16/06/2017 Breakfast


16/06/2017

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Hello, this is Breakfast, with Charlie Stayt and Naga

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Anger over the London tower block fire. The only thing keeping me

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going at the moment is anger and adrenaline and I will keep going on

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anger and adrenaline for as long as I can, because frankly I would not

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like to sit down and contemplate. Pictures emerge of the

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inside of the building. 17 are known to have died,

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more than 60 people are being named As the search of the burned

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out tower continues, police launch a criminal

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inquiry into the fire. A second soldier dies

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following an incident involving a tank at an army firing

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range in Pembrokeshire. Good morning. A big boost for small

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business. HSBC promises ?10 billion in funding for small firms, but what

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difference will it really make? I will speak to the boss later.

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In sport, England's Paul Casey is the pick of the European

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A first round of six under par sees him just a shot off the leader

:01:24.:01:31.

Rickie Fowler at golf's second major of the year.

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Police are warning they may never be able to identify some of those

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who died in the fire at Grenfell Tower in West London

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17 bodies have been found so far, but the number of fatalities

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The first victim of the fire to be officially named is Mohammed

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Alhajali, Assyrian refugee who came to Britain for a better life. His

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brother was led to safety by firefighters but in the chaos and

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confusion Bahama got left behind. I called and said, where are you? He

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said he was on flat. I said, why didn't you come? He said no one got

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me outside. I thought they took him outside with me! They didn't. Some

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of those trapped in the blaze did survive. We now know this man is a

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partially blind grandfather in his 70s. His family say he is in

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intensive care suffering from serious smoke inhalation. They have

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thanked the bravery of the firefighters who risked their lives

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to get him out. He was finally rescued 11 hours after the blaze

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started. There is anger in the community, directed at almost anyone

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in the community. Sadiq Khan saw it for himself when he went to visit.

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How many children died and what are you going to do about it? Police say

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they have now started criminal investigation. That's not to say

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there was a crime committed, but they will investigate to establish

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whether there was one. Police voiced the hope that the final number of

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casualties will be below 100. They admit that some victims may never be

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identified. Meanwhile, tens of thousands of people in tower blocks

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around the country are wondering if their homes are safe. These three

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tower blocks in Luton are due to be refurbished with new cladding. The

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local council is now doublechecking to make sure it will be safe. One

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resident said there had been plenty of fires before but they were never

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a big problem. Just contained in one flat because it is all concrete. As

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soon as you put cladding on the outside you have a fire source that

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will engulf the whole lot. The leader of the local council said

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they thought about installing a sprinkle a system in the tower when

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it was renovated last year, but he said there was no collective view

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among residents in favour of it. Our correspondent has been following

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this throughout the morning. You saw when the tower was engulfed in

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flames to where it is now. What's the latest? The latest is that the

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death toll has gone up to 17. As you say, that's the official death toll.

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We know there were six bodies found around the base of the building and

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there's another 11 bodies still in the tower block that haven't been

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recovered. On top of that we have the list of the dead. Probably

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something more than 60. Some of the national newspapers say it's a

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figure of more than 60. The BBC understands from talking to

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relatives and people searching for news about people on Facebook, we've

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got a list of something like 60 names. There might be other people

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on named on top of that. You can understand the reluctance of the

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emergency services, the police and fire, to give precise numbers, but

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certainly they have warned that the death toll is likely to rise

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significantly. It's just a terribly difficult task to locate and remove

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bodies from that tower block behind me, like a giant black tombstone. We

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heard yesterday that some parts of the building are too dangerous to

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reach. Firefighters can get up the central concrete core but when they

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get to the top floor is the structure is not safe so they can't

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go in and they might be able to use drones to examine the outside of the

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building, there might be able to use specially trained dogs to go in, but

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at the moment the building is too dangerous for those firefighters to

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go in. They said it would be a long and complex operation to locate and

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remove the bodies. As we heard, police say there may be victims that

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will never be identified. Thanks very much. We will be speaking to a

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forensic fire investigator later in the programme, discussing some of

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those points. Political parties are coming under

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increasing pressure to explain why more steps weren't taken to prevent

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the Grenfell Tower block disaster. It comes as the Prime Minister has

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called for a judge-led Our political correspondent

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Chris Mason joins us Alongside some of these practical

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questions which are merging, there is a growing sense of anger amongst

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that community. I wonder, how is that being reflected by political

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leaders? Good morning. There's a real sense at Westminster of that

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sense of anger and how it has to be dealt with. And answers have to be

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provided. The Prime Minister in announcing that public enquiry

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yesterday are hoping that comes with a vehicle for finding those answers,

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which she will be aware and the residents will be very soon as well

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that that is unlikely to provide the immediate and quick answers, the

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very nature of public enquiries is that they take time. I think there

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will be calls for some sort of interim report as soon as possible

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to try to adjust some of those concerns as quickly as can be

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achieved. Yesterday we saw political leaders heading down to the scene.

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We saw Jeremy Corbyn meeting friends and relatives, we saw him hugging

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one woman who was looking for someone who was missing. The Prime

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Minister went as well, although it was a pretty quick visit, described

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as a private visit. She met emergency services and some

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charities but none of the local people. There has been some

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criticism of her for that. My understanding is the calculation was

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made that it was a difficult situation for the Prime Minister.

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They were concerned about getting her away and the security detail she

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would have with her if she was roaming in amongst the crowd. As I

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say, there has been some criticism. Anyone in a position of authority,

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perhaps entirely understandably now, is facing the Rafah, the anger, of

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local people. -- the wrath. Sadiq Khan was facing that last night.

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Government has announced a scheme to make sure lots of extra funding goes

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in the direction of the local council. But they are very

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conscience that a new and fragile government here is having to deal

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with the tragedy, with the right financial at logistical, practical

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and emotional response. Thanks for the moment.

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British security officials say they believe hackers in North Korea

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were behind the cyber attack that crippled parts

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The attack led to delays in operations and treatment

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The hackers are thought to have been attempting to make money,

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but did not predict the extent to which the computer

:09:01.:09:03.

The group believed to be behind the attack is Lazarus,

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the same group thought to have targeted Sony Pictures in 2014.

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A second soldier has died after being wounded in an incident

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involving a tank at an army firing range in Pembrokeshire.

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Two other soldiers were injured at Castlemartin Ranges

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The flags are half mast at Pembrokeshire after the tragic

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events of Wednesday afternoon, which resulted in the deaths of two

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servicemen. It is still unclear exactly what happened, but the BBC

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understands that four members from the Royal Tank Regiment were gravely

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injured in an incident involving the ammunition and other challenger to

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Tank. Three soldiers were taken to hospital in south Wales, with one

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being taken directly to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham,

:09:53.:09:56.

which has a dedicated wing for treating injured service personnel.

:09:57.:10:00.

Yesterday afternoon, the Ministry of Defence announced that one soldier

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had died in hospital and late last night the minister of defence,

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people and their trend confirmed the death of a second emperor of the

:10:10.:10:17.

team. The open range is 1-off the lead two ranges in the UK where

:10:18.:10:21.

armed units can carry out direct fire training. The MoD, police and

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the Health and Safety Executive are investigating and a temporary ban on

:10:30.:10:32.

tanklike firing has been put in place.

:10:33.:10:36.

There were more than 100 attempted, failed all successful terrorist

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attacks in the UK last year, -- EU last year, more than half of which

:10:44.:10:46.

were in the UK. A report published by Europol says the majority of

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attacks in the UK involved Irish republicans.

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The Archbishop of Canterbury will speak at a service of hope

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at Southwark Cathedral today in honour of first-responders,

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families and survivors of the London bridge attack.

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Eight people were killed when three attackers drove a van

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into pedestrians on London Bridge and then launched a knife attack

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at Borough Market just under two weeks ago.

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A new poll has revealed a widespread lack of knowledge

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about where significant moments in England's history took place.

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A campaign has been launched to raise awareness of the sites

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Geneva, Switzerland. Home to the most common answer when people in

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England ask, where was the atom first split? But it was here in

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Manchester that the scientific breakthrough was made in 1917. This

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new research suggests that only one in ten people know that and it is

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far from the only common mistake about England's most impressive

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achievements and inventions. When it comes to wear the first trainers

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were made, three times more people think it was in the USA than know

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the truth. It was in Bolton, Lancashire. JW Foster and sons

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created them in the 1890s and later became Reebok. And the majority of

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people believe that bungee jumping originated in Australia or New

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Zealand, when in fact it all started in Bristol with elite from the

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Clifton Suspension Bridge back in 1979. Historic England hopes the new

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campaign will fill the gaps in people's knowledge and more people

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will be aware of the country's greatest achievements, like the fact

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that pencil was invented in Cumbria. There was a lot in that I didn't

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know. I know.

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It's ridiculous! The Gulf this weekends, they build

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up to so excitement -- golf. A fascinating contest because of the

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way the top six in the world really struggled on this monster of a

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course. The rough?

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Yes. One of the oldest trophies in golf, it's just the USA trophy. The

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lady on the top represents victory. Paul Casey might fancy his chances

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of lifting that on Sunday. Casey says he's ecstatic

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with the way he's playing so far at the US Open, and is breathing

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down the neck of the first round leader, American Rickie

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Fowler, who's seven under par. While none of the world's top

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six were able to cope on the longest course in US

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Open history, Casey says he loves it here and is just

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one shot off the lead Everton have made Jordan Pickford

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the most expensive British He's joined the club on a deal that

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could be worth ?30 million, despite not even making his

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international debut yet. A dominant nine wicket win over

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Bangladesh has put India into the final of the ICC

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Champions Trophy. The defending champions will play

:13:55.:13:57.

England's conquerors Pakistan And top seed Johanna Konta's

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impressive start to the grass court season continued with a straight

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forward win in the second She beat Yanina Wickmayer

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in straight sets. That's it for now but I've got a

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couple of papers for you in a few seconds.

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We will take you through some of the front pages first. There's obviously

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only one story dominating this morning. The front page of the

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Guardian. How a fire anger growing amid claims the building was unsafe.

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Reports coming from elsewhere in the world, the US, Germany, about the

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specifics of the cladding used at Grenfell Tower. This particular

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material has been banned in other countries. We will pick up on some

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of those issues with fire and safety experts late in the programme.

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One word that is also very clear, especially when speaking to

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residents, anger. We've got reports of the Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan,

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being confronted by locals and he acknowledged their anger when he

:15:02.:15:05.

visited the scene. Anger about safety, anger about what happens

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next. The Daily Mail. Three key questions.

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Why were the families told to stay in their flats? That was the advice

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and guidance given to them. And how many more tinderbox houses are

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there? Various accusations at various parties as to who is to

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blame for the lack of safety measures. This headline is simply

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"Criminal." It says profit matters more than safety for the government.

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It says there could be more than 100 dead. But the official death toll,

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we have to say, is 17. We have been talking to people and looking at the

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lists of the missing. There is no confirmed number other than 17, but

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it is expected to rise. Sport for something else. That is where we are

:16:16.:16:21.

today. There is no escaping that. Often, newspapers are desperately

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filled without. -- win sport brings people together. The other

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contenders. I love how sportsmen motivate themselves. Tommy Fleetwood

:16:39.:16:47.

from Southport, he meditates ten minutes a day. I have played with

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him. He is very calm. There is no anger on the golf course. He is two

:16:58.:17:04.

off the lead. And Fowler puts religious messages on his golf

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balls. They inspire him as he goes along. Farrell is a doubt for the

:17:11.:17:16.

first test next weekend for the Lions. He is not even on the bench.

:17:17.:17:24.

He is trying to prove he can be fit for the first test. He is so

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crucial. There is still time to get better. Thank you. And now for the

:17:29.:17:35.

weather. What is happening? It has been warm again. Will it last?

:17:36.:17:41.

Absolutely. It will get hotter towards the weekend. Temperatures on

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the rise. This morning, a fresh start than it has been. Not as hot

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and muggy as recently. This is the view this morning in Sussex. As we

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go through the day, another warm day to come to be spells of sunshine. It

:17:59.:18:02.

will be dry for most of us. Not everywhere. Cloud in the north-west.

:18:03.:18:08.

That will bring patchy rain for Northern Ireland and parts of

:18:09.:18:12.

northern England. Later on, it will be in Scotland. Elsewhere, dry

:18:13.:18:15.

weather into the afternoon. Spells of sunshine breaking through the

:18:16.:18:20.

cloud. The afternoon. Four o'clock. Rain in the west of Scotland. In the

:18:21.:18:26.

east of Scotland, more warm and bright. Northern Ireland,

:18:27.:18:29.

brightening up in the afternoon. 21 degrees. Sunshine to the east of the

:18:30.:18:36.

Pennines. Drizzle lingering in the likes of Cumbria. South in England

:18:37.:18:41.

and Wales, sunny spells. Not wall-to-wall sunshine. A decent day.

:18:42.:18:45.

Temperatures in the mid-20s. High levels of UV at the moment,

:18:46.:18:51.

especially in the south-west of England and southern England today.

:18:52.:18:55.

If you suffer from hay fever, very high pollen levels at the moment,

:18:56.:19:00.

especially in England and Wales. Three this evening, losing most of

:19:01.:19:04.

the wet weather from the west of Scotland. Most places looking dry

:19:05.:19:11.

with light winds. Warm air from the south once again. A muggy and sticky

:19:12.:19:17.

night. Temperatures between 13 and 17. The weekend. Drawing in warm air

:19:18.:19:24.

from further south. 44 degrees across parts of southern Spain. That

:19:25.:19:30.

will go north, leaving temperatures in the UK reaching 30 degrees, even

:19:31.:19:35.

more possibly. Saturday, high pressure staying in charge. Fronts

:19:36.:19:42.

sitting at the far north-west. Saturday, breezy and damp conditions

:19:43.:19:46.

in the north-west of Scotland. Elsewhere, eastern Scotland, eastern

:19:47.:19:51.

parts of Northern Ireland, sunshine developing. Further south in England

:19:52.:19:55.

and Wales, plenty of sunshine. Temperatures, 27- 28 during

:19:56.:19:59.

Saturday. Fair weather cloud building in the afternoon. Sunday.

:20:00.:20:06.

Even warmer. Likely to see fairly widely those temperatures in the

:20:07.:20:10.

mid- height 20s. 30 degrees in several spots. Call in the far

:20:11.:20:15.

north-west without breaks of rain. It looks like the heat holds on into

:20:16.:20:21.

the new working week. 30 degrees for Monday, perhaps cooler into Tuesday.

:20:22.:20:30.

And now it is back to you. Thank you.

:20:31.:20:33.

The tragedies and disasters of the last few months have really

:20:34.:20:36.

highlighted the skill and dedication of our doctors,

:20:37.:20:39.

And a BBC Two documentary crew got to see at first hand how teams dealt

:20:40.:20:44.

Cameras had unprecedented, behind-the-scenes, access

:20:45.:20:46.

to the victims and medical staff at St Mary's Hospital in London.

:20:47.:20:50.

Our health correspondent, Sophie Hutchinson, reports.

:20:51.:20:51.

Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. We are here to review

:20:52.:21:04.

vacancies and retention. OK. How many vacancies have the moment is

:21:05.:21:11.

blue 699. A routine meeting at St Mary is in London. It was the day of

:21:12.:21:19.

the Westminster attack. It would be nice to see... The assessment

:21:20.:21:33.

unit... We are on standby for a major incident at Westminster

:21:34.:21:39.

Bridge. We are on standby for a major incident at Westminster

:21:40.:21:43.

Bridge? Do you have any details? 50 so far. This is believed to be the

:21:44.:21:48.

first time cameras have captured emergency contingency plans of

:21:49.:21:57.

emergency is unfolding in a hospital. We will wait for further

:21:58.:22:02.

information. Just a few miles away, this was the scene, a policeman

:22:03.:22:07.

stabbed to death outside Parliament. Pedestrians were mowed down by a car

:22:08.:22:13.

on Westminster Bridge. A number of the injured were French

:22:14.:22:22.

schoolchildren. Wright St Mary's was one of the major hospitals receiving

:22:23.:22:28.

the injured and six people who died, including the attacker, Kelly

:22:29.:22:39.

Massoud -- Khalid Massoud. The first to arrive was a French schoolboy. He

:22:40.:22:47.

is 16 years old. He was hit by a moving vehicle head-on. What is this

:22:48.:22:53.

one? His school friend arrives in Accident and Emergency. He has a

:22:54.:23:04.

massive head wound. This 18-year-old has lost a dangerous amount of blood

:23:05.:23:15.

from his severe scalp wound. He is taken for immediate life-saving

:23:16.:23:19.

surgery. As the police investigation got under way, and arrests were

:23:20.:23:24.

made, the injured continued to recover in hospital. Eventually, the

:23:25.:23:31.

two French teenagers, best friends, were reunited.

:23:32.:23:56.

Painful memories for so many of the victims caught up in the horror of

:23:57.:24:06.

the attack. Sophie Hutchinson, BBC News.

:24:07.:24:11.

That is absolutely remarkable footage caught at such a dramatic

:24:12.:24:18.

time that we will all remember. So many tributes coming into the

:24:19.:24:21.

emergency services after the events of the past two months. We will be

:24:22.:24:27.

speaking to a firefighter later on in connection to the most recent

:24:28.:24:34.

incident in West London. That is coming up later. Wimbledon is just

:24:35.:24:40.

around the corner. If that is not enough to get you picking up a

:24:41.:24:45.

tennis racquet, Holly Hamilton might be able to give you another one. It

:24:46.:24:49.

is all about fitness good morning. That is right. We obviously know

:24:50.:24:55.

that playing any type of sport, tennis, hockey, rugby, it will keep

:24:56.:25:00.

you fit. This is now the largest study of its kind looking

:25:01.:25:04.

specifically at the benefits of tennis. I am out of breath. I can

:25:05.:25:13.

tell you it definitely keeps you fit. We are looking at long-term

:25:14.:25:18.

health. Does it help keep away diabetes, heart disease, lower

:25:19.:25:22.

cholesterol? Scientists say yes, it does. There have been interesting

:25:23.:25:31.

results. We will have some testimony later on. I will look a little bit

:25:32.:25:34.

at my serve. I will be back soon. Back to the

:25:35.:28:55.

Breakfast sofa. Hello, this is Breakfast,

:28:56.:29:05.

with Charlie Stayt and Naga More than 60 people who are believed

:29:06.:29:08.

to be dead or missing or are unnaccounted

:29:09.:29:16.

for following the fire at Grenfell Tower are being named

:29:17.:29:19.

in the media. Police have warned they may

:29:20.:29:21.

never be able to identify There's growing anger amongst people

:29:22.:29:26.

in the area over whether the blaze Andy Moore is at the scene

:29:27.:29:34.

for us this morning. What's the latest on

:29:35.:29:38.

the investigation Andy? The official death toll stands at

:29:39.:29:46.

17. Police have said it will rise significantly. The operation to

:29:47.:29:48.

recover, remove and identify the bodies will continue today. Very

:29:49.:29:54.

difficult operation, especially on the top floors of the building. We

:29:55.:29:58.

heard yesterday that they weren't safe enough for fire investigators

:29:59.:30:03.

and police investigators to go out, they will have to be shored up. The

:30:04.:30:10.

total number of fatalities, while the BBC understands it could be

:30:11.:30:17.

somewhere higher than 60. A lot of families are actively searching for

:30:18.:30:23.

family members. They are using social media to find out information

:30:24.:30:26.

about them. Families just want certainty. Police and the fire

:30:27.:30:32.

service have warned that this could be a very long and complex operation

:30:33.:30:37.

and have also warned that at the end of the day some victims may never be

:30:38.:30:41.

identified. Thank you for the moment.

