :48:28.and 2014, the largest Then it emerged that Russian hackers

:48:29. > :48:38.had gained access to 60,000 e-mails from Hillary Clinton's

:48:39. > :48:40.presidential campaign. Some believe the resulting leaks

:48:41. > :48:43.helped swing the election for Trump. And what it certainly did

:48:44. > :48:45.reveal is something most We send, each of us, all the time,

:48:46. > :48:58.hugely personal information Information that we'd

:48:59. > :49:01.like to keep private, but others are all too

:49:02. > :49:03.often able to see. So how about something that

:49:04. > :49:05.guarantees to protect Sounds like something

:49:06. > :49:10.you wanna have, doesn't it? Well, this is Nomx,

:49:11. > :49:12.a box which promises It was at CES that we came across

:49:13. > :49:26.this device as it was introduced I met the boss, Will Donaldson,

:49:27. > :49:31.who has impressive security He's worked in computer security

:49:32. > :49:34.and built web applications for the Pentagon, the Marine Corps

:49:35. > :49:37.and he was Chief Technology Officer for the F35 joint strike fighter

:49:38. > :49:39.communications facility. So what does he think is wrong

:49:40. > :49:42.with bog standard e-mail? Well, the Nomx promotional videos

:49:43. > :49:47.explain the problem. When you send an e-mail,

:49:48. > :49:50.copies of the message end up on several internet

:49:51. > :50:01.servers along the way. Will says all of the recent big

:50:02. > :50:04.e-mail hacks have involved one of these servers being

:50:05. > :50:07.compromised, and what's more, So those vulnerabilities,

:50:08. > :50:10.we've identified six core ones that encompass 100% of the hacks that

:50:11. > :50:20.have occurred to date. Will's solution is a $199 box

:50:21. > :50:23.that acts as your own It'll talk to other e-mail services,

:50:24. > :50:27.but where it comes into its own is when it connects directly

:50:28. > :50:30.to another Nomx box at the other end, the pair of them replacing

:50:31. > :50:34.the cloud servers that your message That means no copies are stored

:50:35. > :50:49.anywhere but on your box The idea has caught the imagination

:50:50. > :50:53.of some in the security industry, who've called it a "personal cloud

:50:54. > :50:56.on steroids" and Will himself has become a bit of a star,

:50:57. > :50:59.being interviewed on US national television and elsewhere

:51:00. > :51:07.in the media as a security guru. So what you're pitching here is that

:51:08. > :51:11.you can make a black box, that black box there, that is more

:51:12. > :51:14.secure than a multibillion It's been proved they're vulnerable,

:51:15. > :51:24.my question is to you is, you're not a multibillion

:51:25. > :51:26.dollar company. Not yet.

:51:27. > :51:27.Not yet. Why should I believe

:51:28. > :51:29.that your security is any better than theirs and why should I believe

:51:30. > :51:33.that there are no vulnerabilities that you've accidentally

:51:34. > :51:39.left in your box? What we've done is identify

:51:40. > :51:41.the categories of those vulnerabilities and all of the hacks

:51:42. > :51:44.have occurred have been By removing them from the equation,

:51:45. > :51:48.we've now negated them So the theory sounds a good one,

:51:49. > :51:51.avoid making multiple copies of your messages across potentially

:51:52. > :51:54.vulnerable servers on the internet. You just have to rely on the Nomx

:51:55. > :51:57.boxes themselves not You all know this man, Dan Simmons,

:51:58. > :52:09.one of Click's most experienced reporters and famously,

:52:10. > :52:11.if someone says something is unbreakable,

:52:12. > :52:12.you try and break it? Well, look, often on this programme

:52:13. > :52:16.we look at new things and we are as excited

:52:17. > :52:19.as anybody else to see them, but sometimes, just sometimes,

:52:20. > :52:21.something seems a little bit too good to be true and absolute

:52:22. > :52:24.security, I've never heard anyone in the cyber security

:52:25. > :52:26.industry promise that, but that's exactly what this

:52:27. > :52:29.company are doing. So to prove a point, you're

:52:30. > :52:32.going to try and hack this box? I think I've found somebody

:52:33. > :52:36.who might be able to do it. Scott Helm is one of the UK's most

:52:37. > :52:41.respected professional white hat He's helped discover some big

:52:42. > :52:45.security flaws in the past, including hacking home

:52:46. > :52:55.routers and electric cars. Scott's had the Nomx box

:52:56. > :52:58.in his hands for just a few minutes I've had a look over this device

:52:59. > :53:14.and I was quite surprised So when I flipped it over,

:53:15. > :53:19.we saw what we call the Mac address here, which is the device's unique

:53:20. > :53:22.identifier and these first three segments there identify

:53:23. > :53:24.the manufacturer, that tells So I went away and I looked these up

:53:25. > :53:29.and they're actually registered to the Raspberry Pi Foundation that

:53:30. > :53:46.make the Raspberry Pi computer. That's the hobbyists' computer we've

:53:47. > :53:49.seen a lot of times on Click. So what I did, I went

:53:50. > :53:55.ahead and opened this up Is there is in fact a Raspberry Pi

:53:56. > :54:02.inside this, which is white There's nothing else they've done

:54:03. > :54:06.with this that we can see inside. That's just a standard

:54:07. > :54:08.?35 Raspberry Pi. But what does that say

:54:09. > :54:12.to you when as a security guy I guess, there are further things

:54:13. > :54:16.to be found here that I've also asked Professor Alan

:54:17. > :54:19.Woodward, a well-known cyber security expert, who's advised

:54:20. > :54:22.the UK Government and Europol, to take a look at the Nomx box

:54:23. > :54:25.to see how it works. Well, already through the set-up

:54:26. > :54:40.process, there's a few things for a product that bills itself

:54:41. > :54:43.as being absolutely secure, there's a few things that we found

:54:44. > :54:46.that give rise for concern. And we certainly want to look

:54:47. > :54:49.a bit further into it. Just plugging it in has sent alarm

:54:50. > :54:52.bells ringing for Alan. The set up of the device

:54:53. > :54:55.is through a web application that It doesn't ask Alan

:54:56. > :54:58.to open up port 25. Now, that's a key port on his router

:54:59. > :55:02.he'll need to communicate with popular e-mail servers

:55:03. > :55:04.like Gmail or Microsoft accounts. It's never going to receive e-mail

:55:05. > :55:07.from an external service. Unless you know to go

:55:08. > :55:11.to your router and change port 25. No, it doesn't, the documentation

:55:12. > :55:16.doesn't have it in there. It tells you all these other

:55:17. > :55:19.ports, but not port 25. So you're having a quiet life

:55:20. > :55:23.for a few years to come receiving no Hotmail instantly knows

:55:24. > :55:26.that you're sending it It's what's called a dynamic

:55:27. > :55:30.address because it changes. Every time you turn your router

:55:31. > :55:35.on you get a new one. It spots that and says,

:55:36. > :55:37.we don't accept e-mails Because they just assume nobody's

:55:38. > :55:41.going to be running an e-mail server So this box can't send

:55:42. > :55:45.an e-mail to Hotmail? And if you try and send it

:55:46. > :55:50.to something like Gmail, then what happens is,

:55:51. > :55:52.because of things like the way Hotmail spots it,

:55:53. > :55:54.as you'll see there, Spam House, which is one

:55:55. > :55:58.of biggest spam filters, Now, to be fair, Nomx

:55:59. > :56:03.doesn't open port 25, But as we've seen, without 25 open,

:56:04. > :56:08.it's going to be difficult to hear Well, bearing in mind

:56:09. > :56:12.it's got one job to do, which is be an e-mail server,

:56:13. > :56:15.that's a pretty poor show. And there were more surprises

:56:16. > :56:18.to come when Alan opened the box. One of the simplest machines

:56:19. > :56:22.to break into is a Raspberry Pi. Everything is on this

:56:23. > :56:24.one little card. It's on one of these

:56:25. > :56:26.tiny little cards. So all of your e-mails,

:56:27. > :56:28.all of your software, everything is running on one

:56:29. > :56:31.of these tiny little cards. Now, actually, if somebody did have

:56:32. > :56:34.physical access to this what they could do is

:56:35. > :56:37.they could whip that card out, copy it, put the card back in,

:56:38. > :56:40.put it all back together and you'd be none the wiser and they've got

:56:41. > :56:43.a copy of everything, Because one of the things about this

:56:44. > :56:48.is it's not encrypted in any way This is not using any

:56:49. > :56:52.encryption at all? And what we did was,

:56:53. > :56:57.you said the simplest thing to do, because it is a complete

:56:58. > :56:59.Raspberry Pi, the simplest thing to do was actually plug it

:57:00. > :57:03.into a monitor and see what came up. The first concern would be

:57:04. > :57:13.if it is actually running Raspberry Pi as an operating system,

:57:14. > :57:17.which it is, it immediately tells Postfix is the mail transport agent,

:57:18. > :57:21.that's part of the mail server. It was just all totally

:57:22. > :57:25.standard stuff. So how old is the software

:57:26. > :57:28.on there at the moment? Well, that's another

:57:29. > :57:30.thing that we found, In that it's so old we couldn't

:57:31. > :57:35.actually get hold of some It's running Raspberry Pi's

:57:36. > :57:38.own operating system. It's a version called Wizi,

:57:39. > :57:41.which you can no longer download They've taken it off

:57:42. > :57:56.because they don't want people Likewise there's this Postfix admin,

:57:57. > :58:00.there is another another piece of software called Dovecot,

:58:01. > :58:03.all of which are free bits of software, but some

:58:04. > :58:05.of it dates back to 2009. It's inevitable that

:58:06. > :58:07.people will find bugs, flaws, in any bit of software

:58:08. > :58:11.and what people do is they release The problem with the way this is put

:58:12. > :58:16.together is there's no way There's a whole series of things

:58:17. > :58:21.about the way this is put together that make you think,

:58:22. > :58:22.absolute security is... Now, it's important to say at this

:58:23. > :58:26.point, there's nothing wrong with the hardware or the software

:58:27. > :58:29.that you're talking about per se, Raspberry Pi is fine,

:58:30. > :58:32.the software used, Postfix, Admin, is just a piece

:58:33. > :58:34.of off-the-shelf software. Yeah, I mean, the Raspberry Pi

:58:35. > :58:37.is a great bit of hobbyist kit and Postfix, as in the other

:58:38. > :58:40.programmes we have looked at, they do the job, if you've got

:58:41. > :58:43.the latest versions of them. They are still selling this box

:58:44. > :58:50.right now as a finished product? It was being sold when

:58:51. > :58:53.you were testing it? Absolutely, and as we're

:58:54. > :58:55.filming it is today. OK, you've studied

:58:56. > :58:57.the box, what next? Well, surprise, surprise,

:58:58. > :58:59.Scott thinks he can hack it. I'm afraid because this

:59:00. > :59:02.is the short version of Click, we're going to have

:59:03. > :59:04.to leave the story there. If you want to know more details

:59:05. > :59:08.about the hack and if you'd like to hear from Alan and Scott

:59:09. > :59:12.about what happens after you hack a box like this, you're

:59:13. > :59:15.going to have to watch the full version, which is

:59:16. > :59:17.on iPlayer right now. Thanks for watching

:59:18. > :00:12.and we'll see you soon. Hello, this is Breakfast,

:00:13. > :00:14.with Sally Nugent and Jon Kay. Calls for a public inquiry

:00:15. > :00:17.after a rogue breast surgeon is convicted of intentionally

:00:18. > :00:21.wounding his patients. Ian Paterson was accused

:00:22. > :00:23.of playing God by carrying out Lawyers think he could have hundreds

:00:24. > :00:42.or even thousands of victims. Good morning, it's

:00:43. > :00:46.Saturday 29th April. EU leaders meet in Brussels

:00:47. > :00:51.to discuss how to tackle future Another North Korean missile test,

:00:52. > :00:57.but the US military says the ballistic rocket blew up

:00:58. > :01:00.seconds after take-off. Donald Trump becomes the first US

:01:01. > :01:05.President for more than three decades to address the American gun

:01:06. > :01:09.lobby. No longer will federal agencies be

:01:10. > :01:16.coming after law-abiding gun owners. And it's one of Britain's

:01:17. > :01:28.oldest sports. It's the richest bout in British

:01:29. > :01:31.boxing history. The countdown is on for the world heavyweight showdown

:01:32. > :01:32.as Anthony Joshua meets former champion Vladimir Klitschko.

:01:33. > :01:36.And it's one of Britain's oldest sports.

:01:37. > :01:41.A fine bit of fielding that will make her

:01:42. > :01:43.the pride of the school, rah rah.

:01:44. > :01:46.I've been finding out why stool ball is making a comeback.

:01:47. > :01:53.A largely dry day today with some sunshine

:01:54. > :01:56.around, some of us will see a little bit of rain tomorrow.

:01:57. > :02:02.There are growing calls for a public inquiry following the conviction

:02:03. > :02:06.of a breast surgeon who carried out a series of needless operations.

:02:07. > :02:07.Ian Paterson was found guilty of intentionally

:02:08. > :02:11.wounding his patients at two private hospitals in the West Midlands.

:02:12. > :02:14.Now solicitors working on the case say the true number of his victims

:02:15. > :02:16.could be in the hundreds or even thousands.

:02:17. > :02:25.Patients are meant to be able to trust their doctor,

:02:26. > :02:27.but Ian Paterson practiced at the exact opposite

:02:28. > :02:32.and betrayed his patients on some scale.

:02:33. > :02:35.He told people they were at risk of cancer and operated

:02:36. > :02:39.The breast surgeon worked in private and NHS hospitals

:02:40. > :02:42.in the West Midlands, and while staff in the public sector

:02:43. > :02:45.now hold each other to account, lawyers representing some

:02:46. > :02:48.of the victims are today calling for a full, independent enquiry

:02:49. > :02:50.into oversite of private sector healthcare.

:02:51. > :02:55.One senior surgeon says there is some way to go.

:02:56. > :03:00.No matter what the quality of surgery is in the private sector,

:03:01. > :03:04.there is much less observation going on and much less recording

:03:05. > :03:12.The private provider where Patterson operated,

:03:13. > :03:26.Spire Healthcare, operated has told the BBC:

:03:27. > :03:28.Shirley Maroney's sister, Marie, was one of Ian

:03:29. > :03:31.The surgeon originally carried out an incomplete mastectomy,

:03:32. > :03:33.instead of the double mastectomy she'd asked for.

:03:34. > :03:35.She then had a further double mastectomy,

:03:36. > :03:41.My sister was a police officer for 30 years,

:03:42. > :03:45.she believed in the justice system and she believed in fairness,

:03:46. > :03:48.and quite frankly this wasn't fair, this wasn't just

:03:49. > :03:54.Marie died in 2008 secondary cancer in her lungs.

:03:55. > :03:57.It's impossible to know the extent to which Ian Paterson's failures

:03:58. > :04:02.The criminal case centred on the treatment of nine other women

:04:03. > :04:06.and one man but solicitors say there are hundreds of patients now

:04:07. > :04:12.Ian Paterson has been told he'll face prison when he's

:04:13. > :04:19.European Union leaders are meeting in Brussels today to formally

:04:20. > :04:21.agree their negotiating stance for Brexit.

:04:22. > :04:25.Donald Tusk, has said the EU won't discuss its future

:04:26. > :04:28.relationship with the UK until it's happy that enough progress has been

:04:29. > :04:43.Those include a so-called divorce settlement.

:04:44. > :04:49.That's the Monique the EU believes it will be owed by the UK. -- money.

:04:50. > :04:52.And we'll be live with all the latest reaction from Brussels

:04:53. > :04:56.Theresa May will campaign in Scotland today for the first time

:04:57. > :04:59.The Conservatives currently hold one Scottish seat

:05:00. > :05:02.at Westminster but opinion polls suggest support for the party

:05:03. > :05:05.Meanwhile, Jeremy Corbyn will urge young people

:05:06. > :05:08.to claim their future by voting Labour in the election

:05:09. > :05:12.He will highlight figures that show 2.4 million young voters

:05:13. > :05:14.are missing from the electoral register.

:05:15. > :05:16.North Korea has test fired a ballistic missile.

:05:17. > :05:19.According to South Korean and American officials it exploded

:05:20. > :05:21.The launch, from an airfield in Pukchang,

:05:22. > :05:24.came just hours after a special session at the UN Security council

:05:25. > :05:28.in which the US pushed for tougher sanctions on the Pyongyang regime.

:05:29. > :05:30.Barbara Plett-Usher reports from the UN headquarters

:05:31. > :05:37.After weeks of mounting concern in Washington about North Korea,

:05:38. > :05:40.the Secretary of State arrived at the United Nations

:05:41. > :05:44.UN sanctions aren't working, was the message.

:05:45. > :05:47.There needs to be a new campaign of pressure.

:05:48. > :05:52.Ultimately this is being driven by America's own national security

:05:53. > :05:55.considerations, he said, so it's serious.

:05:56. > :06:00.With each successive detonation and missile test,

:06:01. > :06:03.North Korea pushes North-East Asia and the world closer to instability

:06:04. > :06:10.The threat of a North Korean nuclear attack on Seoul or Tokyo is real,

:06:11. > :06:13.and it is likely only a matter of time before North Korea develops

:06:14. > :06:18.the capability to strike the US mainland.

:06:19. > :06:22.Despite UN pressure, North Korea's been able

:06:23. > :06:26.to accelerate its weapons programme, and shortly after Mr Tillerson

:06:27. > :06:29.spoke, it fired another missile, although that test seems

:06:30. > :06:35.But the Trump administration is keeping open the threat

:06:36. > :06:39.of military action in case of further provocations.

:06:40. > :06:42.The latest missile test probably won't be enough of a trigger

:06:43. > :06:45.for that, but it may help strengthen international resolve to put

:06:46. > :06:48.the economic squeeze on North Korea's determined young leader.

:06:49. > :06:53.Barbara Plett-Usher, BBC News, at the United Nations in New York.

:06:54. > :06:56.President Trump responded overnight to the missile launch.

:06:57. > :07:14.Well, last night, Donald Trump became the first US President in 30

:07:15. > :07:17.gun lobby, the National Rifle Association.

:07:18. > :07:21.On the eve of his 100th day in office, he told a rally

:07:22. > :07:24.in Georgia what his administration had achieved so far and pledged

:07:25. > :07:32.The eight-year assault on your Second Amendment freedoms

:07:33. > :07:48.You have a true friend and champion in the White House.

:07:49. > :07:53.No longer will federal agencies be coming after law-abiding gun owners.

:07:54. > :08:01.A man is due to appear in court, charged with the murder of a former

:08:02. > :08:03.Royal Navy officer during a car theft in Manchester.

:08:04. > :08:06.Mike Samwell was knocked down as he tried to stop thieves

:08:07. > :08:08.taking his car in Chorlton last weekend.

:08:09. > :08:10.Ryan Gibbons, who's 29, is also accused of burglary.

:08:11. > :08:14.arrested on suspicion of murder have

:08:15. > :08:19.been released on police bail, pending further inquiries.

:08:20. > :08:21.Head teachers will today be asked to vigorously oppose

:08:22. > :08:23.the expansion of grammar schools in England.

:08:24. > :08:25.School leaders gathering at their annual conference

:08:26. > :08:28.are warning of a perfect storm of pressures which could have dire

:08:29. > :08:30.consequences for standards and pupils.

:08:31. > :08:32.The Conservatives are planning a fresh wave of grammars,

:08:33. > :08:35.but Labour and the Lib Dems are strongly against them.

:08:36. > :08:41.Here's our education correspondent Marc Ashdown.

:08:42. > :08:47.This tuition centre in Kent is popular with parents who hope it

:08:48. > :08:52.will help their children when a place at a local grammar school.

:08:53. > :08:56.A wave of new grammars in England is likely to be a key plank

:08:57. > :08:58.of the Conservative manifesto, Theresa May feel strongly they can

:08:59. > :09:09.Absolutely the mix and the demographic we have of children

:09:10. > :09:12.coming to any of our centres is not exclusively middle-class at all.

:09:13. > :09:15.I think it's aspirational parents, especially in areas where those

:09:16. > :09:25.But today at their annual conference, head teachers will be

:09:26. > :09:28.asked to vote on a motion to vigorously oppose the expansion

:09:29. > :09:31.of selective schools, it is a policy, they'll be told,

:09:32. > :09:33.for the view at the expense of the many.

:09:34. > :09:41.Grammars might be the hot topic but heads say there are also facing

:09:42. > :09:42.increasing difficulties recruiting and retaining staff.

:09:43. > :09:45.Brexit is a source of uncertainty and the debate

:09:46. > :09:48.It is, heads claim, a perfect storm of pressures.

:09:49. > :09:51.A storm which it's feared will have dire consequences

:09:52. > :09:57.We've got new GCSEs and new A-levels that we can't afford to give them

:09:58. > :10:00.textbooks for, so teachers are constantly having to make up

:10:01. > :10:03.the things they're doing to make sure those students

:10:04. > :10:09.The Department of Education maintains schools have had record

:10:10. > :10:11.levels of investment, but with Labour and Lib Dems

:10:12. > :10:15.strongly opposing more grammars, it's likely to be a key policy

:10:16. > :10:17.battle in the run-up to the election.

:10:18. > :10:28.Now, you can keep your fancy sports cars,

:10:29. > :10:31.just look at this for a show-stopping mode of transport.

:10:32. > :10:33.A British inventor has built an Iron Man-style suit

:10:34. > :10:37.and taken it for a spin to the delight of crowds at a design

:10:38. > :10:41.Richard Browning said he's had a huge amount of interest

:10:42. > :10:43.since posting a video of its maiden flight.

:10:44. > :10:47.But he insists the project in just a bit of fun and is unlikely

:10:48. > :10:48.to become a mainstream method of transportation.

