26/06/2017 Breakfast


26/06/2017

Similar Content

Browse content similar to 26/06/2017. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!

Transcript


LineFromTo

Hello, this is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Naga Munchetty.

:00:00.:00:13.

A 100% failure rate - not a single tower block checked

:00:14.:00:16.

since the Grenfell fire has passed safety tests.

:00:17.:00:18.

60 buildings across England are deemed not safe -

:00:19.:00:21.

hundreds more are due to have their cladding inspected,

:00:22.:00:23.

Good morning, it's Monday the 26th of June.

:00:24.:00:42.

Therese resume will today give more details about how EU citizens living

:00:43.:00:53.

in the UK will be treated after Brexit -- Theresa May.

:00:54.:00:56.

Setting sail at last - the Royal Navy's new ?3 billion

:00:57.:00:59.

aircraft carrier starts sea trials seven years

:01:00.:01:01.

Two different studies today show very different forecasts

:01:02.:01:05.

I'll speak to one firm that says things are looking up,

:01:06.:01:11.

In Sport - Lewis Hamilton labels Sebastian Vettel a disgrace

:01:12.:01:15.

after the two collide in an action packed Azerbaijan Grand Prix.

:01:16.:01:27.

Coming of age - he made his debut just six years ago, now Ed Sheeran

:01:28.:01:31.

has closed the Glastonbury Festival on the main Pyramid stage.

:01:32.:01:34.

For many of us today, it will be a fine and dry day with a fair bit of

:01:35.:01:46.

sunshine. However, the cloud will build from the West and we will see

:01:47.:01:50.

some rain in northern Ireland later this afternoon, heralding an

:01:51.:01:51.

unsettled week ahead. Every single tower block which has

:01:52.:01:57.

had its cladding tested since the Grenfell disaster has

:01:58.:02:01.

failed fire safety inspections. 60 high-rises in 25 areas of England

:02:02.:02:05.

have been examined so far. Local councils are being urged

:02:06.:02:08.

to send samples in more There are still more than 500 other

:02:09.:02:10.

buildings nationwide that need It's a list that keeps on growing,

:02:11.:02:25.

the number of buildings that have now failed fire safety checks

:02:26.:02:28.

following the Grenfell Tower disaster stands at 60 in England

:02:29.:02:33.

across 25 local authorities. And of those examined so far, every single

:02:34.:02:39.

sample has failed. It was concerns over extern or cladding, combined

:02:40.:02:42.

with issues concerning fire doors, gas pipes and installation which are

:02:43.:02:47.

triggered the mass evacuation of four tower blocks in Camden. Where

:02:48.:02:52.

we have read it -- residence, we are continuing to knock on their door,

:02:53.:02:56.

I'm sure it is deeply disruptive for them but keeping people wake and

:02:57.:02:59.

having the conversation and making sure there are people on the block

:03:00.:03:03.

but the fire services are saying it's not safe to stay and they need

:03:04.:03:07.

to go. In Scotland, Holyrood is to carry out their own investigation

:03:08.:03:10.

into the safety of high-rise tower blocks. It is thought up to 600

:03:11.:03:14.

buildings in total are to be tested in England with councils being told

:03:15.:03:18.

to prioritise the ones that are most worried about. Just how long this

:03:19.:03:23.

process will take is still unclear. Theresa May is due to share a

:03:24.:03:27.

meeting of the Grenfell Tower task force later today -- chair and

:03:28.:03:33.

meeting. It could take many weeks, if not months. More inquests are

:03:34.:03:38.

still expected to be opened and adjourned this afternoon into the

:03:39.:03:39.

deaths of the victims. Nick Quraishi joins us now

:03:40.:03:40.

from Camden where some residents have spent a third night sleeping

:03:41.:03:43.

on airbeds in a leisure centre. Nick, how long before they will be

:03:44.:03:46.

able to return home? Nobody knows. We know that four

:03:47.:04:05.

blocks have been evacuated over the weekend. Some 200 residents in 120

:04:06.:04:10.

flats are refusing to leave. Some say they don't want to be in the

:04:11.:04:14.

leisure centre behind me and others say they can't afford to pay for

:04:15.:04:17.

temporary accommodation even though they know they will be reimbursed.

:04:18.:04:22.

Camden Council is still trying to get them to come out. It's not clear

:04:23.:04:26.

what legal steps the council has got to actually forced out. Patients

:04:27.:04:31.

seems to be running out. The council says they can't get into do these

:04:32.:04:34.

remedial work which should take up to four weeks. This would prolong

:04:35.:04:41.

it. In regards to the other 60 high-rise blocks around England that

:04:42.:04:45.

have failed cladding tests, we know that 14 councils have been named,

:04:46.:04:52.

seven in London and others include Manchester, Stockton and Sunderland.

:04:53.:04:56.

600 are said to be tested is England but the question now turned to when

:04:57.:05:00.

this will happen and what do we know. We will get some more details

:05:01.:05:05.

later went Theresa May chairs a meeting of the Grenfell Tower

:05:06.:05:11.

recovery committee. Days on from that disaster, there are still many

:05:12.:05:15.

unanswered questions. Thank you, Nick.

:05:16.:05:18.

We will be trying to answer some of those questions later with the

:05:19.:05:22.

Housing Minister. Theresa May will set out more

:05:23.:05:23.

details this afternoon of how the government plans to treat

:05:24.:05:26.

European Union citizens living Last week, she outlined proposals

:05:27.:05:28.

to offer EU nationals "settled status" as long as British

:05:29.:05:32.

people elsewhere in Europe Our political correspondent

:05:33.:05:35.

Iain Watson joins us now. Iain, how much more

:05:36.:05:38.

detail will we get today? We will get 15 pages outlining their

:05:39.:05:55.

settled status scheme applying to EU citizens. What we know already

:05:56.:06:00.

because Theresa May told leaders in Brussels last week, she is proposing

:06:01.:06:04.

that after Brexit is EU citizens are here for five years, they will get

:06:05.:06:08.

right is very similar to those of British citizens from welfare to

:06:09.:06:12.

healthcare to pensions. What is not clear yet is when it will be the

:06:13.:06:17.

cut-off date for the settle scheme to get under way. Will it be when

:06:18.:06:21.

she triggered the Article 50 letter beginning the process of leaving the

:06:22.:06:24.

EU in March will be the accepted date itself which is what the EU

:06:25.:06:29.

would like to see. That is unlikely to be in these 15 pages because she

:06:30.:06:32.

says that is something that is up for negotiation. We might see some

:06:33.:06:36.

more detail on other questions on EU nationals here. For example, if they

:06:37.:06:40.

are allowed to stay here after five years, what will happen to family

:06:41.:06:44.

members who are currently abroad? That is something to EU wants but so

:06:45.:06:48.

far Theresa May has not committed herself to that. These 15 pages will

:06:49.:06:56.

be closely scrutinised. What we know so far is the EU leaders don't seem

:06:57.:07:00.

to be impressed and they don't think this is sufficient. They would like

:07:01.:07:05.

to see more guarantees of the rights of citizens already here and the

:07:06.:07:10.

rights of UK nationals are brought as well.

:07:11.:07:11.

Six people are known to have died and 16 others are missing

:07:12.:07:15.

after a crowded passenger boat sank in a reservoir in Colombia.

:07:16.:07:18.

Around a 170 passengers are thought to have been on board.

:07:19.:07:20.

The vessel, which had four decks, began taking on water

:07:21.:07:23.

during a cruise on an artificial lake outside the popular resort

:07:24.:07:26.

There are no details yet on why the boat sank.

:07:27.:07:32.

A 16-year-old boy has been charged with the rape of an eight-year-old

:07:33.:07:35.

The attack is alleged to have happened on Saturday evening

:07:36.:07:40.

The boy is due to appear at Manchester Youth Court today.

:07:41.:07:47.

Scotland Yard says six of its officers were injured last

:07:48.:07:50.

night during a protest in east London about the death of a man last

:07:51.:07:53.

week, six days after he'd been stopped by police.

:07:54.:07:56.

Bricks were thrown and bins set on fire

:07:57.:07:58.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission has said a postmortem

:07:59.:08:03.

examination on Edir Frederico Da Costa showed that,

:08:04.:08:05.

contrary to some claims, he had no spinal injuries caused

:08:06.:08:08.

Yousaf Saed, a receptionist at a local hotel, witnessed

:08:09.:08:15.

They were therefore like to hours and then the police around 930 and

:08:16.:08:28.

they came over here and took them and then they were burning car,

:08:29.:08:33.

burning bins out the back. They were burning some bins over there and

:08:34.:08:36.

they were damaging the wall over there and throwing bricks

:08:37.:08:42.

everywhere. Ben was mentioning this at the headlines at six o'clock.

:08:43.:08:45.

The UK's economic growth will remain anaemic until the end

:08:46.:08:47.

of the decade, according to the British Chambers of Commerce.

:08:48.:08:50.

The group, which represents small and medium-sized businesses,

:08:51.:08:55.

doesn't expect growth to be more than 1.5% by 2020.

:08:56.:08:57.

It also says that inflation may end up higher than expected,

:08:58.:09:01.

Despite some predictions, Britain's economy grew robustly after the

:09:02.:09:09.

referendum last year but it has slowed down a lot this year and now

:09:10.:09:14.

it's the weakest in Europe. The British Chambers of commerce which

:09:15.:09:18.

represents thousands of small and medium-sized companies said the GDP

:09:19.:09:21.

will remain anaemic for another few years. It says growth this year will

:09:22.:09:27.

be 1.5% but it dipped to 1.3% next year before rising slightly back to

:09:28.:09:34.

1.5% in 2019. It expects inflation to peak at 3.4% this year and hold

:09:35.:09:38.

back company investment. But it thinks it broke -- growth in exports

:09:39.:09:44.

and the construction centre will be higher than previously thought. The

:09:45.:09:48.

biggest changes to a forecast are around changes to the economy which

:09:49.:09:52.

we think will be flat in the next three years and also around

:09:53.:09:55.

inflation which we think it still will spike a little bit higher

:09:56.:09:59.

before we start to see some relief. Exports will do well this year but

:10:00.:10:03.

then less well in the years to come so we do face a situation where our

:10:04.:10:08.

growth is pretty anaemic, it is not as good at -- not as good as it

:10:09.:10:13.

could be and certainly not as good as other countries around the world.

:10:14.:10:16.

Dell limit the BCC is asking people to spend more on infrastructure,

:10:17.:10:23.

especially mobile phone connectivity and can -- described our road

:10:24.:10:25.

network as congestion. Ed Sheeran's rise has been meteoric.

:10:26.:10:44.

Let's get more on the Glastonbury Festival.

:10:45.:10:44.

For many, Glastonbury's final day was disco day.

:10:45.:10:46.

There were Bee Gees classics from Barry Gibb...

:10:47.:10:49.

Watching from the sidelines, Nile Rodgers, who later took

:10:50.:10:57.

to the stage with Chic with disco hit after disco hit.

:10:58.:11:00.

A huge crowd watching them in the Somerset sunshine.

:11:01.:11:14.

It's not just people famous from the world of music who have

:11:15.:11:20.

been performing at this year's festival.

:11:21.:11:26.

Yes, that's American film and TV star Kiefer Sutherland,

:11:27.:11:28.

He said performing at Glastonbury was particularly special.

:11:29.:11:36.

It is almost like being invited into a part of history.

:11:37.:11:41.

His headline set an emotional climax to a festival that won't be

:11:42.:11:51.

Whatever you think of his music, one guy entertaining that many people

:11:52.:12:22.

with his loop pedal is amazing. I love him. People say he is a lucky

:12:23.:12:29.

busker on one sand and other people say he's a musical genius -- on one

:12:30.:12:34.

hand. I think you have belied way you stand on it. No, I think he is

:12:35.:12:39.

brilliant. I stayed up way too late watching that last night and I

:12:40.:12:44.

should have been preparing for this programme. Here is your quirky for

:12:45.:12:49.

the day. It is normally rained that stops cricket play but this time it

:12:50.:12:55.

was our bullocks. --A bullock. The animal interrupted

:12:56.:13:03.

a match in Bollington, The umpire wasn't going to run at

:13:04.:13:13.

all. The other cricketer ran completely away. Did you like that,

:13:14.:13:22.

Sally? That badtempered Bullock was a reflection of the Grand Prix. My

:13:23.:13:27.

goodness me, some badtempered driving. Red Bullock! We like to see

:13:28.:13:43.

exciting racing but it really got nasty. Strong words from Lewis

:13:44.:13:48.

Hamilton about Sebastian Vettel. He says, "Sebastian Vettel's driving

:13:49.:13:53.

yesterday was disgusting." No love lost their between

:13:54.:13:54.

A remarkable race that featured three safety cars and several

:13:55.:13:59.

crashes was won by Red Bull's Daniel Ricciardo.

:14:00.:14:04.

England have won their T20 series against South Africa.

:14:05.:14:07.

It was winner takes all in Cardiff - with England victorious by 19 runs

:14:08.:14:11.

Feliciano Lopez caused a shock and beat Marin Cilic to win

:14:12.:14:15.

a thrilling final of the Queen's Tournament in West

:14:16.:14:18.

Lopez came from a set down to win 2-1.

:14:19.:14:23.

And Petra Kvitova wins the Aegon Classic in Birmingham -

:14:24.:14:26.

her first title since being injured in a knife attack last year.

:14:27.:14:30.

She beat Australia's Ashleigh Barty in three sets.

:14:31.:14:36.

And I think of all the sports stories are reporting on this

:14:37.:14:43.

morning, that's my favourite. That was her second tournament she has

:14:44.:14:47.

played since coming back and there was our lovely atmosphere and rant.

:14:48.:14:51.

People were saying, "Isn't it marvellous to see her". At that

:14:52.:14:55.

point, nobody thought she could come back and win. What a pretty trophy

:14:56.:15:00.

that was. All trophies are pretty, that one was.

:15:01.:15:03.

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

:15:04.:15:16.

week, the weather is changing in stark contrast to what we had last

:15:17.:15:20.

week. Once settled with spells of brain. There is a lot of sunshine on

:15:21.:15:27.

offer. One of our Weather Watchers are sent in this beautiful picture

:15:28.:15:31.

from East Sussex. A lot of dry weather. Not a lot in the way of

:15:32.:15:36.

wind. This low pressure will be coming in from the Atlantic. Not at

:15:37.:15:42.

seven o'clock in the morning. A lot of dry weather. One or two showers

:15:43.:15:46.

picking away at the far north of Scotland. Temperatures at eight

:15:47.:15:52.

o'clock, if you are just stepping out, would be around 12 degrees. As

:15:53.:15:58.

become further south, a bit of wispy cloud. Hardly a breath of wind.

:15:59.:16:04.

Variable amounts of cloud as you push down towards the south-west but

:16:05.:16:09.

still, a lot of sunshine. As we have gone through the course of the day,

:16:10.:16:13.

you can see how the cloud builds in Northern Ireland. A bit more cloud

:16:14.:16:17.

in the West and the rain and then arrives. Temperature-wise, still

:16:18.:16:18.

very warm. We do have this rain moving across

:16:19.:16:36.

Northern Ireland. Also northern England and parts of Wales. As we

:16:37.:16:42.

head into tomorrow morning, we have got that low pressure still very

:16:43.:16:45.

much with us. It will track northwards and eastwards. That's

:16:46.:16:54.

coming up from France and through the day, that one can prove to be

:16:55.:17:01.

quite thundery in nature. Kim Fischer wise, quite muggy if you are

:17:02.:17:09.

in the south-east, with highs of 21. Tomorrow, quite messy picture. As we

:17:10.:17:15.

had from Tuesday into Wednesday, some rain around, some showers. Some

:17:16.:17:22.

of this is likely to be Bunbury as well. We also have an onshore flow.

:17:23.:17:26.

Along the shoreline, a little bit cooler. Highs of up to 19 degrees in

:17:27.:17:31.

the south. Carroll, thank you. That is bring

:17:32.:17:38.

you up-to-date with the main stories.

:17:39.:17:44.

A 100% failure rate as all buildings inspected so far fail fire safety

:17:45.:17:47.

tests, but hundreds more still need to be examined.

:17:48.:17:50.

The Prime Minister will set out the terms of her plan to protect

:17:51.:17:55.

the rights of EU citizens living in Britain after Brexit.

:17:56.:18:02.

Taking a look at a front pages. The front page of the times but first

:18:03.:18:11.

up. A picture of the royal couple, the Duke of Edinburgh appearing for

:18:12.:18:14.

the first time since leaving hospital. At the polo cup. The main

:18:15.:18:21.

story, foreign criminals to be thrown out after Brexit. Plenty more

:18:22.:18:30.

through the course of the day. Much focus on the fallout after the

:18:31.:18:37.

Grenfell Tower block. Now it is being revealed that 60 high-rises

:18:38.:18:43.

are unsafe. The Daily Mail, also taking a look and the Labour Party

:18:44.:18:51.

calling it the Tower fire murder. Have a look at this picture. The

:18:52.:18:58.

water in Majorca looks scarier than it oughta. British tourists sprint

:18:59.:19:06.

from the sea as a shark brings terror to a Spanish holiday beach.

:19:07.:19:10.

You want to find out what sort of shock that was? You put a tea in

:19:11.:19:18.

there. It should be ough'a. It was still too posh. Doing some shark

:19:19.:19:26.

research, are you? This story in the Express. We are getting used to

:19:27.:19:30.

paying different prices when things are busy, such as taxis, and

:19:31.:19:34.

apparently supermarkets could be getting in on the act. Electronic

:19:35.:19:40.

labels on the sides of shelves could mean the price you pay for everyday

:19:41.:19:45.

groceries, the bread, the milk, could change according to how busy

:19:46.:19:50.

the supermarket is. They say it would be a way to get you to go in

:19:51.:19:54.

earlier when it is quieter and at lunchtime, when everybody is tried

:19:55.:19:59.

to buy their sandwich at lunch, it could cost more. It seems to work

:20:00.:20:04.

overseas but they could fight here but it depends whether we would.

:20:05.:20:10.

Off-peak and peak shopping times. I can't see that going down well. It

:20:11.:20:16.

was a blue shark. They normally feed on little fish but they have been

:20:17.:20:23.

known to attack people. They circle shipwreck survivors and occasionally

:20:24.:20:32.

divers. And that is in Majorca? Nobody was hurt. I impressed with

:20:33.:20:50.

your research in that 90 seconds. Ron Gatlin has been concerned after

:20:51.:20:55.

the match on Saturday. He is saying the All Blacks could have wrapped,

:20:56.:21:03.

Murraycareer. 'S I think putting down a marker after that match to

:21:04.:21:08.

stay ahead of the second test, he wants the referee to keep an eye on

:21:09.:21:15.

it. The scrum halves get a lot of attention. I imagine Connor is aware

:21:16.:21:22.

that is going to happen. He has already decided he is going to have

:21:23.:21:27.

a chat with the referee. Sally, Ben, thank you very much.

:21:28.:21:34.