:30:42.:30:41.

The Prime Minister is facing criticism for not meeting residents

:30:42.:30:44.

when she visited the scene of the Grenfell Tower fire yesterday.

:30:45.:30:47.

Labour Mayor of London Sadiq Khan was heckled by some angry residents

:30:48.:30:50.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn spoke to local campaigners who demanded

:30:51.:30:54.

answers about how the fire was able to spread so quickly.

:30:55.:31:01.

Later in the programme we'll be speaking to

:31:02.:31:03.

the Communities Secretary Sajid Javid.

:31:04.:31:05.

British security officials say they believe that hackers

:31:06.:31:08.

in North Korea were behind the cyber attack that crippled parts

:31:09.:31:11.

The hackers are thought to have been attempting to make money,

:31:12.:31:23.

but did not predict the extent to which the computer

:31:24.:31:25.

The group believed to be behind the attack is Lazarus,

:31:26.:31:29.

which is also thought to have targeted Sony Pictures in 2014.

:31:30.:31:32.

A second soldier has died after he was injured in an incident

:31:33.:31:35.

involving a tank at an army firing range in Pembrokeshire.

:31:36.:31:38.

He was serving with the Royal Tank Regiment.

:31:39.:31:40.

Two other soldiers were injured at Castlemartin Ranges on Wednesday.

:31:41.:31:49.

Over to the sport. Good morning. The longest course in US Open history,

:31:50.:31:55.

the longest grass in the rough for those players who find themselves in

:31:56.:32:02.

it, so no wonder the top six have been struggling.

:32:03.:32:04.

So some different names at the top. The longest list of complaints as

:32:05.:32:07.

well. Many of the worlds top players have

:32:08.:32:10.

struggled in their opening round. But the English pair of Paul Casey

:32:11.:32:13.

and Tommy Fleetwood sit just behind the leader Rickie Fowler,

:32:14.:32:17.

as Adam Wild reports. They are calling this the longest

:32:18.:32:30.

walk. At the US Open there has never been a longer course and for the

:32:31.:32:34.

world's test the hard yards start here. Leading the way was American

:32:35.:32:38.

Rickie Fowler. His round of seven under par took him into the early

:32:39.:32:44.

lead. Much has been made of the unforgiving link for this cause.

:32:45.:32:47.

Many expect players to struggle. Englishman Tommy Fleetwood didn't.

:32:48.:32:53.

Five under put him ahead of the chasing pack. The world number one

:32:54.:32:58.

and reigning champion Dustin Johnson couldn't keep up. In fact, none of

:32:59.:33:05.

the world's top six, including Rory McIlroy, managed to break par.

:33:06.:33:08.

Instead the challenge was left to the likes of England's Paul Casey.

:33:09.:33:13.

After this eagle at the first he ended the day ahead of Fleetwood,

:33:14.:33:17.

just one stroke off the lead. The longest walk in golf perhaps, but

:33:18.:33:21.

there is still plenty of distance left to travel.

:33:22.:33:24.

Jordan Pickford has officially become the most expensive British

:33:25.:33:26.

goalkeeper in history, after joining Everton for a fee that

:33:27.:33:29.

who were relegated from the Premier League last season.

:33:30.:33:38.

Pickford will play in this summer's Under 21 European Championship

:33:39.:33:42.

for England, but has yet to make his debut

:33:43.:33:44.

It was a big spending day for Everton, who also paid over ?23

:33:45.:33:52.

million for Ajax captain Davy Klaassen.

:33:53.:33:53.

India will play Pakistan in the final of the ICC

:33:54.:33:56.

Champions Trophy following a nine-wicket win over

:33:57.:33:58.

The defending champions managed to restrict Bangladesh to 264

:33:59.:34:06.

It looked a reasonable total, but India's batsmen knocked the runs

:34:07.:34:12.

The final is then a repeat of India and Pakistan's opening match

:34:13.:34:16.

in the tournament - India won that match.

:34:17.:34:19.

Johanna Konta has continued her winning start to her grass court

:34:20.:34:23.

season with victory in the second round of the Nottingham Open.

:34:24.:34:26.

The British Number One lost in the first round at

:34:27.:34:29.

the French Open on clay, but is top seed in Nottingham

:34:30.:34:33.

and has comfortable eased past Belgium's Yanina

:34:34.:34:35.

She'll play Ashleigh Barty in the quarter finals today.

:34:36.:34:41.

I am very happy with the matches I've got into play here so far. Two

:34:42.:34:47.

singles matches and also the doubles match yesterday. The more time I can

:34:48.:34:51.

get on the surface right now the better.

:34:52.:34:54.

For the first time in 19 years Salford Red Devils are into the semi

:34:55.:34:58.

finals of Rugby League's Challenge Cup.

:34:59.:34:59.

They ran in five tries before the hour mark to beat

:35:00.:35:05.

Wakefield Trinity by 30-6 at the AJ Bell Stadium.

:35:06.:35:09.

Craig Kopchack grabbed the fifth, bulldozing his way over the line.

:35:10.:35:12.

Britain's Jake Wightman knocked over a second

:35:13.:35:14.

off his personal best, as he beat a high-quality field

:35:15.:35:16.

in the 1,500 metres at the Oslo Diamond League

:35:17.:35:19.

Wightman tweeted afterwards that he was in utter shock.

:35:20.:35:23.

"I cannot believe I've just won a Diamond League."

:35:24.:35:26.

The 22-year-old Scot follows in the footsteps of Seb Coe,

:35:27.:35:32.

Steve Ovett and Steve Cram, who have all won the race known

:35:33.:35:36.

A fantastic achievement. Very good, thank you very much.

:35:37.:35:50.

A long and complex forensic investigation will have to be

:35:51.:35:53.

carried out before the exact cause of the Grenfell Tower fire is known,

:35:54.:35:56.

but already similarities are being made to a blaze

:35:57.:35:59.

There, six people died and fire safety failings were uncovered

:36:00.:36:04.

Dr Peter Mansi was the lead fire investigator at that time.

:36:05.:36:11.

Thank you very much for joining us. I imagine that you never thought you

:36:12.:36:20.

would be talking about something like this again after that fire.

:36:21.:36:26.

No, and you would like to have thought that lessons would be

:36:27.:36:29.

learned and this wouldn't happen again, certainly in this country.

:36:30.:36:32.

What do you think hasn't been learnt? Well, that's going to be the

:36:33.:36:39.

result of a very extensive and complex fire investigation. Once the

:36:40.:36:47.

area of origin and the cause of the fire is established, it will then be

:36:48.:36:51.

upon the investigators to determine why the fire spread the way it

:36:52.:36:57.

spread and all of the materials that were used to envelop the outside of

:36:58.:37:03.

that tower block will be examined and tested to see why the fire

:37:04.:37:08.

spread the way it did. I want to talk to you about the forensic

:37:09.:37:11.

process in just a moment, because we've been hearing a lot about that

:37:12.:37:16.

and the difficulty in identifying and recovering bodies, but before

:37:17.:37:19.

that can talk about the safety aspect? There was an enquiry after

:37:20.:37:26.

the 2009 fire. There was a report asking for more safety procedures to

:37:27.:37:29.

be put in place, especially for example sprinklers. Sprinklers in

:37:30.:37:35.

newer buildings are regulated, but not all the buildings. Do you think

:37:36.:37:43.

that sounds logical? It is always sensible to learn from these

:37:44.:37:47.

tragedies and try to put in place measures that will stop them or

:37:48.:37:52.

mitigate them from happening again. We will always be having fires and

:37:53.:37:56.

there are often fires in high-rise buildings. They don't progress the

:37:57.:38:02.

way this one has. Certainly not to spread to other compartments. Before

:38:03.:38:05.

the fire brigade get there, which they did in this case in about six

:38:06.:38:13.

minutes. So when there are extensive investigations, such as this one

:38:14.:38:17.

will be, once the findings are out in the public domain, once it is fed

:38:18.:38:23.

back to the right authorities, then, yes, you would like to think they

:38:24.:38:28.

would act upon those recommendations, similar to an air

:38:29.:38:31.

crash investigation, so that they don't happen again. Let's talk about

:38:32.:38:37.

the investigation now. What happens next? As I mentioned we have been

:38:38.:38:41.

told that it could be difficult to identify those who are still in the

:38:42.:38:45.

building and those who have perished in the building and retrieve those

:38:46.:38:50.

bodies? Yes, it will be. It will be very, very difficult and a long and

:38:51.:38:59.

protract the investigation because the priority now is for victim

:39:00.:39:05.

recovery and identification. Each flat, each level of the building,

:39:06.:39:10.

needs to be gone through with a fine tooth comb and the teams that are

:39:11.:39:14.

doing this are the London Fire Brigade and Metropolitan Police and

:39:15.:39:20.

they are highly skilled and will do their utmost to complete that task,

:39:21.:39:24.

but it will take a long time. what happens in terms of trying to

:39:25.:39:29.

determine the cause of the fire, in terms of forensic investigation and

:39:30.:39:32.

how quickly it spread, where it spread to? What do you look for?

:39:33.:39:38.

There are three aspects. To identify the area of origin of the fire,

:39:39.:39:42.

because until you've done that you can't identify the cause. There are

:39:43.:39:46.

lots of potential causes on everybody's homes, but you need to

:39:47.:39:50.

narrow that down to identify the area of origin. Once that's done you

:39:51.:39:53.

need to look at the available sources and fuel packages involved

:39:54.:39:56.

and look for evidence to see what the cause may be by the artefacts

:39:57.:40:05.

and component parts that may be left in the ashes. Those are the two

:40:06.:40:09.

aspects, the origin and the cause of the fire. But that should have been

:40:10.:40:14.

contained within the department for at least 30 minutes, and how's

:40:15.:40:20.

separation between that apartment and the adjacent flat as well. But

:40:21.:40:26.

the most difficult part will be to see how this then developed and

:40:27.:40:29.

spread the way it did. Certainly the timescale that we saw on a lot of

:40:30.:40:38.

the video footage. Thank you very much for joining us and talking to

:40:39.:40:43.

us this morning. Just to let you know, we will be

:40:44.:40:50.

speaking to the Secretary of State for. That's coming up. They find out

:40:51.:40:52.

what's happening with the weather. A bit of a fresh start today than it

:40:53.:41:03.

has been in recent days. Not as hot and muggy. This was taken this

:41:04.:41:08.

morning in east Sussex. As we had through the day it will be another

:41:09.:41:12.

warm day, with spells of sunshine. There will be a bit of cloud,

:41:13.:41:16.

especially in northern and western parts of the country. That cloud is

:41:17.:41:21.

bringing some rain in the Northern Ireland, in the western Scotland and

:41:22.:41:25.

perhaps a few spots into the north-west of England. Elsewhere it

:41:26.:41:29.

is looking dry and as the cloud breaks and sunshine breaks through

:41:30.:41:32.

it will be another warm afternoon. This afternoon, at 4pm there will be

:41:33.:41:36.

rain in the western half. Eastern Scotland should brighten up as well.

:41:37.:41:40.

The Northern Ireland, and improving picture. It will be dry this

:41:41.:41:46.

afternoon. 20 or 21 degrees. A little light rain into the

:41:47.:41:49.

north-west. The east of the Pennines is got brighter skies, sunny spells

:41:50.:41:54.

continuing south across the rest of England and Wales, with light winds.

:41:55.:41:58.

Temperatures up to about 22 or 23 degrees. Where we do have the brakes

:41:59.:42:02.

on the cloud there will be high levels of U -- UV. Very high levels

:42:03.:42:09.

of pollen widely across England and Wales. Moderate levels across

:42:10.:42:13.

Scotland and Northern Ireland. Moving into this evening, the rain

:42:14.:42:17.

across the west of Scotland eases away. Hats and little drizzle in the

:42:18.:42:21.

far north-west. Most places overnight look dry. Warm and muggy

:42:22.:42:26.

air coming up from the south. Temperatures overnight falling no

:42:27.:42:34.

lower than about 13- 17. On the weekend and things will be heating

:42:35.:42:38.

up. Down to the fact that we are importing air from further south.

:42:39.:42:43.

Southern Spain likely to see about 44. That drifts up to the UK and we

:42:44.:42:47.

could see temperatures topping 33 degrees or even a little more

:42:48.:42:50.

through the weekend. High pressure on Saturday is the driving force. We

:42:51.:42:55.

have a weather front sitting to the north-west. That will bring rain at

:42:56.:43:00.

times on Saturday for the north-west of Scotland. A bit of cloud for the

:43:01.:43:04.

west and perhaps in the western parts of Northern Ireland. More

:43:05.:43:07.

cloud bubbling up in the afternoon, but most places having warm spells

:43:08.:43:10.

of sunshine and temperatures likely to reach about 27 or 28 degrees

:43:11.:43:14.

during the course of Saturday. On the Sunday and a bit of rain in the

:43:15.:43:18.

far north-west, but another dry day in the west of the country. Likely

:43:19.:43:24.

to see 29 or 30 degrees by the time we get to Sunday, especially in the

:43:25.:43:28.

south-east. That heat holds on, but if you aren't a fan of the heat and

:43:29.:43:33.

humidity things will turn cooler by the time we get to Tuesday.

:43:34.:43:38.

Everyone likes a bit of relief from the heat. Thanks very much.

:43:39.:43:46.

To help businesses grow, HSP has launched a ?10 billion fund to

:43:47.:43:52.

support small and medium-sized businesses in the UK -- HSBC. On the

:43:53.:43:58.

face of it, it sounds like quite a lot of money. Who will it go to?

:43:59.:44:02.

Good morning and welcome to the city of that. A lot of money, ?10 billion

:44:03.:44:10.

foot -- put aside by HSBC. They say they want the final that to small

:44:11.:44:13.

businesses. It is interesting because the small businesses today

:44:14.:44:16.

could be the big visitors tomorrow. For the big banks the challenge is

:44:17.:44:20.

spotting which ones will be the winners and supporting them through

:44:21.:44:23.

this process because they need money to grow. Now we might say is a good

:44:24.:44:28.

time to borrow the money, with interest rates historically low,

:44:29.:44:32.

kept low yesterday by the Bank of England. What does it mean for

:44:33.:44:37.

business and how do they get hold of that money? Ian Stewart is the chief

:44:38.:44:42.

executive of HSBC in the UK. Good morning. ?10 billion put aside for

:44:43.:44:47.

small firms. You might say you should be lending to small firms

:44:48.:44:50.

anyway. Why do you need the special fund?

:44:51.:44:58.

This is the fourth time we have done it. The money goes regionally. It is

:44:59.:45:06.

not one fund for one place in England. It goes all over the

:45:07.:45:10.

country. It allows businesses, from the smallest to the largest, to get

:45:11.:45:17.

access to the funding through local networks. You have to find the firms

:45:18.:45:23.

that will make more money down the line and spot the winners. This is

:45:24.:45:27.

not charity, it is to make money. How do you spot them? We are not

:45:28.:45:33.

good enough to spot the winners. We have to use the support from

:45:34.:45:37.

thousands and millions of businesses. Doing that, hopefully

:45:38.:45:43.

the small ones grow to medium and then large. The UK is good at doing

:45:44.:45:50.

that. Some of the best industries today started off as very small

:45:51.:45:56.

businesses. We have to help small businesses through the trading cycle

:45:57.:45:59.

and help them become the ambitious larger companies they want to be.

:46:00.:46:04.

Now was a good time to row because money is quite cheap and business

:46:05.:46:09.

rates are at a record low. -- borrow. Perhaps now is the time to

:46:10.:46:15.

do it. I would say it is. If you have plans and think now is the

:46:16.:46:21.

chance to take the next step, now is as good a time as any with money

:46:22.:46:28.

costs. There is a lot of talk about. The next is Brexit. We have heard

:46:29.:46:35.

from many big banks about whether they will have to move operations

:46:36.:46:40.

abroad. Passporting, whether we can do the right things in the right

:46:41.:46:44.

place at the right time. Talk us through HSBC. One of the things we

:46:45.:46:51.

cannot do in the UK, well, roughly 1000 jobs have to go. That was

:46:52.:46:57.

updated over yesterday. That depends on whether it is a hard all soft

:46:58.:47:04.

Brexit. -- or. It could change. It is updated all the time. We are in

:47:05.:47:10.

uncharted waters. We don't know how which will look in the next few

:47:11.:47:14.

years. We have to plan ahead. At the moment, it is capped at 1000 but

:47:15.:47:18.

could be less. What are the defining factors of a hard or soft Brexit? It

:47:19.:47:28.

depends what we can do in the UK to be some things we can do and others

:47:29.:47:33.

might have to leave. We don't know the exact numbers. Were employing

:47:34.:47:43.

thousands in the UK. HSBC is a massive employer. Talk us through

:47:44.:47:49.

relocation and staff. You are moving a big operation to Birmingham. That

:47:50.:47:57.

part means a huge thing for Birmingham. Are you able to get

:47:58.:48:02.

staff out of London? I am aware I may get criticised suggesting that

:48:03.:48:08.

talent is not out of the south-east. Can you get the right people? I

:48:09.:48:13.

think we are doing very well with recruitment activity in Birmingham.

:48:14.:48:18.

I am hugely excited by it. It is a brand-new building coming out of the

:48:19.:48:22.

ground. It is well on its way. We will move into it early January into

:48:23.:48:28.

February. All of the plans are on track. Do you have to incentivise

:48:29.:48:33.

people to go there? We have! We are making it easier to come with us.

:48:34.:48:40.

63% of the roles are filled. We are down to the last 300. Plans are on

:48:41.:48:45.

their way. I am very confident we will be 85% by the end of the year.

:48:46.:48:50.

That is where we thought we would be. We will be ready go on line. 60

:48:51.:48:56.

or more you have set to close. People worry about branch is. Yes.

:48:57.:49:04.

-- branches. We have committed to 625 branches. We are investing in

:49:05.:49:10.

them. The branches of the future will be different to the date. I am

:49:11.:49:14.

happy with the 625 and we will keep investing in them. Thank you. We

:49:15.:49:20.

know all about relocating, as part of the BBC is moving to Salford. I

:49:21.:49:25.

will hand back to you from Salford. Thank you.

:49:26.:49:30.

You play tennis, don't you? Times. Is more fit, you me, in terms of

:49:31.:49:44.

physical fitness? -- Who is. I have no idea. It depends on how much

:49:45.:49:48.

sport you play to the apparently, people who play tennis, if you put

:49:49.:49:52.

them against people who go to the gym or the other sports regularly,

:49:53.:49:59.

tennis players are more fit. I think any sport is good. Now we go to

:50:00.:50:06.

Holly Hamilton who was checking out the theory of this. Good advice from

:50:07.:50:12.

Charlie. That is the message this morning. All sport is really good

:50:13.:50:18.

for you. But tennis is specifically good for you. Is it the best sport

:50:19.:50:23.

to keep you fit mentally, physically, physiologically,

:50:24.:50:29.

psychically? We have had fun this morning. I have to admit my server

:50:30.:50:36.

is not the best compared to these guys, but I can tell you it is

:50:37.:50:43.

definitely gruelling! -- service. Exactly how good is this for you,

:50:44.:50:48.

not just in the short-term, but in the long-term?