:10:49. > :10:56.It looks like he's got cans on his wrist. Is it blowing him? You need

:10:57. > :11:01.to talk about that with a bit of science. He's already a few feet off

:11:02. > :11:08.the ground for safety reasons but he says he is capable of flying at 200

:11:09. > :11:14.mph at an altitude of 3000 feet. No! No! No way! He needs to do a bit

:11:15. > :11:21.more than three inches off the ground! It still looks fun. He says

:11:22. > :11:25.the project is a bit of fun and unlikely to become a mainstream form

:11:26. > :11:30.of transportation. My worry is without breaking a limb. He's all

:11:31. > :11:33.right at that height, but when you get up to 1000 feet! Who knows? Will

:11:34. > :11:34.find out! People, money and Ireland look set

:11:35. > :11:39.to dominate talks aimed at finalising Europe's negotiating

:11:40. > :11:42.guidelines for Brexit It's expected that the EU

:11:43. > :11:45.will refuse to let the UK discuss future negotiations

:11:46. > :11:47.until a divorce bill is arranged. We already know the areas the EU

:11:48. > :11:54.wants to sort out swiftly. The remaining members are keen

:11:55. > :11:57.to ensure the rights of the three million EU

:11:58. > :12:01.citizens living in Britain. They'll also be looking

:12:02. > :12:03.to get a guarantee of Britain's financial

:12:04. > :12:07.contributions. Dubbed the divorce bill,

:12:08. > :12:10.it is the amount the EU says the UK must pay as part of existing

:12:11. > :12:21.financial commitments. The leaders are also expected

:12:22. > :12:23.to clarify arrangements under which Northern Ireland

:12:24. > :12:25.would be absorbed directly into the EU if its citizens voted

:12:26. > :12:29.for unity with the Republic Theresa May had previously

:12:30. > :12:34.indicated the UK government would want to discuss the divorce

:12:35. > :12:37.settlement and a trade deal But Donald Tusk said the only

:12:38. > :12:41.possible approach was phased talks in which Britain must make

:12:42. > :12:43.sufficient progress before cannot have the same rights

:12:44. > :12:48.and enjoy the same benefits as a member, the guidelines say,

:12:49. > :12:51.which may affect issues such as the single market,

:12:52. > :12:54.freedom of movement and taxes. They also say an agreement

:12:55. > :12:56.on the future UK-EU relationship can only be concluded once the UK

:12:57. > :13:00.has become a third country. In other words, once it has

:13:01. > :13:04.officially left the EU. Camino Mortera-Martinez

:13:05. > :13:10.is the Brussels representative from the Centre for European Reform,

:13:11. > :13:22.a pro-European think tank focussed Good morning to you. Why is today so

:13:23. > :13:27.important? Well, today is the first time when the EU 27 are actually

:13:28. > :13:31.meeting to adopt the guidelines to give the mandate to negotiate to

:13:32. > :13:36.both the European Commission and the council. So I think it's the first

:13:37. > :13:42.time when we are going to see a display of unity amongst the EU 27

:13:43. > :13:50.and the official negotiating guidelines for the UK. What is the

:13:51. > :13:58.mood of the EU 27 about Brexit? I think their words... They are seeing

:13:59. > :14:02.the rhetoric in the UK escalating because of the election. As

:14:03. > :14:07.Chancellor Merkel signalled a couple of months ago, there is also concern

:14:08. > :14:12.about some in the UK government perhaps are living in a fantasyland,

:14:13. > :14:16.as she politely put it, thinking that they can expect more than

:14:17. > :14:20.actually what the European Union can deliver. I also think they are

:14:21. > :14:25.determined to show they are united, that they were the best deal

:14:26. > :14:29.possible for the European Union, even if that means losing a bit of

:14:30. > :14:34.economic advantage, they will actually go for it. How can they

:14:35. > :14:37.really even begin to decide anything about the framework for negotiations

:14:38. > :14:44.when there are elections looming in the UK, in France and in Germany

:14:45. > :14:50.too? Actually the reason for this is obviously once Article 50 was

:14:51. > :14:55.triggered, in March, we only have two years to negotiate, which will

:14:56. > :14:59.actually end up only being 18 months. Even if you have elections

:15:00. > :15:05.in Germany, France and the UK, things need to start rolling. I do

:15:06. > :15:09.think that the elections in Germany and France are not going to have

:15:10. > :15:15.such a big impact at the moment because the candidates... The likely

:15:16. > :15:21.winners are quite established already, and I struggle to see any

:15:22. > :15:24.other scenario in the UK but a landslide victory for the Tory

:15:25. > :15:26.party. So I don't think the elections are going to change that

:15:27. > :15:36.much. Meanwhile, Donald Tusk has said yet

:15:37. > :15:42.again there will be no trade deals negotiated alongside racks at talks.

:15:43. > :15:47.Is that a continuing power grab, in a way? -- Brexit. I'm not sure. I

:15:48. > :15:50.think that is due to the legal framework they have here. Article 50

:15:51. > :15:58.itself says you have to take into account the few -- future

:15:59. > :16:01.relationships with the target country. It is difficult to

:16:02. > :16:04.negotiate with the country inside the European Union when we talk

:16:05. > :16:09.about negotiating a free-trade agreement with a third country. So

:16:10. > :16:13.in true EU jargon, in true EU diplomacy, what the EU leaders have

:16:14. > :16:23.said is that these divorce talks can have two phases. The first phases

:16:24. > :16:25.once we decide conditions of separating, we can negotiate a

:16:26. > :16:30.conditional agreement for the future. But we can't actually move,

:16:31. > :16:31.as Donald Tusk says, towards the future before having solved the

:16:32. > :16:38.past. Thank you. You are watching

:16:39. > :16:40.Breakfast from BBC News. The main stories this morning:

:16:41. > :16:43.The number of victims of breast surgeon Ian Paterson

:16:44. > :16:45.could run into hundreds, or even thousands,

:16:46. > :16:49.according to solicitors. He was convicted yesterday

:16:50. > :16:53.of carrying out needless operations. North Korea has launched

:16:54. > :16:55.another ballistic missile, hours after Washington called

:16:56. > :17:14.for a tougher international approach We are going to be talking weddings

:17:15. > :17:18.and a minute. It is a big time of year for weddings. It is a big

:17:19. > :17:22.expense as well. Do you think they will be brides up and down the

:17:23. > :17:28.country awake with their rollers in? I do, and I think there is one thing

:17:29. > :17:33.they want to know more than anything else. What will it be like for

:17:34. > :17:36.brides, grooms and everybody today? If you have planned your wedding

:17:37. > :17:40.today things are looking pretty decent. Up and down the country you

:17:41. > :17:44.have a good chance of things staying dry today. A bit of rain later on in

:17:45. > :17:49.the weekend. This was the scene as we started the scene in East Sussex.

:17:50. > :17:53.A beautiful Sareen sunrise there. As we head to the next couple of days,

:17:54. > :17:57.things are feeling a bit warmer than they have done over the past week or

:17:58. > :18:00.so. Quite easy whether developing there is the chance of some rain

:18:01. > :18:04.during Sunday and Monday. It wouldn't be a bank holiday without a

:18:05. > :18:08.little bit of rain in the forecast. We have a front approaching from the

:18:09. > :18:11.Atlantic but before it gets their high pressure is dominating the

:18:12. > :18:15.weather for much of the country so we still have quite a lot of cloud

:18:16. > :18:18.out there this morning. Just a few isolated showers coming out of that

:18:19. > :18:21.cloud across parts of Wales, for instance, north-west England as

:18:22. > :18:25.well. To the south of that there is plenty of sunshine developing. This

:18:26. > :18:28.is nine a.m.. So across the bulk of England in the southern Wales, some

:18:29. > :18:32.sunshine. A few light showers dotted here and there. The north-west of

:18:33. > :18:34.England, and the North of Wales, in the southern Scotland as well.

:18:35. > :18:38.Northern Ireland, central and southern Scotland getting away with

:18:39. > :18:42.a largely dry picture with some sunshine. The cloud we have got out

:18:43. > :18:45.they will tend to thin and break up, allowing a bright afternoon. The

:18:46. > :18:52.winds will pick up. You see the southerly arrows blowing and it will

:18:53. > :18:57.turn quite pretty. Less so for central and eastern areas, where we

:18:58. > :19:02.are likely to see 16 or 17 degrees. Reasonably warm in the sunshine and

:19:03. > :19:05.as we had through the evening, most places staying dry but the breeze

:19:06. > :19:08.will pick up. More cloud drifting in from the south-west should keep

:19:09. > :19:13.things frost free by first thing Sunday morning. Most of us at around

:19:14. > :19:16.eight or nine degrees or so. Through the day tomorrow if you are across

:19:17. > :19:20.the south-west of England and Wales, you are likely to see some wet

:19:21. > :19:23.weather and some breezy conditions developing as well. That area of

:19:24. > :19:27.rain Nudgee north eastwards but across many eastern areas and parts

:19:28. > :19:31.of Scotland as well, it is looking dry and bright with some sunshine.

:19:32. > :19:34.We have a squeeze on those isobars, and as we move through interbank

:19:35. > :19:38.holiday Monday the low pressure drifts its way towards the east. So

:19:39. > :19:41.it will be an improving sort of day for bank holiday Monday, although

:19:42. > :19:44.you will notice some showers, particularly across the southern

:19:45. > :19:50.half of the country, breezy at times as well. Right across the north and

:19:51. > :19:54.temperatures in the. All in all in all we have a little bit of rain on

:19:55. > :19:57.the cards, but quite a lot of dry and bright weather through the bank

:19:58. > :20:02.holiday weekend. The brides and grooms across the country living out

:20:03. > :20:07.a sigh of relief. We will speak to one in a minute. Would you do that

:20:08. > :20:12.on the morning of your wedding? Talk to people on the telly? I am not

:20:13. > :20:17.sure. Let's have a look at this morning's papers. Mike is coming

:20:18. > :20:22.with some of the sports pages as well. The lead story is the same as

:20:23. > :20:26.ours on the front of the Daily Mail, they are talking about the surgeon

:20:27. > :20:31.who has been struck off as at least 1000 victims are said to have been

:20:32. > :20:34.affected by Ian Paterson, who operated over several years in the

:20:35. > :20:38.West Midlands. The Guardian leading with that story as well, talking

:20:39. > :20:42.about the financial implications. The NHS has had to pay out ?9

:20:43. > :20:48.million so far to the victims of rogue surgeon Ian Paterson. A

:20:49. > :20:52.picture of the actress Maxine Peake, who did an interview with the

:20:53. > :20:56.Guardian talking about her accent, and how when she started off she

:20:57. > :21:02.found it hard to get back in jobs, and now it is embraced and she says

:21:03. > :21:08.things are changing. Fascinating about the battle she had. She does a

:21:09. > :21:11.lot of radio drama as well as TV and theatre, because her voice is so

:21:12. > :21:16.amazing. The Daily Express has the same lead story about the doctor we

:21:17. > :21:19.are leading on, the front page of the Times has a picture from the

:21:20. > :21:24.terror raids in north-west London, and they are saying the security

:21:25. > :21:28.services were looking for an Isis suspect, who is now currently being

:21:29. > :21:33.held over what they say is an active terror plot. They are the front

:21:34. > :21:37.pages this morning. There is tons of sport on the front pages and the

:21:38. > :21:43.back pages. One story has caught my eye, how do you make David Beckham

:21:44. > :21:48.ugly? You can't. Of this make-up artist, yellow, rotten teeth and

:21:49. > :21:54.Scarface. He is going to be in a film, a Guy Ritchie movie, the King

:21:55. > :22:03.Arthur legend being told in a film, and he has... The Legend of

:22:04. > :22:08.Bexcalibur is the headline. I have to say he is not looking that ugly

:22:09. > :22:12.death. Yes, the little picture there. The yellow teeth and the

:22:13. > :22:17.scars. We are talking about centuries ago. Still not terrible.

:22:18. > :22:22.He still comes off, doesn't he? Looking forward to seeing that.

:22:23. > :22:27.Imagine being the make-up artist who is told to make David Beckham look

:22:28. > :22:32.ugly. And talking about Anthony Joshua, this is the actual size of

:22:33. > :22:39.his fist. It is incredible, isn't it? That is the left hand of Anthony

:22:40. > :22:46.Joshua. I think he might win, Mike. I am not taking him on. He is taking

:22:47. > :22:53.on Klitschko. And they are both fans of chest boxing. Where you played

:22:54. > :23:00.three minutes of chess and three minutes of boxing -- chess boxing. A

:23:01. > :23:05.stereotypical bank holiday weekend for men used to be a bit of DIY,

:23:06. > :23:08.that sort of thing. Not any more. They are bucking the trend.

:23:09. > :23:13.Apparently now more and more men would prefer to be baking. I do it

:23:14. > :23:25.every weekend, my daughters come over and we make eggs. Well, they

:23:26. > :23:29.make it. And after the success of the Great British Bake-Off, more men

:23:30. > :23:38.are confident making lovely cakes. It is probably not as messy as DIY.

:23:39. > :23:44.I do looking at myself. With those little fists of yours. Go

:23:45. > :23:47.everywhere. Go everywhere in the next story as well, a different type

:23:48. > :23:54.of dodo -- dough everywhere. It is supposed to be one

:23:55. > :23:58.of the best days of your life, but does your wedding need

:23:59. > :24:00.to be the most expensive? The lifestyle magazine Country Life

:24:01. > :24:03.says the pressure of social media has turned getting married

:24:04. > :24:06.into the equivalent of an arms race, as couples try and out-spend

:24:07. > :24:09.and outdo each other. We asked some of you

:24:10. > :24:16.what you thought. You spend money on the one time in

:24:17. > :24:20.your life that it is supposed to mean something. They just do it for

:24:21. > :24:24.just showing off, so I don't like that. It is just ridiculous, you end

:24:25. > :24:28.up with a mortgage, almost, on a wedding. I think it is a lot you

:24:29. > :24:31.spend on dresses that I never worn again. People want to deny stuff,

:24:32. > :24:35.but they, and celebrate that special day and an amazing way. People feel

:24:36. > :24:39.they have to have lots of different things, they have to have lots of

:24:40. > :24:42.add-ons that are expensive, and that becomes more important than the

:24:43. > :24:45.actual ceremony and why they are getting married in the first place.

:24:46. > :24:48.I know people who have massive weddings and then get divorced quite

:24:49. > :24:50.quickly. Save your money and spend it on something else, it is only one

:24:51. > :24:52.day. Give it to charity! We are joined now by Sharn Khaira,

:24:53. > :24:55.a wedding planner and blogger, and Julia Braime, editor

:24:56. > :24:57.of Brides Up North blog We are also joined by Luke Hadon,

:24:58. > :25:05.who is getting married today. What is it about a wedding that

:25:06. > :25:09.makes people go slightly bonkers? Of course, it is the biggest day of

:25:10. > :25:11.your life, and in terms of the importance that is placed on

:25:12. > :25:15.weddings these days, obviously people do want to have an amazing

:25:16. > :25:19.day with their family and friends. Four I let you carry on, I should

:25:20. > :25:25.also say we are now seeing one particular person who I shouldn't

:25:26. > :25:30.forget. Good morning, Luke. I'm not sure you are hearing me, are you? Is

:25:31. > :25:36.looking quite tense. Good morning. Are you hearing us OK? I am, yes. I

:25:37. > :25:40.am sorry to interrupt, you are obviously deep in thought there. We

:25:41. > :25:45.should tell everybody at home watching, when we say you are a

:25:46. > :25:48.groom, this is a particularly significant day to be a groom,

:25:49. > :25:54.because it is your wedding day. It is, yes. It is. How are you feeling

:25:55. > :25:59.today? I think the nerves have just started to kick in, actually. I was

:26:00. > :26:04.OK up until this morning, and now I am pretty nervous. That is live

:26:05. > :26:09.telly, Luke. Thank you very much indeed. Give us an idea of what type

:26:10. > :26:14.of date you and your fiance have planned for today. Is it low-key, is

:26:15. > :26:18.a Budget? It is, it is not too formal. It is in a converted barn,

:26:19. > :26:22.and the ceremony is going to be at the same place as the reception, so

:26:23. > :26:27.nice and sort of low-key, and hope to lead the weather will be nice as

:26:28. > :26:31.well. The thing is, Luke, lots of people talk about, we are going to

:26:32. > :26:36.keep it low-key, but it can run away at because of the ambitions and the

:26:37. > :26:41.cost of it. We have gone over our Budget slightly, and it just

:26:42. > :26:46.happens. Little things just add up. So you just can't help it. But we

:26:47. > :26:50.have kept it as low as we can. We will catch up with you again in a

:26:51. > :26:54.moment. We are just going to talk to these two ladies here in the studio.

:26:55. > :26:59.What are the big pressures on a couple getting married, in terms of

:27:00. > :27:03.those costs? That is what we are talking about, how expensive it can

:27:04. > :27:07.get. There is quite a lot of things that come into play. For any couple,

:27:08. > :27:13.the guest list is the first thing to look at. Numbers, keeping family

:27:14. > :27:16.happy, what is expected of them. We are seeing a lot more these days

:27:17. > :27:20.couples really doing things their own way. So trying to get away from

:27:21. > :27:26.those family pressures, and we try and leave that through our blog and

:27:27. > :27:31.magazines, saying you don't have due conform, you can do a little bit

:27:32. > :27:35.differently -- lead that. Alker today is having a fabulous barn

:27:36. > :27:39.wedding, and obviously he says that Budget has gone a little bit higher

:27:40. > :27:43.than expected, but I'm sure they found ways to include things they

:27:44. > :27:48.want in a wedding, without blowing the bank, basically. We say you

:27:49. > :27:52.don't have to meet the pressures of family and friends, but saying that

:27:53. > :27:57.is one thing, then actually doing it, when there is a whole industry

:27:58. > :28:01.about weddings now, and you go to any supermarket and look at the

:28:02. > :28:03.magazines and there are half a dozen wedding magazines, different styles

:28:04. > :28:08.of wedding magazines, country wedding, city wedding, the pressure

:28:09. > :28:14.is enormous. The pressure is enormous. That is something that we

:28:15. > :28:17.are seeing these days but I think there are obviously ways to

:28:18. > :28:20.eliminate that pressure as well, in terms of the wedding planning

:28:21. > :28:24.journey. So it is really about how can you take that pressure off

:28:25. > :28:27.yourself as a couple? There are a couple of ways you can do that, in

:28:28. > :28:31.terms of looking around at your support system, asking family and

:28:32. > :28:36.friends to help, in terms of Budget, obviously, asking for help as well.

:28:37. > :28:40.Wedding planners are obviously very common now, so a lot of couples even

:28:41. > :28:44.with the average Budget in the UK are actually opting for wedding

:28:45. > :28:47.planners. And it is really how can you eliminate that pressure? Because

:28:48. > :28:52.it will be, inevitably, because it is the biggest day of your life. I

:28:53. > :28:56.think there is an element of you shouldn't feel pressure from media

:28:57. > :28:59.outlets. It is about choice, about letting brides no these options are

:29:00. > :29:04.available. At the more choice you have, the more expensive it can get,

:29:05. > :29:09.can't get? Not necessarily. Through our blog we see a lot of different

:29:10. > :29:12.types of weddings. So a low-budget wedding where they haven't spent as

:29:13. > :29:16.much, but they have created a day that is perfect for them. Right up

:29:17. > :29:27.to the most opulent weddings, which we -- feature in the magazine. We

:29:28. > :29:31.have to come back to you, Luke, because this is your big day. We are

:29:32. > :29:36.actually incredibly lucky, because we have persuaded nastily, your

:29:37. > :29:40.bride, to talk to us later in the programme. Excellent. She probably

:29:41. > :29:44.is watching right now. Is there anything you would like to say, or

:29:45. > :29:53.any message you would like us to pass on? Don't be late! And yes, I

:29:54. > :29:59.love you lots. And see you at the altar. That has taken the pressure

:30:00. > :30:03.off the speech now, mate, you don't have to worry about it! You have

:30:04. > :30:07.done on the wall of us. Thank you very much indeed. We will talk to

:30:08. > :30:11.Natalie a bit later, but we wish you all the best and we appreciate you

:30:12. > :30:15.joining us on the biggest day of your life. And we hope it is the

:30:16. > :30:18.happiest day as well, and not too expensive. Good luck, enjoy. Thank

:30:19. > :30:22.you very much indeed. We will talk to you a bit later. The figures are

:30:23. > :30:28.astonishing. Nearly 30 grand as the average wedding now in the UK last

:30:29. > :30:32.year. ?30,000. How did you compete with that? Did you not compete with

:30:33. > :30:37.that, and go really cheap, and how did you do it? Let us know in the

:30:38. > :30:41.usual way, get in touch with us. We are particular keen to hear from you

:30:42. > :30:45.if you have really save money and done it cheaply but still had a

:30:46. > :30:50.fantastic time. What are your tips, what are your secrets? Use your

:30:51. > :30:56.imagination and save cash, maybe not splashing so much money about. Can I

:30:57. > :30:58.just say good luck to Luke on how well did he do that! He is

:30:59. > :30:58.brilliant. Coming up in the next half-hour:

:30:59. > :31:00.Youth versus experience. Can rising star Anthony Joshua beat

:31:01. > :31:03.veteran Wladimir Klitschko when they meet in the richest bout

:31:04. > :31:06.in British boxing history tonight? We will have all the latest

:31:07. > :31:09.just after 7:30am. Hello, this is Breakfast,

:31:10. > :31:42.with Sally Nugent and Jon Kay. Coming up before 8am,

:31:43. > :31:45.Sarah has the weather. a summary of this morning's main

:31:46. > :31:49.news. There are growing calls for a public

:31:50. > :31:52.inquiry following the conviction of a breast surgeon who carried out

:31:53. > :31:56.a series of needless operations. Ian Paterson was found

:31:57. > :31:57.guilty of intentionally wounding his patients at two private

:31:58. > :32:00.hospitals in the West Midlands. Now solicitors working on the case

:32:01. > :32:04.say the true number of his victims could be in the hundreds

:32:05. > :32:06.or even thousands. Ian Paterson was told he will likely

:32:07. > :32:09.face prison when he's European Union leaders are meeting

:32:10. > :32:17.in Brussels today to formally agree their negotiating

:32:18. > :32:19.stance for Brexit. Donald Tusk, has said the EU

:32:20. > :32:23.won't discuss its future relationship with the UK until it's

:32:24. > :32:26.happy that enough progress has been Those include the so-called divorce

:32:27. > :32:31.settlement which is the money the EU believes it would still

:32:32. > :32:40.be owed by the UK. North Korea has test fired

:32:41. > :32:42.a ballistic missile. According to South Korean

:32:43. > :32:45.and American officials It exploded The launch, from an

:32:46. > :32:47.airfield in Pukchang, came just hours after a special

:32:48. > :32:50.session at the UN Security council in which the US pushed for tougher

:32:51. > :32:54.sanctions on the Pyongyang regime. President Trump says North Korea's

:32:55. > :32:56.latest missile test disrespects Well, last night, Donald Trump

:32:57. > :33:06.became the first US President in 30 gun lobby, the National Rifle

:33:07. > :33:09.Association. On the eve of his 100th day

:33:10. > :33:13.in office, he told a rally in Georgia what his administration

:33:14. > :33:16.had achieved so far and pledged The eight-year assault

:33:17. > :33:23.on your Second Amendment freedoms You have a true friend

:33:24. > :33:39.and champion in the White House. No longer will federal agencies be

:33:40. > :33:42.coming after law-abiding gun owners. The dominance of big home-building

:33:43. > :33:53.firms must end in order to fix the broken housing market,

:33:54. > :33:57.according to a group of MPs. The Home Builders Federation

:33:58. > :34:00.says only big firms can spread the risks

:34:01. > :34:04.large-scale projects pose. But the Communities

:34:05. > :34:07.and Local Government Committee is calling on the government to do

:34:08. > :34:11.more for smaller builders who don't have the scale to bid

:34:12. > :34:15.for large projects. We need to be building at least

:34:16. > :34:21.200,000 homes a year and probably quite a few more to keep pace

:34:22. > :34:24.with household formation. Currently the market is dominated

:34:25. > :34:28.by a small number of developers. They would build a certain

:34:29. > :34:30.number of properties to maximise their profits

:34:31. > :34:33.and they won't build So we need to take action on a whole

:34:34. > :34:39.range of fronts to make sure we get Those are the main

:34:40. > :34:51.stories this morning. Mike has joined us to talk about the

:34:52. > :34:58.richest boxing bout in British history. Both fighters tonight are

:34:59. > :35:02.set to earn 15 million pounds each. 90,000 fans at Wembley. I bet there

:35:03. > :35:08.are lots of people who would think I'll go in a ring with them for ?15

:35:09. > :35:13.million. I have done that with Klitschko, only for a bit of fun

:35:14. > :35:20.sparring, we did a piece with him and also Joshua, his this, about 15

:35:21. > :35:23.times the size of mine. A record for postwar crowds, 90,000 at Wembley.