Tony and Eddie are both in special hospitals and are being that the

:21:35.:21:41.

many years. Six years ago, the BBC highlighted abuse in the winter

:21:42.:21:46.

borne view unit and the government promised to bring people with

:21:47.:21:49.

learning disabilities to be supported in their own communities.

:21:50.:21:52.

We will be looking at the progress made since then. We went to meet the

:21:53.:21:54.

families. They told us he would be there for

:21:55.:22:02.

nine months but he is still bare 16 years on, he is still there. Pam 's

:22:03.:22:10.

son Tony is 120 miles from home in a secure hospital. He is autistic and

:22:11.:22:13.

has learning disabilities. His room has stayed the same ever since he

:22:14.:22:18.

was admitted and later sectioned 16 years ago. I think we died that day.

:22:19.:22:26.

When panorama exposed the abuse of patients with learning disabilities

:22:27.:22:29.

in winter borne view, the government made a promise. Homes, not

:22:30.:22:33.

hospitals. They said people should be supported in their own

:22:34.:22:39.

communities, not locked in institutions far from family. Much

:22:40.:22:45.

time has passed since that promise was made, longer since Pam 's son

:22:46.:22:49.

Tony left button. If he killed somebody, he'd be out now. He's done

:22:50.:22:55.

16 years. It is a long sentence. He went there are 23, he will be 40 in

:22:56.:23:02.

August, 40. In 2014, the government was criticised for failing to take

:23:03.:23:06.

enough action after Winterbourne View. In 2015, transforming care

:23:07.:23:12.

partnership areas were set up in England with access to ?40 million

:23:13.:23:15.

to help build the right community support needed to bring people home.

:23:16.:23:19.

But one third of those areas haven't seen any of that money yet. In fact,

:23:20.:23:25.

published NHS data shows that the number of people in one of these

:23:26.:23:29.

institutions today is roughly the same as it was back in 2014, that's

:23:30.:23:34.

back when the government was told it must take urgent action to get

:23:35.:23:39.

numbers down. That is taken from published NHS data which also shows

:23:40.:23:43.

a third of inpatients like Tony at being in a unit for more than five

:23:44.:23:49.

years. The man originally behind the change says he is appalled. This is

:23:50.:23:53.

a disgrace and something this country should be shamed by. We are

:23:54.:23:57.

not unique in this regard but in this day and age, to abuse people

:23:58.:24:02.

pop -- People's humans rights in this way is utterly shocking. Tony

:24:03.:24:08.

Scout provider and local authority both agree he should be back in

:24:09.:24:10.

both agree he should be back in Brighton.

:24:11.:24:24.

Am afraid how is going to go out there. Like Tony, Eddie is on the

:24:25.:24:32.

autistic spectrum. He went into a unit after a crisis. He was 12. He

:24:33.:24:37.

was in a solitary block called the extra care unit. There has been a

:24:38.:24:42.

26% increase in young people with learning disabilities, referred to a

:24:43.:24:47.

secure unit in the last 12 months. Why? The National Audit Office says

:24:48.:24:50.

there is not enough support to families like this to avoid a

:24:51.:24:55.

crisis. We were told he would be there between 12 weeks and nine

:24:56.:25:01.

months. We are over 4.5 years down the line. And he ended up miles down

:25:02.:25:08.

the road at St Andrews, two years after Winterbourne View, not an

:25:09.:25:12.

upstart, not enough training, not enough care. We had an email to say

:25:13.:25:18.

he dedicated a seclusion room. Discovered he had been in the

:25:19.:25:22.

seclusion room for 21 hours and there is no access to a toilet in

:25:23.:25:26.

the seclusion room. In a Saint Andrews say: the Saint Andrews unit

:25:27.:25:42.

is now rated good by the sea QC. Eddie, though, has moved on to

:25:43.:25:47.

another unit where Dell says he is doing better but it is in Newcastle.

:25:48.:25:51.

His family lived 300 miles away in Bristol. They want him back. We

:25:52.:25:56.

wished we -- we wish we had never asked for any help. I don't want to

:25:57.:26:01.

-- I don't want this to happen to any more autistic young people. NHS

:26:02.:26:05.

England told is clear, hospitals should not be seen as homes. New

:26:06.:26:11.

high-quality community services are essential and are being created. The

:26:12.:26:14.

Department of Health tell us ?25 million is being spent to improve

:26:15.:26:18.

outcomes but the National Audit Office warns this is all happening

:26:19.:26:20.

far too slowly. Do let us know what you think. We

:26:21.:26:30.

will speak on to Jane after eight o'clock. Still to come on the

:26:31.:26:43.

programme. It is ripped when we come to the muscle department. That is

:26:44.:26:47.

why the terminator is coming. The boys in blue are back in new series

:26:48.:26:58.

of the observational documentary 24 Hours in Custody. I love the

:26:59.:27:01.

programme. The amount of work that goes into it. The diskettes and

:27:02.:27:04.

News, travel Plenty more on our website

:27:05.:30:23.

at the usual address. Now though it's back

:30:24.:30:27.

to Naga and Dan. Hello, this is Breakfast

:30:28.:30:29.

with Dan Walker and Naga Munchetty. We'll bring you all the latest news

:30:30.:30:37.

and sport in a moment, As yet more high rise buildings

:30:38.:30:40.

fail fire safety checks, we'll ask the Housing Minister

:30:41.:30:45.

whether safety regulations Also this morning, is it

:30:46.:30:47.

checkmate for digital We'll hear how chess could help

:30:48.:31:03.

children's maths skills and get them I don't know if you have heard of

:31:04.:31:13.

the millions. I am familiar with them.

:31:14.:31:13.

And, Hollywood stars Steve Carell and Kristen Wiig give Charlie

:31:14.:31:16.

a masterclass on how to speak to minions ahead of the release

:31:17.:31:19.

of the latest film in the 'Despicable Me 3' franchise.

:31:20.:31:22.

But now a summary of this morning's main news:

:31:23.:31:27.

That you do that masterclass? It's a masterclass.

:31:28.:31:36.

Every single tower block which has had its cladding tested

:31:37.:31:38.

since the Grenfell disaster has failed fire safety inspections.

:31:39.:31:41.

60 high-rises in 25 areas of England have been

:31:42.:31:43.

Local councils are being urged to send samples in more

:31:44.:31:47.

There are still more than 500 other buildings nationwide that need

:31:48.:31:51.

Theresa May will set out more details today of how the government

:31:52.:32:05.

plans to treat more than 3-million EU citizens living

:32:06.:32:07.

Last week, she outlined proposals to offer EU nationals

:32:08.:32:11.

"settled status" - which would give those who have

:32:12.:32:13.

spent five years in the UK equal rights on healthcare,

:32:14.:32:16.

education and benefits - but only if British people living

:32:17.:32:19.

in the European Union were given similar entitlements.

:32:20.:32:29.

60 people are known to have died and around 170 passengers are thought to

:32:30.:32:36.

have been on board the ship with -- which sunk in Colombia. It began

:32:37.:32:42.

taking on water in a cruise in an artificial lake outside the popular

:32:43.:32:46.

resort of Guatape. There are no details yet on why the boat sank.

:32:47.:32:48.

A 16-year-old boy has been charged with the rape of an eight-year-old

:32:49.:32:51.

The attack is alleged to have happened on Saturday evening

:32:52.:32:55.

The boy is due to appear at Manchester Youth Court today.

:32:56.:33:04.

Scotland Yard says six of its officers were injured last

:33:05.:33:06.

night during a protest in East London over the death

:33:07.:33:09.

of a man last week, six days after he'd been stopped by police.

:33:10.:33:13.

Bricks were thrown - and bins set on fire -

:33:14.:33:15.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission has said a postmortem

:33:16.:33:19.

examination on Edir Frederico Da Costa showed that,

:33:20.:33:21.

contrary to some claims, he had no spinal injuries

:33:22.:33:24.

The Royal Navy's new aircraft carrier is due leave her dock

:33:25.:33:30.

at Rosyth in Scotland for the first time today to begin sea trials.

:33:31.:33:33.

HMS Queen Elizabeth, which cost more than

:33:34.:33:35.

three-billion-pounds, is the Navy's first carrier

:33:36.:33:37.

since Ark Royal was scrapped in 2010 - but it will be several years

:33:38.:33:41.

before the vessel is fully operational with jets.

:33:42.:33:46.

The sound of a blaring car horn can drive most of us up the wall.

:33:47.:33:52.

But now scientists have discovered a more effective noise for warning

:33:53.:33:55.

other road users of danger without getting them in a flap.

:33:56.:33:58.

Researchers in South Korea asked volunteers to evaluate a range

:33:59.:34:08.

of noises and found that a synthesised "quack" successfully

:34:09.:34:12.

alerted pedestrians to potential hazards without raising

:34:13.:34:14.

I have been abroad where they have different sounds at pedestrian

:34:15.:34:38.

crossings, you can hear bells and quacks but that noise winds me up no

:34:39.:34:45.

end on the golf course. I'm one of those here everything people. --

:34:46.:34:56.

hear. They don't echo, do they? There is a theory that they don't

:34:57.:35:02.

echo. Put them in a hollow room or something like that.

:35:03.:35:03.

Sally? A science programme, brilliant, watch it with your kids.

:35:04.:35:17.

Let's change the subject. Port ducks, ducks on the golf course,

:35:18.:35:26.

surely that's not a problem. Don't annoy Naga on the golf course. Do

:35:27.:35:37.

you know what happened at the F1? When you are driving along and the

:35:38.:35:41.

person in front of you slows down on purpose just shoot kind of slightly

:35:42.:35:45.

wind you up. A rake testing being. -- brake. What Hamilton was doing

:35:46.:36:01.

is, he had to slow down because there was a safety car involved more

:36:02.:36:05.

than once. It got really nasty and Hamilton called Sebastian Vettel's

:36:06.:36:07.

driving disgusting. After the two clashed

:36:08.:36:13.

in an incident packed The race included three safety cars

:36:14.:36:15.

and lots of crashes. it was won by Red Bull's

:36:16.:36:19.

Daniel Ricciardo. But heres what everyone

:36:20.:36:21.

is talking about - Vettel was penalised for hitting

:36:22.:36:23.

Hamilton's Mercedes as they prepared Hamilton was ahead

:36:24.:36:26.

with 19 laps to go, He ended up fifth, behind Vettel

:36:27.:36:29.

who's extended his championship lead We heard obviously the problems with

:36:30.:36:46.

Lewis and Sebastian and it was just a crazy race. I made an unplanned

:36:47.:36:57.

pitstop. We have Summit to breed in the breaks. Did I think I would win

:36:58.:37:03.

today? Absolutely not. I would have put all my money on it that this was

:37:04.:37:05.

very unlikely. After a disappointing

:37:06.:37:09.

Champions Trophy exit, England's cricketers bounced back

:37:10.:37:10.

to win their T20 series Dawid Malan starred with the bat

:37:11.:37:13.

on debut for England, top scoring with 78 to set

:37:14.:37:16.

South Africa 182 to win. They were always struggling -

:37:17.:37:20.

especially when dangerman AB de England won by 19 runs and will now

:37:21.:37:22.

turn their focus to the four match test series that starts

:37:23.:37:27.

in a couple of weeks. Feliciano Lopez caused a big shock

:37:28.:37:34.

and beat Marin Cilic in a thrilling Number four seed Cilic took

:37:35.:37:37.

the first set without much fuss but the Spaniard fought back and won

:37:38.:37:42.

the second on the tie-break. That was followed by another

:37:43.:37:45.

compelling set which again depended And it was won by

:37:46.:37:48.

the world number 32. Leigh I cannot believe that I

:37:49.:38:00.

finally won this trophy. I have been waiting, 15 or 16 years to hold this

:38:01.:38:06.

trophy. I thought by the end of the tiebreak after losing a few match

:38:07.:38:10.

points that I wasn't going to be able to make it but I was a little

:38:11.:38:15.

bit lucky at the end and I won today.

:38:16.:38:17.

Jamie Murray ensured at least one Murray brother won a Queen's title

:38:18.:38:21.

as he and partner Bruno Soares beat Frenchmen Julien Benneteau

:38:22.:38:23.

and Edouard Roger-Vasselin in the final of the doubles.

:38:24.:38:26.

The pair won in straight sets 6-2, 6-3.

:38:27.:38:28.

Roger Federer looks in great shape for Wimbledon after winning a ninth

:38:29.:38:31.

He beat Alexander Zverev in straight sets to win the title.

:38:32.:38:35.

Federer sat out the entire clay court season to target a record

:38:36.:38:39.

From a seven time Wimbledon champion to a two-time one and Petra Kvitova

:38:40.:38:47.

has won her first tournament since being injured in a knife

:38:48.:38:50.

She came from behind to beat Australia's Ashleigh Barty in three

:38:51.:38:58.

sets to win the Aegon Classic in Birmingham.

:38:59.:39:00.

She said it is something very special - like a fairytale

:39:01.:39:05.

I couldn't imagine to come back. To win a trophy. That's why I was

:39:06.:39:17.

fighting to play tennis again and that is why I was still able to, you

:39:18.:39:19.

know, have great motivation. It's a big week for

:39:20.:39:25.

the British and Irish Lions. They face the Hurricanes tomorrow

:39:26.:39:27.

before a must win second test Lions coach criticised their tactics

:39:28.:39:30.

after the first test defeat - and All Blacks coach

:39:31.:39:35.

Steve Hansen hit back, These predictable comments. Two

:39:36.:39:53.

weeks ago, we cheated in the scrums and it was blocking after that and

:39:54.:39:57.

now this. It's disappointing because what he is implying is we are

:39:58.:40:01.

intentionally going out to injure somebody and that's not the case, we

:40:02.:40:05.

have never been like that. I would expect him to know the New Zealand

:40:06.:40:09.

psyche that it's not about intentionally tried to hurt anybody

:40:10.:40:12.

but it's about playing hard and fierce. You just call a radio phone

:40:13.:40:18.

in if you want to get your message across. That makes it even more

:40:19.:40:25.

exciting to watch. It was an amazing game, wasn't it? There was quite a

:40:26.:40:33.

lot of pressure on Gatlin tomorrow. They have got to win tomorrow in

:40:34.:40:37.

order to feel like they are succeeding while they are out there.

:40:38.:40:38.

It gets better. Valentino Rossi has won a Moto GP

:40:39.:40:39.

race for the first time in more than a year after claiming victory

:40:40.:40:43.

at the Dutch Grand Prix. The seven time world champion

:40:44.:40:46.

started from fourth on the grid and fought off fellow

:40:47.:40:49.

Italian Danilo Petrucci to take Britain's Cal Crutchlow just

:40:50.:40:51.

missed out on third place. His compatriots Scott Redding,

:40:52.:40:55.

Sam Lowes and Bradley Smith Finally we're going to bring

:40:56.:40:58.

you the opening round of the 2017 Diving World Series that took place

:40:59.:41:05.

in Ireland over the weekend. Britain's Gary Hunt won

:41:06.:41:08.

but we particularly like the patriotic swimwear

:41:09.:41:10.

fashioned by Blake Aldridge - The dives took place from nearly

:41:11.:41:12.

three times the height That is a place called Serpent's

:41:13.:41:40.

Lair. It is a really tight space. Not getting involved with that at

:41:41.:41:42.

all. 12 days ago few would have

:41:43.:41:47.

known what cladding meant or where Grenfell Tower was,

:41:48.:41:53.

but the impact of the fire there continues to impact the lives

:41:54.:41:56.

of thousands of people. 600 buildings across the country

:41:57.:41:59.

are being tested in the wake Of the 60 examined so far,

:42:00.:42:01.

the failure rate is 100-percent. Tony Bird is an expert in social

:42:02.:42:06.

housing and joins us from Camden, where the council

:42:07.:42:09.

is still in the process of evacuating residents

:42:10.:42:11.

from the Chalcots estate. They differ talking to this morning.

:42:12.:42:26.

As an independent expert, tell me what you think in terms of how the

:42:27.:42:34.

building industry has been treated or has been treating safety in

:42:35.:42:42.

social housing. Well, they have obviously not been treating it very

:42:43.:42:45.

seriously otherwise we wouldn't have these tragedies. They have been

:42:46.:42:49.

plenty of warnings out there come up most notably, the period after that

:42:50.:42:55.

Black will fire in 2009 but it also predates that. -- the warnings from

:42:56.:43:09.

the coroner are that they should be talking about sprinklers. Sprinklers

:43:10.:43:18.

would have stopped the very worst of the fire at Grenfell. There has

:43:19.:43:29.

never been any deaths since sprinklers have been installed.

:43:30.:43:34.

People in social housing don't have a lot of money. They are willing to

:43:35.:43:39.

have furniture that are not necessarily fire retardant. They

:43:40.:43:42.

will have old washing machines and white goods and cookers. You are

:43:43.:43:48.

more likely to get fires starting in flats of social housing because of

:43:49.:43:54.

that matter. You have brought up a fair number of issues there. You

:43:55.:44:00.

have highlighted the risk perhaps because of older appliances in the

:44:01.:44:06.

home. There are elements, different elements, in terms of Grenfell in

:44:07.:44:10.

the sense that how much was the cladding the main driver of this

:44:11.:44:13.

fire and would sprinklers have made that much of a difference in this

:44:14.:44:20.

tower block fire in particular? It may not have been the whole

:44:21.:44:24.

solution, actually, I think it would have actually... Probably protected

:44:25.:44:31.

the people in the flats for a longer period but it wasn't their and there

:44:32.:44:38.

is an requirement to fit sprinklers into retrofitted properties -- there

:44:39.:44:44.

is no requirement. Where it has been done, it has been successful and I

:44:45.:44:48.

always make the point that the cost of putting sprinklers in, you can

:44:49.:44:54.

offset it by negotiating better property insurance rates. Property

:44:55.:45:02.

insurance rates are huge for tower blocks and you make the savings they

:45:03.:45:14.

are. Apologies are interrupting. Who's guidelines do building

:45:15.:45:18.

contractors have to follow? There are building regulations and

:45:19.:45:21.

therapies to be government guidance and also insurance companies want

:45:22.:45:25.

certain standards met. Who do they follow? Well, they have to follow

:45:26.:45:33.

the current building regulations which, as everyone it knows, are

:45:34.:45:39.

very flexible. I think what has happened is the contractors doing

:45:40.:45:43.

the large refurbishment, they have had almost complete freedom to

:45:44.:45:49.

choose what materials they make. The government minister in 2011 said not

:45:50.:45:55.

to put burdens on the contractors and let them bring the local

:45:56.:45:58.

expertise in. Of course, they respond by putting in the cheapest

:45:59.:46:02.

materials they can get away with. Tony, thank you for your time this

:46:03.:46:08.

morning. An independent expert in social housing.

:46:09.:46:16.

We will speak to the Housing Minister later.

:46:17.:46:25.

with me with a moody sky. This week, we can expect a more changeable week

:46:26.:46:31.

the last week. It will be unsettled. There will be spells of rain and it

:46:32.:46:36.

will turn cooler. Today, what we've got is low pressure coming in from

:46:37.:46:41.

the Atlantic. Later on, that will introduce some rain. Things fairly

:46:42.:46:49.

quiet. We'll also got a few showers just picking at the far north of

:46:50.:46:54.