:50:49.:50:51.

It takes years of dedication, training, and hard work, to be the

:50:52.:51:04.

world number one. But you don't need to be the next Andy Murray to enjoy

:51:05.:51:11.

the efforts of tennis. Bryan and Sue are avid members of their local

:51:12.:51:15.

tennis club. They don't have titles, but both say they have improved

:51:16.:51:20.

stamina and health. How often do you play? 3-4 times a week. I play

:51:21.:51:27.

doubles. We play against other clubs in Liverpool. Then I come down and

:51:28.:51:32.

play a game of singles for a few hours. I practise some of the shots.

:51:33.:51:37.

It must mean you are extremely fit. I really enjoy it. We know it gives

:51:38.:51:43.

you fit, but can it really improve your long-term health? Using 3D

:51:44.:51:53.

motion capture and strength exercises, 90 fitness fanatics have

:51:54.:51:59.

been put through their paces. Somewhere tennis players and others

:52:00.:52:02.

preferred alternative forms of exercise. How are you feeling? I

:52:03.:52:07.

will try not to interrupt you too much. You are busy. What are you

:52:08.:52:14.

learning? We are measuring Bryan's cardiovascular fitness. Endurance,

:52:15.:52:20.

stamina, how fit his heart and lungs us. Iron play a hell of a lot. I

:52:21.:52:28.

definitely do. It helps fitness. Stress levels. It is good for so

:52:29.:52:36.

many things. I will let you get back to pumping those muscles. We checked

:52:37.:52:42.

the people of different age and background. We have evidence that it

:52:43.:52:52.

improves health in the long-term. Keep it going. While it is not for

:52:53.:52:57.

everyone, the benefits of tennis are clear. Though, for some of us, it

:52:58.:53:02.

may take a while to get to Wimbledon. That was pathetic. You

:53:03.:53:04.

can say that. It is OK. Like I said, my serve is not the

:53:05.:53:20.

best. But look, it is Bryan! He made it out of the lab! And now we will

:53:21.:53:24.

speak to one of the people doing research. Why are we doing tennis?

:53:25.:53:29.

It is a unique sport. It has such a diverse set of attributes really

:53:30.:53:36.

that you train and that get involved in the particular competition,

:53:37.:53:40.

strength, endurance, flexibility, mobility. It is a whole host of

:53:41.:53:47.

different aspects, I think, which makes it unique and interesting to

:53:48.:53:50.

look at in terms of health benefits. I think also the intermittent nature

:53:51.:53:58.

of tennis is something that hasn't necessarily been blue sedated to see

:53:59.:54:07.

whether it is better than others. -- elucidated. It involves the whole

:54:08.:54:11.

body as well. We were really interested to find out exclusive

:54:12.:54:16.

health benefits down to tennis itself as opposed to other

:54:17.:54:22.

activities. And you found that, yes, it is really quite superior. Can you

:54:23.:54:27.

say that confidently compared to other sports? We cannot say. We have

:54:28.:54:32.

not measured them directly. But from our study, according to government

:54:33.:54:43.

recommendations, they are meeting recommendations through other

:54:44.:54:46.

sports, but tennis is coming out superior in terms of cardiovascular

:54:47.:54:57.

risk and muscles and skill and skeletal benefits. It reduces stroke

:54:58.:55:03.

and heart disease risks as well later on in life. Their reason so

:55:04.:55:08.

much more to discuss. We could talk about it all day. -- there is. But

:55:09.:55:14.

you are getting onto the court. You are the chairman of the local tennis

:55:15.:55:19.

association. You were involved in this research. Why did you get

:55:20.:55:26.

involved? We love the sport. I was the first participant. I was

:55:27.:55:31.

incredibly impressed by the facilities at Liverpool. And the

:55:32.:55:39.

equipment and technology behind this research is brilliant. Did you find

:55:40.:55:45.

it tough? It was tough for me. I am getting slightly older. I tried to

:55:46.:55:49.

arrive in good condition. I thoroughly enjoyed it. It was a top

:55:50.:55:56.

rate study. It is good news we are doing these studies in Liverpool and

:55:57.:56:03.

promoting tennis. It is bringing a lot to the game, to be honest. Thank

:56:04.:56:07.

you. I will let you get back on the court as well. I will have a go.

:56:08.:56:12.

With Wimbledon around the corner, if you need an excuse to get involved

:56:13.:56:16.

with tennis, we will get involved now! Over! I'm happy with that! I

:56:17.:56:23.

will quit now. We are I'm back in half an hour. Plenty

:56:24.:59:47.

more on the website. Hello, this is Breakfast,

:59:48.:00:19.

with Charlie Stayt and Naga Anger over the London

:00:20.:00:21.

tower block fire. The only thing keeping me

:00:22.:00:26.

going at the moment is anger and adrenaline and I

:00:27.:00:29.

will keep going on anger and adrenaline

:00:30.:00:32.

for as long as I can, because frankly I'd rather not sit

:00:33.:00:43.

down and actually contemplate Pictures emerge of the

:00:44.:00:46.

inside of the building. 17 are known to have died,

:00:47.:00:50.

more than 60 people are being named As the search of the

:00:51.:00:53.

burned out continues, police launch a criminal

:00:54.:01:00.

inquiry into the fire. New evidence that North Korean

:01:01.:01:09.

hackers were responsible for the cyber attack that crippled

:01:10.:01:18.

parts of the NHS last month. One year on from the murder of Jo

:01:19.:01:35.

Cox we are back in her constituency for her legacy and to say good

:01:36.:01:39.

morning to everybody, planning for a big weekend of celebrations ahead.

:01:40.:01:46.

Good morning from London. We are asking whether the Tesco turnaround

:01:47.:01:50.

is working. We will get the result from the supermarket giant in a next

:01:51.:01:55.

few minutes. They are expected to show that things are looking up.

:01:56.:01:56.

In sport, England's Paul Casey is the pick of the European

:01:57.:01:59.

A first round of six under par sees him just a shot off the leader

:02:00.:02:05.

Rickie Fowler at golf's second major of the year.

:02:06.:02:10.

Good morning. Another warm day on the cards today. Dry for most of us

:02:11.:02:17.

but a bit of rain in the north-west. A full forecast in about 15 minutes.

:02:18.:02:19.

Thank you. More than 60 people who are believed

:02:20.:02:22.

to be dead or missing following the fire at Grenfell Tower

:02:23.:02:26.

are being named in the media. Police are warning they may

:02:27.:02:30.

never be able to identify There's growing anger amongst

:02:31.:02:32.

people in the area over whether the blaze could

:02:33.:02:36.

have been prevented. Some viewers may find

:02:37.:02:38.

some of the content The first victim of the fire

:02:39.:02:40.

to be officially named is Mohammed Alhajali,

:02:41.:02:46.

a Syrian refugee who came to Britain His brother was led to safety

:02:47.:02:49.

by firefighters, but, in the chaos and confusion,

:02:50.:02:55.

Mohammed got left behind. I thought they took

:02:56.:02:58.

him outside with me! Some of those trapped

:02:59.:03:13.

in the blaze did survive. We now know this man

:03:14.:03:19.

is Elpidio Bonifacio, a partially blind

:03:20.:03:21.

grandfather in his 70s. His family say he is in intensive

:03:22.:03:24.

care, suffering from They have thanked the bravery

:03:25.:03:27.

of the firefighters who risked Elpidio was finally rescued 11 hours

:03:28.:03:31.

after the blaze started. There is anger in the community,

:03:32.:03:40.

directed at almost anyone The London Mayor Sadiq Khan saw it

:03:41.:03:43.

for himself when he went to visit. How many children died

:03:44.:03:50.

and what are you going Police say they have now started

:03:51.:03:53.

a criminal investigation. That's not to say there

:03:54.:03:56.

was a crime committed, but they will investigate

:03:57.:04:01.

to establish if there's any The list of the dead

:04:02.:04:03.

and missing grows all the time. Police have voiced the hope

:04:04.:04:09.

that the final number of casualties They admit that some victims may

:04:10.:04:12.

never be identified. The leader of the local council said

:04:13.:04:20.

they did in the bout installing sprinkler system in Grenfell Tower

:04:21.:04:23.

when it was renovated last year, but he said there was no collective view

:04:24.:04:25.

among residents in favour of it. Our correspondent Andy Moore

:04:26.:04:33.

is at the scene of the fire in West The search continues, but the real

:04:34.:04:40.

anguish of those people searching for those missing and unaccounted

:04:41.:04:46.

for? -- there is real anguish. That's right. What they want above

:04:47.:04:54.

all else is certainty. But they are hearing from the police and fire

:04:55.:04:57.

service, that they may not be able to provide that, certainly not any

:04:58.:05:01.

time soon. The operation to recover those bodies and identify them we

:05:02.:05:06.

are being told could take weeks, months and in some cases may never

:05:07.:05:10.

be successful, some of those victims may never be identified. It is

:05:11.:05:15.

difficult some of the top floors of the building behind me. Some parts

:05:16.:05:21.

of it are structurally unsafe, so the police investigators can't

:05:22.:05:23.

actually get out and recover those bodies. So the families are being

:05:24.:05:29.

told it will take a long time, but that's really not what they want to

:05:30.:05:31.

hear. Thanks for the moment. A rally is being organised in

:05:32.:05:40.

Westminster at 6pm this evening to call for justice for those caught up

:05:41.:05:43.

in a fire. The PM has been criticised for

:05:44.:05:47.

travelling to the area, are not meeting residents of the building.

:05:48.:05:57.

Chris Masten joins us. -- Mason. Understandably there is a lot of

:05:58.:06:01.

anger about the building they were housed in, the way they feel they

:06:02.:06:05.

are being treated at the moment and politicians who visit the scene

:06:06.:06:08.

understandably will be a target of that? Absolutely. That has happened

:06:09.:06:17.

and we saw that, in terms of the response Sadiq Khan received. The

:06:18.:06:21.

Prime Minister was there yesterday pretty fleetingly and she has been

:06:22.:06:26.

criticised for that. There are still images often meeting firefighters

:06:27.:06:29.

and charity workers, but she didn't meet any local people, those who are

:06:30.:06:34.

bereaved or who have been left homeless. There has been criticism

:06:35.:06:38.

from some conservatives and the public about her response. My

:06:39.:06:42.

understanding is they did consider the Prime Minister doing some sort

:06:43.:06:47.

of Walkabout, but they decided it would it a distraction, given the

:06:48.:06:51.

amount of security she would have with her and they didn't want to get

:06:52.:06:55.

in the way. Seeing the end they decided against it what was quite

:06:56.:07:01.

striking was the Prime Minister plus a response on the ground to that of

:07:02.:07:04.

Jeremy Corbyn, who was there about one hour later and did Ingall

:07:05.:07:08.

amongst people. We saw him hugging one woman who was desperately trying

:07:09.:07:16.

to find someone. -- mingling. The government says it has activated a

:07:17.:07:20.

scheme to make sure lots more money is sent in the direction of the

:07:21.:07:23.

local council. And there will be this full, independent public

:07:24.:07:28.

enquiry which will ask some very probing questions about what went

:07:29.:07:33.

wrong here, as clearly there is a huge demand for answers locally and

:07:34.:07:36.

also people around the country, the tens of thousands of people who also

:07:37.:07:40.

live in tower blocks and need reassurance that their homes are

:07:41.:07:46.

safe. Thanks very much. In a few minutes we will be speaking to the

:07:47.:07:51.

community is secretary. -- communities.

:07:52.:07:59.

A soldier has died in Pembrokeshire. Two others were injured on

:08:00.:08:02.

Wednesday. Hackers are thought to have

:08:03.:08:16.

attempted to make money but did not predict the extent to which the

:08:17.:08:19.

computer virus would spread. Here is our security correspondent.

:08:20.:08:25.

The cyber attack spread around the world, with the NHS badly hit.

:08:26.:08:30.

Computers were locked with hackers demanding a ransom be paid for them

:08:31.:08:37.

to be made usable again. Written's national cyber security centre led

:08:38.:08:40.

the investigation and security sources have told the BBC that the

:08:41.:08:43.

centre believes in North Korean -based hacking group known as

:08:44.:08:47.

Lazarus launched the attack. The same group is believed to have

:08:48.:08:52.

targeted Sony Pictures after it plans to release a film involving

:08:53.:08:55.

the North Korean leader and was also thought to have been behind the

:08:56.:08:59.

theft of more than $80 million from the central bank last year. The

:09:00.:09:03.

ransom ware last month did not target Britain or the NHS

:09:04.:09:08.

specifically and may well have been a money making scheme that got out

:09:09.:09:11.

of control, especially since the hackers have not yet retrieved any

:09:12.:09:15.

of the ransom money that's been paid into the accounts.

:09:16.:09:20.

A new poll has revealed a widespread lack of knowledge about where

:09:21.:09:25.

significant moments in England's history took place.

:09:26.:09:26.

A campaign has been launched to raise awareness of the sites

:09:27.:09:29.

Home to the Large Hadron Collider and the most common answer when

:09:30.:09:41.

people in England are asked, where was the atom first split?

:09:42.:09:44.

But it was here in Manchester that the scientific breakthrough

:09:45.:09:47.

was made by Ernest Rutherford, in 1917.

:09:48.:09:49.

This new research suggests that only one in ten people know that

:09:50.:09:53.

and it's far from the only common mistake about England's most

:09:54.:09:56.

impressive achievements and inventions.

:09:57.:10:00.

When it comes to where the first trainers were made, three times more

:10:01.:10:03.

people think it was in the USA than know the truth.

:10:04.:10:06.

JW Foster Sons created them in the 1890s and later became

:10:07.:10:14.

And the majority of people believe that bungee jumping originated

:10:15.:10:18.

in Australia or New Zealand, when in fact it all started

:10:19.:10:21.

in Bristol, with a leap from the Clifton Suspension Bridge

:10:22.:10:24.

Historic England hope their new campaign will fill

:10:25.:10:35.

the gaps in people's knowledge and more

:10:36.:10:37.

people will be aware of the country's greatest

:10:38.:10:41.

achievements, like the fact the pencil was invented in Cumbria.

:10:42.:10:48.

Searches of Grenfell Tower in West London are continuing

:10:49.:10:51.

as dozens of people remain unaccounted for after the huge fire

:10:52.:10:54.

Police are warning that some of the dead may never be identified.

:10:55.:11:03.

There is growing anger in the community over what happened. If you

:11:04.:11:12.

had seen that building go up like I saw it from a back window, you would

:11:13.:11:16.

know that building was not fit for purpose. Somewhere along the line

:11:17.:11:20.

someone made a catastrophic error. At the moment we are grieving, but

:11:21.:11:24.

there is a public anger and Neath and we do want to see someone held

:11:25.:11:28.

accountable for this. -- underneath. I feel angry that I saw people dying

:11:29.:11:34.

in front of my eyes. I saw kids and women and kids this age hanging from

:11:35.:11:39.

windows, with teddies. That angered me and nobody could help them. That

:11:40.:11:46.

really angered me. There are few who I know who are already dead and I

:11:47.:11:50.

know for certain that they are dead. There are a few others who I

:11:51.:11:54.

strongly suspect are dead. The only thing that's keeping me going at the

:11:55.:11:59.

moment is anger and adrenaline and I will keep going on anger and

:12:00.:12:02.

adrenaline for as long as I can because frankly I would rather not

:12:03.:12:05.

see down and actually contemplate the actual scale of what's happened

:12:06.:12:10.

around here. Because I think that if I do sit down, I won't stand up

:12:11.:12:12.

again. The Prime Minister is facing

:12:13.:12:14.

criticism for not meeting residents when she visited

:12:15.:12:16.

the scene yesterday. We can speak now to the Secretary

:12:17.:12:24.

of State for Communities We are just hearing from people.

:12:25.:12:33.

Those were in many ways the more measured angry voices we are

:12:34.:12:37.

hearing. Is it your intention to visit the scene? I will be visiting

:12:38.:12:44.

today, but let me first say what's happened is horrific, absolutely

:12:45.:12:49.

horrific. My thoughts are still very much with the victims, their

:12:50.:12:52.

families, their friends and I have nothing but admiration for the

:12:53.:12:58.

emergency services and the local community in how they have handled

:12:59.:13:01.

this tragedy so far. The answer your questions, I will be visiting this

:13:02.:13:07.

morning. My own department is helping with the recovery effort,

:13:08.:13:12.

along with council. We've done a lot in the last 34 hours but I want to

:13:13.:13:16.

make sure we are doing everything we can to help. I want to ask you a

:13:17.:13:20.

couple of things in connection with these figures around the missing all

:13:21.:13:24.

those feared dead. The media widely reporting that figure is around 65

:13:25.:13:29.

people missing or dead. What light can you share on that for us? At the

:13:30.:13:34.

moment I can only share with you what the police have made public.

:13:35.:13:38.

They have confirmed sadly there are 17 confirmed fatalities. There are

:13:39.:13:44.

around I think 30 people still in hospital and 15 of them are in a

:13:45.:13:51.

critical condition and still there are a number of people missing.

:13:52.:13:54.

Police don't know at this point how many are missing. I'm afraid from

:13:55.:13:59.

what we are hearing and from what the police have already said

:14:00.:14:02.

publicly they are preparing the country for further fatalities. So

:14:03.:14:07.

it is very sad, the information is coming out, but I don't have any

:14:08.:14:11.

more information at this point. Moving onto some of the

:14:12.:14:15.

practicalities. Everyone is aware there is an investigation ongoing

:14:16.:14:18.

and that will take some time, but the questions people want answering

:14:19.:14:23.

immediately, and many will be living in tower blocks not to this and

:14:24.:14:27.

there are question marks over cladding used. Do you know how many

:14:28.:14:30.

other tower blocks in the UK have used this same form of cladding? We

:14:31.:14:35.

do know exactly yet. First let me say that anyone living in a tower

:14:36.:14:41.

block in this country, I can totally understand they will be very

:14:42.:14:44.

concerned. What we've already started is an emergency review, five

:14:45.:14:50.

review, of all similar buildings throughout the country. Social

:14:51.:14:56.

housing providers, local authorities, we've asked them to

:14:57.:15:00.

stop compiling a list of what they think might fall into that category.

:15:01.:15:03.

Today you don't know how many other buildings in the UK have the same

:15:04.:15:07.

form of cladding? The reason I am asking about that specifically is

:15:08.:15:10.

because it is widely reported that in other countries, like Germany,

:15:11.:15:18.

these panels have what are called a B2 rating, placing them in the same

:15:19.:15:22.

category as unprotected wood. The same panels are and for use in

:15:23.:15:28.

high-rise tower blocks in America. Those people who are sleeping in a

:15:29.:15:31.

tower block that may have those panels on them tonight and last

:15:32.:15:37.

night will be thinking, should IBM is building at all? And you are

:15:38.:15:40.

saying at this stage it had even know how many buildings have that

:15:41.:15:42.

cladding. There is a lot of speculation about

:15:43.:15:52.

what caused the fire and what led to it spreading so rapidly. We have to

:15:53.:15:59.

be led by the experts in this. The process has started and will be done

:16:00.:16:03.

in a matter of days. Those people need reassurance in days, but it

:16:04.:16:08.

needs to be led by the experts. First we need to identify the

:16:09.:16:11.

buildings, about 4000 high-rise buildings in the country, not all of

:16:12.:16:19.

them recladded. And we will not make the Assange and it is all about

:16:20.:16:23.

cladding. We need to be led by the experts. -- assumption. Once we have

:16:24.:16:29.

got that, that is what should be used. This is your responsibility.