:35:24. > :35:30.Such a fascinating contest, they have been so respectful to each

:35:31. > :35:37.other, refreshing to see, but the contrast, is Joshua experienced

:35:38. > :35:43.enough, is Klitschko to old? 41 against 26, and Klitschko trying to

:35:44. > :35:46.come back after losing to Tyson Fury two years ago. Both have star

:35:47. > :35:47.quality as well. No doubt. The countdown is on then

:35:48. > :35:50.for tonight's world heavyweight title fight as Anthony Joshua

:35:51. > :35:52.meets former champion The fighters weighed-in,

:35:53. > :35:55.with Joshua 10lb heavier It's his his first fight

:35:56. > :36:00.since losing his belts But this is Klitschko's

:36:01. > :36:03.69th professional fight, Eye-to-eye, 6ft 6 apiece,

:36:04. > :36:18.a good fighter, but one that will have to come up

:36:19. > :36:21.against the mammoth that's myself and we'll get it on and I'm ready

:36:22. > :36:26.to go as far as I need to go to get I've shown it before,

:36:27. > :36:32.that's all it is, I've got the skill and determination but I'm really

:36:33. > :36:34.willing to dig deep. Opportunities are not coming every

:36:35. > :36:39.day, the opportunity is there. I have one of the rising stars

:36:40. > :36:42.in Anthony Joshua, it's perfect. Who would have else have fought

:36:43. > :36:45.if Joshua wouldn't be there? And there's coverage of Joshua

:36:46. > :36:56.versus Klitschko on BBC Radio 5 live as well as the BBC Sport

:36:57. > :36:59.website and the app. A strange old week for Newcastle

:37:00. > :37:02.in which they were promoted to the Premier League

:37:03. > :37:05.and raided as part of a fraud They beat Cardiff 2-0 thanks

:37:06. > :37:09.to a brilliant free kick Isaac Heydon added the second

:37:10. > :37:12.as they close in on leaders Brighton but Brighton

:37:13. > :37:15.will still win the title In the Scottish Premiership,

:37:16. > :37:22.Liam Boyce scored all four goals as Ross County beat Inverness

:37:23. > :37:24.in the Highland Derby. Boyce scored twice from open play

:37:25. > :37:27.and twice from the penalty spot to keep Inverness

:37:28. > :37:32.bottom by five points. Less than a week after being beaten

:37:33. > :37:35.in the Scottish Cup semi-final by their biggest rivals,

:37:36. > :37:38.Rangers today have the chance Celtic have already won the title

:37:39. > :37:45.and beat their Glasgow neighbours The midday kick off at Ibrox

:37:46. > :37:50.will see Rangers try to inflict Celtic's first domestic

:37:51. > :37:54.defeat of the season. In the Premier League,

:37:55. > :37:56.it could be a sad afternoon on Bournemouth at the Stadium of

:37:57. > :37:59.Light. David Moyes' side can be relegated

:38:00. > :38:03.if they fail to at least match We'll need a really,

:38:04. > :38:07.really good run of results for things to go our way

:38:08. > :38:10.but while there's a chance we're not We have done and said in every other

:38:11. > :38:20.game that we've got to try and win What I'd say about this

:38:21. > :38:25.one is we're at home, we've got a great chance,

:38:26. > :38:28.we played quite well in recent games so we'll take that into the game

:38:29. > :38:32.and hope we can get a Andy Murray is through to

:38:33. > :38:36.the semi-final of the Barcelona Open after a hard-fought victory

:38:37. > :38:37.against Albert Ramos-Vinolas. The Spaniard knocked Murray out

:38:38. > :38:41.of the Monte Carlo Masters last week and took the first set here,

:38:42. > :38:44.but the world number one fought back Meanwhile, Maria Sharapova

:38:45. > :38:51.is through to the semi-final of Stuttgart's WTA tournament

:38:52. > :38:55.as she continues her comeback Sharapova saw off Estonian

:38:56. > :38:58.qualifier Anett Kontaveit for her third-straight win after 15

:38:59. > :39:03.months out of the game. Sebastian Vettel looks determined

:39:04. > :39:07.to increase his lead in the Formula 1 Drivers' Championship

:39:08. > :39:09.after topping the timesheets in Friday's practice

:39:10. > :39:11.ahead of this weekend's The Ferrari driver was

:39:12. > :39:14.a quarter of a second ahead of his team-mate Kimi Raikkonen

:39:15. > :39:18.and more than half a second ahead and championship

:39:19. > :39:21.rival Lewis Hamilton. Final practice gets under way

:39:22. > :39:27.at 10am with qualifying from 1pm. Harlequins beat top

:39:28. > :39:31.of the table Wasps even though their captain,

:39:32. > :39:32.England scrum-half Danny Care, went off early

:39:33. > :39:35.with a stomach muscle injury. Nick Evans, who's due to retire

:39:36. > :39:38.at the end of the season, kicked 22 points in his last

:39:39. > :39:41.home game as Quins won 32-13. Newcastle beat Worcester 16-14

:39:42. > :39:51.in last night's other match. In the Pro 12, a last-minute

:39:52. > :39:53.try from captain Grant Gilchrist gave

:39:54. > :39:55.Edinburgh a 24-20 win There were also wins

:39:56. > :40:04.for Cardiff and Leinster. Hull FC have gone top of rugby

:40:05. > :40:07.league's Super League after a convincing victory

:40:08. > :40:09.over Warrington Wolves. 20 unanswered second-half

:40:10. > :40:10.points, including this try

:40:11. > :40:12.from Jamie Shaul, helped Elsewhere, St Helens

:40:13. > :40:22.beat Leigh 28-6. You just can't separate

:40:23. > :40:24.them in the semi-finals After two sessions it's neck

:40:25. > :40:28.and neck between defending champion the man he beat

:40:29. > :40:32.in last year's final. clearing up with a break

:40:33. > :40:37.of 135 in the last frame In the other semi-final,

:40:38. > :40:51.John Higgins is 10-6 up against Barry Hawkins after winning

:40:52. > :40:53.a marathon final frame They start again at

:40:54. > :40:58.10am this morning. nights in British boxing history

:40:59. > :41:08.as Anthony Joshua takes on a legend But how do these heavyweights stack

:41:09. > :41:12.up against each other? and Klitschko is now 41,

:41:13. > :41:17.so it's being seen as a battle The British boxer won his Olympic

:41:18. > :41:21.gold at London 2012, but when Klitschko won his in 1996,

:41:22. > :41:25.Joshua was just six years old. Joshua has had only 18

:41:26. > :41:27.professional fights, but Klitchko has experience

:41:28. > :41:35.from 68 contests. But whoever wins they'll both

:41:36. > :41:43.receive a huge pay packet, expected to be ?15 million each,

:41:44. > :41:46.meaning this fight could be With us now is the professional

:41:47. > :42:08.boxing manager and coach, You have managed to some real stars

:42:09. > :42:12.of the ring, what would you say to Anthony Joshua this morning, how

:42:13. > :42:16.would you prepare him? He's had 18 fights and he has won an Olympic

:42:17. > :42:21.medal, he's not as experienced as Klitschko but Klitschko likes to get

:42:22. > :42:25.in early in the middle of the ring, dominate and make his opponent go

:42:26. > :42:28.around the outside, take him off his medal spot, push around the side of

:42:29. > :42:32.the ring, make him feel uncomfortable and don't let him do

:42:33. > :42:36.his normal thing and Joshua has the attributes to do that, he is big,

:42:37. > :42:40.strong, powerful and young so he has to take Klitschko out of his game.

:42:41. > :42:45.Barry, you were in the Tyson Fury camp when he beat Klitschko, take us

:42:46. > :42:50.back to them, what gave him that advantage? It was the mind games,

:42:51. > :42:53.Tyson Fury was playing on him. He was doing things and saying things

:42:54. > :42:59.to Klitschko that he has never been through. Eventually the mind games

:43:00. > :43:04.got to him and broke him down and I think Anthony Joshua can do the same

:43:05. > :43:08.kind of thing and play mind games. It's been different in the buildup

:43:09. > :43:11.because they have been so respectful, the Guardian has said

:43:12. > :43:16.they would maybe eloped together because they have been so friendly.

:43:17. > :43:20.Inside the ring if I was Anthony Joshua I would talk to him and said

:43:21. > :43:24.things to him to wind him up and get him on his game plan. Dominick, do

:43:25. > :43:29.you think that will happen tonight, we have seen it very civilised so

:43:30. > :43:33.far but tonight will that change? Once the gloves are on as they say

:43:34. > :43:39.it is a different ballgame inside the ring, no more Mr nice guy. Think

:43:40. > :43:44.that is when it will get a bit heated. The respect between the

:43:45. > :43:48.fighters will disappear, after the first couple of rounds it will end

:43:49. > :43:52.up as a brawl, roughing and toughing and there could even be some

:43:53. > :43:58.fouling. They can't stay this nice the whole time? Yes, you can't, I

:43:59. > :44:02.think it will be a bit more gruesome. When the switch is flicked

:44:03. > :44:06.and everything changes, how does that change the dynamic between them

:44:07. > :44:10.potentially tonight? Anything can happen in this fight, it's like

:44:11. > :44:16.anything else, it could start off nice and stick to the boxing but one

:44:17. > :44:20.gets landed and it kicks off. That's what could happen, I think Anthony

:44:21. > :44:24.Joshua will get hyped up with the crowd and the crowd will be behind

:44:25. > :44:31.him and he's really going to assert himself on Klitschko maybe early on.

:44:32. > :44:35.Not something I would tell him to do but the adrenaline kicks in and the

:44:36. > :44:39.crowd is behind him he may not be able to stop him. With his

:44:40. > :44:45.experience, would you be respectful of that? He has to stick to the

:44:46. > :44:49.gameplan, stay focused, you can't give too much respect to Klitschko,

:44:50. > :44:54.he needs to do his job, go in and put pressure on him and forget about

:44:55. > :45:00.what Klitschko has done and get the job done. Who has the biggest power

:45:01. > :45:09.in the ring? Joshua has more dynamic power, he is younger and more

:45:10. > :45:13.strength. Joshua has got the one punch knockout but landing the shot

:45:14. > :45:17.on Klitschko is the hard thing, Klitschko could get his timing and

:45:18. > :45:22.distance and set up Joshua Foer the shot. It is like playing chess. In

:45:23. > :45:27.boxing you have to think five moves ahead what your opponent is going to

:45:28. > :45:31.do, you have to think what is coming back at you, what you're going to

:45:32. > :45:35.throw back at them, it is a chess game. Quick prediction, one word

:45:36. > :45:42.each, who is going to win? My heart says Joshua but my mind says

:45:43. > :45:44.Klitschko. I would go the same way. Thanks very much for coming in.

:45:45. > :45:47.And there's coverage of Joshua versus Klitschko on BBC Radio 5 live

:45:48. > :45:54.as well as the BBC Sport website and the app.

:45:55. > :46:02.So keen to watch it. Staying in the ring for now. And Sarah has the

:46:03. > :46:06.weather for us. Good morning. It is a fine start to the day across many

:46:07. > :46:10.parts of the country. This was the scene this morning in Devon, so we

:46:11. > :46:14.have a bit of cloud, but fairly thin cloud. I think it will break up,

:46:15. > :46:17.allowing some sunshine across many parts of the country and through the

:46:18. > :46:20.remainder of the bank holiday weekend things are turning a bit

:46:21. > :46:24.warmer than they have been this week. Quite breezy at times and

:46:25. > :46:29.there is a chance for some rain, particularly through Sunday, and a

:46:30. > :46:33.few showers into Monday. A front approaching from the west but higher

:46:34. > :46:36.pressure the dominating force today. There are some showers across parts

:46:37. > :46:40.of Wales, north-west England, southern Scotland as well, but away

:46:41. > :46:45.from these areas some spells of sunshine. This is 9am, dry

:46:46. > :46:48.conditions with some sunny spells across much of southern England,

:46:49. > :46:52.through the Midlands, after was the north-east as well. A few rogue

:46:53. > :46:56.showers across parts of Wales, north-east England, the Isle of Man,

:46:57. > :46:59.in the southern Scotland. For Northern Ireland, Central and

:47:00. > :47:04.southern Scotland we start the day on the dry note with some sunshine

:47:05. > :47:07.-- on a dry note. As we head through towards the afternoon you will

:47:08. > :47:10.notice the southerly wind arrows gathering pace towards the western

:47:11. > :47:15.half of the country. That is where it will turn quite breezy. For

:47:16. > :47:20.central and eastern parts, less breezy. 16 or 17 degrees, should

:47:21. > :47:24.feel quite pleasant. If you are getting married today or if you have

:47:25. > :47:27.a barbecue it is looking pretty decent. Through the evening and

:47:28. > :47:31.overnight period, during the early hours of Sunday you will notice a

:47:32. > :47:34.change lurking towards the south-west. Rain starting to push

:47:35. > :47:38.in. The winds picking up across the country as well. Through Sunday it

:47:39. > :47:42.will turn increasingly wet and windy across the south-west of England,

:47:43. > :47:46.into Wales, then that will slowly nudge its way north eastwards. As we

:47:47. > :47:51.head into bank holiday Monday, low pressure gradually clearing towards

:47:52. > :47:54.the east. So for Monday, sunshine, a few scattered showers, and

:47:55. > :47:59.temperatures still in the mid-teens. Back to you both.

:48:00. > :48:01.We will be back for the headlines at 8:00am.

:48:02. > :48:04.Now on Breakfast, it is time for Newswatch, with Samira Ahmed.

:48:05. > :48:07.Welcome to Newswatch with me, Samira Ahmed.

:48:08. > :48:09.Viewers say they want policy information, not personal insults.

:48:10. > :48:12.But has the BBC's general election coverage already got mired

:48:13. > :48:19.in mudslinging - mostly against Jeremy Corbyn?

:48:20. > :48:22.And criticisms too about how both French presidential candidates have

:48:23. > :48:30.Although the general election campaign still hasn't officially

:48:31. > :48:33.started, there was no doubt this week about where the focus

:48:34. > :48:44.All the party leaders were out on the stump and facing questions

:48:45. > :48:48.After some pressure on the issue, Tim Farron of the Liberal Democrats

:48:49. > :48:52.told the BBC's Eleanor Garnier that he did not believe gay sex

:48:53. > :48:56.I was asked the question early on and I didn't want to get

:48:57. > :48:59.into a series of questions, unpicking the theology of the Bible.

:49:00. > :49:02.Isn't it just that it's your Christian belief and you didn't

:49:03. > :49:08.What I want is to make sure that we deal with something that's

:49:09. > :49:13.It's a sense of understanding that the question was asked to me

:49:14. > :49:17.a week ago, I don't think people want political party leaders telling

:49:18. > :49:20.Some viewers thought that line of questioning

:49:21. > :49:23.Maureen Lancaster wrote, "The continual questioning

:49:24. > :49:26.and probing of Tim Farron about his beliefs over gay sex

:49:27. > :49:27.was intrusive, unneeded and irrelevant.

:49:28. > :49:31.He said he doesn't believe it is a sin and that's the end

:49:32. > :49:38.But no, the questioner went on, and on, and on."

:49:39. > :50:05.Grace Dalton put it like this, when she rang us this week.

:50:06. > :50:08.I think it was very, very wrong that the BBC really

:50:09. > :50:11.was interrogating him and trying to pressurise him into answering

:50:12. > :50:14.a question that is not at all relevant to the current

:50:15. > :50:20.His views on homosexuality have clearly not impacted his policies.

:50:21. > :50:24.He is absolutely not in favour of any person of any orientation,

:50:25. > :50:25.sexually, being discriminated against.

:50:26. > :50:28.So he should not be pressurised into saying something that conflicts

:50:29. > :50:36.But most of our correspondence this week has been about the treatment

:50:37. > :50:45.Last Friday, deputy political editor John Pienaar was on his tail.

:50:46. > :50:48.He stood by what is called the triple lock -

:50:49. > :50:51.pensions up every year by inflation, or average earnings, or 2.5%.

:50:52. > :50:53.Can Labour afford this, along with other promises?

:50:54. > :51:02.Sorry, I'm not quite sure where I'm going.

:51:03. > :51:05.The use of that comment from Jeremy Corbyn was picked up

:51:06. > :51:09.by some viewers who considered it an example of an insidious tendency

:51:10. > :51:13.One anonymous caller left us this telephone message.

:51:14. > :51:16.You make it a cheap shot on Corbyn, just little drops, like "I don't

:51:17. > :51:21.It's always seemingly undermining the person's direction.

:51:22. > :51:27.You should avoid that, stereotypes that chip away a little

:51:28. > :51:34.Well, BBC News was also getting out and about this week to hear views

:51:35. > :51:37.on Jeremy Corbyn from members of the public, several of them

:51:38. > :51:43.As voters focus on choosing their next Prime Minister,

:51:44. > :51:49.some questioned the Labour leader's credibility.

:51:50. > :51:51.I usually vote Ukip. But I will vote Conservative.

:51:52. > :51:54.Rather than have that idiot, Jeremy Corbyn, I'll go for Theresa

:51:55. > :52:01.Like she says, he can only lead a political demonstration,

:52:02. > :52:09.I've always been Labour, and stuff like that.

:52:10. > :52:11.But I can't, he just can't be trusted.

:52:12. > :52:17.He just seems like he doesn't know what he's doing.

:52:18. > :52:20.Well, David Atkinson, among many others, felt that

:52:21. > :52:22.Jeremy Corbyn is getting a rough deal from the BBC,

:52:23. > :52:27.I've been disgusted to see that once again the BBC are allowing people

:52:28. > :52:30.to be interviewed who are calling Jeremy Corbyn an idiot.

:52:31. > :52:33.I can almost guarantee that nobody would be saying the same thing

:52:34. > :52:36.about Mrs May, or Mr Farron, or Mr Nuttall, any of

:52:37. > :52:42.It's absolutely disgraceful that the BBC are so anti-Corbyn.

:52:43. > :52:52.They should show him the respect they show Theresa May.

:52:53. > :52:54.It's no surprise that Jeremy Corbyn's political opponents

:52:55. > :52:59.are not holding back from the personal attacks either.

:53:00. > :53:02.On Thursday, the Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson unleashed his own -

:53:03. > :53:07.at the same time introducing many of us to a new term of abuse.

:53:08. > :53:10.In the Sun newspaper today, Boris Johnson launched a personal

:53:11. > :53:12.attack on the Labour leader, calling him a mutton-headed

:53:13. > :53:15.old mugwump who would be calamitous in Downing Street.

:53:16. > :53:17.Campaigning in Essex, Mr Corbyn said they were focused

:53:18. > :53:29.Well, a mugwump, in case you're wondering, is a mid-19th century

:53:30. > :53:34.word from the Algonquian for "great chief".

:53:35. > :53:37.But I think we can assume Mr Johnson meant it in its current sense

:53:38. > :53:40.of a person who remains aloof or independent,

:53:41. > :53:44.Exercising Newswatch viewers though was the issue of whether BBC News

:53:45. > :53:46.made too much of that personal comment, thus playing

:53:47. > :53:48.into the Conservatives' agenda and trivialising the campaign.

:53:49. > :53:51.Joan Campbell thought it was the case of "Boris doesn't

:53:52. > :53:54.like Jeremy, so was calling him names in the playground.

:53:55. > :54:11.Alistair Leavey asked more generally:

:54:12. > :54:14.Well, we plan to explore the BBC's election coverage

:54:15. > :54:17.with a representative of the news department in the coming weeks.