Scotland. With this as we go through the course of the morning. The

:46:55.:46:57.

temperatures are indicative of towns and cities. Quite unusual for this

:46:58.:47:07.

stage in June. A lot of sunshine as we go further south. Possibly the

:47:08.:47:14.

odd spot of rain first thing. We've also got some sea fog lapping around

:47:15.:47:21.

the shores of south-west England. We will see more cloud build in the

:47:22.:47:28.

rest. Still a few showers knocking around. The rain is something we are

:47:29.:47:41.

keeping a close eye on. It pushes up in the direction of Aberdeenshire.

:47:42.:47:50.

There will be a lot of surface moisture on the roads. Tomorrow,

:47:51.:47:55.

that low pressure will continue its journey. Meanwhile, we have another

:47:56.:48:01.

one coming up from France. This one is likely to introduce some thundery

:48:02.:48:04.

downpours. It's not going to be raining all the time. There will be

:48:05.:48:11.

drier weather. It will come in through the English Channel across

:48:12.:48:15.

parts of England. The other band of rain pushes up into Scotland,

:48:16.:48:19.

leaving some skies behind it. Temperatures tomorrow, 12 degrees in

:48:20.:48:31.

the north, 21 in the south. A bit of Breakfast in sight. Naga has had a

:48:32.:48:39.

massive bite of toast. She won't be able to talk about 30 seconds. I was

:48:40.:48:45.

hoping you would get to Wednesday. I would have but my time was cut.

:48:46.:48:51.

There is a toast conspiracy catching us. Toast is finished. The wonderful

:48:52.:49:03.

face of Naga. It was and Kurds. Thank you so much. Thankfully Ben

:49:04.:49:08.

had his Breakfast ages ago. The consummate professional. I am lucky,

:49:09.:49:15.

I get a bit of downtime. I get to eat my Breakfast in peace.

:49:16.:49:19.

Two conflicting reports today show different forecasts for the economy

:49:20.:49:24.

with one pretty positive, the other less so.

:49:25.:49:26.

Yep - one is from the British Chambers of Commerce -

:49:27.:49:31.

it says economic growth will be anaemic over the next few years.

:49:32.:49:34.

But a separate report from Lloyd's Bank says businesses

:49:35.:49:36.

are more confident than they've been for 18 months.

:49:37.:49:40.

Uncertainty is something businesses never like, much less in the context

:49:41.:49:46.

of Brexit and the Brexit transition so they do want to see government

:49:47.:49:50.

taking some firm action to support business and support the domestic

:49:51.:49:54.

business environment. We heard almost nothing about business during

:49:55.:49:58.

the General Election campaign. It's got to come back on the agenda in a

:49:59.:50:02.

big way. That was Adam Marshall from the BCC.

:50:03.:50:04.

Stephen Eskowitz is from What Everyone Wants in Bolton -

:50:05.:50:12.

a clearance company that sells discounted cookware and imports

:50:13.:50:15.

We were talking about confidence in business. Businesses are more

:50:16.:50:21.

confident than they have been in 18 months. You are confident

:50:22.:50:26.

businessperson? We have grown year-on-year. We have to sustain

:50:27.:50:33.

that growth and go even further. Letters that confidence come from?

:50:34.:50:40.

We are constantly told things are uncertain. We hear about Brexit, we

:50:41.:50:45.

hear about government policy but things are looking up for business.

:50:46.:50:50.

With our business, it's more about consumers, the end user, whatever

:50:51.:50:56.

retailer people going to, they purchase a product, are looking for

:50:57.:51:02.

value for money rather than imported cheap products we are looking for.

:51:03.:51:09.

At the end of the day, people want to buy a product that lasts and is

:51:10.:51:13.

sustainable, they will spend a little bit more. They are buying a

:51:14.:51:18.

product that lasts. That is where we come in. It's interesting, because

:51:19.:51:25.

your business purchases end of line stock, discount stock and you sell

:51:26.:51:30.

it on. Batting is -- that is in itself an interesting business

:51:31.:51:34.

model. You are able to select a bit more cheaply. 100%. But by the

:51:35.:51:40.

distressed stock from the major brands. We sell it back to the

:51:41.:51:45.

retailers. Therefore, the consumer goes in and they compare like for

:51:46.:51:50.

like. They compare to what the discounted prices now. As far as

:51:51.:51:55.

confidence is concerned, what you need to see from maybe the

:51:56.:51:59.

government or the economy to keep things ticking over? I don't really

:52:00.:52:07.

see a change. We are a unique business in what we do. We just

:52:08.:52:15.

carry on as normal. It is nice to hear some success stories. After

:52:16.:52:22.

seven o'clock, I will talk about how we are spending millions of pounds

:52:23.:52:25.

too much when we go on holidays with our credit cards. That sounds like

:52:26.:52:34.

Dan, actually. I pay ?20, we went to Venice to the day without kids, and

:52:35.:52:40.

it is 1.5 euros every time you take the kids to the toilet so 20 quid

:52:41.:52:45.

just on toilets. You are in Venice. It is a beautiful city but you pay

:52:46.:52:50.

through the nose for it. Spending more than a penny, won't you?

:52:51.:52:54.

He's the big hearted super-villain with many Minion friends and now

:52:55.:52:57.

Gru's returning to the big screen in Despicable Me 3.

:52:58.:52:59.

Stars, Steve Carell and Kristen Wiig spoke to Charlie about the fun

:53:00.:53:03.

they had making the film and even gave him a masterclass on how

:53:04.:53:06.

There is so much excitement about this film, a lot of affection for

:53:07.:53:21.

Despicable Me, now Despicable Me three. It's nice to promote a movie

:53:22.:53:27.

like that, which has a lot of affection, because not all movies

:53:28.:53:30.

have that affection. Just silly, ridiculous Minions. Can you be in a

:53:31.:53:38.

bad mood after? They are the little yellow things. I don't know if you

:53:39.:53:42.

have heard of the Minions. I am familiar with them. I don't

:53:43.:53:47.

understand them. Do you understand them by now, the way they speak?

:53:48.:53:56.

Bellow and banana I understand. Bellow means to load and banana

:53:57.:54:01.

means... I didn't even know they had a full on language. Oh, it is a

:54:02.:54:07.

real... Apparently there is a translator thing on line, I swear,

:54:08.:54:10.

you can put in sentences and it translates it into Minionese. They

:54:11.:54:16.

would know if that's true? That's true. But there are probably

:54:17.:54:20.

people... I am going in. I'm OK! The Gru voice is one that

:54:21.:54:34.

people, it's so are part of this film. What do you want to be to say?

:54:35.:54:43.

That is the voice. Have you heard a lot of people doing really bad

:54:44.:54:48.

efforts at Gru? Do they do it to you? Yes. It's not that hard to do.

:54:49.:54:53.

I set the bar really like myself because it doesn't really apply to

:54:54.:55:00.

any country and it's not an accent, it's just sort of a weird, funny

:55:01.:55:05.

sounding voice. Can you do it? I've not... Can we do a master class? In

:55:06.:55:18.

Gru? You got to kind of talk like this. You push it down. You think of

:55:19.:55:27.

Stella McCarthy and Ricardo Montalban and had a baby, that is

:55:28.:55:37.

Gru. Is that too much? That wasn't Gru. You talk like this. I love it.

:55:38.:55:43.

You are the Godfather. I've gone very red. You are the Godfather Gru.

:55:44.:55:54.

Happy birthday to you, happy birthday dear Dan, happy birthday to

:55:55.:56:08.

you! Are and talking to use some years ago how you came by the voice

:56:09.:56:12.

and you said you use your roan kids and you tried out on them. Are they

:56:13.:56:17.

just say in, shut up, dad? Enough the funny stuff. Don't do it any

:56:18.:56:24.

more. We have had enough. We'll reach that point. It's so much fun

:56:25.:56:29.

to embarrass your kids. Go to a supermarket, any grocery store, you

:56:30.:56:34.

can do anything there, sing, dance, dance down the aisles holding two

:56:35.:56:40.

bags of fruit. You do that? My daughter is 16, can you imagine? Or

:56:41.:56:47.

picking up at school. Hi, honey! Dad, what are you doing? Does it. Do

:56:48.:56:57.

you do it? Embarrass your kids? Even though I was embarrassed by my dad

:56:58.:57:01.

regularly, I am turning into that person. It is inevitable. That is C

:57:02.:57:08.

speaking to Steve Carell and Kristen Wiig. He needs to work in his voice

:57:09.:57:11.

a little bit. Time now to get the news,

:57:12.:57:14.

travel and weather where you are. Plenty more on our website

:57:15.:00:31.

at the usual address. Now though it's back

:00:32.:00:33.

to Naga and Dan. Hello, this is Breakfast,

:00:34.:00:36.

with Dan Walker and Naga Munchetty. A 100% failure rate -

:00:37.:00:42.

not a single tower block checked since the Grenfell fire has

:00:43.:00:45.

passed safety tests. 60 buildings across England

:00:46.:00:47.

are deemed not safe - hundreds more are due

:00:48.:00:49.

to have their cladding inspected, Good morning, it's

:00:50.:00:52.

Monday the 26th of June. Theresa May will today give more

:00:53.:01:07.

details of how EU citizens living in the UK will be

:01:08.:01:17.

treated after Brexit. Setting sail at last -

:01:18.:01:22.

the Royal Navy's new three-billion pound aircraft carrier starts

:01:23.:01:25.

sea trials seven years We are spending billions of pounds

:01:26.:01:40.

too much when using debit cards or credit cards went overseas. Why? I

:01:41.:01:42.

will have the details later. In Sport - Lewis Hamilton labels

:01:43.:01:44.

Sebastian Vettel a disgrace after the two collide in an action

:01:45.:01:47.

packed Azerbaijan Grand Prix. Coming of age. He made his debut six

:01:48.:02:02.

years ago and now Ed Sheeran has closed the Glastonbury Festival on

:02:03.:02:03.

the main Pyramid stage. Good morning. For many of us, a dry

:02:04.:02:14.

and sunny start of the day. However, cloud will build on the west and

:02:15.:02:18.

later we will see some rain in Northern Ireland. All have more

:02:19.:02:20.

details in 15 minutes. Every single tower block which has

:02:21.:02:22.

had its cladding tested since the Grenfell disaster has

:02:23.:02:27.

failed fire safety inspections. 60 high-rises in 25 areas

:02:28.:02:29.

of England have been Local councils are being urged

:02:30.:02:31.

to send samples in more There are still more than 500 other

:02:32.:02:35.

buildings nationwide that need The number of buildings that have

:02:36.:02:39.

now failed fire safety checks following the Grenfell Tower

:02:40.:02:55.

disaster stands at 60 in England And of those examined so far,

:02:56.:02:58.

every single sample has failed. It was concerns over

:02:59.:03:02.

external cladding, combined with issues concerning fire doors,

:03:03.:03:04.

gas pipes and insulation which triggered the mass evacuation

:03:05.:03:11.

of four tower blocks in Camden. Where we have residents,

:03:12.:03:14.

we are making sure that we're continuing to knock on their door,

:03:15.:03:17.

I'm sure it is deeply disruptive for them, just keep having

:03:18.:03:20.

the conversation again and again, keeping people awake,

:03:21.:03:23.

making sure there are people on the block but the fire services

:03:24.:03:25.

are saying it's not safe to stay And in Scotland, Holyrood

:03:26.:03:29.

is to carry out its own investigation into the safety

:03:30.:03:33.

of high-rise tower blocks. It is thought up to 600 buildings

:03:34.:03:35.

in total are to be tested in England with councils being told

:03:36.:03:39.

to prioritise the ones they're most But just how long this process

:03:40.:03:42.

will take is still unclear. Theresa May is due to chair

:03:43.:03:50.

a meeting of the Grenfell Tower recovery task force later today

:03:51.:03:54.

where she will be updated on the recovery effort that

:03:55.:03:56.

could take many weeks, More inquests are also expected

:03:57.:03:59.

to be opened and adjourned this afternoon into the deaths

:04:00.:04:03.

of the victims. And Nick joins us now from Camden

:04:04.:04:05.

where some residents have spent a third night sleeping on airbeds

:04:06.:04:14.

in a leisure centre. Nick, how long before they will be

:04:15.:04:17.

able to return home? No one knows full the ideal

:04:18.:04:36.

timeframe as discussed on Friday night was between two and four

:04:37.:04:40.

weeks. What we have this morning if people out of for tower block here.

:04:41.:04:46.

We estimate 200 people are refusing to leave some 120 flats. Why?

:04:47.:04:50.

Because they don't want to come to the leisure centre behind me or they

:04:51.:04:54.

say they can't afford to pay for temporary accommodation even though

:04:55.:04:58.

they will be refunded. Camden Council says it is still trying to

:04:59.:05:02.

encourage them to come out of the buildings and it's not clear what

:05:03.:05:06.

their legal steps can be to force them out. At this age, patience does

:05:07.:05:13.

seem to be running out because the council says, look, we have got to

:05:14.:05:18.

get the workers in to do this remedial work. -- at this stage. It

:05:19.:05:26.

could take longer than the planned four weeks if these people do not

:05:27.:05:31.

come out. We know that 25 local authorities are affected and 14 have

:05:32.:05:35.

been named. Others include Manchester, Stockton and Sunderland.

:05:36.:05:39.

We know as well that the government were promising to check 600

:05:40.:05:43.

high-rise blocks across England. What is happening with those test?

:05:44.:05:48.

We might get an update from to May when she chairs this type force

:05:49.:05:53.

today. One thing is clear, 12 days on from Grenfell Tower, there are

:05:54.:05:58.

still many unanswered questions. We will ask the Housing Minister a bit

:05:59.:06:01.

later. Theresa May will set out more

:06:02.:06:02.

details this afternoon of how the government plans to treat

:06:03.:06:05.

European Union citizens living Last week, she outlined proposals

:06:06.:06:08.

to offer EU nationals "settled status" as long as British

:06:09.:06:11.

people were given similar rights. Our political correspondent

:06:12.:06:14.

Iain Watson joins us now. Iain, how much more

:06:15.:06:17.

detail will we get today? I think the devil is in the details.

:06:18.:06:34.

When it comes to EU citizens' rights. It will be a 15 page

:06:35.:06:38.

document alongside Theresa May's statement today going through some

:06:39.:06:42.

of the proposals for EU citizens after Brexit. If people are here for

:06:43.:06:50.

over five years, they will get a similar rights to British citizens

:06:51.:06:55.

from welfare to pensions. There are still unanswered questions, for

:06:56.:06:58.

example, what happens to their family members? If they brought them

:06:59.:07:03.

in, could they settle here as well? That may well be answered and there

:07:04.:07:07.

is likely to be exclusions from this five-year settled status if people

:07:08.:07:13.

have admitted serious criminal offences, for example. It is still

:07:14.:07:17.

unclear as to when the cut-off date will be and when did you have to be

:07:18.:07:22.

in Britain to apply for this scheme? That is unlikely to be settled today

:07:23.:07:25.

because Theresa May want to make that the subject of negotiation.

:07:26.:07:29.

There has also been speculation that she might bite it difficult to get

:07:30.:07:33.

her vision of Brexit through Westminster here because she lacks

:07:34.:07:36.

an overall majority. As I understand it, she will meet the DUP leader

:07:37.:07:42.

from Ireland and if they can get the ten MPs on board then she will be a

:07:43.:07:46.

lot more comfortable when it comes to the Brexit negotiations and so

:07:47.:07:49.

far, the noise is sounding pretty positive. Negotiations all round.

:07:50.:07:51.

Thank you very much. Six people are known to have died

:07:52.:07:53.

and 16 others are missing after a crowded passenger boat sank

:07:54.:07:56.

in a reservoir in Colombia. Around 170 passengers are thought

:07:57.:07:59.

to have been on board. The vessel, which had four decks,

:08:00.:08:02.

began taking on water during a cruise on an artificial

:08:03.:08:05.

lake outside the popular resort There are no details yet

:08:06.:08:08.

on why the boat sank. A 16-year-old boy has been charged

:08:09.:08:13.

with the rape of an eight-year-old -- Scotland Yard says six

:08:14.:08:24.

night during a protest in East London over the death

:08:25.:08:30.

of a man last week, six days after he'd been stopped by police.

:08:31.:08:33.

Bricks were thrown - and bins set on fire -

:08:34.:08:36.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission has said a postmortem

:08:37.:08:40.

examination on Edir Frederico Da Costa showed that,

:08:41.:08:42.

contrary to some claims, he had no spinal injuries

:08:43.:08:44.

Ed Sheeran closed the Glastonbury Music Festival last night -

:08:45.:08:48.

just six years after his debut performance to a crowd of just 500.

:08:49.:08:51.

But while his rise has been meteoric, other artists

:08:52.:08:54.

on yesterday's bill have been in the business for more

:08:55.:08:56.

Our entertainment correspondent Lizo Mzimba reports.

:08:57.:09:06.

For many, Glastonbury's final day was disco day.

:09:07.:09:09.

There were Bee Gees classics from Barry Gibb...

:09:10.:09:16.

Watching from the sidelines, Nile Rodgers, who later took

:09:17.:09:23.

to the stage with Chic with disco hit after disco hit.

:09:24.:09:26.

A huge crowd watching them in the Somerset sunshine.

:09:27.:09:39.

It's not just people famous from the world of music who have

:09:40.:09:47.

been performing at this year's festival.

:09:48.:09:49.

Yes, that's American film and TV star Kiefer Sutherland,

:09:50.:09:51.

He said performing at Glastonbury was particularly special.

:09:52.:10:03.

It is almost like being invited into a part of history.

:10:04.:10:06.

His headline set an emotional climax to a festival that won't be

:10:07.:10:17.

It's normally rain that stops play during the cricket season

:10:18.:10:37.

Let's get more on our main story this morning.

:10:38.:10:40.

the number of buildings that have now failed fire safety checks

:10:41.:10:45.

following the Grenfell Tower tragedy stands at 60.

:10:46.:10:47.

That's across 25 local authority areas in England.

:10:48.:10:49.

14 of those have been named, including Barnet,

:10:50.:10:52.

The Government's confirmed that of those tested -

:10:53.:10:55.

so far - every single sample has failed.

:10:56.:10:57.

It's thought up to 600 buildings in total are to be examined.

:10:58.:11:00.

Meanwhile, Camden Council is evacuating residents from four

:11:01.:11:02.

of its tower blocks but 200 people in 120 flats are still refusing

:11:03.:11:06.

Joining us now from our studio in Westminster

:11:07.:11:09.