:16:30.:16:35.

You are saying within days you will have expert advice about whether it

:16:36.:16:41.

was the cladding that caused this. What will happen next? First of all,

:16:42.:16:50.

we need an emergency expection -- inspection... We have moved on from

:16:51.:16:55.

that. What will happen immediately to make sure people in buildings

:16:56.:16:59.

with that cladding are safe? We will do whatever is recommended by the

:17:00.:17:05.

expert advice to make those buildings safe and the people safe.

:17:06.:17:11.

Whatever it takes. We have to be led by the experts... This is so

:17:12.:17:14.

important. You are saying whatever it takes. In two days' time, you

:17:15.:17:21.

will know whether it is the cladding that led to the speed of the fire

:17:22.:17:25.

escalating. Are you saying from that point those buildings will be

:17:26.:17:29.

evacuated, that cladding will be changed as a matter of hierarchy? I

:17:30.:17:33.

am not asking about further investigation. -- priority. Will the

:17:34.:17:46.

buildings be altered accordingly? We have to be led by the evidence. You

:17:47.:17:51.

said in two days' time. But it has to be led by the experts. It would

:17:52.:17:56.

not be right for me as a minister to push them in a way they are not

:17:57.:18:00.

comfortable with. When we have information from the experts, which

:18:01.:18:04.

has already begun, we will act on that and do whatever it takes.

:18:05.:18:08.

Again, it has to be led by the experts. There may be other measures

:18:09.:18:14.

they recommend, but it should not be political, ministerial, it has to be

:18:15.:18:17.

led by the experts. Anyone listening to what you say, you keep referring

:18:18.:18:23.

to experts, anyone who has done the least bit of research will no

:18:24.:18:29.

experts have already made judgement on e-panels. A Fire Brigade report

:18:30.:18:43.

from a court, they said that cladding led to a fire previously.

:18:44.:18:56.

Recommendations were made about sprinklers in Southwark previously.

:18:57.:19:00.

Focusing on sprinklers. How was it possible, how is it possible, that a

:19:01.:19:07.

building of similar height built long ago could be allowed not to

:19:08.:19:19.

have sprinklers, yet a more modern one has sprinklers. A number of fire

:19:20.:19:23.

precautions can be taken for any building. Sprinklers could be one of

:19:24.:19:27.

those. We cannot jump immediately to the conclusion that sprinklers were

:19:28.:19:35.

the problem. We need to follow expert advice. Of course, there are

:19:36.:19:43.

many lessons to learn from this. In the short-term, no one wants to wait

:19:44.:19:50.

months or years for this public enquiry the end. Some of the longer

:19:51.:19:56.

term issues about decisions, whether they are made at government, local

:19:57.:20:01.

council, elsewhere, that is why the Prime Minister is right to have a

:20:02.:20:06.

public judge led enquiry that is completely independent. If you were

:20:07.:20:12.

living in these tower blocks, you don't live in one of those, I don't,

:20:13.:20:19.

if you were, this is not a long-term report issued. They may well want to

:20:20.:20:28.

know that from now on, retrofitting of sprinklers that could have

:20:29.:20:32.

contained the fires, not about how it progressed, could have initially

:20:33.:20:36.

stopped the fire. And many experts have said this in the past,

:20:37.:20:40.

retrofitting of those sprinklers should be brought into place now. We

:20:41.:20:45.

don't need to wait for an enquiry. What harm could do? I completely

:20:46.:20:51.

agree with you. People don't want to wait months and years for a report.

:20:52.:20:55.

That is why I am saying this emergency review of similar

:20:56.:20:58.

buildings is starting now and will happen right away. And what is going

:20:59.:21:04.

to be informed that is the first results from the fire investigation

:21:05.:21:09.

report. -- inform. There is already a police investigation going on. The

:21:10.:21:15.

fire investigation is going on now. We have to listen to them to tell us

:21:16.:21:20.

exactly what needs to be done to be and that is what should be driving

:21:21.:21:23.

the response to this from the government. I am absolutely clear

:21:24.:21:28.

anyone living in similar buildings, many of them will be concerned over

:21:29.:21:34.

the last few days, but we have to do everything we possibly can to

:21:35.:21:37.

reassure them. That is a matter of days. Not weeks and months, a matter

:21:38.:21:42.

of days. You will not categorically say you will retrofit sprinklers at

:21:43.:21:48.

the expense of the government and local authorities? You will not see

:21:49.:21:52.

a dead this morning and say that will happen regardless? I am saying

:21:53.:21:56.

this may not be just about sprinklers. I did not say that. No

:21:57.:22:00.

one has suggested that. I am talking about one specific issue. We will do

:22:01.:22:05.

whatever it takes, but first we have to listen to the fire investigators

:22:06.:22:10.

and be driven by them. We will do whatever it takes. People are were

:22:11.:22:15.

listening to you this morning that the accusations already made of

:22:16.:22:21.

government, of the Prime Minister directly, the response has not been

:22:22.:22:25.

appropriate. People listening this morning will say every answer will

:22:26.:22:30.

be looking to the future and reports. That is not what people

:22:31.:22:34.

want to hear. I bring you back to the suggestion that when the Prime

:22:35.:22:44.

Minister, Theresa May, arrived at the scene, she talked to the

:22:45.:22:47.

emergency services, but none of the people in the community directly

:22:48.:22:50.

affected. Will you do that today? I will be doing that today. We have to

:22:51.:22:56.

be clear, the Prime Minister was right to go as quickly as she could

:22:57.:23:02.

and learn about the operation and discover if there is anything more

:23:03.:23:05.

the government could be doing to help with the operation. For

:23:06.:23:10.

example, one of the first things she did she knows she got back to

:23:11.:23:18.

Downing Street, was to authorise local authorities and their ability

:23:19.:23:24.

to help. It is right the Prime Minister goes and listens to what is

:23:25.:23:28.

going on and works out what more can be done. And I will be going along

:23:29.:23:35.

today visiting one of the centres, because one of the areas my

:23:36.:23:38.

department is involved in is trying to make sure the council is leading

:23:39.:23:43.

the recovery effort and helps in any way it can. What I am concerned

:23:44.:23:46.

about is making sure that everyone that needs to be rehoused is first

:23:47.:23:51.

of all given the right quality of local and temporary accommodation.

:23:52.:23:58.

But I also want to make sure that permanent accommodation is somewhere

:23:59.:24:04.

local and people get what they need and goodness knows, they have enough

:24:05.:24:08.

on their mind. It is horrific what they have gone through. I want to do

:24:09.:24:13.

everything I can to help. Thank you for your time this morning. Thank

:24:14.:24:20.

you. It is 724. The weather. Good morning. Cloud around many parts of

:24:21.:24:26.

the country this morning. This was a view taken by a viewer in Wakefield.

:24:27.:24:32.

Sunshine breaking through the cloud through the day. A warm day on the

:24:33.:24:36.

cloud. Not as sticky as recent morning. More cloud in the

:24:37.:24:43.

north-west of the UK. Drizzly rain to Northern Ireland. It will go to

:24:44.:24:49.

north-west England as well. Away from these areas, another dry bright

:24:50.:24:55.

day. A split East- west in Scotland. Dry and bright conditions in the

:24:56.:24:59.

east in the afternoon. Northern Ireland, improving pictures through

:25:00.:25:05.

the day. 22 degrees. Drizzly rain for the north-west of England. The

:25:06.:25:08.

east of the Pennines, under shelter, bright. Sunny spells further south

:25:09.:25:13.

in England and Wales. Not wall-to-wall sunshine. A bright day

:25:14.:25:18.

to come. Top temperatures, 23 degrees. With breaks in the cloud,

:25:19.:25:26.

very high levels of UV. A day for sunscreen today. High levels of

:25:27.:25:29.

pollen, especially in England and Wales. You will notice that if you

:25:30.:25:35.

suffer hay fever. This evening, rain in the west of Scotland going away.

:25:36.:25:41.

Drizzle in the far north-west. Elsewhere, a dry evening and night

:25:42.:25:45.

to come. Turning warm and humid once again. A sticky night. Temperatures

:25:46.:25:52.

falling no lower than 17 degrees. Warming up further through the

:25:53.:25:55.

course of the weekend. Hot conditions. Further south in Europe,

:25:56.:26:01.

44 degrees in southern Spain. That hit as it goes north will lift

:26:02.:26:06.

temperatures. 30 degrees in the UK, perhaps even higher. High pressure

:26:07.:26:11.

in charge of our weather. A weather front lingering in the north-west.

:26:12.:26:18.

Through Saturday, breezy conditions in the far north-west of Scotland

:26:19.:26:21.

with rain. The same in Northern Ireland at times. Sunny and dry and

:26:22.:26:27.

the rest of the UK. Cloud in the south-east through the afternoon but

:26:28.:26:31.

temperatures between 20- 27 degrees. Maybe a bit higher than that in one

:26:32.:26:37.

two spots. Sunday, similar. Rain in the far north-west. Top

:26:38.:26:41.

temperatures, 29. Possibly 20 degrees. That hit goes into Monday

:26:42.:26:49.

as well. If you are not a fan, it looks like things will turn more

:26:50.:26:55.

cooler by Tuesday. And now it is time to go back to you. Thank you.

:26:56.:27:00.

Holly Hamilton has a reason to pick up your tennis racquet. She is

:27:01.:27:06.

already on the court. Good morning. Good morning. I am on the court. I

:27:07.:27:13.

am causing a hazard. We were talking about how tennis helps your health.

:27:14.:27:20.

That may seem obvious, obviously sport keeps you fit. It has

:27:21.:27:23.

definitely been keeping me fit this morning. But we are looking at

:27:24.:27:27.

long-term health benefits, whether it helps you stay away from

:27:28.:27:30.

diabetes, heart disease, and lowers your cholesterol. Scientists say

:27:31.:27:38.

yes. I have been talking to people taking part in the study and the

:27:39.:27:41.

people doing the research to find out the science behind this finding

:27:42.:27:43.

out what Hello, this is Breakfast,

:27:44.:31:08.

with Charlie Stayt and Naga There's growing anger amongst people

:31:09.:31:11.

affected by the Grenfell Tower fire over whether more could have been

:31:12.:31:18.

done to prevent the blaze. More than 60 people,

:31:19.:31:24.

who are believed to be dead, are being named by the media

:31:25.:31:30.

and police are warning they may never be able to identify

:31:31.:31:33.

some of those who died. Earlier on Breakfast,

:31:34.:31:36.

the Communities Secretary Sajid Javid said he wanted

:31:37.:31:38.

to reassure people living in similar The process we've already started

:31:39.:31:47.

and this will be done in a matter of days. Those people need to be given

:31:48.:31:50.

reassurance within days. It has to be led by the experts. The first

:31:51.:31:55.

point is obviously to identify those buildings, about 4000 high-rise

:31:56.:31:58.

buildings in the country, but not all of them have been re-cladded.

:31:59.:32:04.

But it isn't all about cladding. We need to be led by the experts. As

:32:05.:32:09.

soon as we have more information from the experts, which we expect

:32:10.:32:14.

later today or at the weekend, and that's what should be used during

:32:15.:32:15.

this emergency inspections. The Prime Minister is facing

:32:16.:32:19.

criticism for not meeting residents when she visited the scene of

:32:20.:32:21.

the Grenfell Tower fire yesterday. Labour Mayor of London Sadiq Khan

:32:22.:32:24.

was heckled by some angry residents Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn spoke

:32:25.:32:28.

to local campaigners who demanded answers about how the fire was able

:32:29.:32:31.

to spread so quickly. In other news, British security

:32:32.:32:35.

officials say they believe that hackers in North Korea

:32:36.:32:38.

were behind the cyber attack that crippled parts

:32:39.:32:40.

of the NHS last month. The attack led to delays

:32:41.:32:43.

in operations and treatment The hackers are thought to have been

:32:44.:32:45.

attempting to make money, but did not predict the extent

:32:46.:32:49.

to which the computer The group believed to be behind

:32:50.:32:52.

the attack is Lazarus, which is also thought to have

:32:53.:32:55.

targeted Sony Pictures in 2014. A second soldier has died

:32:56.:32:59.

after he was injured in an incident involving a tank at an army firing

:33:00.:33:02.

range in Pembrokeshire. He was serving with

:33:03.:33:05.

the Royal Tank Regiment. Two other soldiers were injured

:33:06.:33:07.

at Castlemartin Ranges on Wednesday. The weather forecast shortly. First,

:33:08.:33:22.

let's get up-to-date with the sport. Good morning, Mike.

:33:23.:33:25.

Good weather for the golf? Yes, and the roughest and longest course in

:33:26.:33:33.

US history has not bothered two Englishman. You play with Paul Casey

:33:34.:33:36.

and Tommy Fleetwood? Yes, and they meditate on the golf

:33:37.:33:39.

course! Is there a limit... You say it is

:33:40.:33:45.

the longest course in US Open history. Is there a limit to how

:33:46.:33:50.

long... Today to say, this year we will have it that long?

:33:51.:33:54.

Guy Demel if there's a limit but they definitely discussions about

:33:55.:33:57.

what is reasonable -- I don't know if a limit.

:33:58.:34:01.

It is more about the length of the grass, which they did cut back,

:34:02.:34:06.

although Rory McIlroy said that was unnecessary because if you are good

:34:07.:34:10.

enough to play in the US Open you should keep it on the fairway!

:34:11.:34:13.

Many of the world's top players have struggled in their opening round,

:34:14.:34:16.

but the English pair of Paul Casey and Tommy Fleetwood sit just behind

:34:17.:34:19.

the leader Rickie Fowler, as Adam Wild reports.

:34:20.:34:22.

They are calling this golf's longest walk.

:34:23.:34:24.

At the US Open there has never been a longer course and for the world's

:34:25.:34:28.

Leading the way was American Rickie Fowler.

:34:29.:34:32.

His round of seven under par took him into the early

:34:33.:34:35.

Much has been made of the unforgiving link

:34:36.:34:39.

Well, Englishman Tommy Fleetwood didn't.

:34:40.:34:52.

Five under put him amongst the chasing pack.

:34:53.:34:55.

The world number one and reigning champion Dustin Johnson

:34:56.:34:57.

In fact, none of the world's top six, including Rory

:34:58.:35:01.

Instead the challenge was left to the likes of England's

:35:02.:35:06.

After this eagle at the first, he ended the day ahead of Fleetwood,

:35:07.:35:13.

The longest walk in golf perhaps, but there is still plenty

:35:14.:35:18.

In the rugby, the British and Irish Lions are back in action

:35:19.:35:29.

tomorrow against the New Zealand Maori.

:35:30.:35:31.

And the rest of the home nations are also on tour,

:35:32.:35:34.

including Wales, who are in New Zealand too.

:35:35.:35:36.

They're playing Tonga right now in Auckland.

:35:37.:35:38.

Alex Cuthbert has scored the only try of the match so far.

:35:39.:35:41.

Wales leading Tonga 8-3 at half-time.

:35:42.:35:43.

Jordan Pickford has officially become the most expensive British

:35:44.:35:46.

goalkeeper in history, after joining Everton for a fee that

:35:47.:35:48.

who were relegated from the Premier League last season.

:35:49.:35:56.

Pickford will play in this summer's Under 21 European Championship

:35:57.:35:59.

for England, but has yet to make his debut

:36:00.:36:02.

It was a big spending day all round for Everton,

:36:03.:36:09.

who also paid over ?23 million for Ajax

:36:10.:36:12.

India will play Pakistan in the final of the ICC

:36:13.:36:15.

Champions Trophy following a nine-wicket win over

:36:16.:36:17.

The defending champions managed to restrict Bangladesh to 264

:36:18.:36:25.

It looked a reasonable total, but India's batsmen knocked the runs

:36:26.:36:32.

The final is then a repeat of India and Pakistan's opening match

:36:33.:36:36.

in the tournament - India won that match.

:36:37.:36:39.

Johanna Konta has continued her winning start to her grass court

:36:40.:36:42.

season, with victory in the second round of the Nottingham Open.

:36:43.:36:45.

The British Number One lost in the first round at

:36:46.:36:48.

the French Open on clay, but is top seed in Nottingham

:36:49.:36:51.

and has comfortable eased past Belgium's Yanina

:36:52.:36:53.

She'll play Ashleigh Barty in the quarter finals today.

:36:54.:37:00.

I am very happy with the matches I've gotten to play here so far.

:37:01.:37:04.

Two singles matches and also the doubles match yesterday.

:37:05.:37:07.

The more time I can get on the surface right now the better.

:37:08.:37:13.

For the first time in 19 years Salford Red Devils are into the semi

:37:14.:37:17.

finals of Rugby League's Challenge Cup.

:37:18.:37:19.

They ran in five tries before the hour mark to beat

:37:20.:37:22.

Wakefield Trinity by 30-6 at the AJ Bell Stadium.

:37:23.:37:27.

Craig Kopchack grabbed the fifth, bulldozing his way over the line.

:37:28.:37:30.

Britain's Jake Wightman knocked over a second

:37:31.:37:32.

off his personal best, as he beat a high-quality field

:37:33.:37:35.

in the 1,500 metres at the Oslo Diamond League

:37:36.:37:37.

Wightman tweeted afterwards that he was in utter shock.

:37:38.:37:45.

"I cannot believe I've just won a Diamond League."

:37:46.:37:48.

The 22-year-old Scot follows in the footsteps of Seb Coe,

:37:49.:37:51.

Steve Ovett and Steve Cram, who have all won the race known

:37:52.:37:55.

Now a new star of British middle-distance running is born!

:37:56.:38:10.

Well done to him. That's all for now.

:38:11.:38:14.

The tragedies and disasters of the last few months have really

:38:15.:38:19.

highlighted the skill and dedication of our doctors, nurses and emergency

:38:20.:38:24.

services. Now a BBC Two documentary crew got to see first hand how one

:38:25.:38:28.

team helped with the Westminster Terrace tap.

:38:29.:38:36.

Cameras had unprecedented access and our correspondent has more.

:38:37.:38:38.

Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen.

:38:39.:38:40.

We are here to review vacancies and retention.

:38:41.:38:42.

How many vacancies do we have the moment?

:38:43.:38:49.

A routine meeting at St Mary's Hospital in London.

:38:50.:38:55.

It was the early afternoon on the 22nd of March,

:38:56.:38:58.

We are on standby for a major incident.

:38:59.:39:13.

We are on standby for a major incident at Westminster Bridge?

:39:14.:39:19.

This is believed to be the first time cameras have captured emergency

:39:20.:39:31.

contingency plans as it unfolds in an NHS hospital.

:39:32.:39:40.

We will wait for further information.

:39:41.:39:48.

Just a few miles away, this was the scene, a policeman

:39:49.:39:51.

stabbed to death outside Parliament, and pedestrians mown down by a car

:39:52.:39:54.

A number of the injured were French schoolchildren.

:39:55.:40:02.

St Mary's, a major trauma centre, was one of the major hospitals that

:40:03.:40:10.

received some of the 50 injured and six people who died,

:40:11.:40:14.

including the attacker, Khalid Massoud.

:40:15.:40:19.

The first victim to arrive is a French schoolboy.

:40:20.:40:22.

He was hit by a moving vehicle head-on.