:54:18. > :54:20.But before we leave the subject for now, let's mention some

:54:21. > :54:22.complaints made about the corporation's social media

:54:23. > :54:24.coverage, a more significant aspect of its output

:54:25. > :54:30.Last Thursday, the presenter of Radio 4's Today Programme,

:54:31. > :54:42.Nick Robinson, posted this on Twitter.

:54:43. > :54:45.Some wondered whether the former BBC political editor had overstepped

:54:46. > :54:50.the bounds of impartiality, with Mark Robson responding,

:54:51. > :54:53."If this is not fake news, but actually Robinson using his BBC

:54:54. > :54:58.account to insult Corbyn, it is really unprofessional."

:54:59. > :55:01.Nick Robinson responded to objections like that by writing

:55:02. > :55:33.Meanwhile, the current BBC political editor,

:55:34. > :55:35.Laura Kuenssberg, also faced criticism after tweeting

:55:36. > :55:52.Hugh Yeager was one of those objecting to that wording,

:55:53. > :56:06.So, is there a danger of tweets like this from BBC journalists,

:56:07. > :56:08.with their requirement for brevity, infringing the corporation's

:56:09. > :56:33.We put that complaint to BBC News, who told us...

:56:34. > :56:37.Do let us know your thoughts on the use of social media by BBC

:56:38. > :56:40.News, any aspect of the BBC's election coverage, or,

:56:41. > :56:43.indeed, anything that concerns you or delights you which you see

:56:44. > :56:46.on news bulletins, programmes or online.

:56:47. > :56:49.Stay tuned for details of how to get in touch with us.

:56:50. > :56:53.Now, of course, the battle for seats in Westminster is not the only

:56:54. > :56:57.On Monday, Lucy Williamson reported from Paris following the first

:56:58. > :57:02.round of voting for France's new president.

:57:03. > :57:05.Two years ago, he was a new face in politics.

:57:06. > :57:11.In two weeks, he could be the new President of France.

:57:12. > :57:13.Last night, Emmanuel Macron arrived for his victory speech

:57:14. > :57:21.24 years older than him, she was once his drama teacher.

:57:22. > :57:26.But one comment made there, and not infrequently elsewhere

:57:27. > :57:36.in the coverage, annoyed Margaret, who wondered:

:57:37. > :57:38.Richard Spooner agreed, calling the reference ageist,

:57:39. > :57:45.Going through to the run-off with Mr Macron is...

:57:46. > :57:48.Well, this is how Europe editor Katya Adler described her

:57:49. > :57:54.Far-right Marine Le Pen, anti-immigration, anti-globalisation

:57:55. > :58:04.Her presidential plan? France for the French.

:58:05. > :58:07.That first epithet caught the attention of James Williams,

:58:08. > :58:18.That's another question we may well return to on Newswatch.

:58:19. > :58:21.But, in the meantime, one last comment about the BBC's

:58:22. > :58:45.coverage of the French election from John Trueman.

:58:46. > :58:49.This weekend marks 100 days of Donald Trump's presidency.

:58:50. > :58:51.And it's certainly been a busy and controversial start

:58:52. > :58:56.BBC News marked the anniversary this week with a number of reports

:58:57. > :59:01.and programmes, including a Panorama special confronted by Jeremy Paxman.

:59:02. > :59:04.And this raised again among viewers an argument we've had before,

:59:05. > :59:22.Thanks for all your comments this week.

:59:23. > :59:26.If you to want to share your opinions on BBC News and current

:59:27. > :59:29.affairs, or even appear on the programme, you can call us

:59:30. > :59:32.on 0370 010 6676, or e-mail newswatch@bbc.co.uk.

:59:33. > :59:39.You can find us on Twitter at @NewswatchBBC, and do have a look

:59:40. > :59:43.at our website, the address for that is bbc.co.uk/newswatch.

:59:44. > :59:45.And you can search for and watch previous discussions

:59:46. > :59:54.We'll be back to hear your thoughts about BBC News coverage

:59:55. > :00:36.Hello, this is Breakfast, with Sally Nugent and Jon Kay.

:00:37. > :00:38.Calls for a public inquiry after a rogue breast surgeon

:00:39. > :00:45.is convicted of intentionally wounding his patients.

:00:46. > :00:47.Ian Paterson was accused of "playing God" by carrying out completely

:00:48. > :01:03.Lawyers think he could have hundreds - or even thousands - of victims.

:01:04. > :01:05.Good morning, it's Saturday 29th April.

:01:06. > :01:14.EU leaders meet in Brussels to discuss how to tackle future talks.

:01:15. > :01:22.But the US military says the ballistic rocket blew up

:01:23. > :01:26.As he marks 100 days in office, Donald Trump becomes the first

:01:27. > :01:28.US President for more than three decades to address

:01:29. > :01:36.No longer will federal agencies be coming after law-abiding gun owners.

:01:37. > :01:40.It's the richest bout in British boxing history.

:01:41. > :01:43.The countdown is on for tonight's world heavyweight showdown,

:01:44. > :01:47.as Anthony Joshua meets former champion Wladimir Klitschko.

:01:48. > :01:57.And it's one of Britain's oldest sports.

:01:58. > :02:03.Assigned to fielding that will make her the pride of the school.

:02:04. > :02:07.Rah-rah! I've been finding out why stool ball

:02:08. > :02:16.is making a comeback. There will be some sunshine around,

:02:17. > :02:18.but some others will see some rain tomorrow. I will have the full

:02:19. > :02:22.forecast in 15 minutes. There are growing calls for a public

:02:23. > :02:27.inquiry following the conviction of a breast surgeon who carried out

:02:28. > :02:29.a series of needless operations. Ian Paterson was found

:02:30. > :02:31.guilty of intentionally wounding his patients at two private

:02:32. > :02:34.hospitals in the West Midlands. Now solicitors working on the case

:02:35. > :02:37.say the true number of his victims could be in the hundreds -

:02:38. > :02:39.or even thousands. Patients are meant to be able

:02:40. > :02:43.to trust their doctor, but Ian Paterson practised

:02:44. > :02:55.at the exact opposite and betrayed his

:02:56. > :02:57.patients on some scale. He told people they were at risk

:02:58. > :02:59.of cancer and operated The breast surgeon worked

:03:00. > :03:02.in private and NHS hospitals in the West Midlands,

:03:03. > :03:05.and while staff in the public sector now hold each other to account,

:03:06. > :03:07.lawyers representing some of the victims are today calling

:03:08. > :03:12.for a full, independent enquiry One senior surgeon says

:03:13. > :03:14.there is some way to go. No matter what the quality

:03:15. > :03:17.of surgery is in the private sector, there is much less observation

:03:18. > :03:20.going on and much less recording The private provider

:03:21. > :03:31.where Paterson operated, Spire Healthcare,

:03:32. > :03:43.operated has told the BBC: Shirley Maroney's sister,

:03:44. > :03:45.Marie, was one of Ian The surgeon originally carried out

:03:46. > :03:51.an incomplete mastectomy, instead of the double

:03:52. > :03:54.mastectomy she'd asked for. She then had a further

:03:55. > :03:55.double mastectomy, My sister was a police

:03:56. > :04:04.officer for 30 years, she believed in the justice system

:04:05. > :04:07.and she believed in fairness, and quite frankly this wasn't

:04:08. > :04:09.fair, this wasn't just Marie died in 2008 of secondary

:04:10. > :04:16.cancer in her lungs. It's impossible to know the extent

:04:17. > :04:19.to which Ian Paterson's failures The criminal case centred

:04:20. > :04:24.on the treatment of nine other women and one man, but solicitors say

:04:25. > :04:26.there are hundreds of patients now Ian Paterson has been told he'll

:04:27. > :04:41.face prison when he's We will be speaking to one of the

:04:42. > :04:42.lawyers dealing with those victims in just over five minutes about the

:04:43. > :04:46.case. European Union leaders are meeting

:04:47. > :04:49.in Brussels today to formally agree their negotiating

:04:50. > :04:51.stance for Brexit. It is expected the EU

:04:52. > :04:54.will insist the UK must arrange a divorce bill before agreeing

:04:55. > :04:56.any future deals. We already know the areas the EU

:04:57. > :05:53.wants to sort out swiftly. on the future UK-EU relationship

:05:54. > :05:57."can only be concluded once the UK has become a third country" -

:05:58. > :06:04.in other words, once it has Chris Morris joins us. I hope you

:06:05. > :06:10.can make some sense of this. There is an awful lot to go through.

:06:11. > :06:13.Essentially, today is about finalising the guidelines with which

:06:14. > :06:18.the other 27 countries will negotiate with us. They have to be

:06:19. > :06:22.turned into a legal document for the negotiating team. One thing that is

:06:23. > :06:27.striking is that for now the other 27 countries are surprisingly quite

:06:28. > :06:33.united in the way they are doing this. They want key issues solved to

:06:34. > :06:37.begin with. Overall, sorting out the past before the future. It was

:06:38. > :06:54.striking talking to officials yesterday, the growing growing

:06:55. > :07:01.concern about... Also, how the divorce settlement plays out will be

:07:02. > :07:07.absolutely key. And you very much indeed. -- thank you very much

:07:08. > :07:11.indeed. Theresa May will campaign

:07:12. > :07:13.in Scotland today for the first time The Conservatives currently hold one

:07:14. > :07:17.Scottish seat at Westminster - but opinion polls suggest support

:07:18. > :07:19.for the party in Meanwhile Jeremy Corbyn will urge

:07:20. > :07:23.young people to "claim their future" by voting Labour in the election

:07:24. > :07:26.when he speaks in east London later. He will highlight figures

:07:27. > :07:28.that show 2.4 million young voters are missing

:07:29. > :07:30.from the electoral register. North Korea has test fired

:07:31. > :07:34.a ballistic missile. According to South Korean

:07:35. > :07:36.and American officials, it exploded The launch, from an airfield

:07:37. > :07:40.in Pukchang, came just hours after a session at the UN Security

:07:41. > :07:43.council in which the US pushed for tougher sanctions

:07:44. > :07:45.on the North Korean regime. After weeks of mounting concern

:07:46. > :07:51.in Washington about North Korea, the Secretary of State arrived

:07:52. > :07:53.at the United Nations UN sanctions aren't

:07:54. > :07:58.working, was the message. There needs to be a new

:07:59. > :08:00.campaign of pressure. Ultimately this is being driven

:08:01. > :08:06.by America's own national security considerations, he said,

:08:07. > :08:10.so it's serious. With each successive

:08:11. > :08:15.detonation and missile test, North Korea pushes North-East Asia

:08:16. > :08:18.and the world closer to instability The threat of a North Korean nuclear

:08:19. > :08:25.attack on Seoul or Tokyo is real, and it is likely only a matter

:08:26. > :08:28.of time before North Korea develops the capability to strike

:08:29. > :08:35.the US mainland. Despite UN pressure,

:08:36. > :08:37.North Korea's been able to accelerate its weapons programme,

:08:38. > :08:41.and shortly after Mr Tillerson spoke, it fired another missile,

:08:42. > :08:44.although that test seems The Trump administration

:08:45. > :08:53.is keeping open the threat of military action in case

:08:54. > :08:55.of further provocations. The latest missile test probably

:08:56. > :08:58.won't be enough of a trigger for that, but it may help strengthen

:08:59. > :09:00.international resolve to put the economic squeeze on North

:09:01. > :09:03.Korea's determined young leader. Barbara Plett-Usher, BBC News,

:09:04. > :09:10.at the United Nations in New York. President Trump responded overnight

:09:11. > :09:14.to the missile launch. In a tweet he said "North Korea

:09:15. > :09:18.disrespected the wishes of China and its highly respected President

:09:19. > :09:21.when it launched, though Well, last night, Donald Trump

:09:22. > :09:33.became the first to address America's powerful gun

:09:34. > :09:36.lobby - the National On the eve of his 100th day

:09:37. > :09:40.in office, he told a rally in Georgia what his administration

:09:41. > :09:43.had achieved so far - and pledged The eight-year assault

:09:44. > :09:46.on your Second Amendment freedoms You have a true friend

:09:47. > :09:57.and champion in the White House. No longer will federal agencies be

:09:58. > :10:00.coming after law-abiding gun owners. A man is due to appear in court,

:10:01. > :10:14.charged with the murder of a former Royal Navy officer during a car

:10:15. > :10:17.theft in Manchester. Mike Samwell was knocked

:10:18. > :10:19.down as he tried to stop thieves taking his car

:10:20. > :10:21.in Chorlton last weekend. Ryan Gibbons - who's 29 -

:10:22. > :10:24.is also accused of burglary. Two men and a 15-year-old boy

:10:25. > :10:26.arrested on suspicion of murder have been released on police bail,

:10:27. > :10:34.pending further inquiries. Headteachers will today be asked

:10:35. > :10:36.to "vigorously oppose" the expansion of grammar

:10:37. > :10:38.schools in England. School leaders gathering

:10:39. > :10:43.at their annual conference are warning of a "perfect storm"

:10:44. > :10:45.of pressures which could have dire consequences

:10:46. > :10:47.for standards and pupils. The Conservatives are planning

:10:48. > :10:49.a fresh wave of grammars, but Labour and the Lib Dems

:10:50. > :10:51.are strongly against them. Here's our Education

:10:52. > :10:59.Correspondent Marc Ashdown. This tuition centre in Kent

:11:00. > :11:02.is popular with parents who hope it will help their children when

:11:03. > :11:06.a place at a local grammar school. A wave of new grammars in England

:11:07. > :11:09.is likely to be a key plank of the Conservative manifesto,

:11:10. > :11:16.Theresa May feel strongly they can Absolutely the mix and

:11:17. > :11:20.the demographic we have of children coming to any of our centres is not

:11:21. > :11:25.exclusively middle-class at all. I think it's aspirational parents,

:11:26. > :11:27.especially in areas where those But today at their annual

:11:28. > :11:35.conference, head teachers will be asked to vote on a motion

:11:36. > :11:41.to vigorously oppose the expansion of selective schools -

:11:42. > :11:43.it is a policy, they'll be told, -- for the few at the

:11:44. > :11:53.expense of the many. Grammars might be the hot topic

:11:54. > :11:57.but heads say there are also facing increasing difficulties recruiting

:11:58. > :11:58.and retaining staff. Brexit is a source of

:11:59. > :12:00.uncertainty and the debate It is, heads claim,

:12:01. > :12:03.a perfect storm of pressures. A storm which it's feared

:12:04. > :12:05.will have dire consequences We've got new GCSEs and new A-levels

:12:06. > :12:11.that we can't afford to give them textbooks for, so teachers

:12:12. > :12:13.are constantly having to make up the things they're doing

:12:14. > :12:15.to make sure those students The Department of Education

:12:16. > :12:20.maintains schools have had record levels of investment,

:12:21. > :12:22.but with Labour and Lib Dems strongly opposing more grammars,

:12:23. > :12:25.it's likely to be a key policy battle in the run-up

:12:26. > :12:27.to the election. Now, you can keep your fancy

:12:28. > :12:34.sports cars - just look at this for a show-stopping

:12:35. > :12:39.mode of transport. A British inventor has built

:12:40. > :12:44.an Iron Man-style suit and taken it for a spin -

:12:45. > :12:48.to the delight of crowds at a design Richard Browning said he's had

:12:49. > :12:51.a huge amount of interest since posting a video

:12:52. > :12:59.of its maiden flight. Although here he's only a few feet

:13:00. > :13:06.off the ground for safety reasons, he says it's easily capable

:13:07. > :13:08.of flying at 200mph and at an altitude of

:13:09. > :13:16.a few thousand feet. We have a little more about this

:13:17. > :13:21.from the paper. He also says that maybe in the future flexible LCD

:13:22. > :13:34.screen might make this in turn invisible at the touch of a button!

:13:35. > :13:38.I am not sure! He says it is unlikely to become a mainstream

:13:39. > :13:46.method of transportation. Probably right. Coming up we will have Mike

:13:47. > :13:49.Bushell looking ahead to the richest boxing match in British history. It

:13:50. > :14:00.is 13 minutes past eight. A man with a "God complex",

:14:01. > :14:03.that's how breast surgeon Ian Paterson has been described

:14:04. > :14:05.by one former patient. Between 1997 and 2011 he told people

:14:06. > :14:08.they were at risk of cancer and carried out unnecessary

:14:09. > :14:09.life-changing operations on patients at two private

:14:10. > :14:11.hospitals in the Midlands. Yesterday he was found guilty of 17

:14:12. > :14:14.counts of wounding with intent, In a moment we'll be speaking

:14:15. > :14:21.to a lawyer for some of the victims. First let's hear what

:14:22. > :14:34.happened to two of them. How can somebody do that and say

:14:35. > :14:40.things that he did knowing that you didn't need these operations? How

:14:41. > :14:51.can anybody in their right mind to do that to people? I just find it

:14:52. > :14:58.unbelievable. How he's made us all suffer, and people as well who have

:14:59. > :15:06.lost their lives. That is pure evil, to me. Pure evil. I actually stopped

:15:07. > :15:16.and thought, oh, my God. This is all adding up and making a bit of sense,

:15:17. > :15:21.the difference between the truth and what I was led to believe from 2002

:15:22. > :15:29.to 2011 was a pack of lies. For more on this we can

:15:30. > :15:31.speak to Emma Doughty, Head of Clinical negligence

:15:32. > :15:33.at Slater Gordon Lawyers. She represents a number

:15:34. > :15:42.of Ian Paterson's victims. Thank you for joining us. Stopped

:15:43. > :15:47.two voices we heard there. Two victim stories. You have heard many

:15:48. > :15:50.more. Can we get a sense of numbers? Some people say potentially

:15:51. > :15:55.hundreds, and some paper suggesting maybe a couple of thousand. Have you

:15:56. > :15:59.got any sense of how many people he mistreated? We certainly know there

:16:00. > :16:02.are hundreds, and potentially thousands. If we think how many

:16:03. > :16:07.people suffer from breast cancer every year and how many years he was

:16:08. > :16:14.practising for, we suspect there may be many more to come forward. Can

:16:15. > :16:17.you explain, what was it that he was doing? I know that every case is

:16:18. > :16:23.different. But what was the general strategy he had, the general crime

:16:24. > :16:27.he has been convicted of? As you say, he was doing a lot. He was

:16:28. > :16:36.doing unnecessary surgeries in the private sector, he was doing

:16:37. > :16:45.unnecessary lumpectomy operations. For example where an initial

:16:46. > :16:50.assessment would be sufficient. Instead of full mistake to me as he

:16:51. > :16:59.was leaving potential cancerous tissue. He was acting of his own

:17:00. > :17:03.accord. And nobody seems to be able to explain why. Some people say it

:17:04. > :17:08.was evil, incompetence, but have you got a sense of what this was about

:17:09. > :17:12.for him? Having spoken to so many people, one theory is money because

:17:13. > :17:19.obviously there was an incentive for him to do more operations. But a lot

:17:20. > :17:23.of the patients I have spoken to think it might be more to do with

:17:24. > :17:28.power. He wanted his patients to come back to him, he wanted to be

:17:29. > :17:35.known as the person to go to when you have these problems. To a

:17:36. > :17:39.certain extent, he wanted people going back to him as often as he

:17:40. > :17:48.could, and some sort of power trip, I suppose. The God complex we have

:17:49. > :17:52.heard referred to, you would agree with that? A lot of my clients have

:17:53. > :17:55.described him in that way. They thought he was God, and they were

:17:56. > :18:02.absolutely shocked and devastated to realise that he was not at all. What

:18:03. > :18:07.about those clients of yours, the victims of his, what do they want to

:18:08. > :18:11.come from this? I think most of them are just relieved that this part of

:18:12. > :18:16.things is over, they have had a small piece of Justice. Of course,

:18:17. > :18:19.we are now looking towards the civil litigation and trying to investigate

:18:20. > :18:25.and find out what how this has happened. How he has been allowed to

:18:26. > :18:28.practice in this way for so many years. They are just keen for

:18:29. > :18:35.answers. This has been ongoing for so many years. Some of our first

:18:36. > :18:41.clients Quinto as in 2011, so you can imagine they just want this to

:18:42. > :18:47.be over. -- our first clients first came to us in 2011. Would a public

:18:48. > :18:55.enquiry be some way of getting answers? I think so, it has to be.

:18:56. > :19:00.This is on such a huge scale, and certainly the civil litigation, we

:19:01. > :19:05.are acting for victims and trying to make things right for them. But I

:19:06. > :19:11.think, you know, going forward, I think a full independent enquiry is

:19:12. > :19:15.what is needed to ensure this does not happen again. There have already

:19:16. > :19:19.been enquiries, there has also been a court case. Would a public enquiry

:19:20. > :19:25.actually change anything, would it lead to anything that is not already

:19:26. > :19:29.in place? Well, I think in respect of the private sector health care, a

:19:30. > :19:35.full independent enquiry should be made. I do not want to comment too

:19:36. > :19:41.much on the review which was put forward, but from my reading of it

:19:42. > :19:44.they certainly did not go back as far as I would have expected they

:19:45. > :19:50.would have done. They on the looked at 2007 onwards, but he has been

:19:51. > :19:54.practising in the private sector for a long time before that. So I do

:19:55. > :20:03.think that there's more to be done, and certainly think, I have been

:20:04. > :20:05.shocked at the lack of regulation in the private sector, and they think

:20:06. > :20:10.only a full independent enquiry will bring about the changes needed. Do

:20:11. > :20:16.you think Ian Paterson was a one-off, orders they are the

:20:17. > :20:19.potential that there is anybody else doing this on this kind of scale

:20:20. > :20:22.still out there, in the public or private sector? I could not comment

:20:23. > :20:31.on what other people are doing, but I suspect it might happen again, it

:20:32. > :20:34.could happen again. Until we know the appropriate checks and balances

:20:35. > :20:39.are in place in the private sector, we would have to be concerned it may

:20:40. > :20:44.happen again. Thank you very much indeed for joining us this morning.