Thank you for your time this morning. Every single tower block so

:11:10.:11:37.

far has failed the safety test. This is a national scandal. How have we

:11:38.:11:42.

got to this point? Can I just firstly say that last week I had an

:11:43.:11:46.

opportunity to meet some of those who were affected by the Grenfell

:11:47.:11:54.

fire and I have nothing but admiration for the dignity and

:11:55.:11:58.

bravery they have showed. What is clear is when you to make sure they

:11:59.:12:02.

get the help they need right now and that is happening. Also to make sure

:12:03.:12:05.

that, I can understand people are worried live in similar high-rise

:12:06.:12:09.

blocks, we need to make sure they also feel safe. That is why we have

:12:10.:12:13.

put in place a very clear process to make sure that buildings that are

:12:14.:12:21.

identified with a particular type of aluminium cladding, we are able to

:12:22.:12:26.

test hundreds of samples as day. We're ensure that as soon as we find

:12:27.:12:31.

out that a building has failed and has got cladding which is

:12:32.:12:36.

non-compliant, the local fire service is informed and they go to

:12:37.:12:40.

the building and do the right checks. Clearly, as you said in the

:12:41.:12:45.

case of Camden, where it wasn't just cladding that other failures when it

:12:46.:12:48.

came to fire safety, people had to be evacuated and I have nothing more

:12:49.:12:52.

than admiration for the way that people have dealt with that who have

:12:53.:12:57.

been affected. Our priority is to keep people safe and that is why we

:12:58.:13:01.

need to keep this as quick as possible. You say the keep priority

:13:02.:13:05.

is to keep people safe. I will read you the quote from John McDonnell,"

:13:06.:13:14.

79 of those who are dead from Grenfell and there will be more,..."

:13:15.:13:21.

The voices are heard when sharing this committee meeting, we need to

:13:22.:13:28.

try and make sure this never, ever happens again. I will just point out

:13:29.:13:31.

that the buildings we are discovering with this cladding are

:13:32.:13:35.

of varying ages. The cladding was put in over varying periods of time,

:13:36.:13:40.

not just in the past seven years. Of course, in council areas which have

:13:41.:13:44.

different political leaderships. It is understanding that people want to

:13:45.:13:49.

turn it into a political issue but what I am sensing is that what the

:13:50.:13:53.

nation demands is that we work together and make sure we keep

:13:54.:13:56.

people safe and that's why we are making sure these safety checks are

:13:57.:14:00.

happening. On that point, you say it's important and yet there are

:14:01.:14:04.

still 600 buildings that, in total, at least 500 still need to be

:14:05.:14:09.

checked. The former head of the civil service who now work with a

:14:10.:14:13.

housing association MPs body, he said over the weekend, there is no

:14:14.:14:18.

reason why 100 buildings can be tested per day. Why have we only set

:14:19.:14:26.

-- tested a certain amount and why is there people crossed the UK who

:14:27.:14:30.

still don't know whether they're building is safe and we are still 12

:14:31.:14:34.

days after Grenfell. That testing process is happening around the

:14:35.:14:41.

clock. We are urgently making sure that samples are sent to us and that

:14:42.:14:47.

is why we are updating on a very regular basis. Of course, as soon as

:14:48.:14:54.

the local authorities have informed resident in those blocks and the

:14:55.:14:57.

fire safety checks are carried out as a matter of urgency, that is when

:14:58.:15:01.

we are also making clear to the general public where those areas

:15:02.:15:04.

are. Put yourself in the position of some of those people living in some

:15:05.:15:08.

of those blocks where they don't know whether they're building is

:15:09.:15:11.

unsafe, they go to sleep every night and we have been speaking to people

:15:12.:15:14.

over the weekend you are genuinely concerned and worried about their

:15:15.:15:17.

health, worried about their future, worried every single time they put

:15:18.:15:21.

their head on the pillow. Why is there no central base where they can

:15:22.:15:26.

find out? Why aren't these tests, I will come back to this question

:15:27.:15:31.

again, why aren't these tests happening quickly? I completely

:15:32.:15:36.

understand why people should be worried and that is absolutely why

:15:37.:15:40.

we are making sure these tests are happening as quickly as possible. I

:15:41.:15:44.

want to be clear, on the day that this dreadful tragedy at Grenfell

:15:45.:15:48.

occurred, at that point, in government, we had already started

:15:49.:15:51.

contacting local authorities and housing associations and we know

:15:52.:15:54.

that these associations were in turn contacting residents in their

:15:55.:15:58.

blocks. This process has been ongoing in terms of providing

:15:59.:16:01.

assurance and checking buildings for quite some days but you are right,

:16:02.:16:06.

we want to make sure that we check these buildings as quickly as

:16:07.:16:09.

possible and that is why I would say to all landlords out there, you

:16:10.:16:13.

know, if you have any concerns about buildings, please, send the cladding

:16:14.:16:17.

in protesting as soon as possible. -- for testing.

:16:18.:16:28.

mention testing but from Camden, we heard from Eileen, you might be

:16:29.:16:31.

having a heart attack because of the stress that is happening, Rosie,

:16:32.:16:35.

with a nine week old baby who was told at 8:30pm that she had to sleep

:16:36.:16:39.

on in their bed in a local leisure centre. These people need leadership

:16:40.:16:44.

from the government, people like you. I understand that. I know it

:16:45.:16:49.

can be very traumatic when at short notice, you are asked to leave your

:16:50.:16:54.

home. I absolutely understand that in what is paramount, we have to be

:16:55.:16:59.

led by the experts, when they go into the building and they say

:17:00.:17:02.

mitigation measures are not enough in that building has to be

:17:03.:17:05.

evacuated, that is what is happening and we are trying to make sure this

:17:06.:17:09.

happens in an orderly fashion, from what I have heard. That has been

:17:10.:17:13.

happening in Camden. I have nothing but admiration for those individuals

:17:14.:17:19.

who have had to cope with this move and live in temporary accommodation.

:17:20.:17:23.

With respect, they don't want your admiration, they want their homes

:17:24.:17:27.

back and they want to know they are safe. I understand that we want to

:17:28.:17:31.

make sure they themselves are safe and that is why in four out of the

:17:32.:17:36.

60 buildings, people have been evacuated and there are plans in

:17:37.:17:40.

place to immediately make sure the cladding is fixed. Would you talk

:17:41.:17:45.

about the number of people being evacuated, there are 60 buildings.

:17:46.:17:50.

We have made and given very clear advice to housing associations as to

:17:51.:17:53.

what they need to do for mitigation measures to put in place to make

:17:54.:17:58.

sure that people don't have to be evacuated but clearly, as is in the

:17:59.:18:04.

case of Camden, there were multiple failures and that is why people had

:18:05.:18:12.

to be evacuated. Residents want reassurance. How long is this going

:18:13.:18:18.

to take? We are literally working around the clock on this. It is not

:18:19.:18:24.

an issue of capacity. We need to expand the number of items which are

:18:25.:18:29.

tested. We can do that. This is a question of working through the

:18:30.:18:32.

samples that are coming in. Each test takes several hours and we've

:18:33.:18:36.

got to get that right but I absolutely understand people want

:18:37.:18:40.

assurances and I can assure you we are working around the clock to

:18:41.:18:45.

provide that assurance. Thank you for talking to us. Hopefully that

:18:46.:18:52.

provided some of the answers many of you have been looking for.

:18:53.:18:58.

A 100% failure rate as all buildings inspected so far fail fire safety

:18:59.:19:02.

tests, but hundreds more still need to be examined.

:19:03.:19:04.

The Prime Minister will set out the terms of her plan to protect

:19:05.:19:08.

the rights of EU citizens living in Britain after Brexit.

:19:09.:19:17.

What is happening with the weather this week? Carol is with us this

:19:18.:19:26.

morning. It's not a bad start of the day. Chile in Northern Ireland. --

:19:27.:19:36.

cold in Northern Ireland. It will pick up in the sunshine. This week,

:19:37.:19:43.

rather unsettled, spells the brain and it will be cooler. What is

:19:44.:19:49.

happening is low pressure will produce some rain into Northern

:19:50.:19:54.

Ireland and move north eastwards. But the high pressure is keeping

:19:55.:19:58.

things fairly settled. This morning, there are a few showers over the

:19:59.:20:04.

north of Scotland. A lot of dry and sunny weather. For Northern Ireland,

:20:05.:20:12.

chilly start. It comes into northern England, the Midlands, East Anglia.

:20:13.:20:17.

We do have a weak weather front in the south, not producing much more

:20:18.:20:22.

than a band of cloud and there is some sea fog. As we go through the

:20:23.:20:27.

day, that will disperse, leaving us with a lot of dry weather bar the

:20:28.:20:32.

odd shower here and now. Through the day, the cloud will begin in the

:20:33.:20:37.

West as our area of low pressure produces rain into Northern Ireland.

:20:38.:20:43.

Quite muddy in the south-east. Pressure conditions as we push

:20:44.:20:47.

further north. Through this evening, Weise -- we could see a spell of

:20:48.:20:52.

heavy rain across Northern Ireland. Into Scotland, especially Dumfries

:20:53.:20:59.

Galloway, pushing up in the project -- Internet the direction of

:21:00.:21:06.

Aberdeenshire. Through the rest of the evening and overnight into

:21:07.:21:09.

tomorrow, but low pressure continues to drift steadily to the north-east.

:21:10.:21:17.

That is likely to introduce some showery outbreaks of rain. Some of

:21:18.:21:24.

those woolly thundery. The other low pressure area pushing steadily

:21:25.:21:26.

towards the north-east, pushing brain with it. Temperatures in

:21:27.:21:35.

Northern Ireland in Belfast, 19. 12 as we push up to Scotland. Still

:21:36.:21:42.

feeling quite muddy in the south-east with highs of 21 degrees.

:21:43.:21:47.

As we head on, Tuesday and Wednesday, we carry on with a lot of

:21:48.:21:53.

rain across England and Wales. A few showers across Scotland and Northern

:21:54.:21:56.

Ireland. That rain extends further north as we go through the day

:21:57.:22:04.

during Wednesday. Behind it, the temperature is coming down. We are

:22:05.:22:09.

looking at highs up to about 19. The rest of the reek still looks fairly

:22:10.:22:16.

unsettled. I have found out there is a horse called Carol running in the

:22:17.:22:22.

230 at Chepstow today. Is there? It's not me, Dan. Carol, I was not

:22:23.:22:29.

going to suggest that. I am merely stating a fact. I feel like I have

:22:30.:22:34.

got myself into all sorts of bother. Looks. Thank you, Carol.

:22:35.:22:41.

It's an ancient game which was once used to teach young knights

:22:42.:22:44.

and princes about military strategy but could chess

:22:45.:22:46.

800 primary schools in the UK have added it to their curriculum

:22:47.:22:50.

as a way to improve maths and problem solving skills and some

:22:51.:22:54.

say it could even encourage pupils to put down their smart phones.

:22:55.:22:57.

Naga's popped downstairs to meet some budding young Grand Masters.

:22:58.:23:06.

You good at chess? I wouldn't say good. I am aware of how it works.

:23:07.:23:15.

That is a start. I used to love chess when I was younger. It's great

:23:16.:23:19.

to see children getting involved in chess again. There are some thoughts

:23:20.:23:23.

about why it is so important and how it can help them. I can talk to

:23:24.:23:34.

David Hardy was the Manchester co-ordinator for Chess in Schools

:23:35.:23:36.

and Communities. How are you encouraging chess? It has benefits

:23:37.:23:41.

to the children. We feel it helps with self-esteem. They can

:23:42.:23:44.

concentrate on the task at hand. It gives them discipline. You didn't

:23:45.:23:52.

start to play chess till you are much older. You teach people to play

:23:53.:24:04.

chess. How do you teach teachers to teach chess and what else are they

:24:05.:24:10.

teaching children? How will it benefit children? How teachers, we

:24:11.:24:15.

get them to come to a course and explain the way the process works,

:24:16.:24:20.

the teaching curriculum and time. We go through a few small games with

:24:21.:24:26.

them and when we go into the school, lots of our teachers work with their

:24:27.:24:29.

teachers. One of the suggestions is it helps children be better at maths

:24:30.:24:35.

or with concentration levels. It doesn't sound like an lot of fun,

:24:36.:24:41.

playing chess one hour. Some people find it fun. There some educational

:24:42.:24:47.

benefits but it is a bit overstated but it's the intangibles, which are

:24:48.:24:54.

more important. For examples, people might be a little quiet in lessons

:24:55.:24:58.

but when they play chess, they come out of their shells. You say they

:24:59.:25:02.

come out of their shells, or David did, but these guys have been

:25:03.:25:07.

playing this morning. Good morning. Who is winning? Black is winning on

:25:08.:25:14.

points but Whiteposition's as a bit better. You have been playing as

:25:15.:25:23.

well? It is something to focus my brain on. It's just something to put

:25:24.:25:32.

my mind into. What is your favourite piece on the board? Probably the

:25:33.:25:35.

Queen because it move allotted different spaces and it's the key

:25:36.:25:42.

piece for checkmate. How long have you been playing? Two years. Are you

:25:43.:25:48.

good? A bit. We will talk to you guys a little later because Dan,

:25:49.:25:52.

you've got to come down and play and I think we actually will be learning

:25:53.:25:56.

from these children. They are very smart. That is it from me. A lovely

:25:57.:26:00.

morning. It is time to I'm back with the latest

:26:01.:29:24.

from the BBC London newsroom Plenty more on our website

:29:25.:29:24.

at the usual address. Hello, this is Breakfast

:29:25.:29:39.

with Dan Walker and Naga Munchetty. Every single tower block which has

:29:40.:29:42.

had its cladding tested since the Grenfell disaster has

:29:43.:29:45.

failed fire safety inspections. 60 high-rises in 25 areas

:29:46.:29:47.

of England have been Local councils are being urged

:29:48.:29:50.

to send samples in more There are still more than 500 other

:29:51.:29:53.

buildings nationwide that need This is a question of working

:29:54.:30:09.

through the samples that are coming in. Each test takes several hours. I

:30:10.:30:13.

absolutely understand that people want assurance as soon as possible

:30:14.:30:17.

and we are working, I assure you, we are working around the clock to

:30:18.:30:18.

provide insurance. Theresa May will set out more

:30:19.:30:25.

details today of how the government plans to treat more

:30:26.:30:28.

than 3-million EU citizens living Last week, she outlined proposals

:30:29.:30:31.

to offer EU nationals "settled status" -

:30:32.:30:34.

which would give those who have spent five years in the UK equal

:30:35.:30:37.

rights on healthcare, education and benefits -

:30:38.:30:40.

but only if British people living in the European Union were given

:30:41.:30:43.

similar entitlements. The leader of the Democratic

:30:44.:30:45.

Unionist Party, Arlene Foster, has returned to London in the hope

:30:46.:30:47.

of finalising a deal with Theresa It's more than two weeks since

:30:48.:30:51.

Mrs May announced her intention to form a partnership

:30:52.:30:56.

with the Northern Irish party's ten MPs after losing her

:30:57.:30:59.

Parliamentary majority The DUP has previously denied claims

:31:00.:31:09.

they are seeking an extra billion. The understand a meeting will be

:31:10.:31:12.

taking place between Arlene Foster and to resonate at around 930.

:31:13.:31:15.

Six people are known to have died and 16 others are missing

:31:16.:31:18.

after a crowded passenger boat sank in a reservoir in Colombia.

:31:19.:31:21.

Around 170 passengers are thought to have been on board.

:31:22.:31:24.

The vessel, which had four decks, began taking on water

:31:25.:31:27.

during a cruise on an artificial lake outside the popular resort

:31:28.:31:30.

There are no details yet on why the boat sank.

:31:31.:31:34.

The Royal Navy's biggest ever warship is due to set sail

:31:35.:31:44.

Scotland Yard says six of its officers were injured last

:31:45.:31:46.

night during a protest in East London over the death

:31:47.:31:49.

of a man last week, six days after he'd been stopped by police.

:31:50.:31:53.

Bricks were thrown - and bins set on fire -

:31:54.:31:55.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission has said a postmortem

:31:56.:31:59.

examination on Edir Frederico Da Costa showed that,

:32:00.:32:01.

contrary to some claims, he had no spinal injuries

:32:02.:32:04.

The UK's economic growth will remain anaemic until the end

:32:05.:32:18.

of the decade, according to the British Chambers of Commerce.

:32:19.:32:20.

The group of business leaders says it doesn't expect growth to be

:32:21.:32:24.

more than 1.5% by 2020 and that inflation may end up

:32:25.:32:27.

The sound of a blaring car horn can drive most of us up the wall.

:32:28.:32:49.

But now scientists have discovered a more effective noise for warning

:32:50.:32:52.

other road users of danger without getting them in a flap.

:32:53.:32:55.

Researchers in South Korea asked volunteers to evaluate a range

:32:56.:32:59.

of noises and found that a synthesised "quack" successfully

:33:00.:33:02.

alerted pedestrians to potential hazards without raising

:33:03.:33:04.

If you just look at Naga's body language... I just wonder if you

:33:05.:33:21.

have gone to university and become a scientist and you have studied

:33:22.:33:25.

really hard and a new study the quack. But then in 20 years time and

:33:26.:33:31.

you press the horn and a quack comes out, it is research and well used.

:33:32.:33:34.

Put that in your pipe and smoke it. Can you imagine if Sebastian Vettel

:33:35.:33:55.

pressed the Honda and a quack came out? He might not be so badtempered.

:33:56.:34:02.

Quacking and Grand Prix. Formula 1, perfect.

:34:03.:34:05.

Lewis Hamilton called Sebastian Vettel's driving

:34:06.:34:06.

"disgusting" after the two clashed in an incident packed

:34:07.:34:09.

The race included three safety cars and lots of crashes.

:34:10.:34:12.

It was won by Red Bull's Daniel Ricciardo.

:34:13.:34:15.

But heres what everyone is talking about -

:34:16.:34:17.

Vettel was penalised for hitting Hamilton's Mercedes as they prepared

:34:18.:34:20.

Hamilton was ahead with 19 laps to go,

:34:21.:34:22.

He ended up fifth, behind Vettel who's extended his championship lead

:34:23.:34:27.

We heard obviously the problems with Lewis and Seb and it was just

:34:28.:34:39.

I made an unplanned pitstop at the beginning.

:34:40.:34:42.

After a few laps we had some debris in the breaks so we had to stop

:34:43.:34:46.

and clean it and we dropped back to, I think, 17th place.

:34:47.:34:49.

So did I think then I would win today?

:34:50.:34:52.

I would have put all my money on it that this was very unlikely.

:34:53.:35:01.

After a disappointing Champions Trophy exit,

:35:02.:35:03.

England's cricketers bounced back to win their T20 series

:35:04.:35:05.

Dawid Malan starred with the bat on debut for England,

:35:06.:35:09.

top scoring with 78 to set South Africa 182 to win.

:35:10.:35:12.

They were always struggling - especially when dangerman AB de

:35:13.:35:15.

England won by 19 runs and will now turn their focus to the four match

:35:16.:35:19.

test series that starts in a couple of weeks.

:35:20.:35:27.

Feliciano Lopez caused a big shock and beat Marin Cilic in a thrilling

:35:28.:35:31.

Number four seed Cilic took the first set without much fuss

:35:32.:35:36.

but the Spaniard fought back and won the second on the tie-break.

:35:37.:35:39.

That was followed by another compelling set which again depended

:35:40.:35:41.