:40:23.:40:33.

Victor's school friend arrives in Accident and Emergency.

:40:34.:40:47.

This 18-year-old has lost a dangerous amount of blood

:40:48.:40:51.

He is taken for immediate life-saving surgery.

:40:52.:41:04.

As the police investigation got under way, and arrests were made,

:41:05.:41:07.

the injured continued to recover in hospital.

:41:08.:41:10.

Eventually, the two French teenagers, best

:41:11.:41:12.

Painful memories for so many of the victims caught up

:41:13.:41:43.

Extraordinary, those scenes. We will be talking to a member of the

:41:44.:42:04.

emergency services later, and at about 8:10am we will speak to a

:42:05.:42:10.

firefighter about recent events. That will air next Tuesday on BBC

:42:11.:42:12.

Two at nine p.m.. Let's bring you up-to-date with the

:42:13.:42:19.

headlines. Police say some of the people who died in that Grenfell

:42:20.:42:26.

Tower fire may never be identified, as the search continues. The priming

:42:27.:42:29.

inner city is facing criticism for not meeting residents of the tower

:42:30.:42:33.

when she visited the scene yesterday -- the Prime Minister is facing.

:42:34.:42:36.

Let's get the weather forecast. Good morning. A fresh start today

:42:37.:42:48.

than we've seen. Not quite as sticky and muggy and there's more cloud

:42:49.:42:51.

around. This was the scene in Wakefield. It will be another warm

:42:52.:42:56.

day and for some of us there will be spells of sunshine. In other areas

:42:57.:43:00.

we keep more cloud, especially in northern and western parts of the

:43:01.:43:04.

UK. For Northern Ireland, Scotland, western England, cloudy and a few

:43:05.:43:09.

spots of rain. Elsewhere, dry, with light winds and plenty of sunshine.

:43:10.:43:14.

If we look at where we have the rain in the western half of Scotland in

:43:15.:43:18.

particular, eastern Scotland is faring better, dry with some

:43:19.:43:21.

brighter spells. Northern Ireland is also brightening up. Lifting

:43:22.:43:26.

temperatures to about 21 degrees. There could be low cloud and drizzle

:43:27.:43:30.

for the likes of Cumbria and Lancashire but to the east of the

:43:31.:43:33.

Pennines more sunshine breaking through. Heading south across

:43:34.:43:36.

England and Wales, temperatures not as warm as recent days. A pleasant

:43:37.:43:41.

day to come, with spells of sunshine. Where you do see the

:43:42.:43:44.

sunshine breaking through we could see high or very high levels of UV,

:43:45.:43:49.

especially to the south. Also if you suffer from hay fever we have very

:43:50.:43:53.

high levels of Holland, especially across England and Wales. -- Poland.

:43:54.:43:59.

Living through this even in the rain for the west of Scotland is largely

:44:00.:44:03.

easing. Most places looking dry, with light winds. Clear spells and

:44:04.:44:08.

with warm air coming from the south it will be another muggy and sticky

:44:09.:44:13.

night. Temperatures about 13- 17. Through the weekend it will be

:44:14.:44:17.

heating up even more, down to the fact that we have very warm air in

:44:18.:44:21.

southern Europe. 44 degrees possible for southern Spain. That's moving

:44:22.:44:25.

northwards across France and towards the UK, where we could have

:44:26.:44:30.

temperatures topping 30 degrees or higher later on the weekend. For

:44:31.:44:33.

Saturday, high-pressure still the driving force. We have weather

:44:34.:44:37.

fronts it into the far north-west, so that means a bit of rain and

:44:38.:44:42.

cloud for the of Scotland. Elsewhere, dry. Cloud building

:44:43.:44:47.

through the days. Fair weather cloud towards the south-east, but

:44:48.:44:52.

temperatures between about 20- 27. A warm feeling day on Saturday. That

:44:53.:44:56.

theme continues on the Sunday. Hot and humid again. Some rain and

:44:57.:45:02.

cooler in the far north-west, but away from the north-west of Scotland

:45:03.:45:06.

elsewhere is dry. Temperatures likely to reach 39 or 40 degrees on

:45:07.:45:09.

Sunday. That it continues into Monday. 30 degrees likely and

:45:10.:45:14.

perhaps even higher than that. If you are not a fan of the heat and

:45:15.:45:20.

humidity it looks at things will turn fresh again by Monday.

:45:21.:45:24.

I always get confused as to what can we should expect at this time of

:45:25.:45:28.

year. I always wanted to be sunny and hot, because I enjoy golf, but

:45:29.:45:33.

that's not the same for everyone. It is looking above average for the

:45:34.:45:37.

next few days, about five or 10 degrees above average for some of

:45:38.:45:41.

us, but we return to usual the next week.

:45:42.:45:44.

And a lot of that because it is so hot down in Europe and southern

:45:45.:45:46.

Spain? Yes, that's right. We have the heat

:45:47.:45:50.

and humidity in southern Europe that is driving up to the UK. If you like

:45:51.:45:55.

the heat, you've got quite a bit on the cards over the next few days.

:45:56.:45:57.

I am going to enjoy it while I can! One year ago today, the MP, Jo Cox,

:45:58.:46:13.

was murdered in her constituency. Schools and communities across the

:46:14.:46:18.

country are taking part in a great get-together. These are to celebrate

:46:19.:46:23.

her life. There will be special assemblies held in schools across

:46:24.:46:32.

the country. This morning, John Maguire is in Batley High School,

:46:33.:46:36.

her constituency. I imagine her family are pleased people are

:46:37.:46:50.

celebrating the life. Batley High School, where people are celebrating

:46:51.:46:55.

her life. It is just one year since she was murdered here in Batley and

:46:56.:47:02.

Spen just down the road. We can find out more by talking to the head

:47:03.:47:07.

teacher. You were a friend of her, weren't you? You spent a lot of time

:47:08.:47:13.

with her. Tell us what she did. She was fabulous and inspirational. She

:47:14.:47:19.

was a people person. When she walked into a room she had a big smile. She

:47:20.:47:25.

talked to children about all sorts of issues, EU referendums, Syria,

:47:26.:47:32.

being a working mum... People felt a real connection to her. That is why

:47:33.:47:37.

we wanted to do something as a school she would be proud of. We are

:47:38.:47:42.

meeting up with Ryan Riess calls and eating cake. Lots of cake this

:47:43.:47:46.

morning. Hopefully she is looking down on us. This centre is named in

:47:47.:47:56.

her honour? Yes. We wanted to do something that was a legacy for her.

:47:57.:48:02.

She wanted to bring people together and talk about the environment. We

:48:03.:48:08.

are renaming this centre in her name. Thank you. I want to come

:48:09.:48:16.

around and talk to some of the boys here. Tell me about the tree. So

:48:17.:48:25.

what is currently happening is this is the prayer tree. When the

:48:26.:48:32.

ceremony begins, there will be these hands representing all of the people

:48:33.:48:45.

Jo Cox worked with. There will be some pens to write a prayer on,

:48:46.:48:48.

something personal to you and that you knew about her. It will be put

:48:49.:48:53.

up here. All of it will come collectively together. A great idea.

:48:54.:48:58.

And you have these roses. We made some white roses. They have come

:48:59.:49:06.

from all around the world. She was a Yorkshire girl and the Yorkshire

:49:07.:49:15.

rose represents the place. Good morning. You have had a busy week.

:49:16.:49:22.

For the family, it is one year on. These anniversaries are very

:49:23.:49:27.

difficult. How have you been coping as a family? We have been doing OK.

:49:28.:49:33.

It is difficult as a family. It is not like today is different for us

:49:34.:49:37.

in many ways. But what I chose to do, and I think it is the right

:49:38.:49:41.

decision, is to come into the community and be around people who

:49:42.:49:45.

loved her and who she loved, in the place we were born and were brought

:49:46.:49:50.

up. That is my way of coping with it. I wanted to let people know that

:49:51.:49:55.

we will not be beaten as a family and as a community we are not

:49:56.:49:59.

beaten. It is not just this community with the big get-together

:50:00.:50:03.

this weekend. How many events are there across the UK in the next few

:50:04.:50:07.

days? People have embraced the great get-together. Thousands of events. A

:50:08.:50:15.

few million people. 20,000 events. It shows there is an appetite for

:50:16.:50:22.

something positive, appetite to come together to take a break from the

:50:23.:50:25.

division and politics and things we fall apart about and focus on

:50:26.:50:33.

humanity and basic kindness. That is what Jo Cox stood for. People have

:50:34.:50:37.

embraced it and it is wonderful. It seems an appropriate time given the

:50:38.:50:43.

dreadful events of the past few weeks, to drive home those messages,

:50:44.:50:49.

that is. It seems like an eternity it has been that we have do turn on

:50:50.:50:55.

the TV and radio and hear these things. The country feels unstable.

:50:56.:51:00.

People need something to bring us together. Even if that is just

:51:01.:51:06.

switching off for a few hours and spending time with family and

:51:07.:51:08.

friends and remembering what is important in life. Respect,

:51:09.:51:16.

equality. If we take that away from this weekend, it has been a campaign

:51:17.:51:20.

that has worked. Thank you very much indeed. I am sure that you and the

:51:21.:51:26.

family and her friends have done her proud. You will see a lot of this

:51:27.:51:30.

over the next few days. They are the words from the maiden speech of Jo

:51:31.:51:35.

Cox, the first speech an MP makes in the House of Commons. It says we

:51:36.:51:40.

have far more united and far more in common than what divides us. She

:51:41.:51:48.

died 365 days ago, but every day those words become more and more

:51:49.:51:51.

appropriate. Thank you to everyone involved. It rather stops you in

:51:52.:51:57.

your tracks given all the news we reported recently. People embracing

:51:58.:52:03.

that spirit. It is good to hear that kind of thing. It really is. It

:52:04.:52:08.

really is. It makes you think. We are talking about one of Britain's

:52:09.:52:14.

biggest retailers this morning. Tesco has shown strong figures.

:52:15.:52:23.

Decent figures. Quite a troubled sector. Good morning. Good morning.

:52:24.:52:30.

You are right. I will come to those figures in a minute. We are in the

:52:31.:52:36.

shadow of St Paul's this morning in London where it is a glorious

:52:37.:52:41.

morning. A busy morning of economic and corporate data. Tesco has

:52:42.:52:47.

released its latest figures. Those for the first three months of the

:52:48.:52:57.

year. A sixth consecutive quarter of growth. It is a competitive sector.

:52:58.:53:03.

All of the discounters biting at the heels of Tesco and Sainsburys and

:53:04.:53:13.

others. Sales are up in the UK, but down in the rest of the world. What

:53:14.:53:20.

will it mean for customers? One person who can explain more is the

:53:21.:53:31.

analyst Theresa Wickham. Tesco has had a hard time like other

:53:32.:53:36.

retailers, but they are turning around. They are on a consecutive

:53:37.:53:42.

sales path. They have done better in the UK than internationally. It

:53:43.:53:47.

shows they are doing... Whatever they are doing in store, improving

:53:48.:53:53.

customer service, for example, it is interesting lots of the sales has

:53:54.:53:57.

been fresh food. They have decided clearly to go down that route. It is

:53:58.:54:05.

a steady result for them. I mentioned discounters like Lidl

:54:06.:54:11.

biting at their heels. There is a relatively new player, Amazon, doing

:54:12.:54:15.

that. They have their rights on fresh food as well. An on line

:54:16.:54:23.

retailer delivering fresh food. Yes. They have been competing well

:54:24.:54:28.

against discounters in reducing prices. People have moved away from

:54:29.:54:32.

promotions and have gone to everyday low prices, which is what the

:54:33.:54:37.

customer wants. Amazon is on a battle for fresh food. The other

:54:38.:54:41.

battle is on how fast can I get it to the customer? One hour deliveries

:54:42.:54:49.

in London. On line, Amazon, they are keen of interest for the customer.

:54:50.:54:53.

People are showing to prices are back on the up. We have been so used

:54:54.:54:59.

to price wars, always making it cheaper. That is at an end. They are

:55:00.:55:07.

not vying for custom just based on price. Yes. Tesco hinted at this.

:55:08.:55:15.

They are absorbing some of those costs and not passing them on. They

:55:16.:55:19.

don't want to be seen as more expensive than other people. Thank

:55:20.:55:22.

you for shedding light on that. We have heard from the boss, David

:55:23.:55:29.

Lewis this morning. They are very competitive. It seems there is a lot

:55:30.:55:36.

for them to consider. Sales up overall by a 1%, their sixth

:55:37.:55:44.

consecutive quarter of growth. And while we are here, they have set up

:55:45.:55:53.

a strange crazy golf set. It is back to you, I am off to play. I am

:55:54.:55:59.

jealous. You never know what you will find! And now, what is still to

:56:00.:56:14.

come this morning? #Baby, we're lost without the cause#. It is still very

:56:15.:56:18.

similar, that sound. Hello, this is Breakfast, with

:56:19.:00:22.

Charlie Stayt and Naga Munchetty. An emergency review is launched

:00:23.:00:25.

into tower blocks across the UK The Communities Secretary tells this

:00:26.:00:30.

programme that following the tower block fire in London,

:00:31.:00:32.

he expects answers about the safety So what we've already started, had

:00:33.:00:49.

started right away, is an emergency review, fire review, of all similar

:00:50.:00:50.

buildings throughout the country. Pictures emerge of the

:00:51.:00:53.

inside of the building. 17 people are known to have died,

:00:54.:00:55.

more than 60 are being named As the search of the burned

:00:56.:00:58.

out tower continues, the police launch a criminal

:00:59.:01:03.

inquiry into fire. It is Friday the 16th of June. New

:01:04.:01:30.

evidence that North Korean hackers were responsible for the cyber

:01:31.:01:33.

attack that crippled parts of the NHS last month.

:01:34.:01:38.

It is one year on since the murder of MP Jo Cox, this morning we are

:01:39.:01:43.

back in her constituency to remember but, more importantly, to celebrate

:01:44.:01:47.

her life. England's Paul Casey is the pick of

:01:48.:01:51.

the European challengers at the U.S. Open so far. A first round of six

:01:52.:01:56.

under par sees him a stroke of the leader Rickie Fowler at golf's

:01:57.:02:00.

second major of the year. Sarah has the weather. A slightly

:02:01.:02:04.

fresh start than recently but things will warm and it is looking try, a

:02:05.:02:11.

bit of rain in the north-west. All the details in about 15 minutes.

:02:12.:02:12.

The Communities Secretary has said that the Government has launched an

:02:13.:02:22.

emergency review of tower blocks in response to the Groenefeld Tower

:02:23.:02:26.

fire. Sajid Javid said his department has asked local

:02:27.:02:28.

authorities for a list of residential buildings that might be

:02:29.:02:31.

affected by safety concerns. There is growing anger in the community

:02:32.:02:36.

about whether the blaze could have been prevented. You might find the

:02:37.:02:38.

content of this report distressing. The first victim of the fire

:02:39.:02:43.

to be officially named is Mohammed Alhajali,

:02:44.:02:45.

a Syrian refugee who came His brother was led to safety

:02:46.:02:47.

by firefighters, but, in the chaos and confusion,

:02:48.:02:50.

Mohammed got left behind. I thought they took

:02:51.:02:52.

him outside with me! Some of those trapped

:02:53.:03:06.

in the blaze did survive. We now know this man

:03:07.:03:11.

is Elpidio Bonifacio, a partially blind grandfather

:03:12.:03:13.

in his 70s. His family say he is in intensive

:03:14.:03:18.

care, suffering from They have thanked the bravery

:03:19.:03:20.

of the firefighters who risked Elpidio was finally rescued 11 hours

:03:21.:03:25.

after the blaze started. There is anger in the community,

:03:26.:03:32.

directed at almost The London Mayor Sadiq Khan saw it

:03:33.:03:34.

for himself when he went to visit. How many children died and what are

:03:35.:03:41.

you going to do about it? Police say they have now started

:03:42.:03:45.

a criminal investigation. That's not to say there

:03:46.:03:47.

was a crime committed, but they will investigate

:03:48.:03:50.

to establish if there's The list of the dead

:03:51.:03:52.

and missing grows all the time. Police have voiced the hope

:03:53.:03:58.

that the final number They admit that some victims may

:03:59.:04:00.

never be identified. The leader of the local council said

:04:01.:04:15.

they did think about installing sprinkler system in Grenfell Tower

:04:16.:04:18.

when it was renovated last year, but he said there was no collective

:04:19.:04:21.

view among residents in favour Andy Moore is at the scene

:04:22.:04:24.

of the fire in West London. You have been there since that fire

:04:25.:04:33.

took hold in the early hours of Wednesday morning, you have seen

:04:34.:04:38.

just how the progression of the investigation has continued and the

:04:39.:04:42.

reaction of residence? That's right, shock initially, now

:04:43.:04:49.

quite a bit of anger. We saw in that report the first person officially

:04:50.:04:57.

named and with me is a friend of his, Abdul. First of all, tell us

:04:58.:05:03.

about Mohammed, what kind of man was he? He was a kind man, a great

:05:04.:05:11.

individual. He came to the UK seeking safety. He wanted to do his

:05:12.:05:19.

degree in civil engineering. I asked why he was studying engineering, why

:05:20.:05:23.

not IT, then I could find you a job? That is because I am a computing

:05:24.:05:28.

engineer. He said he wanted to go back to Syria when the war is over

:05:29.:05:31.

and help rebuild the country, he said they were leaders. This is the

:05:32.:05:37.

kind of person he was. Is a civil engineer, what would he have made of

:05:38.:05:41.

the fire safety arrangements up the tower block? I think the safety

:05:42.:05:46.

measures are the most important thing in any tower. When I visited

:05:47.:05:51.

him here in this building I really had a negative thought about it and

:05:52.:05:55.

I asked him why do you live here? You said, to be fair, we don't like

:05:56.:06:00.

it a lot but we moved to the country, we are refugees, it takes

:06:01.:06:05.

time to find better accommodation. Unfortunately the fire took him

:06:06.:06:11.

before he moved out. What do you think about the fact that you lost

:06:12.:06:16.

him to this fire, this fire that seems to have been accelerated by

:06:17.:06:20.

the cladding on the exterior of the building? So many people died, what

:06:21.:06:25.

do you think? It is a huge loss for us and Syria as well, we lost one of

:06:26.:06:32.

our future civil engineers. I think someone must take the

:06:33.:06:36.

responsibility. He came here to seek safety, he did not come to end up

:06:37.:06:42.

dying in a fire. I think this tragic incident could have been prevented.

:06:43.:06:51.

But I think the local council, the management organisations must take

:06:52.:06:53.

the responsibility. Lots of questions need to be answered. How

:06:54.:06:58.

is his brother doing? We know they were separated in the smoke and

:06:59.:07:03.

confusion, obviously devastated by this, how is his brother doing?

:07:04.:07:08.

About physically he is fine, he did not suffer any burn injuries. But he

:07:09.:07:12.

is traumatised by the whole thing, by the loss of his brother and buy,

:07:13.:07:19.

like, living through the horrific experience. I hope he will be fine

:07:20.:07:25.

but I believe it will take a really long time. Abdul, thank you. This is

:07:26.:07:34.

the story of Mohammed, the first victim. Thank you very much, Andy

:07:35.:07:41.

Miller. Earlier in the programme,

:07:42.:07:49.