:20:45. > :20:47.Spire have given us a statement saying they have carried out an

:20:48. > :20:52.independent enquiry, or one was carried out for them, so they can

:20:53. > :20:53.lend from these events. They have implemented the recommendations from

:20:54. > :20:59.that report. Here's Sarah with a look

:21:00. > :21:08.at this morning's weather. We have a bit of a mixed bag through

:21:09. > :21:13.the bank holiday weekend. Today will be mixed, with dry weather and

:21:14. > :21:17.sunshine, and a bit of rain on the wafer some of us over the next few

:21:18. > :21:21.days. Is the view in Devon. The cloud is thinning and breaking,

:21:22. > :21:27.allowing sunshine. It will feel a bit warmer than it has done over the

:21:28. > :21:32.last week. It is also turning breezy over the next few days with a chance

:21:33. > :21:36.of rain. But we will not all see it, so do not write off the bank holiday

:21:37. > :21:42.weekend. It is a weather front approaching today, but the high

:21:43. > :21:50.pressure through Europe is the main driving force today. As we head into

:21:51. > :21:56.the afternoon, any of the showers in the West ease off, so it is

:21:57. > :22:02.generally drive. Temperatures up to 1617 at four o'clock this afternoon.

:22:03. > :22:05.A light breeze towards the east. A bit of patchy cloud here and there.

:22:06. > :22:10.There could be the odd shower lingering into the afternoon across

:22:11. > :22:14.Northern Ireland and Scotland. But most places fine drive. The

:22:15. > :22:18.southerly breeze will be noticeable in the West as we head into the

:22:19. > :22:23.afternoon. Severely breezy but dry, as we head into this evening and

:22:24. > :22:26.overnight. Sunday morning, cloud increases from the south-west ahead

:22:27. > :22:34.of the weather front living in. Breezy as well, with temperatures

:22:35. > :22:39.remaining frost free. During Sunday, another largely dry day for the good

:22:40. > :22:43.part of the UK. Back towards the south-west, things turning

:22:44. > :22:46.increasingly wet and windy. If you're camping across the south-west

:22:47. > :22:56.of England and Wales, you are in for a damp day. Further north and east,

:22:57. > :23:03.18 degrees, but it will feel windy. Here are some blustery conditions as

:23:04. > :23:06.we move into bank holiday Monday. There will still be a few showers

:23:07. > :23:10.around on Monday, across parts of northern England and further south

:23:11. > :23:15.across England and Wales. Across Scotland and Northern Ireland it is

:23:16. > :23:23.dry, with temperatures up to around 14 to 16 degrees. All in all, a bit

:23:24. > :23:24.of rain during Sunday and Monday but greater and drier weather in

:23:25. > :23:36.between. You're watching

:23:37. > :23:52.Breakfast from BBC News. Simon Fanshawe as well as. How are

:23:53. > :24:03.you today? I think it is too early to tell! My

:24:04. > :24:14.inner soul is sparkling. What have you got for us? A man got as far as

:24:15. > :24:19.Downing Street with a bag of knives. It was interesting about this. The

:24:20. > :24:23.first thing, that picture, you may remember years ago, when there was a

:24:24. > :24:35.group of people tried to take a load of stuff to Gaza, and he was on that

:24:36. > :24:41.ship which got captured and they got taken to Turkey and brought back, so

:24:42. > :24:44.there was a whole thing around that. It is arguable that that was the

:24:45. > :24:47.moment he started on this path. But what I thought was interesting about

:24:48. > :24:52.this was the people who tipped off the police that they thought he was

:24:53. > :24:55.about to do something really dangerous was his family. And I

:24:56. > :25:00.think it is often painted that these people are kind of crazy, and all

:25:01. > :25:06.Muslims are somehow off on the warpath. But clearly he was a very

:25:07. > :25:14.conscientious family, what is he doing? At this point he's simply a

:25:15. > :25:20.suspect. Yes, but he was caught with a bag of knives, we do not know why

:25:21. > :25:25.or what he was doing, but it is interesting what set him off on this

:25:26. > :25:31.route, but also the fact his family reported him. After the Westminster

:25:32. > :25:33.Bridge attack, police are specific about this, saying that if you were

:25:34. > :25:40.concerned about anyone in your family, please let us know. A story

:25:41. > :25:46.here in the mirror, a Tory MP who will not be in the election, when he

:25:47. > :25:50.said in a school visit, he was the Isle of Wight member of Parliament,

:25:51. > :25:56.and was asked if he was going to go on the Gay pride march. He said he

:25:57. > :26:03.was not, and when asked why, he said he thought homosexuality is wrong

:26:04. > :26:08.and a danger to society. I'm sure there will be people reading this

:26:09. > :26:12.and going, hang on a second, he just thinks that, why is he not able to

:26:13. > :26:18.say that? There are two reasons people put forward for him not being

:26:19. > :26:24.able to see that. Loads of people in the Isle of Wight are saying that is

:26:25. > :26:30.not what I think, that does not represent my views. Also, he said it

:26:31. > :26:34.on a school visit. We know that suicides among young lesbian and gay

:26:35. > :26:38.kids is very high, and that is partly because the are very unsure

:26:39. > :26:42.and uncertain and isolated, so to see that to a bunch of kids is

:26:43. > :26:47.clearly dangerous. The third interesting thing was that the

:26:48. > :26:54.Conservative Party basically said, actually, we do not want you.

:26:55. > :26:58.Imagine Mac ten or 15 years ago, not about the Conservative Party, but

:26:59. > :27:05.how things have changed. We do not know exactly what has been happened,

:27:06. > :27:10.to be fair. We know that a Tory party insider said he jumped before

:27:11. > :27:14.he was pushed. It was interesting that it was one of the people in the

:27:15. > :27:17.classroom that put this out on the Internet and publicised it. Some

:27:18. > :27:22.politicians have to be careful even when they think they are behind

:27:23. > :27:27.closed or is, that teenagers do not have the vote, but they have

:27:28. > :27:30.influence. I do not know what other people feel, I am not a defender of

:27:31. > :27:34.hate speech. I think you should be able to say what you want, if you

:27:35. > :27:40.want to say something you should say it. But not when you are an MP and

:27:41. > :27:54.speaking to kids, they deserve the extra responsibility. Here, bars of

:27:55. > :28:01.gold. Yes, Facebook, Amazon, Netflix, Google. In the 19th

:28:02. > :28:07.century, I would be saying, here is an extraordinary story, the stock in

:28:08. > :28:16.railways, mining, steel manufacturer. These are the Kerney

:28:17. > :28:30.Dees and Rockefellers of the modern era. -- Carnegies. They'd is

:28:31. > :28:33.rumoured to be a tax holiday for assets stored overseas because

:28:34. > :28:36.Donald Trump was my view is you should bring them back to America.

:28:37. > :28:42.What is interesting is if you offer a holiday for overseas assets,

:28:43. > :28:46.people hold them overseas until you have the holiday, so they will them

:28:47. > :28:51.up more and more overseas. But what is interesting is the sheer volume

:28:52. > :28:54.of the money, and the other thing is, how are they making it? These

:28:55. > :28:59.people do not make anything. We make the content, we are the steelmakers,

:29:00. > :29:06.they just use our content. This is mass surveillance. That is how they

:29:07. > :29:11.make their money. If you listen to people like Tim Berners-Lee, who

:29:12. > :29:20.invented the Internet, they are seeing, people be to start to work

:29:21. > :29:23.on the ship of our information, we should not be giving it for free to

:29:24. > :29:29.these people. We are in the middle of a revolution, and that is the

:29:30. > :29:33.comment. Weird in the middle of a revolution. Who knew? See you later.

:29:34. > :29:37.Coming up, a tiny geology centre is vying with the mighty Tate modern to

:29:38. > :29:43.be Museum of the year. The others also in the race. We will have a

:29:44. > :29:45.look at the runners and riders. Stay with us, the headlines are coming

:29:46. > :30:08.up. Hello, this is Breakfast,

:30:09. > :30:11.with Sally Nugent and Jon Kay. Coming up before nine,

:30:12. > :30:13.Sarah will have the weekend's And we will have all the sport ahead

:30:14. > :30:20.of the big fight. But first a summary of this

:30:21. > :30:22.morning's main news. There are growing calls for a public

:30:23. > :30:25.inquiry following the conviction of a breast surgeon who carried out

:30:26. > :30:28.a series of needless operations. Ian Paterson was found

:30:29. > :30:30.guilty of intentionally wounding his patients at two private

:30:31. > :30:34.hospitals in the West Midlands. Now solicitors working on the case

:30:35. > :30:37.say the true number of his victims could be in the hundreds

:30:38. > :30:47.or even thousands. And that regulation and private

:30:48. > :30:52.health care has to be looked at. I think there is more to be done and I

:30:53. > :30:56.think, I have been shocked by the lack of regulation in the private

:30:57. > :30:57.sector and I suspect that only a full independent enquiry will bring

:30:58. > :31:01.about the changes that are needed. European Union leaders are meeting

:31:02. > :31:04.in Brussels today to formally agree their negotiating

:31:05. > :31:05.stance for Brexit. President of the European Council

:31:06. > :31:09.Donald Tusk has said the EU won't discuss its future

:31:10. > :31:12.relationship with the UK until it's happy that enough progress has been

:31:13. > :31:16.made on settling past issues. Those include the so-called divorce

:31:17. > :31:19.settlement which is the money the EU believes it would still be owed

:31:20. > :31:23.by the UK. North Korea has test fired

:31:24. > :31:25.a ballistic missile. According to South Korean

:31:26. > :31:28.and American officials it exploded The launch, from an airfield

:31:29. > :31:32.in Pukchang, came just hours after a special session at the UN

:31:33. > :31:36.Security Council in which the US pushed for tougher sanctions

:31:37. > :31:38.on the Pyongyang regime. President Trump says

:31:39. > :31:41.North Korea's latest missile test Well, last night, Donald Trump

:31:42. > :31:53.became the first US president in 30 years to address America's powerful

:31:54. > :31:55.gun lobby, the National On the eve of his 100th day

:31:56. > :32:00.in office, he told a rally in Georgia what his administration

:32:01. > :32:03.had achieved so far and pledged The eight-year assault

:32:04. > :32:07.on your Second Amendment freedoms You have a true friend

:32:08. > :32:27.and champion in the White House. No longer will federal agencies be

:32:28. > :32:30.coming after law-abiding gun owners. A man is due to appear in court,

:32:31. > :32:36.charged with the murder of a former Royal Navy officer during a car

:32:37. > :32:38.theft in Manchester. Mike Samwell was knocked

:32:39. > :32:41.down as he tried to stop thieves taking his car

:32:42. > :32:43.in Chorlton last weekend. Ryan Gibbons, who's 29,

:32:44. > :32:46.is also accused of burglary. Two men and a 15-year-old boy

:32:47. > :32:49.arrested on suspicion of murder have been released on police bail,

:32:50. > :32:54.pending further inquiries. The "dominance" of big home-building

:32:55. > :32:57.firms must end in order to fix the "broken" housing market,

:32:58. > :32:59.according to a group of MPs. The Home Builders Federation says

:33:00. > :33:02.only big firms can spread the risks But the Communities

:33:03. > :33:05.and Local Government Committee is calling on the government to do

:33:06. > :33:07.more for smaller builders who don't have the scale

:33:08. > :33:20.to bid for large projects. Those are the main

:33:21. > :33:28.stories this morning. There is one big sports store in

:33:29. > :33:33.town and Mike has the latest on the preparations for the fight tonight.

:33:34. > :33:38.In front of 90,000 fans at Wembley with Zayn post-war record for boxing

:33:39. > :33:45.at Wembley. Anthony Joshua and Wladimir Klitschko have been best of

:33:46. > :33:54.mates all week. -- with a post-war record crowd. They genuinely apt and

:33:55. > :33:59.admiration for each other. But it is a fight that contrasts, A27

:34:00. > :34:05.-year-old former bricklayer against one of the legends of the ring, 41,

:34:06. > :34:09.Klitschko. When he won his Olympic gold medal Anthony Joshua was just

:34:10. > :34:10.six years old. The countdown is on then

:34:11. > :34:13.for tonight's world heavyweight title fight, as Anthony Joshua,

:34:14. > :34:15.meets former champion The fighters weighed in,

:34:16. > :34:18.with Joshua ten pounds heavier Klitschko weighed in

:34:19. > :34:23.at 17 stone 2 pounds. It's his his first fight

:34:24. > :34:26.since losing his belts But this is Klitschko's

:34:27. > :34:44.69th professional fight, Eye to eye, six foot six apiece, the

:34:45. > :34:48.good fight but one that will have to come up against myself and we'll get

:34:49. > :34:53.it on. I'm ready to go as far as I need to go to get the win. I've

:34:54. > :34:56.shown it before and that's all it is I have got the skill and

:34:57. > :34:59.determination but I'm willing to dig deep.

:35:00. > :35:06.Now is the right time, the opportunity is there. Opportunities

:35:07. > :35:12.are not come every day, the opportunity is there. I have one of

:35:13. > :35:16.the rising stars in Anthony Joshua, it's perfect. Who else would I have

:35:17. > :35:20.fought if Josh Law wouldn't be there? Nobody.

:35:21. > :35:23.A strange old week for Newcastle in which they were promoted

:35:24. > :35:26.to the Premier League, and raided as part of a fraud

:35:27. > :35:30.They beat Cardiff 2-0 thanks to a brilliant free kick

:35:31. > :35:36.Isaac Hayden added the second, as they close in on leaders,

:35:37. > :35:38.Brighton, but Brighton will still win the title

:35:39. > :35:47.In the Scottish Premiership, Liam Boyce scored all four goals

:35:48. > :35:50.as Ross County beat Inverness in the Highland derby.

:35:51. > :35:53.Boyce scored twice from open play and twice from the penalty spot

:35:54. > :35:55.to keep Inverness bottom by five points.

:35:56. > :35:58.Dan Walker is here ahead of football focus and Sunderland

:35:59. > :36:10.Good morning. Now Sunderland could be relegated today. It has been a

:36:11. > :36:14.sorry old season for them and it could come to an end mathematically

:36:15. > :36:19.if Hull do what they need to and Sunderland got more points. We have

:36:20. > :36:23.an interesting programme today, a lot of healthy stuff to debate. We

:36:24. > :36:28.have an interview with James Maclean who was a pretty controversial

:36:29. > :36:32.character, he was the guy who refused to wear a poppy on several

:36:33. > :36:36.occasions, chose to play for the Republic of Ireland rather than

:36:37. > :36:40.Northern Ireland but he holds his opinions and he is a man of

:36:41. > :36:42.conviction as well. We have already been criticised for even

:36:43. > :36:47.interviewing him on the programme and he has been criticised himself

:36:48. > :36:52.both for the decisions he has made and the opinions he expresses and

:36:53. > :36:55.not just criticism, much worse, as you can see. Since you came over

:36:56. > :37:01.here you have a death threats, people wanting a career threatening

:37:02. > :37:05.injuries to happen to you. I have a death threats and all that people

:37:06. > :37:09.see me as anti-British. I want to go on record as saying that I've never

:37:10. > :37:13.been anti-British. There are certain things I don't agree with in my

:37:14. > :37:19.beliefs, I've made that very clear in the past, but I'd take the bull

:37:20. > :37:25.at face value. I treat people how they treat me. -- I take people at

:37:26. > :37:28.face value for that I have a death threats, they started when I

:37:29. > :37:32.declared for the Republic of Ireland. It is well worth watching

:37:33. > :37:37.the full 11 minutes. Normally our interviews are three or four units

:37:38. > :37:40.with this longer interview and he talks about some of the things he

:37:41. > :37:44.has been through, the death of a good friend of theirs who played for

:37:45. > :37:47.Derry City and whatever you think of him, just watch it, and see him

:37:48. > :37:52.describe what he has been through. As well as that we have Mark Noble

:37:53. > :37:57.who has been West Ham captain for so many years, talking about the best

:37:58. > :38:03.players he has played with after 400 appearances at the club. Leon

:38:04. > :38:16.Brittan Swansea, they are also in trouble, he had been giving his team

:38:17. > :38:21.is DVDs to try to drum up support. James Ward-Prowse at Southampton

:38:22. > :38:26.talking about the Academy, and Leon Osman and the option would be

:38:27. > :38:36.looking at Chelsea away at the top of the table and the last north

:38:37. > :38:43.London derby at White Hart Lane. We don't have any insight into what

:38:44. > :38:47.will happen in Line Of Duty you have Adrian Dunbar doing Premier League

:38:48. > :38:52.predictions. He is a big ask for fun and he will tell you which football

:38:53. > :39:02.managers he has -based Superintendent Hastings on! I can't

:39:03. > :39:06.wait. Midday today. He is too powerful for Mark Lawrenson! Midday

:39:07. > :39:09.today. Thank you. Andy Murray is through to

:39:10. > :39:12.the semi-final of the Barcelona Open after a hard-fought victory

:39:13. > :39:14.against Albert Ramos-Vinolas. The Spaniard knocked Murray out

:39:15. > :39:17.of the Monte Carlo Masters last week and took the first set here,

:39:18. > :39:20.but the world number one fought back Meanwhile, Maria Sharapova

:39:21. > :39:27.is through to the semi-final of Stuttgart's WTA tournament

:39:28. > :39:29.as she continues her Sharapova saw off Estonian qualifier

:39:30. > :39:34.Anett Kontaveit for her third straight win after 15 months out

:39:35. > :39:41.of the game. Sebastian Vettel looks determined

:39:42. > :39:43.to increase his lead in the Formula 1 Drivers'

:39:44. > :39:46.Championship after topping the timesheets in Friday's practice

:39:47. > :39:48.ahead of this weekend's The Ferrari driver was a quarter

:39:49. > :39:55.of a second ahead of his team-mate, Kimi Raikkonen, and more than half

:39:56. > :39:58.a second ahead of the Mercedes of Valtteri Bottas and championship

:39:59. > :40:00.rival Lewis Hamilton. Final practice gets underway at 10am

:40:01. > :40:12.with qualifying from 1pm. In rugby union's Premiership,

:40:13. > :40:14.Harlequins beat top scrum-half Danny Care,

:40:15. > :40:21.went off early, with a stomach Nick Evans, who's due

:40:22. > :40:25.to retire at the end of the season, kicked 22 points

:40:26. > :40:27.in his last home game, Newcastle beat Worcester 16-14

:40:28. > :40:31.in last night's other match. In the Pro 12 a last-minute try

:40:32. > :40:34.from captain Grant Gilchrist gave Edinburgh a 24-20 win over

:40:35. > :40:36.Newport Gwent Dragons. There were also wins

:40:37. > :40:42.for Cardiff and Leinster. Hull FC have gone top of rugby

:40:43. > :40:44.league's Superleague after a convincing victory,

:40:45. > :40:47.over Warrington Wolves. Twenty unanswered second-half

:40:48. > :40:49.points including this try from Jamie Shaul,

:40:50. > :40:54.helped them to a 34-10 win. You just can't separate

:40:55. > :40:59.them in the semi-finals, After two sessions it's neck

:41:00. > :41:04.and neck between defending champion Mark Selby and Ding Junhui -

:41:05. > :41:07.the man he beat in last year's But Ding came back from 10-7 down,

:41:08. > :41:19.clearing up with a break of 135 in the last frame,

:41:20. > :41:25.to draw level at 12-12. In the other semi-final,

:41:26. > :41:29.John Higgins is 10-6 up against Barry Hawkins after winning

:41:30. > :41:32.a marathon final frame in yesterday They start again at ten

:41:33. > :41:42.o'clock this morning. In the week that England's

:41:43. > :41:46.cricketers starve their summer with a one-day international against

:41:47. > :41:51.Ireland, the sport that gave the world its first wicket is water into

:41:52. > :41:55.its new season having been played since the 15th century and as I

:41:56. > :41:57.found out, stoolball has been enjoying a resurgence recently.

:41:58. > :42:00.Old Father Time on the clubhouse and the familiar sound of bat

:42:01. > :42:06.This is a sport that dates back even further.

:42:07. > :42:12.And in stoolball, the wicket is up in the air.

:42:13. > :42:16.Yeah, cricket in the air because basically when you bowl,

:42:17. > :42:20.the ball leaves the bowler's hand, it doesn't touch the ground.

:42:21. > :42:22.Your actual batting strip doesn't need to be as well prepared

:42:23. > :42:28.It's thought the game was originally played in churchyards back

:42:29. > :42:31.in the 15th century by people who just wanted to throw a stone

:42:32. > :42:37.or a ball at a tree stump, another name for which is a stool.

:42:38. > :42:40.Trouble is with tree stumps, you can't move them anywhere.

:42:41. > :42:44.So stoolball players then started using church gates,

:42:45. > :42:47.also known as wicket gates, they could be lifted off and played

:42:48. > :42:52.with, and this is where it's believed the word wicket comes from.

:42:53. > :42:56.The sport was flourishing at the turn of last century

:42:57. > :42:59.when keeping your top hat on was an extra challenge

:43:00. > :43:02.for the batsmen and women running between the wickets,

:43:03. > :43:06.which, by now, were solid boards attached to the top of posts.

:43:07. > :43:10.ARCHIVE: And here it is in progress in the Kentish village green.

:43:11. > :43:14.By the 1940s and '50s when there were 3,000 stoolball

:43:15. > :43:16.clubs competing in leagues and schools, the attire was much

:43:17. > :43:19.more suitable for batters and fielders alike.

:43:20. > :43:24.A fine bit of fielding that will make her the pride

:43:25. > :43:31.Shirley was starting to play back in those days and she still is,

:43:32. > :43:33.now aged 80, as the new season starts for dozens of teams,

:43:34. > :43:40.mostly across the south of the UK, and in Birmingham.

:43:41. > :43:45.I just love having a team that plays, there are balls and bats

:43:46. > :43:48.and you just catch it and, oh, it's a wonderful game.

:43:49. > :43:51.When it first started it was just a case of defending the wicket

:43:52. > :43:53.with your hand but now, luckily, there are these

:43:54. > :43:59.It has so much in common with cricket except there are eight

:44:00. > :44:02.balls per over, not six, and bowling is underarm.

:44:03. > :44:04.But because it's a forerunner of baseball and rounders,

:44:05. > :44:11.the ball is surprisingly small and hard.

:44:12. > :44:13.It so hard, especially when your hands are sort

:44:14. > :44:17.But as you warm up and through the season your hands get

:44:18. > :44:23.Being accessible to beginners and also being one of the country's

:44:24. > :44:25.oldest sports, two reasons why stoolball is enjoying a revival.