And it was won by the world number 32.

:35:42.:35:45.

I cannot believe that I finally won this trophy.

:35:46.:35:49.

I have been waiting so long, 15 or 16 years, to be

:35:50.:35:52.

I thought by the end of the tiebreak after losing a few match points that

:35:53.:35:58.

I wasn't going to be able to make it but I was a little bit lucky

:35:59.:36:02.

Jamie Murray ensured at least one Murray brother won a Queen's title

:36:03.:36:19.

as he and partner Bruno Soares beat Frenchmen Julien Benneteau

:36:20.:36:22.

and Edouard Roger-Vasselin in the final of the doubles.

:36:23.:36:24.

The pair won in straight sets 6-2, 6-3.

:36:25.:36:27.

Roger Federer looks in great shape for Wimbledon

:36:28.:36:29.

after winning a ninth Halle Open in Germany.

:36:30.:36:31.

He beat Alexander Zverev in straight sets to win the title.

:36:32.:36:34.

Federer sat out the entire clay court season to target a record

:36:35.:36:37.

From a seven time Wimbledon champion to a two-time one and Petra Kvitova

:36:38.:36:42.

has won her first tournament since being injured in a knife

:36:43.:36:45.

She came from behind to beat Australia's Ashleigh Barty in three

:36:46.:36:49.

sets to win the Aegon Classic in Birmingham.

:36:50.:36:51.

She said it is something very special - like a fairytale.

:36:52.:36:56.

I couldn't imagine to come back for sure, my second event,

:36:57.:36:59.

That's why I really was fighting to play tennis again and that is why

:37:00.:37:06.

I was still able to, you know, have a great motivation to win

:37:07.:37:10.

a title for example here in Birmingham.

:37:11.:37:20.

It's a big week for the British and Irish Lions.

:37:21.:37:23.

They face the Hurricanes tomorrow before a must win second test

:37:24.:37:26.

Lions coach criticised their tactics after the first test defeat -

:37:27.:37:31.

and All Blacks coach Steve Hansen hit back,

:37:32.:37:33.

Well, it's predictable comments from Gatland, isn't it?

:37:34.:37:36.

Two weeks ago, it was we cheated in the scrums,

:37:37.:37:39.

last week it was blocking and now he's saying this.

:37:40.:37:42.

But, it's really disappointing because what he's implying is we're

:37:43.:37:45.

intentionally going out to injure somebody.

:37:46.:37:47.

That's not the case, we've never been like that.

:37:48.:37:49.

And as a New Zealander, I would expect him to know

:37:50.:37:52.

the New Zealand psyche that it's not about intentionally trying to hurt

:37:53.:37:56.

anybody, it's about playing hard and fair.

:37:57.:38:01.

And how about this from Jordan Spieth.

:38:02.:38:03.

The world number six won his 10th PGA title in some style.

:38:04.:38:06.

It went down to a play-off at the travellers Championship

:38:07.:38:09.

Spieth, the 2015 Masters and US Open champion, chipping in from

:38:10.:38:13.

At 23, he's now the second youngest player

:38:14.:38:16.

after Tiger Woods to reach ten PGA for 72 years.

:38:17.:38:31.

Finally we're going to bring you the opening round of the 2017

:38:32.:38:37.

Diving World Series that took place in Ireland over the weekend.

:38:38.:38:41.

Britain's Gary Hunt won but we particularly

:38:42.:38:42.

like the patriotic swimwear fashioned by Blake Aldridge -

:38:43.:38:46.

The dives took place from nearly three times the height of an Olympic

:38:47.:38:51.

Whenever I watch something like that, the soles of my feet tingle.

:38:52.:39:08.

It is the size of the cereal bowl. I heard you mention Carol earlier. Our

:39:09.:39:20.

Carol? Think that she was thinking I was referring to her as a horse but

:39:21.:39:24.

there is a horse called Carol. Sure everybody's money is on it now but I

:39:25.:39:29.

have done some research and they have some background about Carol.

:39:30.:39:37.

Which Carol? 230 Carol. Has been beginning to look a bit exposed but

:39:38.:39:41.

in decent form, a player. She is beginning to look a bit exposed Mr

:39:42.:39:51.

Mark in decent form. I think she is second favourite. You know she will

:39:52.:39:53.

be the favourite by the end of this. It has been a cause of tension

:39:54.:39:58.

between the government and the European Union ever

:39:59.:40:01.

since the referendum - what will happen to EU nationals

:40:02.:40:03.

living the UK after Brexit? Today the government

:40:04.:40:06.

will published its plans so what can we expect and what do

:40:07.:40:09.

people make of it? Our correspondent John Maguire

:40:10.:40:11.

is in North London this We send John out and all he makes

:40:12.:40:26.

sure he does is get his croissant and cup of coffee and a cake,

:40:27.:40:32.

already! Nice job if you Kent get it, John. Lubricate. -- if you can

:40:33.:40:45.

get it. -- blueberry cake. We are in North London and will speak to some

:40:46.:40:51.

EU National 's. A big day in the Brexit negotiations. Was this one of

:40:52.:40:54.

the issues people were thinking about when they went into the

:40:55.:40:58.

polling booth just over one year ago? There are 3.2 million EU

:40:59.:41:03.

citizens currently living in the UK. What Theresa May have said so far is

:41:04.:41:07.

that those that have been here for more than five years should be

:41:08.:41:10.

entitled to stay and they will receive access to health, education

:41:11.:41:16.

and welfare benefits. The government also wants those benefits to be

:41:17.:41:20.

reciprocated with the almost 1 million people who live elsewhere in

:41:21.:41:23.

the European Union. This morning, we are joined with people from Greece,

:41:24.:41:30.

bog area and Italy. Good morning to you all. -- Bulgaria. You have been

:41:31.:41:37.

here for 15 years from Greece. What do you want to hear today from the

:41:38.:41:48.

negotiations? I want guaranteed for our rights. These are the terms and

:41:49.:41:52.

conditions that we had when we entered this country. You can't just

:41:53.:41:56.

change the rules of the game in the middle of the game. We want her to

:41:57.:42:03.

say that the European Court of Justice is the custodian of our

:42:04.:42:08.

political stature in our country -- this country. They are what we have

:42:09.:42:15.

had as long as we have been here. Anything less is simply not giving

:42:16.:42:23.

us the respect that we deserve and she said the other day about Jeremy

:42:24.:42:32.

Corbyn's idea of giving houses to Grenfell Tower victims. She said we

:42:33.:42:36.

can't take private property are way from people to give to victims and

:42:37.:42:40.

she is absolutely right, I agree with her, at how can she take all

:42:41.:42:44.

legal and political status of way from us and change it to something

:42:45.:42:55.

new? You came here as a student five years ago from bog area. When the

:42:56.:42:58.

Brexit vote happened just over one year ago -- Bulgaria. What are your

:42:59.:43:05.

thoughts? Initially, I was very angry and disappointed because I

:43:06.:43:10.

still have a belief in the EU idea, the idea of the European Union has

:43:11.:43:16.

-- and I was very angry about that point. Not scared about what will

:43:17.:43:22.

happen to me, personally because I work here, I pay my taxes, I think I

:43:23.:43:27.

contribute to society to a dead think I will be deported or

:43:28.:43:31.

something like that. I'm not worried about that in particular. Salvador,

:43:32.:43:36.

you are an interesting case because you came here in January, after the

:43:37.:43:43.

Brexit vote, from Italy. For me, Brexit was not a concern. I decided

:43:44.:43:48.

to join London after the referendum. It was an opportunity to me because

:43:49.:43:55.

this country is the best for Premier League. It is the best talent of the

:43:56.:44:01.

world. It is not only local talent. If a here to contribute to this

:44:02.:44:05.

country, to give my skills and talent, to improve this country,

:44:06.:44:11.

give something back. Why should I be worried? Sure everybody think like

:44:12.:44:19.

this. In the government. This country is growing because there is

:44:20.:44:24.

a lot of people working for it and no matter where they are from, just

:44:25.:44:28.

because they are the best talent and they are here to help, to grow this

:44:29.:44:34.

city. So Premier League trumps Syria, I guess you are saying. As

:44:35.:44:38.

you are saying, Christine, do you think generally people have come

:44:39.:44:46.

around, what about the detail? People concerned the detail? I think

:44:47.:44:56.

it could depend on the negotiations. We should be worried about

:44:57.:45:05.

maintaining our existing rights. We shouldn't be worried about things

:45:06.:45:09.

that are in a first world country like Britain. The shift of the

:45:10.:45:17.

conversation to this extreme point of view is I believe very, very

:45:18.:45:26.

worrying for the UK and for Europe. Thinking about some of the detail,

:45:27.:45:31.

what are some of the things you would like to hear? What would make

:45:32.:45:36.

you feel more settled and secure? In terms of the ideas settled status, I

:45:37.:45:42.

wonder how this is going to be different from, for example,

:45:43.:45:45.

applying for person -- permanent residency? We have the loophole with

:45:46.:45:51.

private medical insurance that we had to have in order to get

:45:52.:45:56.

permanent residency so Theresa May did say there is going to be a

:45:57.:46:03.

certain dream streamlining -- streamlining. We don't know what's

:46:04.:46:10.

going to happen in the weeks and months ahead. What is your long-term

:46:11.:46:18.

plans? I'm very new here in London but I love this city and I'm very

:46:19.:46:23.

happy here and I'm not planning to move at this point because all the

:46:24.:46:29.

conditions are safe, can't see anything, I can stay here. I would

:46:30.:46:36.

like to stay like this. In this moment, I then see a big problem.

:46:37.:46:44.

Thank you, all. Good coffee and cakes. We will be back later on this

:46:45.:46:49.

morning with some other people with some different perspectives. Make

:46:50.:46:50.

sure you join us then. You're watching

:46:51.:46:55.

Breakfast from BBC News. A 100% failure rate as all buildings

:46:56.:46:56.

inspected so far fail fire safety tests, but hundreds more

:46:57.:47:04.

still need to be examined. The Prime Minister will set out

:47:05.:47:07.

the terms of her plan to protect the rights of EU citizens living

:47:08.:47:10.

in Britain after Brexit. Has been a bit exposed but looking

:47:11.:47:34.

good for the 230 at Chepstow. Carol has the weather for others. I think

:47:35.:47:40.

you have dug yourself a bit further into the hole. You are in such big

:47:41.:47:47.

trouble. Moving on. This morning is a fine start to the day but it's

:47:48.:47:53.

going to be fairly unsettled. It's going to turn cooler through the

:47:54.:48:01.

week. We have some sunshine. High pressure dominating the weather. The

:48:02.:48:06.

low pressure coming in later will usurp it and produce some rain. The

:48:07.:48:11.

far north of Scotland, let's get a few showers this morning. Chilly

:48:12.:48:17.

start in Northern Ireland. It's a bright start. As we move across

:48:18.:48:23.

England and Wales, a fair bit of sunshine there were times across the

:48:24.:48:27.

Midlands, a wee bit of cloud. A similar scenario. The sea fog now

:48:28.:48:36.

starting to lift. As we go through the day, there will be a lot of

:48:37.:48:40.

sunshine. Quite muddy in the south-east. Towards the West, we

:48:41.:48:48.

will see more cloud build as this low pressure comes in. Temperatures

:48:49.:48:56.

in Glasgow, 17 degrees. As we head through the rest of the afternoon

:48:57.:49:00.

and into the evening, the rain will be persistent and heavy as it moves

:49:01.:49:04.

in across Scotland, northern England and North Wales but especially

:49:05.:49:08.

across Cumbria and Dumfries Galloway. There is likely to be a

:49:09.:49:16.

lot of surface water and spray. That low pressure continues. Meanwhile,

:49:17.:49:24.

another area of low pressure from the continent -- continent comes our

:49:25.:49:32.

way. Showery outbreaks of rain. Meanwhile, the other band of low

:49:33.:49:37.

pressure moves to the north-west of Scotland. Temperature-wise, 19

:49:38.:49:47.

degrees in Belfast. 21 degrees in London. Tuesday evening into

:49:48.:49:54.

Wednesday, you can see how the brain develops. In the north, one of two

:49:55.:50:04.

showers around and that rain continues to migrate northwards into

:50:05.:50:06.

Northern Ireland and northern England. Most of Scotland staying

:50:07.:50:14.

dry. Coming down as we push further south. Highs between 16 and 19 into

:50:15.:50:19.

the rest of the week, it does remain unsettled with rain at times and

:50:20.:50:25.

also windy at times as well. Good to the garden of least. Absolutely. It

:50:26.:50:29.

saves you watering your plants. See you a bit later on. You just got

:50:30.:50:35.

back from holiday. I use savvy with your money in the way you pay with

:50:36.:50:39.

things? Am I getting asked if, you know when you use your credit card,

:50:40.:50:44.

I would always say currency because it saves you the charges. Not many

:50:45.:50:52.

people know that. You just get caught by these little things. You

:50:53.:50:59.

get to the front of the queue and you don't know what to press. It's

:51:00.:51:02.

worth knowing. Lots of people prefer to pay in

:51:03.:51:18.

pounds. But new figures show holidaymakers are spending ?380

:51:19.:51:21.

million in extra fees because they choose to pay it that way rather

:51:22.:51:23.

than choosing the local currency. They found that on average,

:51:24.:51:28.

those who pay in pounds for card transactions spend ?60 more

:51:29.:51:31.

than people who don't every time Joining me now is Pippa Jacks,

:51:32.:51:34.

the editor of travel industry trade We have all been there, that dilemma

:51:35.:51:43.

when we get to the front of the queue. You should choose to pay in

:51:44.:51:48.

the local currency. If it is sterling, the rate of exchange will

:51:49.:51:52.

not be done a relieved. It is done by the payment services provider so

:51:53.:51:55.

it's not a great exchange rate and there can be be included so always

:51:56.:52:01.

choose the local currency. So they are cashing in on the fact we don't

:52:02.:52:06.

know, they can set their own exchange rate. Exactly. There is

:52:07.:52:10.

nothing on the screen to show you which exchange rate is being used so

:52:11.:52:15.

unless you are up on it, you will not know. And that is just one of

:52:16.:52:22.

many issues, isn't it? We all know, or the message is getting through

:52:23.:52:26.

about not buying your currency at the airport. It will be a terrible

:52:27.:52:31.

exchange rate. You also need to be thinking about every time you

:52:32.:52:36.

withdraw cash from an ATM, there are going to be transaction fees, it

:52:37.:52:44.

really does add up. It can be wise to try and take cash. Or if you

:52:45.:52:50.

can't use cash, order it on line and get a good rate. Never at the

:52:51.:52:58.

airport. It doesn't have any transaction fees. Several on the

:52:59.:53:02.

market now. That can really mean you can buy an ice cream here, a

:53:03.:53:09.

newspaper that, a copy there. At the moment, those costs racked up

:53:10.:53:12.

because you might be spending ?12 on an ice cream but you pay more in

:53:13.:53:17.

fees. Those credit cards are the way to go. And prepaid cards which you

:53:18.:53:22.

load up with cash. Some of those have these as well. Cash for smaller

:53:23.:53:29.

purchases is a good thing. The important thing is all the cards are

:53:30.:53:33.

different and you need to know what you got before you go. Holidays,

:53:34.:53:39.

your money is not going as far this year. You don't want to be wasting

:53:40.:53:44.

40, 50 quid on fees you could have avoided. The cost of a holiday is

:53:45.:53:49.

what we think we are paying for. Unless you pay for it, you're not

:53:50.:53:56.

logged in the current rate. It can be hard to know so it's really

:53:57.:54:02.

important to do everything you will is -- everything you can. Good

:54:03.:54:11.

advice. Thank you very much. Always choose local currency, not pounds

:54:12.:54:14.

when you get to the front of the queue. That is a good tip. A lot of

:54:15.:54:19.

money can be wasted. Saving an average 60 quid.

:54:20.:54:25.

She is longer than the Houses of Parliament, taller than Nelson's

:54:26.:54:28.

column and today, the Royal Navy's new aircraft carrier is due to set

:54:29.:54:31.

HMS Queen Elizabeth will leave her dock at Rosyth

:54:32.:54:35.

in Scotland, where she's been built, to begin sea trials.

:54:36.:54:38.

Our Defence Correspondent Jonathan Beale has been

:54:39.:54:40.

The biggest warship ever built in Britain is about to go to see the

:54:41.:54:53.

very first time. It's been one of the largest most complex engineering

:54:54.:54:59.

projects in the UK and has taken years and cost more than ?3 billion.

:55:00.:55:04.

But HMS Queen Elizabeth is now ready to set sail. This is a significant

:55:05.:55:10.

moment the Royal Navy. It will have been without an aircraft carrier for

:55:11.:55:15.

almost a decade. I think there are very few capabilities by any country

:55:16.:55:20.

that are as symbolic and is totemic as it carrier strike capability.

:55:21.:55:26.

Some things you can't see but these are very visible symbols of national

:55:27.:55:30.

power and power projection. But first they will have to carefully

:55:31.:55:34.

manoeuvre this massive ship out of a dock with the help of 11 barges.

:55:35.:55:39.

Just to give you a sense of scale, from one end of the deck to the

:55:40.:55:44.

other is about 300m. That is the length of the Houses of Parliament.

:55:45.:55:47.

As far as height, from the keel right up to the top of that mast,

:55:48.:55:51.

that is taller than Nelson 's column. In fact, they are going to

:55:52.:56:02.

have to lower that mast as they slide through these docs in some

:56:03.:56:04.

very narrow spaces and eventually having to take under the bridges out

:56:05.:56:08.

there. That will be the beginning of the first sea trials. By tonight,

:56:09.:56:12.

HMS Queen Elizabeth should be heading out to sea under her own

:56:13.:56:17.

power. And later this year, but it all goes according to plan, she will

:56:18.:56:22.

be sailing into her new home of Portsmouth. She is impressive. A big

:56:23.:56:28.

old Plenty more on our website

:56:29.:59:47.

at the usual address. This is Breakfast with Dan Walker

:59:48.:00:36.

and Naga Munchetty. Not a single tower block checked

:00:37.:00:39.

since the Grenfell fire has 60 buildings across England

:00:40.:00:45.

are deemed not safe. Hundreds more are due

:00:46.:00:50.

to have their cladding inspected, Also on the programme: The DUP

:00:51.:01:15.

leader has flown into London for talks with the Prime Minister.

:01:16.:01:19.

Arlene Foster says her party is close to agreeing a deal to support

:01:20.:01:29.

a minority Conservative government. Coming of age. He made his debut

:01:30.:01:33.

just six years ago and now Ed Sheeran has closed the Glastonbury

:01:34.:01:37.

festival on the main Pyramid Stage. Two different studies show different

:01:38.:01:44.

forecasts for the economy. Who is right?

:01:45.:01:50.

In sport: Lewis Hamilton labels Sebastian Vettel a disgrace

:01:51.:01:52.

after the two collide in an action packed Azerbaijan Grand Prix.

:01:53.:01:57.

Hello means hello and banana means... Banana?

:01:58.:02:04.