Communities Secretary Sajid Javid said he wanted to reassure people

:07:50.:07:53.

living in similar tower blocks throughout the country. Anybody

:07:54.:07:57.

living in a tower block, especially if it has recently been clad, I

:07:58.:08:01.

understand they will be very concerned. So right away we started

:08:02.:08:06.

an emergency fire review of all similar buildings throughout the

:08:07.:08:10.

country. We are in touch with local authorities everywhere, social

:08:11.:08:13.

housing providers, we have asked them to begin compiling a list of

:08:14.:08:17.

what they might think falls into the category. Those people sleeping in a

:08:18.:08:21.

tower block that might have those panels on them tonight and last

:08:22.:08:27.

night will be thinking should I be in this building at all? You say at

:08:28.:08:30.

this stage you don't even know how many buildings have that cladding?

:08:31.:08:39.

The process we have already started, which will be done in a matter of

:08:40.:08:42.

days, I think those people need to be reassured within days, it has to

:08:43.:08:45.

be led by the experts. We need to identify those buildings, about 4000

:08:46.:08:48.

high-rise buildings in the country, not all of them have been re-clad.

:08:49.:08:54.

Let's not make the assumption it is all about cladding, we need to be

:08:55.:08:57.

led by the experts. As soon as we have more information from the

:08:58.:09:01.

experts, which we expect later today or over the weekend, that should be

:09:02.:09:05.

used to do these emergency inspections. Sajid Javid, the

:09:06.:09:11.

Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government, speaking to

:09:12.:09:12.

Serbia. A rally is being organised

:09:13.:09:13.

in Westminster at six o'clock this evening,

:09:14.:09:15.

to call for justice for those The Prime Minister has been

:09:16.:09:18.

criticised for travelling to the area but not meeting

:09:19.:09:21.

residents of the tower when she visited the scene

:09:22.:09:23.

of the fire yesterday. Our political correspondent,

:09:24.:09:25.

Chris Mason, joins us Sajid Javid was quick to point out

:09:26.:09:33.

he will be visiting the scene today, in amongst the other things he was

:09:34.:09:37.

talking about. The Prime Minister has come in for some criticism for

:09:38.:09:43.

visiting but talking to the emergency services rather than those

:09:44.:09:47.

individuals caught directly? Good morning. One Labour Shadow

:09:48.:09:51.

Ministers spitting with anger on social media about the Prime

:09:52.:09:55.

Minister's unwillingness, in his view, to meet local people. My

:09:56.:09:59.

understanding is that Downing Street did consider the Prime Minister

:10:00.:10:04.

giving a more extensive visit when she was there yesterday but

:10:05.:10:07.

concluded, having taken advice from the police, that this risk,

:10:08.:10:13.

effectively, getting in the way. The very nature of the security details

:10:14.:10:17.

surrounding the Prime Minister would have meant this could have required

:10:18.:10:20.

manpower from the emergency services which, frankly, could have been

:10:21.:10:23.

better used dealing with what they are having to deal with on the

:10:24.:10:28.

ground but, yes, there has been criticism. There was a stark

:10:29.:10:31.

contrast between the Prime Minister's visit and a couple of

:10:32.:10:36.

hours later the Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn arriving, mingling amongst

:10:37.:10:39.

the crowds, putting his arm around one woman who was desperately

:10:40.:10:44.

looking for somebody who is still missing. The Government says it is

:10:45.:10:49.

doing everything it can, it has activated a scheme which ensures

:10:50.:10:52.

that central government funding is channelled directly to the local

:10:53.:10:56.

authority, which obviously faces a huge number of additional costs.

:10:57.:11:01.

There will be a public inquiry. This could be a huge endeavour. Clearly

:11:02.:11:05.

there is a demand for answers quickly and public inquiries very

:11:06.:11:08.

rarely provide quick answers but they tend to provide very detailed

:11:09.:11:13.

answers that can shape the whole approach of governments, this one

:11:14.:11:18.

and future ones, in terms of their approach to housing. We do not yet

:11:19.:11:22.

know who will chair that, we know it will be a judge but we do not know

:11:23.:11:26.

quite who, or its exact terms of reference. It gives you an insight

:11:27.:11:32.

that the whole issue of housing, its safety and fire risk are likely to

:11:33.:11:36.

be something that politically remains salient for a long time as a

:11:37.:11:41.

result of this. Chris, for the moment, thank you.

:11:42.:11:46.

Some of the news to bring you. -- some other news.

:11:47.:11:48.

A second soldier has died after he was injured in an incident

:11:49.:11:51.

involving a tank at an army firing range in Pembrokeshire.

:11:52.:11:53.

He was serving with the Royal Tank Regiment.

:11:54.:11:55.

Two other soldiers were injured at Castlemartin Ranges on Wednesday.

:11:56.:11:58.

British security officials say they believe hackers in North Korea

:11:59.:12:00.

were behind the cyber attack that crippled parts of

:12:01.:12:02.

The hackers are thought to have been attempting to make money,

:12:03.:12:06.

but didn't predict the extent to which the computer

:12:07.:12:08.

Here's more from our security correspondent, Gordon Corera.

:12:09.:12:11.

The cyber attack spread around the world, with the NHS badly hit.

:12:12.:12:16.

Computers were locked, with hackers demanding a ransom

:12:17.:12:18.

be paid for them to be made usable again.

:12:19.:12:21.

Britain's National Cyber Security Centre led the investigation

:12:22.:12:25.

and security sources have told the BBC that the centre believes

:12:26.:12:30.

a North Korean-based hacking group known as Lazarus

:12:31.:12:32.

The same group is believed to have targeted Sony Pictures after it

:12:33.:12:41.

planned to release a film involving the North Korean leader and was also

:12:42.:12:44.

thought to have been behind the theft of more than $80 million

:12:45.:12:47.

from Bangladesh's central bank last year.

:12:48.:12:50.

The ransomware last month did not target Britain or the NHS

:12:51.:12:53.

specifically and may well have been a money making scheme

:12:54.:12:57.

that got out of control, especially since the hackers have

:12:58.:12:59.

not yet retrieved any of the ransom money that's been

:13:00.:13:02.

A new poll has revealed a widespread lack of knowledge

:13:03.:13:12.

about where significant moments in England's history took place.

:13:13.:13:14.

A campaign has been launched to raise awareness of the sites

:13:15.:13:17.

Home to the Large Hadron Collider and the most common answer

:13:18.:13:24.

when people in England are asked, where was the atom first split?

:13:25.:13:30.

But it was here in Manchester that the scientific

:13:31.:13:32.

breakthrough was made by Ernest Rutherford, in 1917.

:13:33.:13:37.

This new research suggests that only one in ten people know that and it's

:13:38.:13:41.

far from the only common mistake about England's most impressive

:13:42.:13:43.

When it comes to where the first trainers were made, three times more

:13:44.:13:52.

people think it was in the USA than know the truth.

:13:53.:13:55.

JW Foster Sons created them in the 1890s and later became Reebok.

:13:56.:14:05.

And the majority of people believe that bungee jumping originated

:14:06.:14:08.

in Australia or New Zealand, when in fact it all started

:14:09.:14:15.

in Bristol, with a leap from the Clifton Suspension Bridge

:14:16.:14:17.

Historic England hope their new campaign will fill

:14:18.:14:26.

the gaps in people's knowledge and more people will be aware

:14:27.:14:29.

achievements, like the fact the pencil was invented in Cumbria.

:14:30.:14:43.

We will have the sport and weather shortly. Surgeons at Grenfell Tower

:14:44.:14:53.

in west London continue. Dozens of people are still unaccounted for.

:14:54.:14:56.

Police are warning some of the dead may never be identified. Tim Moffat

:14:57.:15:00.

has been speaking to some of the family and friends of those missing.

:15:01.:15:06.

The wait for news is unbearable. Pictures of 12-year-old Jessica can

:15:07.:15:14.

be seen posted across this area. The last time I saw her was 1:39am. I

:15:15.:15:21.

couldn't get up to get her. She was in panic. That is the last time I

:15:22.:15:28.

spoke to her. I don't know. I'd like you have got these pictures of her

:15:29.:15:34.

and these posters around everywhere. Lots of people have same -- have

:15:35.:15:42.

said they saw her. But we don't know if it is true. It was just a

:15:43.:15:52.

schoolboy saying that. I'm just worried about people that are

:15:53.:16:00.

missing. My little sister's friend is missing. They have been missing

:16:01.:16:07.

since four o'clock, the first day it started. No sign of them. Just

:16:08.:16:10.

thinking of the people that died, the babies that died, the children,

:16:11.:16:17.

the families, the mothers, the grandfathers, the grandmothers. All

:16:18.:16:23.

our minds are on them today. I know of quite a few were missing. They

:16:24.:16:27.

are a few I know who are already dead. There are a few others I

:16:28.:16:34.

strongly suspect are dead. The only thing keeping me going at the moment

:16:35.:16:38.

is anger and adrenaline. And I will keep going on anger and adrenaline

:16:39.:16:42.

for as long as I can. Because frankly I would rather not sit down

:16:43.:16:46.

and actually contemplated that the actual scale of what happened around

:16:47.:16:51.

here. If I do sit down, I will understand up again. Getting a real

:16:52.:16:59.

sense this morning, in among the grief and the anxiety, a real sense

:17:00.:17:01.

of anger this morning. Let's now return again

:17:02.:17:04.

to the experience of the firefighters who battled

:17:05.:17:07.

this unprecedented blaze. Lucy Masoud is a firefighter

:17:08.:17:09.

and trade union official at the Fire Brigades Union London

:17:10.:17:11.

branch and joins us now. Thank you very much for talking to

:17:12.:17:22.

us. I understand you did not attend the scene but you have been in close

:17:23.:17:27.

contact with colleagues from your station who have. Can you tell us

:17:28.:17:32.

what they have been telling you? Good morning. I have been in quite

:17:33.:17:37.

close contact. As a union official we are there to support our members.

:17:38.:17:42.

I have been in contact with people on my -- at my station in Chelsea

:17:43.:17:47.

and colleagues at other stations. Andy yeah, the things they have been

:17:48.:17:50.

telling me I absolutely horrific. Just horrific. The incident itself

:17:51.:17:56.

is just unprecedented. We have never seen anything like it. I have been

:17:57.:17:59.

in the job ten years. I have been too many fires in high-rise

:18:00.:18:04.

buildings. These fires do not spread in the manner this one did. It is

:18:05.:18:09.

absolutely unprecedented. Something has gone seriously wrong. This fire

:18:10.:18:13.

should not have happened. In regards to the firefighters I have spoken

:18:14.:18:16.

to, they did an absolutely amazing job. I have to pay tribute to the

:18:17.:18:20.

brave men and women who attended the scene. But also controlled workers

:18:21.:18:24.

as well, who would have had to have taken horrific calls and literally

:18:25.:18:29.

would have heard people perish on the other end of the line. It is a

:18:30.:18:34.

terrible situation to be standing here this morning. We heard from

:18:35.:18:43.

Dany Cotton, the London Fire Brigade commissioner, telling us that some

:18:44.:18:47.

have been injured and of course support will be given to

:18:48.:18:52.

firefighters who, as you have said, saw horrific scenes. The danger that

:18:53.:18:57.

they were facing, you said this is unprecedented. In terms of danger

:18:58.:19:00.

and risks that were being taken, what can you tell us? As

:19:01.:19:07.

firefighters we put our lives on the line every day. That is part and

:19:08.:19:11.

parcel of the job. We're happy to do that. I have heard witness accounts

:19:12.:19:16.

from people saying as they were running out of the building, we were

:19:17.:19:19.

running towards the danger into the building. That is what we do. In

:19:20.:19:25.

most early as firefighters, we put up emotional walls, so we are not

:19:26.:19:31.

too badly affected by is -- by these kind of incidents. Otherwise we

:19:32.:19:35.

wouldn't be able to do our jobs. Something like this is absolutely

:19:36.:19:38.

unprecedented. We have never seen anything even close to this. I do

:19:39.:19:43.

worry for my firefighters. I do worry for my members. We hold the

:19:44.:19:47.

London Fire Brigade to account. They said they will support us. I hope

:19:48.:19:53.

they do. We have been outside since the incident took place and we will

:19:54.:19:57.

continue to be onside to ensure that our firefighters and control are

:19:58.:20:02.

supported. I'm sure you are aware the public is very grateful for the

:20:03.:20:05.

risks that the emergency services have taken while trying to save

:20:06.:20:11.

others. Lucy, I understand as well, that you have had phone

:20:12.:20:15.

conversations with colleagues very upset about snap decisions that have

:20:16.:20:20.

to be made while such a horrific event is under way. Can you tell us

:20:21.:20:27.

about that? Yeah. The conversations I have had, one colleague said he

:20:28.:20:29.

was going in there literally having to choose who to save and who to

:20:30.:20:36.

leave and die. You only have two hands. You can only take out so many

:20:37.:20:40.

people. My colleagues who went in, took the Bilate, went back in. The

:20:41.:20:45.

red watch at Chelsea were meant to finish at 9:30am, they didn't get

:20:46.:20:51.

back to station until 530 in the afternoon. That is an absolute

:20:52.:20:56.

tribute to the brave men and women who attended this incident. But

:20:57.:21:00.

here, the scenes they would have encountered in the early hours of

:21:01.:21:03.

Tuesday morning, it is absolutely unimaginable. Lucy, how do

:21:04.:21:10.

firefighters, emergency workers, how do they process this? You said you

:21:11.:21:15.

put up a wall when you are doing your job. You almost have to be

:21:16.:21:19.

stone cold when you are tackling something like this. How are you

:21:20.:21:25.

trained to deal with this after? It is an interesting question. We are

:21:26.:21:30.

trained to deal with things like this to a certain extent but nothing

:21:31.:21:35.

on this scale. We deal Das -- we deal with death on a daily basis. It

:21:36.:21:41.

comes with the job. Many of us have attended terrorist incidents and

:21:42.:21:45.

other horrific incidents. And we just deal with it. That is what we

:21:46.:21:49.

do. We are firefighters. Something on this scale, speaking to the

:21:50.:21:54.

people I have spoken to, they are an absolute pits. I have never seen

:21:55.:21:58.

anything like it. I have spoken to people who have been in for 30 years

:21:59.:22:02.

and they have never seen anything like it. We need to ensure that the

:22:03.:22:05.

support is therefore our fire service. We know there has been a

:22:06.:22:10.

cut in funding to the fire Brigade in regards to the sport offered to

:22:11.:22:15.

our employees. -- support. We need to take this opportunity to ensure

:22:16.:22:20.

the government is offering that support to all my colleagues. Our

:22:21.:22:25.

thoughts are with all of your colleagues and the emergency

:22:26.:22:28.

services who attended this scene in this horrific tragedy. On a separate

:22:29.:22:32.

note, there are a lot of discussions about the safety of buildings such

:22:33.:22:37.

as this, and questions about how this fire spread so quickly. You

:22:38.:22:41.

alluded to this at the beginning of the interview. What thoughts of you

:22:42.:22:45.

got in terms of the numbers of fire inspections that are able to take

:22:46.:22:49.

place in the light of cuts? And also in terms of safety regulations? What

:22:50.:22:53.

will the Fire Brigades Union be pushing for a? We have been pushing

:22:54.:22:59.

for more fire inspections for years. We have been pushing against the

:23:00.:23:02.

cuts for years. We have been screaming this from the rooftops for

:23:03.:23:07.

I don't know how long. It is far too early to speculate what has gone

:23:08.:23:10.

wrong and why this has happened. It would be inappropriate for me to

:23:11.:23:14.

stand here and throw allegations at people. What we do know is something

:23:15.:23:18.

has gone wrong. Fires like this do not happen in this country and fires

:23:19.:23:21.

like this should not be happening in this country. Residents and the

:23:22.:23:25.

public rightly angry and they should be. In regards to the cuts, it is

:23:26.:23:30.

too early to speculate, to say there is a link between the cuts what

:23:31.:23:36.

happened. But we do know that ten fire stations have been closed down

:23:37.:23:40.

in three years in London. 600 jobs have been removed. And many fire

:23:41.:23:44.

engines have been removed from front line services. Has that had an

:23:45.:23:49.

effect? We don't know. It is far too early. There are serious questions

:23:50.:23:52.

that need to be answered. All I would say is, how many more fires,

:23:53.:23:57.

and many more dead bodies does the government need to see before the

:23:58.:24:02.

stop these savage cuts on the emergency services?

:24:03.:24:06.

Lucy Massoud, thank you for your time. Please do pass her best and

:24:07.:24:10.

our thanks to colleagues. We are going to take a break from

:24:11.:24:19.

our coverage of events in west London and have a look at the

:24:20.:24:25.

weather. Here is Sarah. It is a fresh start today than in

:24:26.:24:29.

recent days. Things will turn warm later. This is a view taken this

:24:30.:24:33.

morning by a Weather Watchers in Norfolk. Spells of sunshine. Things

:24:34.:24:40.

warming up. It will turn much hotter through the weekend. It will not be

:24:41.:24:44.

dry everywhere. We have got light rain across Northern Ireland pushing

:24:45.:24:47.

its way into Scotland and perhaps some drizzle into the north-west of

:24:48.:24:50.

England. Elsewhere, things looked dry. Further south you will see more

:24:51.:24:55.

in the way of sunshine. The western half of Scotland will have cloud and

:24:56.:25:02.

patchy rain. Brighter towards the east of Scotland. Northern Ireland

:25:03.:25:06.

also drying out later in the day. We could sequences of sunshine. 21

:25:07.:25:11.

degrees in Belfast. For Northern inland, drizzle over the Pennines

:25:12.:25:14.

and the West. Further east it is looking brighter and drier. Further

:25:15.:25:19.

south, spells of sunshine peeking through the cloud. Temperatures

:25:20.:25:24.

added 22, 20 three degrees. Where you see the sunnier spells,

:25:25.:25:26.

particularly in southern and south-west England, high levels of

:25:27.:25:33.

UV, you will be aware there are high levels of pollen, particularly

:25:34.:25:36.

across England and Wales. Through the day and into the evening, we

:25:37.:25:39.

will lose the wet weather from the West of Scotland. Perhaps a little

:25:40.:25:43.

drizzle continuing. Overnight most places looking dry. We have some

:25:44.:25:48.

warm, humid air piling in from the south. Temperatures falling no lower

:25:49.:25:53.

than 16, 17 degrees. Quite a sticky night. Things warming up in the

:25:54.:26:00.

weekend. Hot air developing across parts of southern Spain. 44 degrees

:26:01.:26:05.

possible there. That warm air drifters way across France and

:26:06.:26:10.

towards the UK. Our temperatures could reach 30 degrees, particularly

:26:11.:26:13.

on Sunday into Monday. High-pressure Billing in from the south. We have

:26:14.:26:19.

still got a front towards the far north-west. That would bring wet and

:26:20.:26:22.

windy weather across the far north-west of Scotland. More cloud

:26:23.:26:25.

at times across Scotland into western parts of Northern Ireland.

:26:26.:26:31.

Elsewhere across the UK, lots of sunshine. Fairweather cloud building

:26:32.:26:35.

in the afternoon. Temperatures between 20 and 27 degrees. A warm

:26:36.:26:39.

feeling day. Sunday turns that bit hotter. Some outbreaks of rain in

:26:40.:26:44.

the far north-west. Elsewhere, another dry, sunny day. 2930 degrees

:26:45.:26:52.

lightly. That heat stays with us on Monday. Another day of 30 degrees in

:26:53.:26:55.

the south-east. Things will start to turn a little bit fresher by the

:26:56.:26:57.

time we get to Tuesday. Now the news where you are.