:44:26. > :44:37.If you fancy a go, you can go to the BBC website for details of your

:44:38. > :44:40.local club. So back to the main event and we're

:44:41. > :44:44.in for one of the biggest nights in British boxing history

:44:45. > :44:46.as Anthony Joshua takes on a legend But how do these heavyweights stack

:44:47. > :44:50.up against each other? and Klitschko is now 41 so it's

:44:51. > :44:54.being seen as a battle The British boxer won his Olympic

:44:55. > :44:58.gold medal at London 2012, but when Klitschko won his in 1996,

:44:59. > :45:01.Joshua was just six years old. Joshua has had only 18 professional

:45:02. > :45:03.fights but Klitchko has But whoever wins they'll both

:45:04. > :45:11.receive an huge pay packet - expected to be ?15 million each,

:45:12. > :45:14.meaning this fight could be Joining us from our London

:45:15. > :45:29.newsroom is the boxing In all your years, have you ever

:45:30. > :45:32.known a build-up as friendly and courteous with even one newspaper

:45:33. > :45:38.suggesting these two would elope together? I'm not bothered by the

:45:39. > :45:42.fact they liked each other and that they're friendly, I liked it because

:45:43. > :45:46.I been up close to them this week and I have seen from five and six

:45:47. > :45:50.feet there is enough anger and intensity, you have to be close

:45:51. > :45:54.enough. They have a very clever thing with shaking hands and

:45:55. > :46:03.cuddling and smiling but behind all that, there is an awful lot of anger

:46:04. > :46:07.and hate. As you said, it is a fight of contrasts. Is Klitschko too old,

:46:08. > :46:12.can he come back after that defeat to Tyson Fury? We will find out at

:46:13. > :46:17.some point in the first round and the defeat to Tyson Fury was not

:46:18. > :46:22.because he became an old man overnight, he was 39 then, but Tyson

:46:23. > :46:27.Fury had a brilliant strategy and he beat Klitschko in the ring and in

:46:28. > :46:37.the head. Klitschko had a bad night and Tyson Fury had a great night. We

:46:38. > :46:42.will find out this evening at 10:01pm if, at 41, after 28 years of

:46:43. > :46:46.boxing if he has become an older man. An hour ago we heard from Kid

:46:47. > :46:51.Galahad who is a big make a Tyson Fury saying that he got into

:46:52. > :46:54.Klitschko's head and wound him up. Can Josh Wood do the same? No and

:46:55. > :47:08.he's not tried it. -- Josh Yorwerth. -- Joshua. I thought he might do,

:47:09. > :47:12.talk about his old age but they said they would not do anything. I was

:47:13. > :47:15.shocked as well because what Tyson Fury did with the got in his face

:47:16. > :47:21.every second and annoyed him and after six weeks Wladimir didn't know

:47:22. > :47:27.if he was coming or going! You have seen them up close, trying to get a

:47:28. > :47:35.sense of what makes them tick, who wants more? They will both claim

:47:36. > :47:40.that but I will give it to Wladimir because after all of those years, 68

:47:41. > :47:46.fights, trying to win the title back for the third time that he knows

:47:47. > :47:49.that a defeat puts a bit of an Asterix on his fantastic reputation

:47:50. > :47:55.and in ten years we will look back and say that at 41, having not boxed

:47:56. > :47:59.for 18 months, he should be at home with his slippers on and not

:48:00. > :48:04.challenging A27 -year-old kid. That would not be the end of things. Not

:48:05. > :48:10.for Anthony Joshua, he is a big star. Anthony Joshua can lose

:48:11. > :48:15.tonight no problem and leave the ring with his head held high because

:48:16. > :48:19.I think it is a 50-50 fight. A lot of my colleagues disagree. There is

:48:20. > :48:28.no shame in Joshua, who is a boxing baby, a big baby but a boxing

:48:29. > :48:31.novice. It is only his 19th fight. Wladimir Klitschko can't even

:48:32. > :48:37.remember his 19th fight! He would have to watch it on VHS! We will

:48:38. > :48:38.have to leave it there, thank you for joining us and enjoy its

:48:39. > :48:39.tonight. And you can hear live radio

:48:40. > :48:51.commentary of the fight on BBC Radio I'm trying to imagine Steve Bunce

:48:52. > :48:55.doing stoolball commentary! He could do anything.

:48:56. > :49:04.Let's get the weather now. We have a decent day ahead, a little bit of

:49:05. > :49:07.mixed weather in the next couple of days and some rain for some of us

:49:08. > :49:12.but this is how things are looking, this was near Twickenham. Heading

:49:13. > :49:18.through the remainder of the weekend, things feel warmer than in

:49:19. > :49:22.the past week and it will turn quite breezy at times, particularly in the

:49:23. > :49:28.West, and a chance of some rain on Sunday and Monday. Useful rain in

:49:29. > :49:32.parts of the South but we will not all have the wet weather. This front

:49:33. > :49:36.is approaching from the West but before it comes, high pressure is

:49:37. > :49:39.the driving force and today we have a few isolated showers in parts of

:49:40. > :49:44.Wales and Northern Ireland and southern Scotland but they can to

:49:45. > :49:49.peter out and die away in the afternoon. Most of the cloud should

:49:50. > :49:54.thin and break up and there should be plenty of sunshine for England

:49:55. > :49:59.and Wales with some patchy cloud around and temperatures around 16 or

:50:00. > :50:04.17. A bit warmer than recently. Some patchy cloud moving into northern

:50:05. > :50:10.England and Northern Ireland and Scotland and the odd like passing

:50:11. > :50:14.shower coming from that. But generally at dry day. Heading into

:50:15. > :50:18.the evening, the breeze will pick up in the West with some cloud moving

:50:19. > :50:24.in and it will be frost free in the early hours of Sunday morning. And

:50:25. > :50:28.you'd notice the rain creeping in to the south-west. It could be wet and

:50:29. > :50:34.windy in the south-west and much of Wales tomorrow and that area will

:50:35. > :50:38.nudge slowly north-eastwards but quite a lot of eastern England and

:50:39. > :50:42.northern England and Scotland and Northern Ireland get away with a

:50:43. > :50:45.largely dry day, 18 degrees but you have the wind so feeling quite cool

:50:46. > :50:52.on the east coast of Scotland for instance. On tobacco on a Monday,

:50:53. > :50:55.low-pressure drifting slowly eastwards -- onto bank holiday

:50:56. > :50:59.Monday. Sunshine and scattered showers on Monday, the driest

:51:00. > :51:15.weather in Scotland and Northern Ireland. Thank you. We have talked

:51:16. > :51:17.recently about energy bills. There is a warning this morning because

:51:18. > :51:22.energy companies are said to be installing so-called smart meters

:51:23. > :51:25.which might already need to be replaced.

:51:26. > :51:26.They're aiming to meet a government target

:51:27. > :51:30.to have the device fitted in every home by 2020, but new communication

:51:31. > :51:34.Paul Lewis from Radio 4's Money Box is in our London studio.

:51:35. > :51:42.What is this all about? The government wants us all to have a

:51:43. > :51:48.smart atrocity and gas meter by the end of 2020 as you said, that is 50

:51:49. > :51:53.million metres. The companies are busy fitting them now, 6 million

:51:54. > :51:59.have been done and there will be another two or 3 million but I have

:52:00. > :52:04.been told that these are type one meters and with the new standard of

:52:05. > :52:09.type two, comes into use, that will use a new big communications network

:52:10. > :52:14.across the whole country. The type one meters might not work with that

:52:15. > :52:20.communications network. People have been aware of this problem but they

:52:21. > :52:25.were hoping they would and the company responsible has said twice

:52:26. > :52:29.in the last few days I ask, if all the old meters would have to be

:52:30. > :52:33.replaced, they said yes. It is possible that millions of meters

:52:34. > :52:37.will have to be replaced. Why were we even given the wrong ones in the

:52:38. > :52:43.first place? The government was very keen to get this done by 2020 and it

:52:44. > :52:47.was a European Union position that we should have a certain standard by

:52:48. > :52:53.then. They wanted to get it done but there were delays with the network,

:52:54. > :52:56.with the design, it had to be referred to GCHQ for security

:52:57. > :53:00.reasons because of the data was being passed around and it has

:53:01. > :53:05.delayed things so to meet the target and get enough meters in and of

:53:06. > :53:11.homes by 2020, they went with the old standard and are still fitting

:53:12. > :53:17.them. They may not work with this new network, they may have to be

:53:18. > :53:22.replaced, I stress the word may. What has the government said? They

:53:23. > :53:27.did not deny this, they said, " our expectation that all these type one

:53:28. > :53:34.meters will be enrolled and work with this new network." The network

:53:35. > :53:38.themselves are saying they are consulting and it is about how this

:53:39. > :53:42.can be done but neither would guarantee that all these old meters

:53:43. > :53:48.woodwork. When I said they would have to be replaced, nobody would

:53:49. > :53:55.deny that. There is a danger they will and that will put up the cost

:53:56. > :54:03.for every meter being fitted and a few million meters will add a few

:54:04. > :54:06.100 million maybe ?1 billion the cost and a technology expert said to

:54:07. > :54:11.me earlier that it may mean the whole thing is not viable. It sounds

:54:12. > :54:23.like that is looming. Thank you for that, there is more on that story on

:54:24. > :54:27.Money box on Radio 4 from midday. Museums used to be dusty and dry old

:54:28. > :54:32.places that were not so much about fun but you know now but a lot have

:54:33. > :54:39.become more exciting and accessible and up-to-date. So much has changed.

:54:40. > :54:41.There is now a museum of the year award.

:54:42. > :54:42.Centres of sculpture, geology, modern art,

:54:43. > :54:45.and the home of two of the Queen's former race horses are all

:54:46. > :54:48.in the running for this year's Art Fund Museum of The Year award.

:54:49. > :54:51.So what will clinch the deal and push one of these over

:54:52. > :54:55.Our Arts Correspondent Colin Paterson has been taking

:54:56. > :55:04.Talk us through what you have on display. Good morning. It is one of

:55:05. > :55:09.the nominees for the award, that is Sir John, he was an architect who

:55:10. > :55:15.designed the Bank of England and he left his entire art collection and

:55:16. > :55:19.this house to the nation and in the last year ?7 million as been spent

:55:20. > :55:25.restoring it so it looks exactly like it did when he died in 1837.

:55:26. > :55:28.This is a starter, this is a model of the tomb he designed for his wife

:55:29. > :55:33.Elizabeth and if it looks familiar, that is because if you came the

:55:34. > :55:38.inspiration for the red phone box that we have seen around the

:55:39. > :55:39.country. But as well as here, I have been looking at the other nominees

:55:40. > :55:48.starting with a trip to Yorkshire. When the Hepworth Wakefield

:55:49. > :55:50.was designed, the idea was that the outside of outside

:55:51. > :55:54.the building would be a work of art itself, every bit as much

:55:55. > :55:56.as the exhibits inside. Now the gallery has received some

:55:57. > :55:59.serious recognition. It is one of the five nominees

:56:00. > :56:01.competing for the title Specialising in the sculpture,

:56:02. > :56:11.it has been rewarded for a year which has seen a 20% rise

:56:12. > :56:13.in visitors, many I think actually children

:56:14. > :56:21.are the most open-minded people of all to work with and they end up

:56:22. > :56:25.inspiring their families and adults And they have certainly

:56:26. > :56:31.been taking it all in. I've seen some very

:56:32. > :56:33.pretty sculptures. They're made of glass

:56:34. > :56:43.and wood material and metal. I have never seen paintings

:56:44. > :56:46.hanging on doors before. Another reason the Hepworth has been

:56:47. > :56:49.nominated is that its year was enhanced by one

:56:50. > :56:52.very special donation. An old Chinese dog, I suppose,

:56:53. > :56:55.from about 2000 BC. Watch out, Gavin, don't knock it

:56:56. > :57:10.off with the camera! An art collection which covers every

:57:11. > :57:13.inch of a North London house. Tim Sayer has been collecting art

:57:14. > :57:22.for more than five decades. A visit to the Hepworth prompted him

:57:23. > :57:25.to donate his entire And now the Hepworth Wakefield

:57:26. > :57:32.is nominated for Art Fund Museum of the Year and your donation

:57:33. > :57:34.was in their submission. I had no idea we were

:57:35. > :57:43.going to be singled out When it comes to Museum of the Year,

:57:44. > :57:51.there are some other very strong runners and riders including

:57:52. > :57:56.the National Heritage Centre for Horseracing in Newmarket opened

:57:57. > :58:00.in November by the Queen. One of its star exhibits,

:58:01. > :58:02.a racing simulator. It is not believed that

:58:03. > :58:06.Her Majesty had a go. The Tate Modern is nominated

:58:07. > :58:10.for a year which saw the opening of a new building,

:58:11. > :58:12.the Switch House, And also up for the prize

:58:13. > :58:18.is the Lapworth Museum of Geology in Birmingham,

:58:19. > :58:20.home to a quarter On July the 5th, only one

:58:21. > :58:26.of the museums will be given a new precious item,

:58:27. > :58:43.the title of Museum of the Year. That was the Duchess of Cambridge

:58:44. > :58:48.presenting the price to the winner of last year, the Victoria and

:58:49. > :58:53.Albert Museum. What a collection of nominees, what do you make of them?

:58:54. > :58:58.Extraordinary and how can you pick? It is like having five different

:58:59. > :59:04.children and asking which is best. But how do you go about comparing a

:59:05. > :59:08.place where the Queen's race are to be taken more than? The wonderful

:59:09. > :59:14.thing about the selection is that each of them offers something for

:59:15. > :59:18.everybody -- the Queen's racehorses. It is about looking at the future

:59:19. > :59:23.and not just the past and what these places can offer to the children of

:59:24. > :59:29.tomorrow. How do you get children into our galleries and museums? You

:59:30. > :59:33.have to be a good parent and schools had their love of it on the

:59:34. > :59:38.curriculum. And finally, you admitted that you hadn't even heard

:59:39. > :59:41.of two the nominees! This means that its prize is doing its job if

:59:42. > :59:47.someone like you is learning from it. Absolutely, I have never been to

:59:48. > :59:53.the geology Museum or the horse won but coming here, it is fantastic and

:59:54. > :59:57.Soane reminds me of the IKEA of his day, these flatpack areas that you

:59:58. > :00:02.would even know where they were. We will be showing you some of them

:00:03. > :00:07.throughout the morning. Thank you for the guided tour.

:00:08. > :00:12.Coming up, we will be looking through the papers in about 20

:00:13. > :00:32.minutes just after the headlines. Stay with us.

:00:33. > :00:35.Hello, this is Breakfast, with Sally Nugent and Jon Kay.

:00:36. > :00:38.Calls for a public inquiry after a rogue breast surgeon

:00:39. > :00:41.is convicted of intentionally wounding his patients.

:00:42. > :00:43.Ian Paterson was accused of "playing god" by carrying out completely

:00:44. > :01:05.Lawyers think he could have hundreds - or even thousands - of victims.

:01:06. > :01:06.Good morning, it's Saturday 29th April.

:01:07. > :01:14.EU leaders meet in Brussels to discuss how to tackle future talks.

:01:15. > :01:19.But the US military says the ballistic rocket blew up

:01:20. > :01:24.As he marks 100 days in office, Donald Trump becomes the first US

:01:25. > :01:26.President for more than three decades to address

:01:27. > :01:40.No longer will federal agencies be coming after law-abiding gun owners.

:01:41. > :01:42.In sport, it's the richest bout in British boxing history.

:01:43. > :01:44.The countdown is on for tonight's world heavyweight showdown,

:01:45. > :02:02.as Anthony Joshua meets former champion Wladimir Klitshcko.

:02:03. > :02:09.And more than 40,000,000 records sold. The Cranberries will be here

:02:10. > :02:11.to tell us why they have decided to put a new twist on their greatest

:02:12. > :02:22.hits. It is a largely dry day today with

:02:23. > :02:26.some sunshine around, too. Some will see some rain tomorrow. I will have

:02:27. > :02:27.the full forecast in about 15 minutes.

:02:28. > :02:34.There are growing calls for a public inquiry following the conviction

:02:35. > :02:37.of a breast surgeon who carried out a series of needless operations.

:02:38. > :02:39.Ian Paterson was found guilty of intentionally

:02:40. > :02:41.wounding his patients at two private hospitals in the West Midlands.

:02:42. > :02:44.Now solicitors working on the case say the true number of his victims

:02:45. > :02:47.could be in the hundreds - or even thousands.

:02:48. > :02:52.Patients are meant to be able to trust their doctor,

:02:53. > :02:54.but Ian Paterson practised at the exact opposite

:02:55. > :02:58.and betrayed his patients on some scale.

:02:59. > :03:01.He told people they were at risk of cancer and operated

:03:02. > :03:05.The breast surgeon worked in private and NHS hospitals

:03:06. > :03:08.in the West Midlands, and while staff in the public sector

:03:09. > :03:11.now hold each other to account, lawyers representing some

:03:12. > :03:18.of the victims are today calling for a full, independent enquiry

:03:19. > :03:25.into oversite of private sector healthcare.

:03:26. > :03:33.I do think there is more to be done. I suspect that only a full

:03:34. > :03:40.independent enquiry will bring about the changes that are needed. The

:03:41. > :03:58.private provider has told the BBC decision...

:03:59. > :03:59.Shirley Maroney's sister, Marie, was one of Ian

:04:00. > :04:02.The surgeon originally carried out an incomplete mastectomy,

:04:03. > :04:04.instead of the double mastectomy she'd asked for.

:04:05. > :04:06.She then had a further double mastectomy,

:04:07. > :04:09.My sister was a police officer for 30 years,

:04:10. > :04:12.she believed in the justice system and she believed in fairness,

:04:13. > :04:14.and quite frankly this wasn't fair, this wasn't just

:04:15. > :04:18.Marie died in 2008 of secondary cancer in her lungs.

:04:19. > :04:21.It's impossible to know the extent to which Ian Paterson's failures

:04:22. > :04:26.The criminal case centred on the treatment of nine other women

:04:27. > :04:30.and one man, but solicitors say there are hundreds of patients now

:04:31. > :04:34.Ian Paterson has been told he'll face prison when he's

:04:35. > :04:47.European Union leaders are meeting in Brussels today to formally

:04:48. > :04:49.agree their negotiating stance for Brexit.

:04:50. > :04:52.It is expected the EU will insist the UK must arrange a divorce bill

:04:53. > :04:55.Our Europe Correspondent Chris Morris is in Brussels

:04:56. > :05:04.What's likely to be discussed today, Chris?

:05:05. > :05:11.It is really about agreeing on the guidelines which they are going to

:05:12. > :05:15.use to negotiate with us. The President Donald Tusk has just

:05:16. > :05:18.walked in on the red carpet behind us saying we have got to sort out

:05:19. > :05:23.the past before we talk of the future. In other words, a financial

:05:24. > :05:27.settlement, how much the UK owes the EU before it leaves and the issue of

:05:28. > :05:32.guaranteeing rights for EU citizens who live in the UK. Both issues, the

:05:33. > :05:37.language in the guidelines we will see today has hardened a bit in the

:05:38. > :05:41.last few weeks since the 1st draft was announced. 1 thing that is

:05:42. > :05:46.interesting around looking around the EU, there are usually fights

:05:47. > :05:49.about everything on this sort of importance, but on this issue, it

:05:50. > :05:54.may not stay like this at the moment, but they are unusually...

:05:55. > :05:59.Because I think most governments do not want it to be seen for the UK

:06:00. > :06:03.leaving to be a better thing for the UK. They do not want that message to

:06:04. > :06:07.be sent to their own electorates. For now, they are united about

:06:08. > :06:12.saying, look, you have got to come to terms with the fact with you are

:06:13. > :06:18.the ones you want to change the relationship and you have to listen

:06:19. > :06:19.to the terms you are being given. Everyone is on their best behaviour.

:06:20. > :06:23.Thank you very much indeed, Chris. Theresa May will campaign

:06:24. > :06:25.in Scotland today for the first time The Conservatives currently hold one

:06:26. > :06:29.Scottish seat at Westminster, but opinion polls suggest support

:06:30. > :06:31.for the party in Meanwhile Jeremy Corbyn will urge

:06:32. > :06:36.young people to "claim their future" by voting Labour in the election

:06:37. > :06:40.when he speaks in East London later. He will highlight figures that show

:06:41. > :06:44.2.4 million young voters are missing North Korea has test fired

:06:45. > :06:50.a ballistic missile. According to South Korean

:06:51. > :06:52.and American officials, The launch, from an airfield

:06:53. > :06:57.in Pukchang, came just hours after a session at the UN

:06:58. > :07:01.Security Council in which the US pushed for tougher sanctions

:07:02. > :07:06.on the North Korean regime. After weeks of mounting concern

:07:07. > :07:11.in Washington about North Korea, the Secretary of State arrived

:07:12. > :07:14.at the United Nations UN sanctions aren't

:07:15. > :07:18.working, was the message. There needs to be a new

:07:19. > :07:22.campaign of pressure. Ultimately this is being driven

:07:23. > :07:27.by America's own national security considerations, he said,

:07:28. > :07:30.so it's serious. With each successive

:07:31. > :07:34.detonation and missile test, North Korea pushes North-East Asia

:07:35. > :07:38.and the world closer to instability The threat of a North Korean nuclear

:07:39. > :07:46.attack on Seoul or Tokyo is real, and it is likely only a matter

:07:47. > :07:49.of time before North Korea develops the capability to strike

:07:50. > :07:53.the US mainland. Despite UN pressure,

:07:54. > :07:57.North Korea's been able to accelerate its weapons programme,

:07:58. > :08:01.and shortly after Mr Tillerson spoke, it fired another missile,

:08:02. > :08:05.although that test seems The Trump administration

:08:06. > :08:10.is keeping open the threat of military action in case

:08:11. > :08:13.of further provocations. The latest missile test probably

:08:14. > :08:16.won't be enough of a trigger for that, but it may help strengthen

:08:17. > :08:19.international resolve to put the economic squeeze on North

:08:20. > :08:23.Korea's determined young leader. Barbara Plett-Usher, BBC News,

:08:24. > :08:33.at the United Nations in New York. Pope Francis will lead a mass

:08:34. > :08:36.for Egypt's Catholics on the second He's expected to repeat the message

:08:37. > :08:41.of his first day in the Egyptian capital when he urged the leaders

:08:42. > :08:44.of all faiths to renounce violence Our Middle East correspondent

:08:45. > :08:53.Orla Guerin is in Cairo. Heller, thank you for joining us on

:08:54. > :09:02.Bread. The timing of this is so significant, isn't it? Certainly

:09:03. > :09:08.there is added poignancy. It is just 3 weeks after a double bomb attack

:09:09. > :09:16.on charges on the nurse of Egypt. -- attack on churches in the north of

:09:17. > :09:19.Egypt. But there was no change after the bloodshed. He and the Vatican

:09:20. > :09:25.City decided to go ahead. At the mast today in the main part of the

:09:26. > :09:30.visit is underway. Very colourful, lots of people crowded into a

:09:31. > :09:41.military Stadium on the outskirts of Cairo. Many waving flags. Military

:09:42. > :09:46.helicopters ahead. The Pope arrived in a car, no sign of bullet-proof

:09:47. > :09:53.glass, no armoured car, and he has been riding around the stadium in a

:09:54. > :10:02.golf buggy. Very much to do with his low-key approach.