The stars of Despicable Me 3 give Charlie a lesson in communicating

:02:05.:02:08.

We always understand what she had to say. It has been quite chilly start

:02:09.:02:15.

for some parts of UK this morning but there is sunshine and showers

:02:16.:02:19.

around. The sunshine turns hazy from the west heralding the arrival of

:02:20.:02:23.

some rain initially into Northern Ireland. More details in 15 minutes.

:02:24.:02:25.

We will see you at 8:15. Thank you. Every single tower block which has

:02:26.:02:30.

had its cladding tested since the Grenfell disaster has

:02:31.:02:34.

failed fire safety inspections. 60 high rises in 25 areas of England

:02:35.:02:40.

have been examined so far. Local councils are being urged

:02:41.:02:43.

to send samples in more There are still more than 500 other

:02:44.:02:46.

buildings across the country It is a list that keeps on growing.

:02:47.:02:58.

The number of buildings that have now failed fire safety checks

:02:59.:03:01.

following the Grenfell Tower disaster stands at 60 in England

:03:02.:03:05.

across 25 local authorities. Of those examined so far, every single

:03:06.:03:11.

sample has failed. It was concerns over external cladding combined with

:03:12.:03:15.

issues surrounding fire doors, gas pipes and installation which

:03:16.:03:19.

triggered the mass evacuation of four tower blocks in Camden. Where

:03:20.:03:23.

we have residents, we are making sure we continue to knock on their

:03:24.:03:27.

door. It is deeply disruptive for them. Just keep having the

:03:28.:03:30.

conversation again and again, keeping people away, making sure

:03:31.:03:34.

there are people on the block. The Fire Service says it is not safe to

:03:35.:03:38.

stay and they need to go. And in Scotland Holyrood will carry out its

:03:39.:03:42.

own investigation into the safety of high-rise tower blocks. It is

:03:43.:03:50.

thought up to 600 buildings in total are to be tested in England with

:03:51.:03:52.

councils being told to prioritise the ones they are most worried

:03:53.:03:55.

about. But just how long this process will take is still not

:03:56.:03:58.

clear. Theresa May is due to chair a meeting of the Grenfell Tower

:03:59.:04:01.

recovery task force later today where she will be updated on the

:04:02.:04:03.

recovery effort that could take many weeks if not months. More inquests

:04:04.:04:09.

are also expected to be opened and adjourned this afternoon into the

:04:10.:04:12.

deaths of the victims. Nick Quraishi, BBC News.

:04:13.:04:16.

And Nick joins us now from Camden where some residents have spent

:04:17.:04:19.

a third night sleeping on airbeds in a leisure centre.

:04:20.:04:21.

Nick, how long before they will be able to return home?

:04:22.:04:27.

Nobody knows. That is the big question. Initially they were told

:04:28.:04:35.

they would be out between two and four weeks. What we have got this

:04:36.:04:40.

morning, we know that 200 people are refusing to leave some 120 flats.

:04:41.:04:45.

They say that they feel safe. Camden Council says until they leave, they

:04:46.:04:48.

cannot get in to do the necessary work. I must be that has been

:04:49.:04:51.

disputed this morning by one resident who came over to tell me

:04:52.:04:55.

that workers are already in, starting the work. Some kind of

:04:56.:04:58.

disparity there. What about the rest of the country? We

:04:59.:05:16.

know that 60 blocks have failed cladding tests. 25 local authorities

:05:17.:05:19.

and 14 have been named. Seven in London, others in Manchester,

:05:20.:05:20.

Stockton and Sunderland. 600 high-rise blocks are supposed to be

:05:21.:05:22.

tested according to the government in England. When all that is going

:05:23.:05:25.

to be completed nobody knows. Maybe Theresa May will update people when

:05:26.:05:27.

she chairs the Grenfell Tower recovery task force today. One thing

:05:28.:05:30.

is clear, 12 days on from the Grenfell Tower fire, there are still

:05:31.:05:32.

many unanswered questions. Thank you. Good to talk to you. The leader

:05:33.:05:40.

of the Democratic Unionist Party will hold talks with the Prime

:05:41.:05:44.

Minister in Downing Street in just over an hour. Arlene Foster believes

:05:45.:05:46.

her party is close to a deal with the government.

:05:47.:05:50.

Writing in the Belfast Telegraph, Arlene Foster says progress had been

:05:51.:05:53.

painfully slow at time but she was working to agree

:05:54.:05:55.

a confidence and supply agreement to support a minority Conservative

:05:56.:05:57.

Our political correspondent Iain Watson joins us from Westminster.

:05:58.:06:03.

This has taken quite some time. We heard the proposal and we pretty

:06:04.:06:08.

much assumed, rightly or wrongly, that talks would continue and a firm

:06:09.:06:13.

deal would be made. Being timely is of course what the government needs

:06:14.:06:18.

to be. That is absolutely right. The government would have preferred to

:06:19.:06:20.

close the deal last week when the Queen's Speech was put to

:06:21.:06:24.

Parliament. The proposed legislation for the next two years. But there is

:06:25.:06:29.

no vote on it until Wednesday at Westminster, crucial vote. The

:06:30.:06:32.

government is keen to conclude a deal with the DUP before then. It

:06:33.:06:36.

looks very positive this morning for the government. The mood music is

:06:37.:06:41.

certainly sounding good and soothing for Theresa May. Arlene Foster

:06:42.:06:44.

saying they are close to reaching an appropriate agreement with the

:06:45.:06:48.

government, although DUP socialists say there are still issues to be

:06:49.:06:52.

worked through. We are expecting them to meet for an hour this

:06:53.:06:55.

morning and at the end of that they could sign that agreement today,

:06:56.:06:58.

which would give Theresa May more security before that crucial vote on

:06:59.:07:03.

Wednesday. Of course she no longer has an overall majority. We should

:07:04.:07:06.

be very clear about what this deal will cover. First of all it is

:07:07.:07:10.

called a confidence and supply deal. Although Theresa May will get the

:07:11.:07:13.

Queen's Speech through my legislation, she will not have to

:07:14.:07:16.

give way and allow Jeremy Corbyn to become Prime Minister, which the DUP

:07:17.:07:20.

are not keen on. She also get support for the budget when it

:07:21.:07:24.

comes. But in every other area of policy she will have to negotiate

:07:25.:07:28.

that line by line with the DUP, or indeed

:07:29.:07:46.

with her own backbench MPs to be sure of winning those votes. It is a

:07:47.:07:51.

limited deal that will be put in place. The government also say they

:07:52.:07:53.

will publish details of that deal and people are keen to see elsewhere

:07:54.:07:56.

in the UK just how much money might be injected into Northern Ireland as

:07:57.:07:59.

a result of that deal. If it is a substantial sum, expect more demands

:08:00.:08:01.

on the government from the Scottish and Welsh governments as well.

:08:02.:08:03.

Theresa May will set out more details today of how the government

:08:04.:08:06.

plans to treat more than 3 million EU citizens living in

:08:07.:08:09.

Last week, she outlined proposals to offer EU

:08:10.:08:12.

nationals settled status, which would give those who have

:08:13.:08:14.

spent five years in the UK equal rights on healthcare,

:08:15.:08:16.

education and benefits but only if British people living

:08:17.:08:18.

in the European Union were given similar entitlements.

:08:19.:08:20.

Six people are known to have died and 16 others are missing

:08:21.:08:23.

after a crowded passenger boat sank in a reservoir in Colombia.

:08:24.:08:27.

Around 170 passengers are thought to have been on board.

:08:28.:08:31.

The vessel, which had four decks, began taking on water

:08:32.:08:33.

during a cruise on an artificial lake outside the popular

:08:34.:08:36.

There are no details yet on why the boat sank.

:08:37.:08:42.

Scotland Yard says six of its officers were injured last

:08:43.:08:44.

night during a protest in East London over the death

:08:45.:08:47.

of a man last week, six days after he'd been stopped by police.

:08:48.:08:51.

Bricks were thrown and bins set on fire

:08:52.:08:53.

The Independent Police Complaints Commission has said

:08:54.:09:01.

a post-mortem examination of Edir Frederico Da Costa showed

:09:02.:09:03.

that, contrary to some claims, he had no spinal injuries

:09:04.:09:06.

Ed Sheeran closed the Glastonbury Music Festival last night

:09:07.:09:15.

just six years after his debut performance to a crowd of just 500.

:09:16.:09:18.

But while his rise has been meteoric, other artists

:09:19.:09:21.

on yesterday's bill have been in the business for more

:09:22.:09:23.

Our entertainment correspondent Lizo Mzimba reports.

:09:24.:09:28.

For many, Glastonbury's final day was disco day.

:09:29.:09:31.

There were Bee Gees classics from Barry Gibb.

:09:32.:09:34.

Watching from the sidelines, Nile Rodgers, who later took to the stage

:09:35.:09:43.

with Chic, for disco hit after disco hit.

:09:44.:09:45.

# I want the world to know.

:09:46.:09:50.

A huge crowd watching them in the Somerset sunshine.

:09:51.:09:57.

It's not just people famous from the world of

:09:58.:10:08.

music who have been performing at this year's festival.

:10:09.:10:10.

Yes, that's American film and TV star Kiefer

:10:11.:10:12.

Sutherland playing country music with his band.

:10:13.:10:18.

He said performing at Glastonbury was particularly

:10:19.:10:20.

It is almost like being invited into a part of history.

:10:21.:10:31.

His headline set an emotional climax to

:10:32.:10:38.

a festival that won't be back until 2019.

:10:39.:10:40.

He is brave to be up there. I know he is good at what he does, but just

:10:41.:11:03.

a guitar and a pedal. The Royal Navy's biggest ever

:11:04.:11:11.

warship is due to set sail The 65,000 tonne HMS

:11:12.:11:14.

Queen Elizabeth will leave her dock at Rosyth in Scotland,

:11:15.:11:19.

where she's been built, It will be some time until she is

:11:20.:11:21.

fully operational with jets. It's normally rain that stops play

:11:22.:11:28.

during the cricket season but a village match was interrupted

:11:29.:11:30.

by a charging bullock. The animal interrupted

:11:31.:11:32.

a match in Bollington, Look at the umpire. I don't know if

:11:33.:11:40.

he knows. That is very close! I am not sure on the advice on Bullock

:11:41.:11:44.

charging. But the umpire did quite well. He just stood there while

:11:45.:11:49.

everyone was running away. Aren't you told not to run to stop them

:11:50.:11:53.

chasing you? It is hard to remember safety advice when something like

:11:54.:12:03.

that is happening. I am glad that the Bullock took up that crucial

:12:04.:12:06.

position at the end! Nobody was injured.

:12:07.:12:12.

They're both in special hospitals far from home and have

:12:13.:12:16.

Six years ago, when the BBC highlighted abuse of vulnerable

:12:17.:12:19.

patients in the Winterbourne View unit, the government promised

:12:20.:12:22.

to bring people with learning disabilities out of hospitals to be

:12:23.:12:24.

Over the next two days we'll look into the progress made since then.

:12:25.:12:29.

Jayne McCubbin went to meet the families of Tony and Eddie.

:12:30.:12:36.

They told us that he would be there for nine months. He is still there,

:12:37.:12:44.

16 years on. He is still there. Pam's Santoni is 120 miles from home

:12:45.:12:50.

in a secure hospital. He is autistic and he has learning disabilities.

:12:51.:12:54.

His room has stayed the same ever since he was admitted and later

:12:55.:12:58.

section 16 years ago. I think we died that day. When Panorama expose

:12:59.:13:05.

to the abuse of patients with learning disabilities in

:13:06.:13:08.

Winterbourne View, the government made a promise. Homes not hospitals.

:13:09.:13:15.

They said people should be supported in their own communities, not locked

:13:16.:13:21.

in institutions far from family. Much time has passed since that

:13:22.:13:28.

promise was made, longer since Pam's son Tony left Brighton. If he had

:13:29.:13:32.

killed somebody he would be out by now. He has done 16 years, life

:13:33.:13:36.

sentence. He went there is a young man, 23. He will be 40 in August,

:13:37.:13:42.

40. The Department of Health promise to get people out of institutions.

:13:43.:13:46.

In 2014 they were criticised for failing to do that. In 2015,

:13:47.:13:50.

transforming care partnership areas were created in England with ?40

:13:51.:13:54.

million of investment. They were to build the right community support

:13:55.:13:59.

needed to help bring people home. But one third of those areas haven't

:14:00.:14:03.

seen any of that money yet. Published NHS data shows that the

:14:04.:14:07.

number of people in one of these institutions today is roughly the

:14:08.:14:12.

same as it was back in 2014. The data also shows a third of

:14:13.:14:16.

inpatients like Tony have been in a unit for more than five years. The

:14:17.:14:20.

man originally behind the call for change says he is appalled. This is

:14:21.:14:25.

a disgrace and something that this country should be shamed by. We are

:14:26.:14:31.

not unique in this regard. But in this day and age, to abuse people's

:14:32.:14:35.

human rights in this way, I think is utterly shocking. Tony's care

:14:36.:14:39.

provider and local authority both agree he should be back in Brighton.

:14:40.:14:44.

We agree long stays are not desirable and we are working with

:14:45.:14:48.

the local authority as they try to source a placement. We appreciate

:14:49.:14:52.

challenges in providing the right services and the timescales to

:14:53.:14:54.

achieve this can be frustrating for families. I thought he was going to

:14:55.:15:01.

die there. Like Tony, Eddie is on the autistic spectrum. He also went

:15:02.:15:06.

into a unit after crisis. He was 12. He was in a solitary blog that they

:15:07.:15:11.

called the extra care unit. In fact there has been a 26% increase in

:15:12.:15:14.

young people with learning disabilities referred to a secure

:15:15.:15:19.

unit in the last 12 months. Why? The National Audit Office says there is

:15:20.:15:22.

not enough support for families like this to help them avoid a crisis. We

:15:23.:15:29.

were told that he would be there between 12 weeks to nine months. It

:15:30.:15:33.

is over four and a half years down the line.

:15:34.:15:38.

Eddie ended up 120 miles from home in St Andrew's. We had an e-mail to

:15:39.:15:47.

say he had defecated a seclusion room. We discovered that he been in

:15:48.:15:54.

this seclusion room for 24 hours and there is no access to a toilet. St

:15:55.:16:00.

Andrew's say there are objective criteria set out in the Mental

:16:01.:16:04.

Health Act which determine whether or not a patient is detained. No

:16:05.:16:07.

patient would continue to be detained if the criteria were not

:16:08.:16:13.

satisfied. The St Andrew's unit is rated good by the CQC, Eddie has

:16:14.:16:18.

moved on to another unit where he is doing better, but it is in

:16:19.:16:23.

Newcastle. His family live 300 miles away in Bristol. They want him back.

:16:24.:16:28.

We wish we never asked for any help. I don't want this to happen to

:16:29.:16:34.

anyone who is autistic young people. NHS England told us they are clear,

:16:35.:16:38.

hospitals should not be seen as homes. New high quality community

:16:39.:16:42.

services are essential and are being created. The Department of Health

:16:43.:16:46.

tell us ?25 million is being spent on this to improve outcomes, but the

:16:47.:16:51.

National Audit Office warns this is all happening far too slowly.

:16:52.:17:00.

How many people are we talking about? Different parts of the NHS

:17:01.:17:13.

have given us different figures. The published data shows a 4% drop to

:17:14.:17:19.

2500 still locked up inside. NHS England though say they think the

:17:20.:17:23.

figures are better. They think there has been a 13% drop since 2015. NHS

:17:24.:17:30.

Digital, a different part of the NHS, say no, don't use those

:17:31.:17:34.

figures, use a different data set. Those figures show there are more

:17:35.:17:38.

than 1,000 extra people inside these units today and they say there has

:17:39.:17:41.

been a significant increase in the last 12 months. It's a mess. The

:17:42.:17:46.

National Audit Office have twice criticised the Department of Health

:17:47.:17:49.

for not getting the numbers right and of course, we're not talking

:17:50.:17:53.

about numbers, we're talking about people. Today, a campaign starts.

:17:54.:17:59.

It's called Seven Days Of Action. It is being led by families whose

:18:00.:18:02.

children have experience of these units, being taken far from home and

:18:03.:18:06.

families who live in fear of their child, needing help in a crisis and

:18:07.:18:10.

being taken away from home. These are sons and daughters who might

:18:11.:18:14.

have very challenging behaviour. They might at times be aggressive.

:18:15.:18:18.

They need a lot of support and they need a lot of stability, but these

:18:19.:18:22.

families say why can't that happen in their own community? The right

:18:23.:18:25.

support? The Government agrees. That if you do that, if you get the care

:18:26.:18:30.

model right in the community it has much better outcomes for these

:18:31.:18:33.

children and it costs less. Tomorrow, we're going to be looking

:18:34.:18:37.

at this again. We will be looking at the huge growth of the private

:18:38.:18:41.

sector in this area and the cost of that to the NHS and to lives.

:18:42.:18:46.

So much more to talk about on this. Thank you very much.

:18:47.:18:53.

It's 8.18am and you're watching Breakfast from BBC News.

:18:54.:18:58.

A 100% failure rate as all buildings inspected

:18:59.:19:02.

so far fail fire safety tests, but hundreds more still

:19:03.:19:03.

The DUP leader has flown into London for talks with the Prime Minister.

:19:04.:19:13.

Arlene Foster says her praerpt is close to doing a deal to support a

:19:14.:19:15.

minority Government. Here's Carol with a look

:19:16.:19:18.

at this morning's weather. Ah, but you have umbrellas? Yes,

:19:19.:19:29.

today you could use them as parasols, but sadly not for the rest

:19:30.:19:32.

of the week. Some of us, of course, are crying out for rain. The week

:19:33.:19:41.

ahead is looking unsettled with spells of rain. If you like it

:19:42.:19:44.

drier, then today is your day. High pressure is in charge of our

:19:45.:19:48.

weather. Hardly a breath of wind. That's until this area of low

:19:49.:19:51.

pressure comes in bringing rain into Northern Ireland. So, UV levels

:19:52.:19:55.

today are high, or very high across England and Wales and also

:19:56.:19:58.

north-east Scotland and if you have an alshlgy to pollen, well, this is

:19:59.:20:02.

the pollen chart. You can see high across most of England and Wales.

:20:03.:20:10.

Including the Channel Islands. This morning we have showers across the

:20:11.:20:15.

far north of Scotland. They are around the north and the Moray

:20:16.:20:20.

Firth. Move further north, it is large dry dry. A sunny start in

:20:21.:20:24.

Northern Ireland. As we head across England and Wales we are back into

:20:25.:20:30.

the sunshine as Naga rightly said with temperatures picking up.

:20:31.:20:33.

Already we are looking at 14s and 15s. By 10al we are more likely to

:20:34.:20:38.

see 16s and 1s. Through the course of the day, the sunshine prevails,

:20:39.:20:42.

however as our Atlantic set of fronts come in from the west the

:20:43.:20:47.

cloud in the west will also build so the sunshine will turn hazier.

:20:48.:20:50.

Temperature wise, we are in good shape, 21 Celsius in Cardiff and 14

:20:51.:20:54.