:26:58.:27:02.

a very warm start to next week. I'm back with the latest

:27:03.:30:26.

from the BBC London Hello, this is Breakfast with

:30:27.:30:29.

Charlie Stayt and Naga Munchetty. The Communities' Secretary Sajid

:30:30.:30:39.

Javid has told BBC Breakfast the government has launched

:30:40.:30:41.

an emergency review of high rise blocks in response

:30:42.:30:43.

to the Grenfell Tower fire. There's growing anger

:30:44.:30:46.

in the local community over whether the blaze

:30:47.:30:47.

could have been prevented. 60 people are being named by some

:30:48.:30:50.

media outlets as missing or dead. Sajid Javid said he wanted

:30:51.:30:54.

to reassure people living in similar This is being done

:30:55.:30:56.

in a matter of days. I think those people need

:30:57.:31:05.

to be given reassurance The first point is obviously

:31:06.:31:07.

to identify these buildings. There are about 4000 high-rise

:31:08.:31:12.

buildings in the country but not all of them have been

:31:13.:31:16.

re-cladded but also, let's not just make the assumption it's

:31:17.:31:19.

all about cladding. As soon as we have more information

:31:20.:31:21.

from the experts, which we expect either later today

:31:22.:31:26.

or certainly over the weekend, then that is what I think should be used

:31:27.:31:29.

to do these emergency inspections. Our correspondent Andy

:31:30.:31:36.

Moore is at the scene As politicians react to growing

:31:37.:31:52.

anger we have been hearing more from residents who are rightly very

:31:53.:31:57.

concerned about safety. That is right. The first victim has been

:31:58.:32:01.

officially identified. Mohammed Alhajali was 23 and training to be a

:32:02.:32:09.

civil engineer. About half an hour ago we heard a tribute to him from

:32:10.:32:16.

his friend. He was a kind man, full of passion for his family, a great

:32:17.:32:22.

individual. He came to the UK seeking safety. He wanted to do his

:32:23.:32:28.

degree in civil engineering. I asked him why he was studying several

:32:29.:32:33.

engineering instead of IT and he said because I want to go back to

:32:34.:32:40.

Syria when the war is over and help rebuild the country. He said they

:32:41.:32:43.

will need us. This is the kind of person he was. I asked him what he

:32:44.:32:51.

thought of this building burnt out and he said he had not seen damage

:32:52.:32:57.

like this in his own country, Syria, in a war zone. The views of the

:32:58.:33:01.

friend was that somebody should be held responsible for this.

:33:02.:33:08.

Distressing accounts that have been coming out from the area. Our

:33:09.:33:11.

correspondent has been talking to local people.

:33:12.:33:14.

The Prime Minister is facing criticism for not meeting residents

:33:15.:33:16.

when she visited the scene of the Grenfell Tower

:33:17.:33:18.

The Mayor of London Sadiq Khan was heckled by some angry

:33:19.:33:22.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn spoke to local campaigners who demanded

:33:23.:33:28.

answers about how the fire was able to spread so quickly.

:33:29.:33:33.

British security officials say they believe that hackers

:33:34.:33:36.

in North Korea were behind the cyber attack that crippled parts

:33:37.:33:38.

The attack led to delays in operations

:33:39.:33:41.

The hackers are thought to have been attempting to make money,

:33:42.:33:47.

but did not predict the extent to which the computer

:33:48.:33:49.

The group believed to be behind the attack is Lazarus,

:33:50.:33:53.

which is also thought to have targeted Sony pictures in 2014.

:33:54.:34:04.

Still to come on Breakfast this morning: After three decades in one

:34:05.:34:06.

of the world's biggest bands, she stepped out of the

:34:07.:34:09.

Now Fleetwood Mac's Christine McVie is back.

:34:10.:34:12.

She'll be here to tell us why she's hooked up again

:34:13.:34:15.

We'll meet award winning saxophonist Yolanda Brown,

:34:16.:34:31.

who's taking the UK jazz scene to new heights.

:34:32.:34:33.

And we'll take a trip to Middle Earth with the illustrator

:34:34.:34:35.

whose creations brought Tolkien's magical world to life.

:34:36.:34:38.

Alan Lee will tell us about the newest instalment,

:34:39.:34:40.

The first round has been and gone in the US Open. It has challenged a few

:34:41.:35:06.

of the golfers. It is always going to be

:35:07.:35:10.

unpredictable. Rickie Fowler was seven under. It does not really mean

:35:11.:35:17.

anything. The top six in the wild are underpowered. You are a golfer.

:35:18.:35:24.

This course has been set-up to so difficult. This is an enormously

:35:25.:35:35.

long course. 8000 yards. We were asking if there were limits. They

:35:36.:35:40.

can only push them luck so far before the top golfers they know

:35:41.:35:45.

they are not playing this. They like being tested.

:35:46.:35:47.

The US Open, golf's second major of the year,

:35:48.:35:49.

Many of the world's top players have struggled in their opening round.

:35:50.:35:53.

The early leader is America's Rickie Fowler who shot

:35:54.:35:55.

That put him clear of the chasing pack.

:35:56.:35:58.

That includes Englishman Tommy Fleetwood, who is two shots behind.

:35:59.:36:00.

But the pick of the British challengers is Paul Casey.

:36:01.:36:03.

He is just one shot off the lead after day one at Erin Hills.

:36:04.:36:06.

The British and Irish Lions are back in action tomorrow

:36:07.:36:09.

against the New Zealand Maori, and the rest of the home nations

:36:10.:36:13.

are also on tour, including Wales, who are in New Zealand too.

:36:14.:36:16.

They've beaten Tonga in Auckland 24-6.

:36:17.:36:21.

Winger Alex Cuthbert scoring the first try of the match.

:36:22.:36:23.

Next up for Wales is Samoa next week.

:36:24.:36:26.

Jordan Pickford has officially become the most expensive British

:36:27.:36:30.

goalkeeper in history, after joining Everton for a fee that

:36:31.:36:32.

He joins from Sunderland, who were relegated from

:36:33.:36:36.

Pickford will play in this summer's U21

:36:37.:36:41.

European Championship for England, but has yet to make his debut

:36:42.:36:44.

It was a big spending day for Everton, who also paid

:36:45.:36:52.

over ?23 million for Ajax captain Davy Klaassen.

:36:53.:36:56.

Johanna Konta has continued her winning start to her grass court

:36:57.:36:58.

season with victory in the second round of

:36:59.:37:00.

The British No 1 lost in the first round at

:37:01.:37:05.

the French Open on clay, but is the top seed in Nottingham

:37:06.:37:09.

and eased past Belgium's Yanina Wickmayer in straight sets.

:37:10.:37:12.

She'll play Ashleigh Barty in the quarterfinals today.

:37:13.:37:16.

Britain's Jake Wightman knocked over a second

:37:17.:37:18.

off his personal best as he beat a high-quality field

:37:19.:37:21.

in the 1500 metres at the Oslo Diamond League

:37:22.:37:24.

Wightman tweeted afterwards that he was, "In utter shock.

:37:25.:37:29.

I cannot believe I've just won a Diamond League."

:37:30.:37:32.

The 22-year-old Scot follows in the footsteps of Seb Coe,

:37:33.:37:37.

Steve Ovett and Steve Cram who have all won the race known

:37:38.:37:40.

That was back in the 80s. Have we seen a new start for in British

:37:41.:37:50.

middle-distance running? Some of the top wakeboarders

:37:51.:37:52.

in the world have gathered in Cheshire for the penultimate stop

:37:53.:37:54.

on their pro tour. They're in the lake all weekend

:37:55.:37:56.

at Bolesworth Castle at the inaugural International

:37:57.:37:59.

Watersports Festival there, and as well pushing each other

:38:00.:38:00.

to new daring heights, the professional riders

:38:01.:38:03.

will also show beginners how Here's some buffoon thinking he's

:38:04.:38:06.

mastered it until the sight of a jump coming towards him

:38:07.:38:10.

meant an early bath. Did you go over the jump? No. Around

:38:11.:38:25.

it? No. I just chickened out. We can hear from a former world champion.

:38:26.:38:27.

Maybe not. We can hear from him now. Doing these tour stops, it gets

:38:28.:38:34.

so many more people involved. A lot of new competitors

:38:35.:38:36.

and new people seeing the sport. This is the main purpose of bringing

:38:37.:38:39.

wakeboarding here to Bolesworth It has only really been going a year

:38:40.:38:48.

and the idea is to take the show on the road to show people how to get

:38:49.:38:51.

up on the water. What a great weekend. Clearly you struggled. The

:38:52.:38:59.

site of the jump was probably beyond me. You could build up to it if you

:39:00.:39:06.

had a couple of more lessons. Tomorrow morning we are celebrating

:39:07.:39:11.

50 years of orienteering. And something that will surprise you

:39:12.:39:12.

about it. OK. Their on-off relationships

:39:13.:39:17.

and bust ups are the stuff of rock and roll legend,

:39:18.:39:20.

but it was the music which made Fleetwood Mac one of the most

:39:21.:39:23.

successful bands of all time. Christine McVie was with the group

:39:24.:39:26.

for three decades, but stepped out Now she's back, with band-mate

:39:27.:39:29.

Lindsey Buckingham, There's even talk of a world tour,

:39:30.:39:33.

before we speak to her let's listen # I wonder where you are. As I fall

:39:34.:39:53.

upon my bed. And I think about the we were. So much left NZ. I wonder

:39:54.:40:04.

what you are doing. As I walk a longer sure. You took your love away

:40:05.:40:16.

from me. I only wanted more. Sometimes I wonder do you ever think

:40:17.:40:25.

of me? And it's worse for me at night you know when your kisses are

:40:26.:40:36.

seen. Slowly breaks the dawn today. Heralded by the sun. My favourite

:40:37.:40:44.

time of day or so I thought when we began #.

:40:45.:40:48.

You were just glancing at that picture behind us. Can you put a

:40:49.:40:59.

date on that? I think it was sometime in the 80s but I would not

:41:00.:41:05.

bet on it. Quite a few changes in the line-up over the years. Yes,

:41:06.:41:10.

Lindsay left foot about the night years and we replaced him with Billy

:41:11.:41:17.

Barnett and rig the talk. It was ultimately the inauguration of Bill

:41:18.:41:21.

Clinton that brought us back together because they wanted to use

:41:22.:41:27.

don't stop as their campaign song and we performed live at the

:41:28.:41:30.

inaugural Ball and we thought it was pretty good and we wanted to get

:41:31.:41:36.

cracking against the five of us got back together. When we introduced

:41:37.:41:39.

the music we were saying there were some bust ups, the stuff of legend

:41:40.:41:49.

almost. Are you friends knows with? I think so, we have grown up and

:41:50.:41:53.

realised we have a great bond and a great legacy. We have reaffirmed our

:41:54.:42:01.

of those. You have a beautiful necklace on. We are told that is

:42:02.:42:06.

knocking into your microphone. Can you adjust it is likely for us? We

:42:07.:42:13.

have to do these things live. We have to do these things. The bigger

:42:14.:42:22.

one. Perfect. We will get onto the album in a moment. Is that all

:42:23.:42:29.

right? Perfect. For those people who are fascinated by your personal

:42:30.:42:34.

story, you stepped aside from the music world for 16 years. Yes. When

:42:35.:42:42.

things like that happen, mythology built around people and I think that

:42:43.:42:46.

has happened to a degree with you. People want to know what I did. Yes.

:42:47.:42:54.

What happened? I left the band initially because I developed a fear

:42:55.:42:58.

of flying. I was tired of living out of a suitcase. My dad got sick. I

:42:59.:43:04.

was living in America and I thought it was time to move back to England.

:43:05.:43:09.

That is what I did, I bought the house in England. I carried on

:43:10.:43:13.

playing with Fleetwood Mac and said this would be my last tour and I was

:43:14.:43:18.

going to move to Kent, which I did, and I got this huge manor house

:43:19.:43:22.

which was falling apart and I happily spent four years restoring

:43:23.:43:27.

it. Then four years later I bloody couple of dogs and I thought what am

:43:28.:43:38.

I going to do? -- bought a couple. Does that lifestyle ever leave? No.

:43:39.:43:45.

It has been the most joyous thing I have ever done in my life. I am

:43:46.:43:51.

enjoying it. The new album, you have brought pretty much everyone back

:43:52.:43:53.

together in some sense in the studio. How? When I first joined or

:43:54.:44:02.

rejoined sending linseed devils of material I had written and he was

:44:03.:44:08.

working in his studio and the world tour had been booked so I went over

:44:09.:44:12.

early to Los Angeles and worked with Lindsay on these songs that I had

:44:13.:44:16.

written and he said why do we not go in the studio and reconnect in that

:44:17.:44:21.

way as well as touring and see if we have any magic between us? After 16

:44:22.:44:26.

years than might have been nothing there. We got in the studio working

:44:27.:44:33.

together and it was easy, real joy. It was just the most fantastic time

:44:34.:44:39.

and we clicked really well. As we always have over the years

:44:40.:44:43.

musically. We can hear and other song from the album, in my world.

:44:44.:44:50.

As soon as you hear it, you know it is Fleetwood Mac. There is something

:44:51.:45:17.

about that side that makes you think of Fleetwood Mac. I suppose it does

:45:18.:45:24.

because you have Jordan playing bass and neck playing drums and Lindsay

:45:25.:45:28.

and I collaborating in the music department so it has to sound a

:45:29.:45:33.

little bit. I asked you if the rock and roll lifestyle ever leaves your

:45:34.:45:38.

blood and you said no. However lovely a break you may take from it.

:45:39.:45:44.

There are rumours we might be seeing you on tour. Can you tell is?

:45:45.:45:50.

with Lindsey Buckingham or is Fleetwood Mac? Both. Yes, I'm

:45:51.:45:59.

starting a small tour with Lindsey next week, doing America and next

:46:00.:46:02.

year, all being well, we are doing a Fleetwood Mac tour. When you reflect

:46:03.:46:09.

a bit, as you get older, you reflect on things that happened in the past,

:46:10.:46:13.

how do you reflect on the early days of Fleetwood Mac and the incredible

:46:14.:46:18.

success? It was an incredibly successful band for a long period of

:46:19.:46:23.

time. How do you reflect on that time? There is such a lot to reflect

:46:24.:46:26.

about, starting from the very beginning. It is a carnival. Our

:46:27.:46:32.

life has been a carnival. It has been the most remarkable time. Those

:46:33.:46:41.

16 years I was dormant... I think there was, you know, the universe

:46:42.:46:45.

was looking after me and then to rejoin was really the most joyous

:46:46.:46:49.

thing of all. Because if I had stayed, who knows what would have

:46:50.:46:54.

happened? You sound quite spiritual, are you quite a spiritual person?

:46:55.:46:57.

You said universe was looking after you. Yeah, I do believe that. I do

:46:58.:47:02.

believe the universe takes care of you. If you put good stuff out... It

:47:03.:47:11.

looks after you. It comes back? Yeah. It's been lovely having you

:47:12.:47:15.

here this morning and there will be so many people happy to hear that

:47:16.:47:19.

you in your new incarnation and is Fleetwood Mac will do more

:47:20.:47:22.

livestock. We are more in love with each other than ever! Good to hear.

:47:23.:47:25.

Thank you for joining us. Thank you. The album is simply

:47:26.:47:28.

called Lindsey Buckingham A year ago today, the MP

:47:29.:47:30.

Jo Cox was murdered in her To mark the anniversary, schools

:47:31.:47:35.

and communities across the country are taking part in

:47:36.:47:40.

the Great Get Together. This is a celebration of Jo Cox's

:47:41.:47:47.

life. Jo used to say, "We

:47:48.:47:50.

have more in common than that which divides us",

:47:51.:47:52.

so that's why her friends and family have organised a series of big

:47:53.:47:55.

parties to celebrate her life. One of them is at Upper Batley High

:47:56.:47:58.

School, where we can join We are finding out exactly what the

:47:59.:48:07.

celebrations will entail with him. Good morning.

:48:08.:48:10.

Good morning, as you say, celebrations right across the UK and

:48:11.:48:13.

I want to emphasise the word celebration this morning, not only

:48:14.:48:18.

the celebration of Jo Cox's life but also our communities, the coming

:48:19.:48:21.

together of communities is important. Children working hard,

:48:22.:48:24.

they have baked all of these cakes, and I want to talk to the

:48:25.:48:29.

headteacher, Dan Vickers. I know Jo was a frequent visitor to the school

:48:30.:48:36.

and an important part of school life. She was absolutely, we saw her

:48:37.:48:39.

as a real friend of the school, she visited the lot and the staff

:48:40.:48:42.

thought a lot of Jo and so did the children and today is about doing

:48:43.:48:46.

something positive as part of a legacy so we are renaming our

:48:47.:48:50.

conference centre in her name. Their children are keen to keep her name

:48:51.:48:54.

going, working on mental health issues and environmental issues, the

:48:55.:48:58.

things that Jo was passionate about, and the cake theme today is was

:48:59.:49:01.

because she liked to party and enjoy good piece of cake so we thought

:49:02.:49:04.

what better way to bring people together than have a bit of cake and

:49:05.:49:07.

a cup of coffee, chat to people you may be have not met before and

:49:08.:49:12.

really unite people and bring the community together. Thank you for

:49:13.:49:14.

joining us. I wanted to do a couple of the boys, so this tree will be

:49:15.:49:18.

planted in the garden and what are you doing this morning? Currently,

:49:19.:49:28.

we have a prayer tree and as you can see, some people have come and

:49:29.:49:30.

written prayers so how this works is we have some hands. The reason is

:49:31.:49:33.

because we think this represents people. When you have written down

:49:34.:49:35.

your prayer, we put them on the tree and these are going to be a

:49:36.:49:39.

collective source and everybody's prayers can be read by everybody.

:49:40.:49:44.

Wonderful idea. You have got your Yorkshire rose on as well and

:49:45.:49:48.

there's a story behind that? Jo was the Yorkshire lass and the White

:49:49.:49:51.

Rose represents Yorkshire, and the roses were not just made in school

:49:52.:49:55.

but around the world so, like Australia. Bay has been coming in

:49:56.:49:59.

from around the world, copying the pattern. -- they have been. Kim,

:50:00.:50:08.

Jo's sister and parents are here. We were talking earlier and saying one

:50:09.:50:11.

year on can sometimes be a difficult time. How is the family coping? I

:50:12.:50:16.

think we are doing OK overall. Today will obviously be very difficult,

:50:17.:50:20.

this afternoon in particular but I think we felt as a family it was

:50:21.:50:24.

important we were here with the community, the community Jo love to

:50:25.:50:28.

come in the area we were born and bred and the community that have

:50:29.:50:31.

looked after us in the last 12 months. It feels like the right

:50:32.:50:41.

thing to do to be here and Jo loved the school and the local area and so

:50:42.:50:44.

far, this is the right decision, to be yet. Jean, we have stressed it's

:50:45.:50:47.

a celebration. It is and I would like to thank Sam and the boys

:50:48.:50:49.

because they have been brilliant, not just today but throughout the

:50:50.:50:52.

year. They have welcomed us with open arms and I can't thank Sam

:50:53.:50:57.

enough for what she has done. It is a celebration of Jo's life but can I

:50:58.:51:03.

just say that today, our thoughts and prayers are with the people down

:51:04.:51:09.

in west London and it has been a horrific year and our thoughts or

:51:10.:51:12.

ulcer with the families of everyone who has lost loved ones. -- are also

:51:13.:51:19.

with the families of everyone. Let's hope we can get more in common again

:51:20.:51:24.

and rebuild and take something positive from today. Very well said.