:10:03. > :10:17.Donald Trump became the 1st person to address the American gun lobby.

:10:18. > :10:19.The age of assaults on your 2nd Amendment freedoms has come to a

:10:20. > :10:23.crashing end. You have a true friend

:10:24. > :10:29.and champion in the White House. No longer will federal agencies be

:10:30. > :10:50.coming after law-abiding gun owners. If traffic jam is getting you down,

:10:51. > :10:51.here is the solution. You keep this in your bit and you fly over the

:10:52. > :11:00.track traffic. A British inventor has built

:11:01. > :11:02.an Iron Man-style suit and taken it for a spin,

:11:03. > :11:05.to the delight of crowds at a design Richard Browning said he's had

:11:06. > :11:09.a huge amount of interest since posting a video

:11:10. > :11:13.of its maiden flight. It reminds me of the things you see

:11:14. > :11:19.in holiday resorts when people do a jet ski thing. With the tube thing.

:11:20. > :11:28.It is similar. Potentially more dangerous. He says it is capable of

:11:29. > :11:32.flying at 200 mph. He even says he has got something he could invent

:11:33. > :11:36.that would cover the suit he is wearing and make him invisible.

:11:37. > :11:41.Apparently his boots are snake proof. He has thought of everything.

:11:42. > :11:51.That is very important. The time is 11 10 AM. -- 9 10 AM.

:11:52. > :11:53."People, money and Ireland" look set to dominate talks aimed

:11:54. > :11:55.at finalising Europe's negotiating guidelines for Brexit.

:11:56. > :11:58.It is expected that the EU will refuse to let the UK discuss

:11:59. > :12:00.future negotiations until a divorce bill is arranged.

:12:01. > :12:04.Let's talk now to Mats Persson, who advised former Prime Minister

:12:05. > :12:06.David Cameron with his EU deal last year.

:12:07. > :12:08.He is now the head of international trade at the consultancy

:12:09. > :12:15.Good morning. We have been live in Brussels this morning. We have seen

:12:16. > :12:21.the red carpet for the politicians to walk in. It is all really quite

:12:22. > :12:27.formal, and this is very staged. What is really going on in the

:12:28. > :12:33.negotiations? I think that depends on the summit of the negotiation in

:12:34. > :12:37.question. I think these summits, the meetings which are quite regular,

:12:38. > :12:43.they tend to be relatively friendly. A lot of the hard work is actually

:12:44. > :12:49.done before the summit, before EU leaders get together amongst

:12:50. > :12:52.advisers which are the EU advisers to EU leaders. Lots of the work will

:12:53. > :13:00.already have been done. This tends to be, at least sometimes, to be a

:13:01. > :13:05.more formal affair with EU leaders around the table signing off what a

:13:06. > :13:11.lot has already been agreed beforehand. With an election coming

:13:12. > :13:16.up in this country and France, Germany, too, with so much

:13:17. > :13:22.uncertainty across the EU and in the UK, how can these negotiations come

:13:23. > :13:29.with any real meaning? That is the tricky part. It is difficult to see

:13:30. > :13:33.how anything of substance will be able to be negotiated over the next

:13:34. > :13:39.month. You have the French election very soon and the UK election on

:13:40. > :13:43.June the 8th. I think you can have a bit of negotiation after that,

:13:44. > :13:48.though, but then you have the German election in September. We are

:13:49. > :13:56.looking at a period from September and on the words perhaps for a year

:13:57. > :14:05.to 15 months where a real intent is talk and negotiation will take place

:14:06. > :14:13.and lots will be settled. As Chris, your correspondent rightly said, is

:14:14. > :14:20.around the 27 EU leaders, not a British leader in the removal. This

:14:21. > :14:25.is the sequencing of the talks. You rightly mentioned this issue around

:14:26. > :14:30.money, how much of the bill should be settled before they can start

:14:31. > :14:34.talking about the future relationship, we have do pay up a

:14:35. > :14:37.certain amount of money before we can talk about that. It is about

:14:38. > :14:44.those definitions and issues that will be spoken about now, but the

:14:45. > :14:47.real issues, the terms of the future relationship, that may wait until

:14:48. > :14:52.early autumn. You helped David Cameron negotiate with the EU full

:14:53. > :14:57.stop how tricky can it get? How tense can it be? It can be very

:14:58. > :15:06.tense. EU summit are notorious for late nights, for dragged out

:15:07. > :15:11.negotiations and talks, so it can be very intense, can be very energy and

:15:12. > :15:18.time-consuming. The summit today and I do not think will be like that at

:15:19. > :15:23.all. It is quite a formal affair. As we go into the substantive

:15:24. > :15:27.negotiations that I talked about earlier, this will be intense, this

:15:28. > :15:34.will be a lot of hours and there will be lots of noise and the

:15:35. > :15:38.negotiations involved will probably have some of the toughest times in

:15:39. > :15:46.their lives to be honest, in terms of the issues and the challenges

:15:47. > :15:50.ahead. At the end of the day, I think there are incentives on all

:15:51. > :15:54.sides to get some sort of deal between the UK and the EU, so

:15:55. > :15:59.hopefully that is what will happen. Mats Persson, thank you.

:16:00. > :16:07.We're going to talk weddings and a couple of minutes time. We will talk

:16:08. > :16:14.about the spiralling cost. EU negotiations, you have seen nothing

:16:15. > :16:21.yet! The average cost of a wedding is 30 grand?! We will ask what to do

:16:22. > :16:22.to keep the bills down. Weddings are not today, weather has

:16:23. > :16:33.It is looking like a decent day if you are getting married to day.

:16:34. > :16:38.There will be some sunshine breaking through. Not wall-to-wall sunshine,

:16:39. > :16:43.some patchy card. Today is probably the best day of the bank holiday

:16:44. > :16:47.weekend. Although things will feel a little warmer, it will turn quite

:16:48. > :16:50.breezy and some of those macro will see some range rings Sunday and

:16:51. > :16:57.Monday. But certainly not everywhere. We have got a front

:16:58. > :17:01.which is approaching from the Atlantic. That will bring Tamara's

:17:02. > :17:09.wet weather. 102 isolated showers tomorrow. It will turn quite breezy

:17:10. > :17:12.in the West later on. For eastern parts of the country, there are

:17:13. > :17:20.lighter winds and sunshine. This is for PM this afternoon. It is dry,

:17:21. > :17:28.bright, 16, 17dC, a bubbly alone beat South Coast is the best of

:17:29. > :17:32.sunshine. There may be isolated passing showers in Northern Ireland.

:17:33. > :17:37.Similar picture in parts of Scotland. Some bright spells

:17:38. > :17:41.developing. Dry into this evening and overnight. But with the breeze

:17:42. > :17:47.picking up and a bit of cloud moving in from the west, we're looking at

:17:48. > :17:51.no frost with temperatures at 9, 10dC. Tamara, rain working in across

:17:52. > :17:58.the south-west of England and Wales where it will be quite windy. A

:17:59. > :18:02.brighter picture for the rest of the country. Rain clears away and we're

:18:03. > :18:03.left with Sony spells and a view blustery showers for bank holiday

:18:04. > :18:07.Monday. Thank you, Sarah. It is time to look

:18:08. > :18:25.at the Saturday papers. Simon Fanshawe is here to speak with

:18:26. > :18:30.us. I have picked out the French elections. I see you have the

:18:31. > :18:33.Financial Times. It is an interesting difference between them

:18:34. > :18:39.and the times. What is really strange about this election is the 2

:18:40. > :18:42.candidates in the 2nd round and neither from the Socialist party

:18:43. > :18:48.narrowly from the other party. So you have got these 2 insurgents. The

:18:49. > :18:55.question is where will the other votes go, because these 2 only got

:18:56. > :19:03.45% of the boat altogether. This is very difficult to predict. What is

:19:04. > :19:07.interesting is the Financial Times from the far left candidate, people

:19:08. > :19:16.are arguing his votes, but Marine Le Pen is making for his votes. That is

:19:17. > :19:23.really interesting because what it illustrates is French politics is no

:19:24. > :19:30.longer this left right divide. There is a battle between a globalist and

:19:31. > :19:34.the protectionist. You sorry to when Emmanuel Macron went to the factory.

:19:35. > :19:40.Marine Le Pen immediately went there and stood on the right lines. He

:19:41. > :19:44.went down and spoke to the workers. Marine Le Pen said I will get your

:19:45. > :19:49.jobs back, close the borders. He went down and said I am not causing

:19:50. > :19:52.the borders, that will harm the economy. I cannot get your jobs that

:19:53. > :19:58.because I cannot tell a private company what to do. And I do have a

:19:59. > :20:02.strategy to revive the economy. Apparently he'd left in complete

:20:03. > :20:12.silence after lots of bees. I think it was a white goods factory, and I

:20:13. > :20:18.promise... What he did not do is he could promise to give them their job

:20:19. > :20:22.back. That is the challenge he has got, because if he does not reform

:20:23. > :20:29.the economy, which the article is on about. If you'd is not reform the

:20:30. > :20:33.economy, the next election, that is what matters. Marine Le Pen has

:20:34. > :20:37.doubled her boat. Both these candidates were aiming for the next

:20:38. > :20:44.time, not this time. But 1 of them is going to get it this time! France

:20:45. > :20:48.spends 57% of its GDP on its public spending. That is absolutely huge.

:20:49. > :20:59.They do not have the money to suspend it. -- sustain it. To the

:21:00. > :21:08.Guardian, van. She is the best. She will be close to the hearts of

:21:09. > :21:13.people in Salford. You will remember her voice, she clearly reflects

:21:14. > :21:22.where she is from. People are asking her to drop the accent. She has

:21:23. > :21:32.acts. We are from the north, we can read. She's fantastic. Here is a

:21:33. > :21:41.really heart-warming story. Well, it is a hard story. This man is called

:21:42. > :21:48.Tokyo Myers. Do remember when Philip Lawrence, the man in the picture, do

:21:49. > :21:54.remember he was stabbed and a man was convicted for his murder? Well,

:21:55. > :21:58.this boy, Tokyo, was practising music when he was 11 years old as

:21:59. > :22:04.that was happening, and his music teacher came and grabbed him, picked

:22:05. > :22:10.him up, shielded his face as the murder was taking place and the

:22:11. > :22:17.headmaster staggered into the atrium of the school. He told Tokyo to go

:22:18. > :22:24.home. He is on Britain has got talent night, and he is arguing that

:22:25. > :22:32.the teacher, of music, is what saved him, put him on the right path. Good

:22:33. > :22:37.look to him, tonight. He has not seen the teachers for a long time. I

:22:38. > :22:47.would find the teacher, wouldn't you? There have been brilliant ...

:22:48. > :22:49.It is but does your wedding need to be

:22:50. > :22:56.the most expensive? The lifestyle magazine,

:22:57. > :22:57.Country Life, says the pressure of social media has turned getting

:22:58. > :23:00.married into the "equivalent of an arms race" as couples try

:23:01. > :23:06.and out-spend and out do each other. We asked some of you

:23:07. > :23:17.what you thought. you spend money on the 1 time in

:23:18. > :23:23.your lifetime and you to mean something. They do it's just to show

:23:24. > :23:31.off. It is just really close. Ridiculous. People want to do nice

:23:32. > :23:36.stuff, don't they, and celebrate that special day in an amazing way.

:23:37. > :23:42.People feel they have to do have lots of different things and add-ons

:23:43. > :23:44.that are expensive and is more important than the actual ceremony

:23:45. > :23:49.and why they are getting married in the 1st place. Save your money and

:23:50. > :23:58.spend it on something else. It is only 1 day.

:23:59. > :24:02.We're joined now by Sharn Khaira, a wedding planner and blogger,

:24:03. > :24:04.and Julia Braime, editor of Brides Up North blog and Unveiled

:24:05. > :24:13.magazine, along with Natalie, who is getting married today.

:24:14. > :24:20.Morning, Natalie. This is Natalie, who where somebody to talk to.

:24:21. > :24:28.Natalie is getting married today. How are the nerves? Absolutely fine.

:24:29. > :24:34.I have all the bridesmaids, phones out, so it is absolutely fine. How

:24:35. > :24:42.many bridesmaids have you got? I've got four bridesmaids. Add a all

:24:43. > :24:47.adults? How did you choose? All adults. They are just my closest

:24:48. > :24:51.friends from all different groups. What sort of wedding do expect to

:24:52. > :24:55.have today? Would you say you have been careful with the budget?

:24:56. > :24:59.Looking at the gorgeous dressings hanging up behind you, it looks to

:25:00. > :25:06.me like you have done some very careful shopping. Yeah, I think we

:25:07. > :25:11.initially had a budget. I cannot tell you exactly how much we spend.

:25:12. > :25:18.I don't know. We have had a long engagement. Over the time, we bought

:25:19. > :25:25.it and bobs. You have to shop around. We were very careful

:25:26. > :25:30.choosing and in terms of the bridesmaids dresses, we were good to

:25:31. > :25:35.look at the high street shops and things like that. Sounds like you

:25:36. > :25:38.have been pretty careful, but lots of people cannot resist the

:25:39. > :25:44.spending. We will talk to you again in a moment. I have been astounded

:25:45. > :25:49.by the figures. Around ?30,000 is around the average now! How can it

:25:50. > :25:56.cost that much money. There is a lot to do. It does not have to cost that

:25:57. > :25:59.much. You have to do work within your own budget, and that is

:26:00. > :26:04.something we really encourage our people to do. Do not overspend on

:26:05. > :26:09.your wedding day, but do try within your budget to choose the best

:26:10. > :26:14.quality suppliers. If the dress is really important to you, spend on

:26:15. > :26:21.that. I would always say... Or the suit! Of a really good photographer.

:26:22. > :26:29.Get the best quality images for your day. Spend your priorities. Choose

:26:30. > :26:37.wisely. What are the basics? What are the things you really need?

:26:38. > :26:41.Forget the extravagances. I would say catering and the venue are

:26:42. > :26:45.really, really important. Normally couples we see are not willing to

:26:46. > :26:50.compromise on that. Sometimes what you will see in the Asian wedding

:26:51. > :26:55.market is the catering side is the most important aspect to them, but

:26:56. > :26:58.in terms of other things, they will fall back on the outfits,

:26:59. > :27:05.photography and the other elements. When I say the basics,, you need to

:27:06. > :27:10.buy a licence, you need to pay someone to marry you. You need a

:27:11. > :27:18.marriage license, you need to be in a building licensed for weddings. So

:27:19. > :27:24.that is how much? I think about ?500. Could you do it for less than

:27:25. > :27:30.?1000? Absolutely. We have people on our blog that spend near that. They

:27:31. > :27:34.are celebrating the fact that they have been able to put together a

:27:35. > :27:41.fabulous wedding on a budget. Consciously, some people able to

:27:42. > :27:44.invite their family and have a really good day. People getting in

:27:45. > :27:49.touch have said they have put the money into the honeymoon for the

:27:50. > :27:55.long-term memories rather than just one day. Ashley said she got her job

:27:56. > :27:58.for ?450, everything was second-hand, hired the suits, and

:27:59. > :28:04.they used friends to make the cake, the flowers and drove her friend's

:28:05. > :28:11.are. You can do it. Of course. There are always ways to save money. Are

:28:12. > :28:18.you guys to blame? It is in your interest to bump up the prices. I

:28:19. > :28:23.would say no. What we do via our media products is we give them a

:28:24. > :28:25.choice. We let them see the whole gamut from a really nicely done

:28:26. > :28:32.budget wedding to the biggest weddings. We never push anything, we

:28:33. > :28:37.never say this is the right way to do it. Neither do our suppliers.

:28:38. > :28:46.People will always work within bride's budget. The supplies I meet

:28:47. > :28:52.with would never add extra money because it is a wedding. I think it

:28:53. > :28:56.is a really honest and lovely industry and I think brides can be

:28:57. > :29:00.confident on their wedding day. Sorry, ladies, but there is one

:29:01. > :29:03.important lady we have to go back to. Natalie, I do not know if you

:29:04. > :29:07.heard all of that, but we were talking about that you do not have

:29:08. > :29:12.too spend lots of money. You said that is something you have been good

:29:13. > :29:20.with. We also spoke to Luke and hour ago. OK! I don't know if you manage

:29:21. > :29:27.to catch it, but he was looking quite nervous! He's looking much

:29:28. > :29:31.more nervous than you, Natalie! I have had lots of people to help me

:29:32. > :29:35.this morning, so I am problem at an advantage. He did have a message for

:29:36. > :29:41.you. We wanted to know what he wanted to pass on and what special

:29:42. > :29:51.message we could give you. He said, please don't be late! I am only

:29:52. > :30:04.next-door, so... Before you go, can we say hello to the bridesmaids?

:30:05. > :30:12.Bring them in. Hello! Good look, everybody expire... You look

:30:13. > :30:20.absolutely brilliant. Relax and enjoy it. Thank you very much

:30:21. > :30:24.indeed. All the best to you. If you are getting married today, whoever

:30:25. > :30:27.you are, have a fantastic day. Worry about the budget tomorrow.

:30:28. > :30:30.We're on BBC One until ten o'clock this morning,

:30:31. > :30:33.when Michel Roux Junior takes over in the Saturday kitchen.

:30:34. > :30:47.Good morning. Our special guest today can say what she wants. So,

:30:48. > :30:54.say what you want for food heaven. My heaven would be Lennon sole. And

:30:55. > :31:03.your help? Scarlets. Tried hard can't do it. Two chefs here. Welcome

:31:04. > :31:13.to the studio. What is on your menu? Cotswold lamb with asparagus. You

:31:14. > :31:17.are not keen on lamb, are you? And welcome back. What is cooking? Where

:31:18. > :31:25.doing something very different today. We will make a spiced Gerrit

:31:26. > :31:31.so dish with Chile in it. And some spicy tomato mayonnaise.

:31:32. > :31:40.And our wine expert is Jane. I have something for everybody, we have it

:31:41. > :31:46.all. And all European? They are. We will see you at ten o'clock. Judy

:31:47. > :31:53.has been in touch, she is winning on the cheap wedding front, the whole

:31:54. > :31:57.thing for under ?100! Strangers as witnesses and they have been married

:31:58. > :32:02.for 20 years! Even with inflation they are still doing well! It might

:32:03. > :32:13.be about 15 grand now! Coming up here...

:32:14. > :32:23.She had the most distinctive voices the 90s and now the cramp is here to

:32:24. > :32:25.tell us why they decide to rework some of the most popular hits. --

:32:26. > :32:48.the cramp reuse. Hello this is Breakfast,

:32:49. > :32:52.with Sally Nugent and Jon Kay. Coming up before 10am,

:32:53. > :32:57.Sarah has the weather. But first a summary of this

:32:58. > :33:02.morning's main news. There are growing calls for a public

:33:03. > :33:05.inquiry following the conviction of a breast surgeon who carried out

:33:06. > :33:08.a series of needless operations. Ian Paterson was found

:33:09. > :33:10.guilty of intentionally wounding his patients at two private

:33:11. > :33:12.hospitals in the West Midlands. Now solicitors working on the case

:33:13. > :33:15.say the true number of his victims could be in the hundreds

:33:16. > :33:17.or even thousands and that regulation of private

:33:18. > :33:26.health care has to be looked at. I do think there is more

:33:27. > :33:29.to be done and I think, I have been shocked by the lack

:33:30. > :33:32.of regulation in the private sector and I suspect that only a full,

:33:33. > :33:46.independent enquiry will bring The president of the European

:33:47. > :33:52.Council, Donald Tusk, has called on the EU to keep the United front in

:33:53. > :33:55.the face of Brexit negotiations. They are meeting at a special summit

:33:56. > :34:00.in Brussels to discuss the parameters that will form the basis

:34:01. > :34:05.of discussions of the UK leaving the EU. It also includes the so-called

:34:06. > :34:09.divorce settlement which is the money that the EU believes it would

:34:10. > :34:16.be owed by Britain. We need to remain united as indefinite macro

:34:17. > :34:23.27. It is only then that we will be able to conclude the negotiations

:34:24. > :34:26.which means that our unity is also in the UK's interests.

:34:27. > :34:28.North Korea has test fired a ballistic missile.

:34:29. > :34:31.According to South Korean and American officials it exploded

:34:32. > :34:35.The launch, from an airfield in Pukchang, came just hours

:34:36. > :34:38.after a special session at the UN Security Council in which the US

:34:39. > :34:41.pushed for tougher sanctions on the Pyongyang regime.

:34:42. > :34:43.President Trump says North Korea's latest missile test

:34:44. > :34:55.Well, last night, Donald Trump became the first US president in 30

:34:56. > :34:57.years to address America's powerful gun lobby, the National

:34:58. > :35:02.On the eve of his 100th day in office, he told a rally

:35:03. > :35:05.in Georgia what his administration had achieved so far and pledged

:35:06. > :35:11.The eight-year assault on your Second Amendment freedoms

:35:12. > :35:25.You have a true friend and champion in the White House.