Celsius in Aberdeen and 24 Celsius in London and under the rain we are

:20:55.:20:59.

looking at the mid-teens in Northern Ireland. The rain will gather force

:21:00.:21:06.

getting into Scotland, northern England and Wales. The heaviest rain

:21:07.:21:11.

is likely to be across Cumbria and Dumfries and Galloway. You may find

:21:12.:21:15.

there will be a lot of surface water and spray on the roads if you're out

:21:16.:21:21.

and about early on. Tomorrow the low pressure continues to move

:21:22.:21:23.

north-east wards. We have got low pressure in the near Continent.

:21:24.:21:26.

That's going to bring us muggy conditions and it is going to bring

:21:27.:21:30.

us thundery showers, but not all of us will see they will and they won't

:21:31.:21:35.

be on all the time, but they will be migrating northwards. Here is that

:21:36.:21:38.

trailing front connected to the area of low pressure pushing north-east

:21:39.:21:42.

wards with its rain. But for Northern Ireland, things brighten up

:21:43.:21:45.

for you with sub shine and showers and highs of 19 Celsius. 12 Celsius

:21:46.:21:49.

in abdaornings 21 Celsius and feeling muggy in London. And then as

:21:50.:21:53.

we head on through Tuesday evening and overnight into Wednesday, you

:21:54.:21:57.

can see how the rain gathers as it continues to push northwards. A few

:21:58.:22:00.

showers just ahead of it across Scotland and Northern Ireland and it

:22:01.:22:03.

will continue its journey northwards during the course of Wednesday of

:22:04.:22:07.

the so temperatures are coming down and with an on shore flow, it will

:22:08.:22:12.

feel cooler. Highs of 19 Celsius in London the ahead of it across

:22:13.:22:15.

Scotland it is where we will have the driest conditions, but here

:22:16.:22:19.

there will be a few showers with highs up to 13 Celsius. Dan and

:22:20.:22:28.

Naga. Thank you very much, Carol. What's that then? There is nothing

:22:29.:22:33.

to see! There is you to see. That's what there is to see. Thank you very

:22:34.:22:35.

much. See you later! Two conflicting reports today show

:22:36.:22:44.

different forecasts for the economy. Ben has more on that and the other

:22:45.:22:47.

main business stories. Mixed message about Business Today.

:22:48.:23:12.

A separate report, this one from Lloyds says businesses are more

:23:13.:23:16.

confident than they have ever been certainly over the last 18 months

:23:17.:23:20.

despite uncertainty about the politics in Westminster and of

:23:21.:23:23.

course, the start of the Brexit negotiations. So watch this space!

:23:24.:23:28.

Two Italian banks are being bailed out

:23:29.:23:30.

by the country's government after warnings they

:23:31.:23:32.

It's costing more than four and a half billion pounds to rescue

:23:33.:23:41.

the two Venice-based banks which the Italian Prime Minister

:23:42.:23:43.

said would protect savers and the Italian banking system.

:23:44.:23:48.

New research says UK holiday-makers are spending millions of pounds too

:23:49.:23:50.

much in fees by choosing to pay in pounds on their

:23:51.:23:53.

It is that bit when you get to the till and you have got to choose.

:23:54.:24:02.

The figures from FairFX found that those who pay in pounds

:24:03.:24:05.

for card transactions spend up to ?60 more than people who don't,

:24:06.:24:07.

So make sure you choose local currency not pounds when you get to

:24:08.:24:16.

the till and you have got to choose how you want to pay. You're

:24:17.:24:20.

up-to-date. That's one of the most surprising facts I've heard today.

:24:21.:24:24.

It is always confusing because there is pressure when you get to the till

:24:25.:24:28.

and it is which one do you choose? The retailer chooses the exchange

:24:29.:24:32.

rate rather than your bank. If you choose the local currency then it is

:24:33.:24:35.

your bank that will make the fee. There is a space here!

:24:36.:24:43.

All I'm left with is a cushion for his back.

:24:44.:24:50.

We have got some chess news for you. You can see our beautiful make-shift

:24:51.:24:58.

chessboard being rearranged by a until of children. The reason we're

:24:59.:25:02.

doing this, it is an ancient game and used to be taught to kings to

:25:03.:25:08.

help with military strategy, now it's about maths and problem solving

:25:09.:25:14.

and 800 primary schools added chess to the curriculum. We have got a

:25:15.:25:18.

game of boys against girls going on here. Who won that game? The boys

:25:19.:25:23.

managed to win that one. Let me introduce you to this young

:25:24.:25:28.

gentleman, Mr David Hardy, who is the Manchester co-ordinator for

:25:29.:25:30.

chess in schools. 800 schools then have added chess to the curriculum.

:25:31.:25:33.

Primary schools. Did you expect it to be quite so popular? Well, not

:25:34.:25:40.

really, no. We started off with a low-tar get and we have had to

:25:41.:25:43.

increase the targets. It has grown incredibly. It hes with maths and

:25:44.:25:47.

with problem solving. What have you seen about the difference it makes

:25:48.:25:50.

to children in terms of ta learning experience? I mean learning is

:25:51.:25:57.

great. Don't get me wrok, but educational, the most important

:25:58.:25:59.

thing is we see life skill development. We see them learn how

:26:00.:26:06.

to lose, how to win, how to respect the opponent, discipline,

:26:07.:26:09.

concentration, all those things that we take as adults as a given. I can

:26:10.:26:14.

imagine people watching are saying it is fine to say let's teach chess

:26:15.:26:20.

in schools, it is for children who go to a certain school and have a

:26:21.:26:24.

certain academic level? There are some schools that do that, however

:26:25.:26:29.

in the inner city schools there are children that don't achieve

:26:30.:26:32.

academically, but when they play chess they suddenly switch on and

:26:33.:26:35.

they really take to the game. Let's have a word with po teches grand

:26:36.:26:42.

masters. You had a massive chess argument about who won. Did you

:26:43.:26:47.

decide the boys won. Do you enjoy it? Yes, we enjoy it. When you have

:26:48.:26:53.

your lessons, is it one on one or together or learn as a group?

:26:54.:26:58.

Sometimes it's tournaments and sometimes you do one on one with

:26:59.:27:03.

whoever you want to. From your prospective, do you enjoy doing it?

:27:04.:27:08.

Do you enjoy playing chess with your friends? We play one or two games

:27:09.:27:12.

because we have an hour. OK. Thank you very much for coming down and

:27:13.:27:16.

demonstrating chess. I've got a chess joke to finish. I used to work

:27:17.:27:24.

in a chesspiece making factory. I did the knight shift. The knight

:27:25.:27:31.

shift. There you go. That went down well, didn't it. The knight shift!

:27:32.:30:59.

Now though it's back to Naga and Dan.

:31:00.:31:04.

Hello, this is Breakfast with Dan Walker and Naga Munchetty.

:31:05.:31:15.

Thank you for being with us on this Monday morning.

:31:16.:31:19.

Every single tower block which has had its cladding tested

:31:20.:31:21.

since the Grenfell disaster has failed fire safety inspections.

:31:22.:31:24.

60 high-rises in 25 areas of England have been examined so far.

:31:25.:31:27.

Local councils are being urged to send samples in

:31:28.:31:29.

There are still more than 500 other buildings nationwide that

:31:30.:31:34.

And Nick joins us now from Camden where some residents have spent

:31:35.:31:46.

a third night sleeping on airbeds in a leisure centre.

:31:47.:31:49.

Good morning to you. Good morning. It is unclear when these residents

:31:50.:31:56.

will be able to return. But many are staying put. We know 200 in some 120

:31:57.:32:03.

flats in these four blocks are refusing to leave. They say ideally

:32:04.:32:10.

they feel safe. There was a big fire in 2012. It was confined to one

:32:11.:32:16.

flat. No one was injured and people felt safe. Joining me now is a fire

:32:17.:32:21.

safety expert. You flew in from overseas when you heard what was

:32:22.:32:29.

happening here. Why was that? I view this very seriously. I was involved

:32:30.:32:32.

in the Lakanal House investigation. What do you think about the decision

:32:33.:32:45.

taken by Camden Council? It is not just about cladding. They have

:32:46.:32:50.

performed a systematic fire investigation and they have

:32:51.:32:52.

discovered there is something else going on in the buildings. This is

:32:53.:32:58.

an important step. They are talking about gas pipes, installation and

:32:59.:33:02.

fire doors. Is it the right decision? If what they are saying is

:33:03.:33:07.

correct, it is the right decision. The buildings you can see behind us

:33:08.:33:12.

and elsewhere are complex machines. It is not just about cladding. It is

:33:13.:33:17.

a combination of the fire doors, the pipes, how they are isolated one

:33:18.:33:19.

flat to another. If their investigation shows there is a

:33:20.:33:37.

problem, more than just cladding, absolutely I would support their

:33:38.:33:39.

decision to evacuate from those buildings. Thank you. Camden Council

:33:40.:33:42.

says it is still trying to encourage the residents in this block to get

:33:43.:33:45.

out so they can start remedial work, but I am told by one resident that

:33:46.:33:48.

workers are already in and the process has begun. Back to you.

:33:49.:33:49.

Thank you. Meanwhile, the safety of Scotland's

:33:50.:33:51.

high-rise flats is to be examined by a Holyrood committee

:33:52.:33:54.

following the Grenfell Tower Catriona Renton joins

:33:55.:33:56.

us live from Glasgow. Basically, high-rise living in

:33:57.:34:06.

Glasgow is a feature of life. Thousands of people here live in

:34:07.:34:10.

multistorey blocks as do people across the country. Questions have

:34:11.:34:13.

been raised in the Scottish Parliament about the safety of

:34:14.:34:17.

living in high rises and this investigation comes on top of that.

:34:18.:34:23.

The Scottish Parliament has scrutinised other organisations

:34:24.:34:26.

including the government and the work they are doing. It is the local

:34:27.:34:30.

government and communities committee that is doing this. I have spoken to

:34:31.:34:36.

the chair Bob Doris and he has taken evidence from local authorities,

:34:37.:34:42.

housing experts and tenants and he says there is no need to doubt the

:34:43.:34:47.

work already being undertaken, this provides an extra layer of scrutiny.

:34:48.:34:52.

The Scottish Government have set up a working group. They say no local

:34:53.:34:56.

authority or housing association high-rise in flat has used the same

:34:57.:35:01.

cladding used in the Grenfell Tower. 24 of the 32 local authorities

:35:02.:35:05.

hearsay no privately owned high-rises used that material. But

:35:06.:35:09.

as we learned in Camden, as we were hearing in the report there, it is

:35:10.:35:13.

not just the issues of cladding that people need to look at now. It is

:35:14.:35:19.

fire doors, installation of pipes, sprinkler systems and alarms. All of

:35:20.:35:22.

these are being looked at. The committee will take evidence and

:35:23.:35:26.

will start taking evidence in September. Parliament was into

:35:27.:35:31.

recess this week. I have been told it will take as long as it takes and

:35:32.:35:36.

they will report back as soon as they can. Thank you, Catriona

:35:37.:35:37.

Renton. The leader of the Democratic

:35:38.:35:41.

Unionist Party, says she believes her party is "close

:35:42.:35:43.

to concluding an appropriate Writing in the Belfast Telegraph,

:35:44.:35:45.

Arlene Foster says progress had been "painfully slow at times"

:35:46.:35:50.

but she was working to agree a "confidence and supply" agreement

:35:51.:35:54.

to support The DUP has previously denied claims

:35:55.:35:55.

it is seeking an extra ?1 billion Theresa May will set out more

:35:56.:35:59.

details today of how the government plans to treat more than 3 million

:36:00.:36:04.

EU citizens Last week, she outlined

:36:05.:36:07.

proposals to offer EU nationals "settled status" -

:36:08.:36:11.

which would give those who have spent five years in the UK equal

:36:12.:36:13.

rights on health care, education and benefits -

:36:14.:36:16.

but only if British people living in the European Union were given

:36:17.:36:18.

similar entitlements. Six people are known to have died

:36:19.:36:24.

and 16 others are missing after a crowded passenger boat sank

:36:25.:36:26.

in a reservoir in Colombia. Around 170 passengers are thought

:36:27.:36:30.

to have been on board. The vessel, which had four decks,

:36:31.:36:33.

began taking on water during a cruise on an artificial

:36:34.:36:37.

lake outside the popular There are no details yet

:36:38.:36:42.

on why the boat sank. Scotland Yard says six

:36:43.:36:49.

of its officers were injured last night during a protest

:36:50.:36:51.

in East London over the death of a man last week, six days

:36:52.:36:54.

after he'd been stopped by police. Bricks were thrown and bins

:36:55.:36:57.

set on fire The Independent Police

:36:58.:36:59.

Complaints Commission has said a postmortem examination

:37:00.:37:02.

on Edir Frederico Da Costa showed that, contrary to some claims,

:37:03.:37:05.

he had no spinal injuries The sound of a blaring car horn can

:37:06.:37:08.

drive most of us up the wall. But now scientists have discovered

:37:09.:37:21.

a more effective noise for warning other road users of danger

:37:22.:37:24.

without getting them in a flap. Researchers in South Korea asked

:37:25.:37:28.

volunteers to evaluate a range of noises and found that

:37:29.:37:43.

a synthesised "quack" successfully alerted pedestrians

:37:44.:37:46.

to potential hazards It is research you are not

:37:47.:38:05.

particular happy with? I don't think the scientists would have been happy

:38:06.:38:10.

doing the research. In years to come it could prove crucial in science,

:38:11.:38:18.

the noise of a duck. I am not sure now she will ever be convinced.

:38:19.:38:29.

Coming up here on Breakfast this morning...

:38:30.:38:31.

It's been a festival filled with standout performances

:38:32.:38:33.

We'll be looking back at the highlights of Glastonbury.

:38:34.:38:36.

Bedforshire's boys in blue are back for a new series

:38:37.:38:38.

of the observational documentary 24 Hours In Police Custody.

:38:39.:38:40.

One of their investigating officers will be here.

:38:41.:38:43.

I do know if you have heard of the minions? I am familiar with them. I

:38:44.:38:50.

don't know if I understand them. And, Hollywood stars Steve Carell

:38:51.:38:53.

and Kristen Wiig give Charlie a masterclass on how to speak

:38:54.:38:56.

to minions ahead of the release of the latest

:38:57.:38:59.

in the Despicable Me franchise. It is hard speaking Minion. Much

:39:00.:39:10.

harder than it looks! It is time for a look at this sport.

:39:11.:39:15.

Are we not doing it then? I think I embarrassed myself enough with that

:39:16.:39:28.

terrible chest joke! You should have done the interview after doing that

:39:29.:39:33.

impression. It just means I watch a lot of child films.

:39:34.:39:39.

There is a bit of a villain yesterday in the Formula 1. Did you

:39:40.:39:44.

see the Grand Prix yesterday? There was some proper road rage, track

:39:45.:39:51.

rage going on which was not good to see.

:39:52.:39:53.

Lewis Hamilton called Sebastian Vettel's driving

:39:54.:39:54.

"disgusting" after the two clashed in an incident-packed

:39:55.:39:56.

The race included three safety cars and lots of crashes.

:39:57.:39:59.

It was won by Red Bull's Daniel Ricciardo, but here's

:40:00.:40:01.

what everyone is talking about - Vettel was penalised for hitting

:40:02.:40:04.

Hamilton's Mercedes as they prepared for a re-start Hamilton was ahead

:40:05.:40:07.

with 19 laps to go, but his head rest came loose.

:40:08.:40:11.

He ended up fifth, behind Vettel who's extended his championship lead

:40:12.:40:14.

We heard obviously the problems with Lewis and Sebastien. It was a crazy

:40:15.:40:29.

race. I made an un-planned pit stop at the beginning. We had some debris

:40:30.:40:35.

in the brakes so we had to stop and clean it and we dropped back to 17th

:40:36.:40:40.

place. Did I think I would win today? Absolutely not. I would put

:40:41.:40:44.

all my money on it that it was very unlikely.

:40:45.:40:47.

After a disappointing Champions Trophy exit,

:40:48.:40:48.

England's cricketers bounced back to win their T20 series

:40:49.:40:51.

Dawid Malan starred with the bat on debut

:40:52.:40:55.

for England, top scoring with 78 to set South Africa 182 to win.

:40:56.:41:00.

They were always struggling - especially when

:41:01.:41:02.

England won by 19 runs and will now turn their focus to the four match

:41:03.:41:07.

Test series that starts in a couple of weeks.

:41:08.:41:09.

Feliciano Lopez caused a big shock and beat Marin Cilic in a thrilling

:41:10.:41:12.

Number 4 seed Cilic took the first set without much fuss

:41:13.:41:16.

but the Spaniard fought back and won the second on the tie-break.

:41:17.:41:19.

That was followed by another compelling set which again

:41:20.:41:21.

And it was won by the world number 32.

:41:22.:41:31.

I cannot believe that I have finally won this trophy. I wanted it for so

:41:32.:41:40.

long. 15 or 16 years to be holding this trophy. I thought at the end of

:41:41.:41:44.

the tie-break, after losing a few match points, that I would not be

:41:45.:41:48.

able to make it but I was lucky the end that I won today. That was a

:41:49.:41:53.

whopper of a trophy. Jamie Murray ensured at least one

:41:54.:41:55.

Murray brother won a Queen's title as he and partner Bruno Soares beat

:41:56.:41:58.

Frenchmen Julien Benneteau and Edouard Roger-Vasselin

:41:59.:42:01.

in the final of the doubles. The pair won in straight

:42:02.:42:03.

sets 6-2, 6-3. Roger Federer looks in great shape

:42:04.:42:05.

for Wimbledon after winning a ninth He beat Alexander Zverev in straight

:42:06.:42:08.

sets to win the title. Federer sat out the entire clay

:42:09.:42:12.

court season to target a record From a seven-time Wimbledon champion

:42:13.:42:15.

to a two-time one and Petra Kvitova has won her first tournament

:42:16.:42:22.

since being injured She came from behind to beat

:42:23.:42:24.

Australia's Ashleigh Barty in three sets to win

:42:25.:42:28.

the Aegon Classic in Birmingham. She said it is something very

:42:29.:42:30.

special - like a fairytale. I could not imagine a comeback. I

:42:31.:42:50.

won a trophy, that is why I was fighting to play tennis again and

:42:51.:42:55.

why I was still able to have great motivation to win a title here in

:42:56.:42:58.

Birmingham. Great to see her back. It's a big week for

:42:59.:43:02.

the British and Irish Lions. They face the Hurricanes tomorrow

:43:03.:43:04.

before a must win second test Lions coach criticised their tactics

:43:05.:43:07.

after the first test defeat - and All Blacks coach Steve Hansen

:43:08.:43:11.

hit back, live on New Zealand radio. Predictable comments from Gatland.

:43:12.:43:26.