:51:25.:51:29.

A very important message for everyone and Gordon, you have a busy

:51:30.:51:32.

day today, extraordinary amount of events taking place across the UK.

:51:33.:51:37.

Today and over the weekend but again, let's use the word

:51:38.:51:41.

celebration, to celebrate Jo's life and the principles she stood for,

:51:42.:51:45.

particularly when it looks as though the whole fabric of society is under

:51:46.:51:52.

threat, it is more a more important that we all get together. We can go

:51:53.:51:54.

forward with events like this and the others we are going to do, and I

:51:55.:51:58.

think they will seal it. Tell us how many events are being held in Jo's

:51:59.:52:03.

name for the Great Get Together over the weekend, a staggering number.

:52:04.:52:08.

About 120,000 events at the last count, some a few million people,

:52:09.:52:12.

and it shows, as dad says, there's an appetite for people to come

:52:13.:52:16.

together, there's a lot of negativity and division in the world

:52:17.:52:18.

at the moment and it can feel quite a lonely and unstable place and I

:52:19.:52:23.

think the Great Get Together is showing people want to

:52:24.:52:24.

counterbalance that with something positive which is what Jo would have

:52:25.:52:28.

loved and we believe in as a family and fingers crossed people can come

:52:29.:52:32.

together and have something positive this weekend. Has it helped you as a

:52:33.:52:36.

family to have this, to throw your energies into it, to concentrate on

:52:37.:52:41.

it? Enormously, absolutely, the one thing this year, we have been so

:52:42.:52:45.

busy, people have wanted to show their love in the community, and

:52:46.:52:50.

throughout the world. It keeps you going. You have to stay positive. No

:52:51.:52:55.

good being negative. I think that is why it is important to reach out to

:52:56.:52:59.

other people who have been affected, we are not on we know, bad stuff

:53:00.:53:03.

seems to be happening all the time and it's important wet -- that we

:53:04.:53:07.

help people have been affected, whether it is terror attacks or this

:53:08.:53:10.

horrendous fire, it's important we help them and that is the message of

:53:11.:53:14.

the weekend. You would have been incredibly proud of Jo and her life

:53:15.:53:18.

achievements, to become an MP, so how important is it a lot of this

:53:19.:53:23.

takes place her name? Jo had worked all around the world in some

:53:24.:53:26.

challenging places but the only MP she wished to be was for the local

:53:27.:53:30.

community year. She was Yorkshire through and through. -- community

:53:31.:53:38.

here. While she achieved a lot, I am frustrated, knowing full well she

:53:39.:53:41.

would have achieved a lot more in the next years. But we are doing her

:53:42.:53:48.

proud. You certainly are. She would be up there laughing at us, saying,

:53:49.:53:55.

"Get on with it and enjoy yourselves!" Lovely to talk to you

:53:56.:53:59.

and everyone at the school. I suppose it is appropriate to leave

:54:00.:54:03.

the last word to Jo Cox, the last words, and you will hear a lot of

:54:04.:54:06.

this in the next few days, the words from her maiden speech in the House

:54:07.:54:12.

of Commons, she said back then, three years ago, when she first

:54:13.:54:17.

became an MP, "We are far more united and have far more in common

:54:18.:54:22.

than things that divide us". Jo Cox. Back to you.

:54:23.:54:30.

Wonderful sentiment. Thanks, John. One of those times, seeing the

:54:31.:54:32.

smiles on the face of her family, and the sentiment, it rather sets

:54:33.:54:38.

you back and makes you think. Considering everyone who was going

:54:39.:54:39.

through tough times at the moment. Here's Sarah with a look

:54:40.:54:44.

at this morning's weather. The sun has been shining but will it

:54:45.:54:51.

continue? More sunshine in the forecast today

:54:52.:54:54.

and certainly through the weekend when things will be turning pretty

:54:55.:54:59.

hot, 30 degrees by Sunday. This morning, a fresh start out there

:55:00.:55:02.

compared to recent mornings, not quite as humid but it will warm up

:55:03.:55:07.

through the day and there will be spelt of sunshine. More cloud across

:55:08.:55:10.

the North and west of the country and already drizzly rain across

:55:11.:55:14.

parts of Northern Ireland and western Scotland and a few spots of

:55:15.:55:21.

drizzle in the north-west of England but most places looking dry with

:55:22.:55:23.

some sunshine, particularly towards eastern England and down towards the

:55:24.:55:26.

south and south-west. By 4pm, West of Scotland, outbreaks of rain

:55:27.:55:31.

continuing, eastern Scotland bearing a bit better, dryer and a touch

:55:32.:55:34.

warmer and Northern Ireland warming up and drying up, 21 or 22 in

:55:35.:55:38.

Belfast with brighter spells. The best of the sunshine to the east of

:55:39.:55:41.

the Pennines in northern England and heading south through the Midlands,

:55:42.:55:45.

southern England and Wales, patchy cloud but equally bright spells,

:55:46.:55:48.

particularly across the south-west of England and quite funny, very

:55:49.:55:58.

high UV levels where the sunshine comes out in the south-west and high

:55:59.:56:01.

levels elsewhere across England and Wales and if you are a hay fever

:56:02.:56:03.

sufferer, you have probably noticed the very high pollen levels,

:56:04.:56:05.

particularly across England and Wales. This evening and overnight,

:56:06.:56:08.

eventually the wet weather goes from Scotland, with perhaps a little

:56:09.:56:11.

drizzle in the far north-west but most places looking dry with light

:56:12.:56:14.

winds and clear spells and it will feel quite muddy and humid once

:56:15.:56:18.

again with temperatures holding up at around 17 degrees overnight. A

:56:19.:56:22.

muddy start to the weekend and through the weekend, we will see

:56:23.:56:26.

some very hot weather across southern Europe, 44 degrees possible

:56:27.:56:30.

across the south of Spain and the warm air is pushing northwards

:56:31.:56:33.

across France and into the UK where we could see temperatures up to 30

:56:34.:56:38.

degrees or even a touch higher. High pressure dominates on Saturday, some

:56:39.:56:42.

low pressure and whether France just sitting after the far north-west

:56:43.:56:45.

which will bring outbreaks of rain and breezy conditions across the far

:56:46.:56:50.

north-west of Scotland but elsewhere across the UK, dry and bright with

:56:51.:56:54.

plenty of sunshine and a bit of fair weather cloud bubbling up in the

:56:55.:56:58.

afternoon. Temperatures between 20-27. It is warmer than we would

:56:59.:57:01.

expect for the time of year on Saturday and Sunday will be even

:57:02.:57:06.

warmer. With temperatures building, we could see 29 or 30 during the

:57:07.:57:10.

course on Sunday, again, a bit cooler with some wet weather and

:57:11.:57:14.

breezy across the far north-west of Scotland but dry and hot elsewhere

:57:15.:57:21.

and the heat continues into Monday, we could well see 30 degrees once

:57:22.:57:24.

again but it looks like we will start to see some slightly cooler

:57:25.:57:26.

and fresher conditions developing on Tuesday. Back to you.

:57:27.:57:36.

Of The Rings since the '90s. of The Hobbit and The Lord

:57:37.:57:41.

Alan went on to pick up an Oscar for his work on the Peter Jackson

:57:42.:57:44.

movies which were based on the books.

:57:45.:57:47.

His famous illustrations feature in the first new publication

:57:48.:57:52.

Beren And Luthien was put together by Tolkien's son Christopher.

:57:53.:57:56.

This is an example of his beautiful work.

:57:57.:58:06.

Good morning. These stories, Middle Earth must be in your blood by now

:58:07.:58:14.

most are not it is, I first read The Lord Of The Rings when I was 17, the

:58:15.:58:19.

perfect age to enter Middle Earth. I have pretty much been stuck there

:58:20.:58:22.

ever since with a few excursions into other various mythology. When

:58:23.:58:30.

you read The Lord Of The Rings, did it immediately get your artistic

:58:31.:58:35.

juices flowing and did you start imagining it your way? Totally. I

:58:36.:58:40.

was a constant doodler anyway so I immediately started drawing is based

:58:41.:58:45.

on Tolkien's words. How did it go from thinking about it to being part

:58:46.:58:51.

of it? That took a bit of time, I had to forge a career as an

:58:52.:58:55.

illustrator first of all so I spent several years doing book covers, and

:58:56.:58:58.

then found myself doing books on fairies and other mythology and that

:58:59.:59:05.

led back into talking. Tell us about the book. You have done the drawings

:59:06.:59:09.

and people are immediately fascinated by the idea of a new

:59:10.:59:12.

Tolkien book. This has been brought together by his grandson, is that

:59:13.:59:18.

right? His son, Christopher. Sorry, so is it based on bits of material

:59:19.:59:23.

he had left, storylines? Tolkien left a huge archive of material,

:59:24.:59:29.

most of which has been published in one form of another -- or another

:59:30.:59:34.

now. Christopher Tolkien has devoted his life to bringing all of this

:59:35.:59:41.

fantastic archive into a form which is, in which we can retrieve it. Did

:59:42.:59:46.

you go back to the original book you illustrated and said they should be

:59:47.:59:49.

based on this, or when you read this book, did you say, this is a

:59:50.:59:53.

different world and a different series?

:59:54.:00:01.

It is a different world, but there are interesting parallels with Lord

:00:02.:00:07.

of the rings. The story is a reflection of the story with an elf

:00:08.:00:19.

in love with a mortal and that sets up the dynamic because the Elf will

:00:20.:00:22.

live forever ran the mortal will not. Let us take an image like the

:00:23.:00:32.

one we can see in between us. From the storylines from the book how

:00:33.:00:36.

much detail to your half of the descriptions of either the creatures

:00:37.:00:41.

or the individuals from which to work and how much is entirely your

:00:42.:00:46.

imagination? There is not a huge amount of detailed description in a

:00:47.:00:55.

book like this. It is very much evil King a style of character. You have

:00:56.:00:59.

a huge talking dog for example who plays a big part in the story. You

:01:00.:01:03.

did not know exactly what kind of dog it was. No. List of Tolkien told

:01:04.:01:11.

me it was a will find. You can then build up the image array. Out of the

:01:12.:01:17.

conversations go when Tolkien told you that it was not what the dock

:01:18.:01:22.

look like? I showed him the pictures and we had discussions about it.

:01:23.:01:29.

Through email. We came to an agreement about what we were going

:01:30.:01:32.

to illustrate. You have been closely involved with the films. I remember

:01:33.:01:39.

reading Tolkien when I was young and then entirely using your imagination

:01:40.:01:42.

you have a picture of what the world looks like and I remember when the

:01:43.:01:46.

films came out being really anxious about its boiling my imagination

:01:47.:01:52.

because it would overwhelm, the imagery of the films which are so

:01:53.:01:56.

incredible, would overwhelm some of which I thought I knew. Do you share

:01:57.:02:06.

that? I sure some of that anxiety. I do not think I can remember now. I

:02:07.:02:10.

feel that is a bit of a gym. I suppose it is a credit to you and

:02:11.:02:15.

those who have come up with the imagery because that has become what

:02:16.:02:20.

it looks like. I am not sure I can remember what I thought Gollum

:02:21.:02:26.

looked like but I know I did know, so I suppose that is a tribute to

:02:27.:02:30.

the film and you and your illustrations. Yes, we are all very

:02:31.:02:35.

conscious of trying not to depart very far from Tolkien's words and

:02:36.:02:39.

descriptions so we are constantly referring to the books but the main

:02:40.:02:43.

anxieties over the characters, whether they are going to replace

:02:44.:02:47.

the actual character you summed up when you are reading. To a certain

:02:48.:02:54.

extent you McCullum's version of Gandalf for example has kind of

:02:55.:02:59.

become Gandalf. Was that how you imagined him? It was much better

:03:00.:03:09.

than I imagined. That is a credit to Ian. It has been a pleasure talking

:03:10.:03:11.

to you. Your latest artwork is out. Alan's latest artwork

:03:12.:03:18.

is in the Beren and Luthien Doing sport is fine. Some better

:03:19.:03:31.

than others. At least better than going to the gym. Tennis is the

:03:32.:03:42.

answer. I am trying my best to get a volley going. We have been playing

:03:43.:03:47.

tennis all morning. Tennis definitely keeps you fit. Like most

:03:48.:03:53.

sports, as you can imagine, the government advises you should do at

:03:54.:03:58.

least 150 minutes per week but this body has been telling us that tennis

:03:59.:04:03.

is not just good for your fitness, it is good for your all-round

:04:04.:04:07.

health. I am going to have to let you go. It keeps you active and it

:04:08.:04:14.

is good for you psychologically, physiologically, good all round.

:04:15.:04:19.

Most people would say surely any sport is good for you, doing

:04:20.:04:24.

anything to get your hundred and 50 minutes is good. Researchers have

:04:25.:04:28.

been doing their homework looking at 90 different people and they find

:04:29.:04:32.

half those people who play tennis... I am out of breath, it keeps you

:04:33.:04:39.

fit... Half of the people of Dublin 90, the people who played tennis bit

:04:40.:04:45.

better mentally and physically. We can find out more about this

:04:46.:04:49.

research. You were the lead researcher. Why tennis? Why not

:04:50.:04:56.

rugby or boxing? We were interested in Racquet sports. We thought it

:04:57.:05:05.

would be valuable to provide some scientific evidence for why a it

:05:06.:05:10.

could happen with tennis. We think tennis is a is a popular sport.

:05:11.:05:20.

Muscle endurance is essential for muscular health. As a result of that

:05:21.:05:24.

it provides overall wide-ranging benefits of health in all physical

:05:25.:05:33.

and physiological dimensions. It helps lower your cholesterol,

:05:34.:05:37.

prevent heart disease and diabetes, people might be interested in that.

:05:38.:05:43.

Yes, more than 70 valuables in their study and it showed that people

:05:44.:05:49.

involved in regular tennis have a much regular profile for blood

:05:50.:05:54.

glucose, vascular health and overall fitness. We hope that the NHS will

:05:55.:06:02.

take this evidence into practice and recommended as the optimum option

:06:03.:06:07.

for physical activity to stay healthy and fit across life. You

:06:08.:06:12.

have told me you are going to be taking up tennis. I will. Sue Power,

:06:13.:06:21.

a brilliant name for a tennis player, your story is interesting.

:06:22.:06:24.

You have been playing tennis while you have been sick. Yes, in 2013I

:06:25.:06:30.

was diagnosed with the most aggressive form of breast cancer. I

:06:31.:06:36.

carried on playing tennis through my chemo. I have no doubt that the

:06:37.:06:41.

fitness they acquire previously helped me recover from the

:06:42.:06:45.

mastectomy and the reconstruction, no doubt. Not to mention all the

:06:46.:06:51.

psychological effects of being able to go and had a ball and forget

:06:52.:06:54.

about it and be around lovely people. You did really well in the

:06:55.:07:00.

study. Your fitness levels were better than most people I know.

:07:01.:07:05.

Barry, I am never going to make it to Wimbledon, you are a former

:07:06.:07:11.

professional player, you must understand the benefits of tennis.

:07:12.:07:16.

Absolutely. I have been playing since I was six so I know the

:07:17.:07:22.

benefits. For tennis it requires so many different facets, in gerunds,

:07:23.:07:28.

but even now I do a lot of running. I can be out of breath for 20

:07:29.:07:32.

minutes because it is a different type, quick, short short sprints and

:07:33.:07:38.

decision making as well, quick decisions you have to make, which is

:07:39.:07:42.

useful in everyday life because you have to make sure you do not panic,

:07:43.:07:47.

live on television. You would never panic. We have Wimbledon coming up

:07:48.:07:52.

shortly so there are plenty of reasons to get in the mood for

:07:53.:07:56.

tennis. As if you needed any more, it turns out it is very good for

:07:57.:08:00.

you, except apparently when there is a target at the back of your head,

:08:01.:08:05.

which apparently has been my problem is morning.

:08:06.:08:13.

She has gone away. She did not want to be hit.

:08:14.:08:17.

Let's get a last, brief look at the headlines

:08:18.:10:02.

Saxophonist Yolanda Brown has won two consecutive Mobo awards,

:10:03.:10:05.

released a chart-topping debut album and is now an international star

:10:06.:10:07.

She's back with a new album Love, Politics, War.

:10:08.:10:13.

You have had a little girl. Yes, nearly five years. She comes on

:10:14.:10:28.

tour. It is amazing. It is wonderful. She has been part of the

:10:29.:10:34.

process. Logistically that presents complications. As it inspired you

:10:35.:10:40.

creatively? I think so. When you become a mum you start to look

:10:41.:10:43.

outwards rather than in words and with this new album you start to

:10:44.:10:48.

think about what the world is going through, it is a reflection on the

:10:49.:10:51.

world today and seeing how much love and care is needed, the crazy

:10:52.:10:55.

politics we have been going through with Brexit, the presidential

:10:56.:11:03.

election, the war on terror, that you're feeling you have of the

:11:04.:11:05.

parent and leaving your home and travelling. It goes through what

:11:06.:11:14.

everyone goes through. Industry politics as well as internal battles

:11:15.:11:18.

and different things we face. How do you put all of that into music? Let

:11:19.:11:20.

us see. Have a look. Let's hear a track,

:11:21.:11:32.

Million Billion Love. I should not be surprised but you

:11:33.:11:59.

start moving. I have created Porsche reggae because everyone seems to

:12:00.:12:04.

want to put you in a genre so I have made my own. It is a mixture of

:12:05.:12:09.

jazz, reggae and soul. I can dance around the stage, move, you almost

:12:10.:12:14.

have license to do the same as an audience member. You love

:12:15.:12:21.

performing. I do. I love the process of recording the album but being on

:12:22.:12:26.

the stage and communicating with the audience and seeing the motions

:12:27.:12:31.

people go through is important. One of those big personalities, not a

:12:32.:12:35.

show off, that has horrible connotations, but someone who is

:12:36.:12:40.

here I am and let me show you, were you always like that? No. I was

:12:41.:12:46.

quite shy and reserved growing up. I did not want to be centre of

:12:47.:12:50.

attention but I loved being around people. I wasn't performing on a

:12:51.:13:00.

plane? Fantastic. I have a presenting career taking off.

:13:01.:13:04.

British Airways have an inaugural flight from London to New Orleans

:13:05.:13:11.

and the inaugural flight I was performing reggae on board. It was

:13:12.:13:16.

fun does it. What a treat for those people on board. It was. We were

:13:17.:13:23.

literally having a party 30,000 feet in the air. It is lovely seeing you

:13:24.:13:29.

this morning. Our time is up. Your music is a tonic. I hope so. We wish

:13:30.:13:33.

you well. Yolanda Brown's album

:13:34.:13:35.

is called Love Politics War. But now on BBC One it's time

:13:36.:13:37.

for Crimewatch Roadshow Today we are at Guildhall Yard, and

:13:38.:13:59.

will be having a get-together. It's been a terrible few weeks in

:14:00.:14:01.

Manchester and London so on

:14:02.:14:03.

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