:35:26. > :35:36.No longer will federal agencies be coming after law-abiding gun owners.

:35:37. > :35:38.Headteachers will today be asked to "vigorously oppose" the expansion

:35:39. > :35:41.School leaders gathering at their annual conference

:35:42. > :35:44.are warning of a "perfect storm" of pressures which could

:35:45. > :35:46.have dire consequences for standards and pupils.

:35:47. > :35:48.The Conservatives are planning a fresh wave of grammars,

:35:49. > :35:54.but Labour and the Lib Dems are strongly against them.

:35:55. > :35:59.Those are the main stories this morning.

:36:00. > :36:08.It is just after half past nine and Mike now at the sport and it is all

:36:09. > :36:13.about the boxing. This is my reach! We could give them a run for their

:36:14. > :36:19.money! Sally must have good reach as well. There is so little to choose

:36:20. > :36:24.between them and that is what makes it so interesting. Apart from the

:36:25. > :36:32.age, Anthony Joshua is 27, Wladimir Klitschko is 41. Only one inch in

:36:33. > :36:36.terms of reach between them, 81 against 82, pretty much equal

:36:37. > :36:42.weaponry, it is a case of who wins the mind games and the chess match

:36:43. > :36:47.we were talking about earlier. And it has all been so simple now.

:36:48. > :36:50.Rather unlike most boxing Vesteinn Hafsteinsson 's do they have been

:36:51. > :36:53.best mate -- boxing press conferences.

:36:54. > :36:54.The countdown is on then for tonight's world heavyweight

:36:55. > :36:56.title fight, as Anthony Joshua, meets former champion

:36:57. > :37:00.The fighters weighed in, with Joshua ten pounds heavier

:37:01. > :37:06.Klitschko weighed in at 17 stone 2 pounds.

:37:07. > :37:08.It's his his first fight since losing his belts

:37:09. > :37:12.But this is Klitschko's 69th professional fight,

:37:13. > :37:23.Eye to eye, six foot six apiece, a good fighter but one that

:37:24. > :37:26.will have to come up against myself and we'll get it on.

:37:27. > :37:29.I'm ready to go as far as I need to go to get the win.

:37:30. > :37:32.I've shown it before and that's all it is.

:37:33. > :37:34.I have got the skill and determination but I'm

:37:35. > :37:48.Opportunities are not coming every day, the opportunity is there.

:37:49. > :37:51.I have one of the rising stars in Anthony Joshua, it's perfect.

:37:52. > :37:54.Who else would I have fought if Joshua wouldn't be there?

:37:55. > :38:14.Sorry to interrupt him! This is the size of his left fist, the actual

:38:15. > :38:18.size. It is as big as your head! You can follow that fight on BBC Radio 5

:38:19. > :38:22.Live with commentary and build up from 90. And it is also on the app

:38:23. > :38:24.-- from 9pm. A strange old week for Newcastle

:38:25. > :38:27.in which they were promoted to the Premier League,

:38:28. > :38:30.and raided as part of a fraud They beat Cardiff 2-0 thanks

:38:31. > :38:33.to a brilliant free kick Isaac Hayden added the second,

:38:34. > :38:37.as they close in on leaders, Brighton, but Brighton

:38:38. > :38:39.will still win the title In the Scottish Premiership,

:38:40. > :38:45.Liam Boyce scored all four goals as Ross County beat Inverness

:38:46. > :38:47.in the Highland derby. Boyce scored twice from open play

:38:48. > :38:51.and twice from the penalty spot to keep Inverness bottom

:38:52. > :38:57.by five points. Less than a week after being beaten

:38:58. > :39:00.in the Scottish Cup semi-final by their biggest rivals,

:39:01. > :39:02.Rangers today have the chance Celtic have already won the title

:39:03. > :39:06.and beat their Glasgow neighbours The midday kick off at Ibrox

:39:07. > :39:11.will see Rangers try to inflict Celtic's first domestic defeat

:39:12. > :39:13.of the season. In the Premier League,

:39:14. > :39:15.it could be a sad afternoon for Sunderland who take

:39:16. > :39:17.on Bournemouth at David Moyes' side can be relegated

:39:18. > :39:22.if they fail to at least match We need a really really good run

:39:23. > :39:28.of results now for things to go our way but while there's

:39:29. > :39:31.a chance, we're not going We have done and said it

:39:32. > :39:38.in every other game, that we have to try and win,

:39:39. > :39:41.and we've not done so. What I would say about this one,

:39:42. > :39:44.it's at home, we've got a great chance, we've played quite well

:39:45. > :39:47.in the recent games so we'll take that into the game and hope

:39:48. > :39:50.we get a result from it. Andy Murray is through to

:39:51. > :39:53.the semi-final of the Barcelona Open after a hard-fought victory

:39:54. > :39:56.against Albert Ramos-Vinolas. The Spaniard knocked Murray out

:39:57. > :40:00.of the Monte Carlo Masters last week and took the first set here,

:40:01. > :40:03.but the world number one fought back Meanwhile, Maria Sharapova

:40:04. > :40:09.is through to the semi-final of Stuttgart's WTA tournament

:40:10. > :40:11.as she continues her Sharapova saw off Estonian qualifier

:40:12. > :40:15.Anett Kontaveit for her third straight win after 15 months out

:40:16. > :40:30.of the game. Sebastian Vettel looks determined

:40:31. > :40:36.to increase his lead in the Formula 1 Drivers' Championship

:40:37. > :40:38.after topping the timesheets in Friday's practice ahead of this

:40:39. > :40:43.weekend's Russian Grand Prix. The Ferrari driver was a quarter

:40:44. > :40:46.of a second ahead of his team-mate, Kimi Raikkonen, and more than half

:40:47. > :40:49.a second ahead of the Mercedes of Valtteri Bottas and championship

:40:50. > :40:51.rival Lewis Hamilton. Final practice gets underway at 10am

:40:52. > :40:58.with qualifying from 1pm. The first stage of the Tour de

:40:59. > :41:02.Yorkshire was marred by a big crash within sight of the finish

:41:03. > :41:05.line in Scarborough. Danish rider Magnus Cort Nielsen

:41:06. > :41:10.fell with less than 200 yards to go. The crash brought down

:41:11. > :41:14.several other riders, including Briton Tao Geoghgan Hart,

:41:15. > :41:17.who's in his first season as Dutchman Dylan Groenewegen won

:41:18. > :41:24.the stage and all those caught up in the crash will be given

:41:25. > :41:27.the same time. Team Sky's Elia Viviani has won

:41:28. > :41:30.stage three of the Tour de The Italian was guided to the sprint

:41:31. > :41:34.finish by team leader Chris Froome. The Briton remains 29 seconds

:41:35. > :41:38.off the overall lead. In rugby union's Premiership,

:41:39. > :41:41.Harlequins beat top of the table Wasps, even though their captain,

:41:42. > :41:44.England scrum-half Danny Care, went off early with

:41:45. > :41:47.a stomach muscle injury. Nick Evans, who's due to retire

:41:48. > :41:50.at the end of the season, kicked 22 points in his last

:41:51. > :41:55.home game as Quins won 32-13. Newcastle beat Worcester 16-14

:41:56. > :42:04.in last night's other match. In the Pro12, a last-minute try

:42:05. > :42:06.from captain Grant Gilchrist gave Edinburgh a 24-20 win over

:42:07. > :42:08.Newport Gwent Dragons. There were also wins

:42:09. > :42:10.for Cardiff and Leinster. Edinburgh a 24-20 win over

:42:11. > :42:12.Newport Gwent Dragons. There were also wins

:42:13. > :42:14.for Cardiff and Leinster. Hull FC have gone top of rugby

:42:15. > :42:16.league's Super League after a convincing victory over

:42:17. > :42:19.Warrington Wolves. Twenty unanswered second-half

:42:20. > :42:24.points, including this try from Jamie Shaul,

:42:25. > :42:26.helped them to a 34-10 win. You just can't separate

:42:27. > :42:32.them in the semi-finals, After two sessions it's neck

:42:33. > :42:36.and neck between defending champion Mark Selby and Ding Junhui,

:42:37. > :42:39.the man he beat Ding came back from 10-7 down,

:42:40. > :42:47.clearing up with a break of 135 in the last frame,

:42:48. > :42:50.to draw level at 12-12. In the other semi-final,

:42:51. > :43:00.John Higgins is 10-6 up against Barry Hawkins after winning

:43:01. > :43:02.a marathon final frame in yesterday They start again at ten

:43:03. > :43:17.o'clock this morning. And you can follow that on the BBC,

:43:18. > :43:21.on TV and the website. The match between Ding Junhui and Selby was

:43:22. > :43:24.incredible, both coming back, I wouldn't like to call it. It might

:43:25. > :43:30.be like the boxing match tonight! You're watching

:43:31. > :43:35.Breakfast from BBC News. The number of victims of breast

:43:36. > :43:40.surgeon Ian Paterson could run into hundreds -

:43:41. > :43:42.or even thousands - He was convicted yesterday

:43:43. > :43:47.of carrying out needless operations. North Korea has launched

:43:48. > :43:49.another ballistic missile, hours after Washington called

:43:50. > :43:51.for a tougher international approach For the last time, Sarah has the

:43:52. > :44:15.bank holiday weather. It is looking good for many of us,

:44:16. > :44:20.this picture was taken in Newquay. And many parts of the country will

:44:21. > :44:23.have similar scenes to this through the day with some cloud suddenly but

:44:24. > :44:30.most places looking dried. Through the weekend it is feeling warmer

:44:31. > :44:35.than for the past week but breezy conditions and a chance of rain at

:44:36. > :44:37.times on Sunday and Monday but not for all of us. High-pressure holding

:44:38. > :44:43.onto the weather today with this front in the Atlantic heading our

:44:44. > :44:48.way over Sunday but for much of the country dry with sunny spells, a few

:44:49. > :44:51.isolated showers in Wales, north-west England, southern

:44:52. > :44:56.Scotland, but either side of that band of cloudy conditions some

:44:57. > :45:01.decent sunshine. This afternoon, dry and bright in the southern England

:45:02. > :45:04.with sunny spells in Wales and perhaps an isolated shower or two

:45:05. > :45:10.and temperatures around 16 or 17 degrees. Heading northwards, a

:45:11. > :45:16.similar picture, breezy in Northern Ireland later and temperatures

:45:17. > :45:21.around 12 or 13 with the chance of an isolated shower in central

:45:22. > :45:24.Scotland. Into this evening and overnight, it stays dry and clear

:45:25. > :45:29.and decent evening in store, the wind will pick and the cloud

:45:30. > :45:32.increases from the West but a frost free start to Sunday with

:45:33. > :45:37.temperatures around nine or ten first thing. The rain comes into the

:45:38. > :45:42.south-west and on Sunday it will turn pretty wet and windy across

:45:43. > :45:48.south-west England and Wales. It will creep north-eastwards across

:45:49. > :45:51.the country, perhaps reaching Northern Ireland and the London

:45:52. > :45:55.region by mid-afternoon but further north and east it will remain dry

:45:56. > :46:00.and reasonably warm away from the east coast but pretty windy on

:46:01. > :46:03.Sunday. And the low pressure pushes eastwards, petering out a bit

:46:04. > :46:09.heading into a bank holiday Monday but we still have some showers

:46:10. > :46:13.around that area of low pressure. A day of sunshine and showers across

:46:14. > :46:16.the southern half of the country, brighter and drier further north and

:46:17. > :46:20.the temperatures are not too bad, about the mid-teens.

:46:21. > :46:29.Thank you, that does not sound bad at all. If it is raining you might

:46:30. > :46:31.fancy a trip to the museum. We are about to discover what is the Museum

:46:32. > :46:34.of the Year. Centres of sculpture,

:46:35. > :46:35.geology, modern art, and the home of two of the Queen's

:46:36. > :46:38.former racehorses are all in the running for this year's

:46:39. > :46:41.Art Fund Museum of the Year award. So what will clinch the deal

:46:42. > :46:44.and push one of these over Our Arts Correspondent,

:46:45. > :46:48.Colin Paterson, is at the Sir John Soane's Museum

:46:49. > :46:58.for us this morning. That looks fairly traditional. This

:46:59. > :47:04.is traditional, we have moved into the picture room and they have spent

:47:05. > :47:12.?7 million making it look exactly as it did when Sir John died in 1837.

:47:13. > :47:21.This is all about tradition. There is a lot the paintings, how many?

:47:22. > :47:28.Over 110. And how were they stored? He called them movable planes. This

:47:29. > :47:32.is the trick, it is pulled back and there are more on the other side! We

:47:33. > :47:38.will show you the big deal in a minute as to what is behind that

:47:39. > :47:39.panel but I had also been looking at the other nominees starting in

:47:40. > :47:41.Yorkshire. When the Hepworth Wakefield

:47:42. > :47:43.was designed, the idea was that the outside of outside

:47:44. > :47:47.the building would be a work of art itself, every bit as much

:47:48. > :47:50.as the exhibits inside. Now the gallery has received some

:47:51. > :47:57.serious recognition. It is one of the five nominees

:47:58. > :47:59.competing for the title Specialising in the sculpture,

:48:00. > :48:09.it has been rewarded for a year which has seen a 20% rise

:48:10. > :48:11.in visitors, many I think actually children

:48:12. > :48:17.are the most open-minded people of all to work with and they end up

:48:18. > :48:20.inspiring their families and adults And they have certainly

:48:21. > :48:27.been taking it all in. I've seen some very

:48:28. > :48:35.pretty sculptures. They're made of glass and wood,

:48:36. > :48:39.material and metal. I have never seen paintings

:48:40. > :48:43.hanging on doors before. Another reason the Hepworth has been

:48:44. > :48:46.nominated is that its year was enhanced by one

:48:47. > :48:49.very special donation. An old Chinese dog, I suppose,

:48:50. > :48:52.from about 2000 BC. Watch out, Gavin, don't knock it

:48:53. > :49:02.off with the camera! An art collection which covers every

:49:03. > :49:07.inch of a North London house. Tim Sayer has been collecting art

:49:08. > :49:20.for more than five decades. A visit to the Hepworth prompted him

:49:21. > :49:22.to donate his entire And now the Hepworth Wakefield

:49:23. > :49:29.is nominated for Art Fund Museum of the Year and your donation

:49:30. > :49:32.was in their submission. I had no idea we were

:49:33. > :49:41.going to be singled out When it comes to Museum of the Year,

:49:42. > :49:49.there are some other very strong runners and riders including

:49:50. > :49:52.the National Heritage Centre for Horseracing in Newmarket opened

:49:53. > :49:54.in November by the Queen. One of its star exhibits,

:49:55. > :49:57.a racing simulator. It is not believed that

:49:58. > :49:59.Her Majesty had a go. The Tate Modern is nominated

:50:00. > :50:01.for a year which saw the opening of a new building,

:50:02. > :50:05.the Switch House, And also up for the prize

:50:06. > :50:14.is the Lapworth Museum of Geology in Birmingham,

:50:15. > :50:16.home to a quarter On July the 5th, only one

:50:17. > :50:23.of the museums will be given a new precious item,

:50:24. > :50:39.the title of Museum of the Year. The Duchess of Cambridge presenting

:50:40. > :50:45.the award lasted to the Victoria and Albert Museum. We are ready for the

:50:46. > :50:52.big reveal here, this is how the paintings are displayed here and

:50:53. > :50:57.look at this! We can see a nymph and below him, the Bank of England

:50:58. > :51:01.model, one of Sir John's most famous designs. Helen is from the museum

:51:02. > :51:17.and you have a remarkable title bestowed upon you. It is the

:51:18. > :51:21.inspector. You often try to jazz up museums but this is doing the

:51:22. > :51:27.opposite. Absolutely, it is authentic through and through and it

:51:28. > :51:31.speaks for itself. Sir John's vision is strong enough without labels. He

:51:32. > :51:37.died in 1830s and left it to the nation and we heard about Tim Sayer,

:51:38. > :51:41.a modern-day example of leaving a collection. How common is it for

:51:42. > :51:47.somebody to do that? Not very common at all but Sir John did it because

:51:48. > :51:51.he wanted his collection to inspire future generations of architects and

:51:52. > :51:54.painters and sculptors and he left it for amateurs and student so for

:51:55. > :51:59.everybody, for free. We have been talking a lot about the boxing.

:52:00. > :52:05.Museum of the Year, you're taking on heavyweight, the Tate modern. How

:52:06. > :52:11.can someone like Sir John Soane's Museum take on the Tate modern? We

:52:12. > :52:14.are going to be true to ourselves, we think the vision is strong enough

:52:15. > :52:19.and we have achieved so much and for a tiny place it is amazing, the

:52:20. > :52:24.whole collection is available online, there is an interactive way

:52:25. > :52:29.to experience the museum. 150 volunteers being trained him and

:52:30. > :52:33.masses of lost interior is restored. And ?100,000 prize, that could be

:52:34. > :52:38.yours. We will leave you and have a quick look into the recess. It all

:52:39. > :52:46.opened at 10am if you want to come down. Come and have a look yourself.

:52:47. > :52:52.We want to stay with you for longer and see what we discover! It is

:52:53. > :52:56.fantastic, thank you. It is beautiful.

:52:57. > :52:59.An American dating show might not be the most likely place to bring

:53:00. > :53:01.a Celtic rock band back together again, but that's

:53:02. > :53:04.exactly what happened to The Cranberries two years ago.

:53:05. > :53:07.Now they are back with a new album and a stripped back sound.

:53:08. > :53:09.Something Else combines a re-versioning of some

:53:10. > :53:12.of their best known hits alongside several brand new tracks.

:53:13. > :53:13.Lead singer Dolores O'Riordan and guitarist Noel Hogan

:53:14. > :53:25.are here but before we talk to them let's take a listen to their album.

:53:26. > :53:31.# What's in your head, in your head

:53:32. > :54:01.# And through my dreams # It is never quite as it seems

:54:02. > :54:11.# Your own dream to me, dream to me # You know I'm such a fool for you

:54:12. > :54:13.# You've got me wrapped around your finger

:54:14. > :54:25.# Do you have to let it Linger # Do you have to, do you have to let

:54:26. > :54:26.it Linger # I thought the world of you #.

:54:27. > :54:35.. Our lovely to see you here. Thank

:54:36. > :54:41.you for having us. We started by saying an American dating show. The

:54:42. > :54:45.bachelorette! They asked if we would do a performance of Linger in their

:54:46. > :54:49.grand finale and we said we would and we recorded it with a quartet

:54:50. > :54:52.and it sounded so nice we decided to do an album with the quartet. And

:54:53. > :55:01.you had not done any work together in the meantime? Nothing? No, the

:55:02. > :55:04.last thing we did was in 2012. We had taken a five-year hiatus at that

:55:05. > :55:11.stage. We were meant to go back on the road. Where you still in touch

:55:12. > :55:15.in that time? Not really. We don't really hang out with each other

:55:16. > :55:21.because we sick of looking at each other! Is it a bit like a marriage!

:55:22. > :55:30.You are back together and did it just all click into place in that

:55:31. > :55:35.performance? We clicked back into it very quickly, it is like second

:55:36. > :55:44.nature because we were so young when we began. You were 17. Just turning

:55:45. > :55:53.18 at the time. We came from school straight into it. It was really the

:55:54. > :55:58.only proper full job we have had. Before the five year break we had

:55:59. > :56:02.taken a seven-year break. We found it was quite easy to go away from

:56:03. > :56:06.it. You know it's not the end and you can come back to it and that is

:56:07. > :56:11.what we do. After an hour of being in a room together, it fits back

:56:12. > :56:15.together. It is always there? Always is and it has been there for ever.

:56:16. > :56:19.Things come and go in life but the band has always been there since we

:56:20. > :56:24.were young, something solid we can always go back to. And how rewarding

:56:25. > :56:31.was it to go back to the music that we all recognise, those incredible

:56:32. > :56:36.hits you had? Reworking them, you said you preferred the new versions?

:56:37. > :56:42.It was kind of like a rebirth of something it gave them a new life.

:56:43. > :56:45.They were nice, the original recordings, but they are more

:56:46. > :56:50.stripped back and raw and it shows a good song is a good song if you can

:56:51. > :56:54.do it acoustically. This was 1993, let's have a Linger.

:56:55. > :57:22.# Do you have to let it Linger # I thought the world of you #.

:57:23. > :57:29.I was going through my tea cosy period! My mother took it back and

:57:30. > :57:35.put it on the teapot! You talk about getting back together and it feeling

:57:36. > :57:38.right but dipping in and out of The Cranberries but are you back

:57:39. > :57:43.together for good now or will there be more gaps? We hope not to have

:57:44. > :57:48.too many gaps because we are getting older! It has been such a long time

:57:49. > :57:53.since we did anything. The only thing is health permitting we would

:57:54. > :57:57.like to talk a lot in the next 12 months and bring out a new album of

:57:58. > :58:02.new material for our fans. We want to get down to writing and we tend

:58:03. > :58:12.to write a lot more on the road as null as more time because he had

:58:13. > :58:16.little kids -- Noel. When we focus on this, we really focus on it and

:58:17. > :58:21.we put everything into it. And the schedule starts to get busy. We have

:58:22. > :58:26.always found it easier to write when we are away because we had the

:58:27. > :58:30.success so early, we were never at home after the first album, we will

:58:31. > :58:35.always gone. It is a natural way to do it for us. The impact your

:58:36. > :58:39.health? You said you had to watch your health, was it tough

:58:40. > :58:43.physically? I have had health issues a lot in the last few years but one

:58:44. > :58:47.of the worst things was I had a disc problem in my back and I stopped

:58:48. > :58:52.playing guitar and I was so depressed about that. But my guitar

:58:53. > :58:56.was really heavy, and I have been wearing them and jumping around with

:58:57. > :59:01.it hanging off your neck and then posture problems and the spine and I

:59:02. > :59:02.had to stop playing. It is great to have you back, thank you for coming

:59:03. > :59:03.in. The Cranberries new album

:59:04. > :59:07.is called Something Else. Ben and I will be back

:59:08. > :59:10.tomorrow morning at 6am.