Two weeks ago it was cheating on the scrums, now it is blocking. It is

:43:27.:43:30.

really, really disappointing. What he is implying is we are

:43:31.:43:33.

intentionally going out to injure somebody. That is not the case. We

:43:34.:43:39.

have never been like that. As a New Zealander, I would expect him to

:43:40.:43:43.

know the New Zealand psyche, that it is not about intentionally trying to

:43:44.:43:49.

hurt somebody, it is about playing hard and with fear. That is what you

:43:50.:43:53.

do in sport when you are cross with someone, go on a radio phone in.

:43:54.:44:02.

Finally, we're going to bring you the opening round of the 2017

:44:03.:44:05.

Diving World Series that took place in Ireland over the weekend.

:44:06.:44:07.

Britain's Gary Hunt won but we particularly

:44:08.:44:09.

like the patriotic swimwear fashioned by Blake Aldridge -

:44:10.:44:11.

The dives took place from nearly three times the height

:44:12.:44:15.

He looks a little bit overdressed there in the middle. I am not sure

:44:16.:44:25.

about the tiny Speedos. Wearing something that small and diving in,

:44:26.:44:29.

the force of hitting the water, I would be checking before I came back

:44:30.:44:36.

up. It would be quite snug. You would hope so. I think I would

:44:37.:44:42.

be in a huge swimming costume. I would never do it, what am I talking

:44:43.:44:50.

about! We will send Mike to do it. A big bellyflop from up there! Thank

:44:51.:44:54.

you, Sally. She is longer than the Houses

:44:55.:44:58.

of Parliament, taller Thank than Nelson's column and today,

:44:59.:45:02.

the Royal Navy's new aircraft carrier is due to set

:45:03.:45:04.

sail for the first time. HMS Queen Elizabeth will leave her

:45:05.:45:07.

dock at Rosyth in Scotland, where she's been built,

:45:08.:45:09.

to begin sea trials. Our defence correspondent

:45:10.:45:11.

Jonathan Beale has been The biggest warship ever built in

:45:12.:45:21.

Britain is about to go to sea for the first time. It has been one of

:45:22.:45:25.

the largest and most complex engineering projects in the UK, and

:45:26.:45:31.

has taken years and cost more than ?3 billion. But HMS Queen Elizabeth

:45:32.:45:38.

is now ready to set sail. Her crew of 700 are already finding their way

:45:39.:45:42.

around the labyrinth inside, and getting used to life on board. Yet,

:45:43.:45:47.

the beds alone are bigger than what you would get on other warships,

:45:48.:45:53.

that is a good start. Everything is better when it is new, isn't it?

:45:54.:45:59.

This is only the start. It will be another year before the first jets

:46:00.:46:03.

take-off and land, and she will not be fully operational until 2021.

:46:04.:46:07.

This is a significant moment for the Royal Navy, they would have been

:46:08.:46:11.

without an aircraft carrier for almost a decade. I think there are

:46:12.:46:16.

very few capabilities by any country that are as symbolic and Titanic as

:46:17.:46:22.

a carriercapabilities. These are very visible symbols of national

:46:23.:46:27.

power, and power projection. But first, they have two carefully

:46:28.:46:30.

manoeuvred this massive ship out of the dark with the help of 11 barges.

:46:31.:46:38.

To give you a sense of scale, from one end to the other is about 300

:46:39.:46:43.

metres, the length of the Houses of Parliament. As far as height, from

:46:44.:46:47.

the keel to the top of the mast is taller than Nelson 's column. They

:46:48.:46:52.

will have two lower the mast as they slide her through the docs, very

:46:53.:46:58.

narrow spaces, and will have to take are under the bridges out there. --

:46:59.:47:04.

docks. That will be the beginning of her first sea trials. Do you feel

:47:05.:47:10.

like the driver of a new Porsche, petrified you are going to crash it

:47:11.:47:14.

as you come out the garage? Yes, but I'm also taking one that has never

:47:15.:47:20.

been driven before. You presume your porch has been driven from the

:47:21.:47:24.

factory, but this will be towed out of the docks and out of the river.

:47:25.:47:28.

The first time the leaders go forward is the first time she has

:47:29.:47:36.

been under our power and moving. By tonight, HMS Queen Elizabeth should

:47:37.:47:39.

be heading out to sea under her own power. Later this year, if it all

:47:40.:47:45.

goes according to plan, she will be sailing into her new home of

:47:46.:47:48.

Portsmouth. Jonathan Beale, BBC News.

:47:49.:47:52.

STUDIO: She is an amazing thing. Very big. It's now time for a look

:47:53.:48:02.

at the weather. If you are a regular viewer, we love an auld nag on

:48:03.:48:14.

breakfast. Is Carol. The horse! Yes, the horse! There are lovely

:48:15.:48:18.

pictures coming in from East Yorkshire. A lot of sunshine

:48:19.:48:19.

around this morning. Temperatures are around about 16 or 17 degrees in

:48:20.:48:30.

London, Plymouth, 15 in Cardiff, temperatures are steadily rising.

:48:31.:48:34.

High pressure is in charge of the weather, not much in the way of wind

:48:35.:48:38.

but low pressure comes in from the West, which introduces bigger cloud

:48:39.:48:43.

and rain. If you are out and about, UV levels are high across most of

:48:44.:48:50.

England, and you can see two across north-east Scotland and Wales, very

:48:51.:48:55.

high in the south-east. If you are allergic to pollen, levels are high

:48:56.:48:59.

across England and Wales, apart from the north where they are moderate or

:49:00.:49:02.

low across Scotland and parts of Northern Ireland. Through the

:49:03.:49:08.

morning, we hang the sunshine. There are bits and pieces of cloud

:49:09.:49:12.

floating around, shallows across the North and thicker cloud towards the

:49:13.:49:17.

West, turning sunshine hazy through the day. Meanwhile, rain begins to

:49:18.:49:22.

gather across Northern Ireland as it advances north-eastwards. We are

:49:23.:49:27.

looking at 16 degrees in Belfast, 14 degrees in Aberdeen, 18 in

:49:28.:49:32.

Manchester and highs of 24 in London. Still feeling a little

:49:33.:49:37.

sticky. As we head through the and overnight, you can see how the rain

:49:38.:49:41.

travels across Northern Ireland, the North Sea and the channel, Wales,

:49:42.:49:47.

northern England and Scotland. It will be heavy and persistent,

:49:48.:49:51.

especially in Cumbria, Dumfries Galloway, worth bearing in mind if

:49:52.:49:54.

you are travelling with a lot of surface water and spray on the

:49:55.:49:59.

roads. Mudgee in the south, this area of low pressure advances

:50:00.:50:04.

towards us tomorrow, bringing in thundery downpours. This trail in

:50:05.:50:07.

front associated with this area of low pressure, drifting northwards.

:50:08.:50:12.

You can see rain coming into the West which continues to push

:50:13.:50:16.

north-eastwards. After a relatively dry and muggy start, we have this

:50:17.:50:21.

area of low pressure bringing in thundery downpours. Not all of us

:50:22.:50:24.

will see them but you will see quite a lot of rain in a short amount of

:50:25.:50:31.

time if you do. Highs of 21 in London, 17 in Manchester and 14 in

:50:32.:50:35.

Stornoway. Here, things are brining up with sunshine and showers across

:50:36.:50:41.

Northern Ireland. -- brightening up. Through the evening and overnight,

:50:42.:50:47.

rain gathers in the south, and continues to journey northwards.

:50:48.:50:49.

Eventually moving up to northern England during the day on Wednesday

:50:50.:50:54.

and Northern Ireland. Scotland hanging on to the driest and

:50:55.:50:58.

brightest conditions, but also the lowest temperatures of 12-15d.

:50:59.:51:04.

Temperatures are coming down but 17-19d. For the rest of the week, an

:51:05.:51:10.

unsettled theme is continuing. Spells a rain, windy at times, and

:51:11.:51:14.

it is going to turn cooler. Certainly cooler than it was last

:51:15.:51:19.

week, for those who had very high temperatures. STUDIO: Thank you. We

:51:20.:51:22.

will keep an eye out on your namesake at 2:30pm at Chepstow

:51:23.:51:30.

this afternoon. Has she become the favourite yet? That horse was

:51:31.:51:35.

second. I must check, I confess, it was a throwaway comment earlier on

:51:36.:51:38.

and I haven't checked and done my research as to whether it was the

:51:39.:51:43.

favourite! Fear not, I will sort that out for you!

:51:44.:51:46.

Glastonbury is only about 50 miles away from Chepstow. And it is all

:51:47.:51:48.

coming down after one year. The tents are being packed away,

:51:49.:51:53.

the stages dismantled and thousands of bleary-eyed fans are heading home

:51:54.:51:56.

from the Glastonbury The famous site in Somerset

:51:57.:51:58.

will soon return to being a working dairy farm but yesterday

:51:59.:52:04.

it was hosting the cream Our entertainment correspondent

:52:05.:52:07.

Lizo Mzimba reports. For many, Glastonbury's

:52:08.:52:09.

final day was disco day. There were Bee Gees

:52:10.:52:13.

classics from Barry Gibb. Watching from the sidelines,

:52:14.:52:17.

Nile Rodgers, who later took to the stage with Chic,

:52:18.:52:35.

for disco hit after disco hit. A huge crowd watching them

:52:36.:52:38.

in the Somerset sunshine. It's not just people famous

:52:39.:52:55.

from the world of music who have been performing

:52:56.:53:09.

at this year's festival. Yes, that's American film and TV

:53:10.:53:16.

star Kiefer Sutherland playing He said performing at Glastonbury

:53:17.:53:19.

was particularly special. It is almost like being invited

:53:20.:53:34.

into a part of history. It started off with one person and

:53:35.:53:50.

an idea, that has been allowed to blossom and grow like this. Again,

:53:51.:53:56.

it is almost like being invited into a part of history.

:53:57.:53:59.

# Set the tone # His headline set an emotional

:54:00.:54:04.

climax to a festival that One of the potential sticking points

:54:05.:54:08.

in Brexit negotiations between the government

:54:09.:54:34.

and the European Union is - What will happen to EU nationals

:54:35.:54:36.

living the UK after Brexit? Today the government

:54:37.:54:39.

will publish its proposals on that - our correspondent John Maguire

:54:40.:54:41.

is in North London this morning finding out how some EU nationals,

:54:42.:54:43.

who live here, think the plans He has been having blueberry cake

:54:44.:54:59.

and is talking about how the plans will affect them. Good morning! Good

:55:00.:55:06.

morning, I don't want to say that we are having our cake and eating it,

:55:07.:55:10.

we haven't even tucked into this marvellous blue brocade yet. Dorota

:55:11.:55:19.

is putting on the finishing touches. We are in north-west London and have

:55:20.:55:24.

gathered some EU nationals here to talk about their aspirations and

:55:25.:55:28.

even fears for Brexit negotiations taking place. Dorota will join us

:55:29.:55:33.

here. Also here, we have Emmanuelle from France, Dorota joining us and

:55:34.:55:42.

Yacub. What would you like to hear from these negotiations? We like

:55:43.:55:47.

certainty. Until then, it is uncertain. It has been one year, we

:55:48.:55:51.

did not have a vote. I run a business. Until we know certainties,

:55:52.:55:58.

these discussions will last another two years, until it is certain,

:55:59.:56:07.

nothing is certain. At last, we need to come up with something so we can

:56:08.:56:11.

move on and decide as to whether or not we want to grow, we want to

:56:12.:56:16.

attract talent. That is the most important thing. The political

:56:17.:56:20.

debate is difficult for people like us. What does it mean? We will judge

:56:21.:56:26.

whether or not we want to stay, or whether we want to remain here. It

:56:27.:56:33.

is a personal situation, Yacub, you are a Polish journalist, what is the

:56:34.:56:38.

picture you are getting from people? Especially when we talk about the

:56:39.:56:41.

five-year limit, is their optimism or pessimism, how do you read it?

:56:42.:56:46.

There is a lot of confusion, people do not understand the rules. When

:56:47.:56:51.

you talk about policy, sometimes people understand but people think,

:56:52.:56:55.

how does that apply to me? There isn't an understanding of that. In

:56:56.:57:02.

the grace period, proposed by the government, they are allowing people

:57:03.:57:10.

to stay. There is a lot of confusion, there will be changes

:57:11.:57:18.

across the UK, but they need to make sure they understand the rules,

:57:19.:57:21.

whatever they are, as it is a big part of making the right decision.

:57:22.:57:27.

Dorota, this cafe has been open 18 months or so. I suppose it's been

:57:28.:57:33.

around six months before the Brexit vote. As a relatively new business

:57:34.:57:38.

owner, what are your thoughts? It is very confusing, different people are

:57:39.:57:45.

saying different things. If you read a newspaper, you still don't know

:57:46.:57:49.

the answer, what about the five years? Even me, that period, for

:57:50.:58:14.

that long... It is very confusing. All right, to all three of you,

:58:15.:58:19.

thank you. We should expect clarity later today, especially when the

:58:20.:58:22.

government says what it wants to come out of the brakes proposals.

:58:23.:58:26.

From here in north London, we will hand things back to you guys in the

:58:27.:58:32.

studio. And four portions of blueberry pie, please. I can take

:58:33.:58:38.

some back to the studio! Back to you. STUDIO: Enjoy the pie! Thank

:58:39.:58:41.

you. A great way to start the day. He's the big hearted super-villain

:58:42.:58:44.

with many minion friends and now Gru's returning to the big screen

:58:45.:58:47.

in 'Despicable Me 3'. Stars Steve Carell and Kristen Wiig

:58:48.:58:49.

spoke to Charlie about the fun they had making the film and even

:58:50.:58:52.

gave him a masterclass on how Steve, and just admiring your boots.

:58:53.:58:55.

Thank you. Are they statement

:58:56.:59:06.

boots of some kind? They're statement boots,

:59:07.:59:08.

they say, "These are boots. There's so much excitement

:59:09.:59:10.

about this film, a lot of affection for Despicable Me,

:59:11.:59:13.

now three. It's nice, it's fun

:59:14.:59:15.

to promote a movie that there is affection

:59:16.:59:18.

for, because not all They are funny, they

:59:19.:59:20.

are silly, just go to the theatre and the get

:59:21.:59:29.

life for a few hours. Just silly, ridiculous,

:59:30.:59:36.

and minions, I mean... Can you be in a bad

:59:37.:59:39.

mood after those? I don't know if you've

:59:40.:59:49.

heard of the minions? "Bello" means "hello",

:59:50.:59:52.

and "banana" means... I didn't even know they had a full

:59:53.:00:03.

on language. Apparently there's

:00:04.:00:13.

a translator thing online. I swear, you can put in sentences

:00:14.:00:16.

and it translates it But how would you know

:00:17.:00:19.

if that is true? There are people, probably,

:00:20.:00:22.

that have studied it. I bet there are people who are

:00:23.:00:27.

experts in the minion language. I mean, it is so

:00:28.:00:40.

a part of this film. Have you heard a lot of people doing

:00:41.:00:48.

really bad efforts at Gru, I set the bar really

:00:49.:00:57.

low for myself, because it doesn't really

:00:58.:01:04.

apply to any country. And it's not an accent, it's just,

:01:05.:01:10.

sort of, a weird, My gosh, can you give

:01:11.:01:13.

us a masterclass? AS GRU: all right, well,

:01:14.:01:23.

you've got to kind of... AS GRU: you've got to kind of talk

:01:24.:01:26.

like this! AS GRU: Exactly, you push it

:01:27.:01:28.

down the airwaves... AS GRU: You push it down,

:01:29.:01:31.

and that is how you do it! AS GRU: You think

:01:32.:01:34.

of Bela Lugosi, and Ricardo Montalban had

:01:35.:01:36.

a baby, that is Gru. You've got to kind

:01:37.:01:38.

of bellow like this! I remember talking

:01:39.:01:51.

to you some years ago, about how you came by the voice

:01:52.:02:20.

and you said that you use your own Are you at the point

:02:21.:02:23.

where they say, shut up, dad! It is so much fun to

:02:24.:02:29.

embarrass your kids, though. When they get older,

:02:30.:02:42.

that is part of the joy. They don't want you to embarrass

:02:43.:02:46.

them in public, especially. Any kind of grocery store,

:02:47.:02:58.

you can do anything there. Sing, dance, you know, danced down

:02:59.:03:05.

the aisles, We were talking about age,

:03:06.:03:07.

I'm being delicate when I say this. We are approximately the same age,

:03:08.:03:32.

very close in age. Are you, sort of,

:03:33.:03:35.

how do I say this... We were both agreeing

:03:36.:03:42.

that we are getting I'm not sure that's quite the right

:03:43.:03:43.

word, but sometimes... I find myself, you know,

:03:44.:03:47.

talking about how maybe... How loud something is,

:03:48.:03:51.

and I'm like, who am I? Kristen, I just want to ask

:03:52.:03:55.

you about Tony Erdman. Because it's a film

:03:56.:04:02.

that may be not that many people know, it is a very

:04:03.:04:06.

unusual movie which has been remade. You are going to star in this

:04:07.:04:09.

with Jack Nicholson, is that right? It is being written right now, I'm

:04:10.:04:12.

very excited. Yeah, because it is a very

:04:13.:04:18.

quirky film, isn't it? And he's quite a quirky actor to

:04:19.:04:21.

work with, you would imagine. I mean, I know that

:04:22.:04:29.

he will be great. Just moving slightly

:04:30.:04:37.

further away from I was thinking about

:04:38.:04:43.

voices, since we did I was thinking, my all-time

:04:44.:04:50.

favourite animated voice is not from the movies

:04:51.:04:53.

but from Wacky Races. I've actually started

:04:54.:04:55.

doing that naturally. Just tell people you're doing

:04:56.:05:07.

the impression of the dog. That's right, I can

:05:08.:05:11.

get away with it! Despicable Me 3 is out

:05:12.:05:13.

at the end of this week. We'll be finding out what's

:05:14.:05:44.

on the docket for the news series I'm back with the latest

:05:45.:05:48.

from the BBC London newsroom 1.30pm. It's the policing

:05:49.:07:25.

documentary which - unlike its fictional rivals -

:07:26.:07:37.

features detectives without bravado, wisecracks or complicated

:07:38.:07:39.

personal back stories. But the Channel 4 programme 24

:07:40.:07:40.

Hours In Police Custody is often more gripping and dramatic

:07:41.:07:43.

than anything Let's take a look at a clip

:07:44.:07:44.

from tonight's show, Knocks him clean out

:07:45.:07:48.

into the doorway. Can I pass you a description

:07:49.:08:06.

of our offender? It's an IC1 male, about six foot

:08:07.:08:09.

tall, dark short hair, he's wearing a suit with a white

:08:10.:08:13.

shirt and a dark coloured jacket. Gary Hales is the investigation

:08:14.:08:19.

officer you saw in that clip and he joins us now,

:08:20.:08:31.

along with the show's executive I absolutely love this programme.

:08:32.:08:41.

Gary, can you explain more about the details of that case and what made

:08:42.:08:44.

it so interesting to follow. It was an assault in a pub, wasn't it?

:08:45.:08:50.

Guess, it was an assault in a pub and you can see from the footage

:08:51.:08:53.

that several people witnessed what happened. But when it came to us

:08:54.:08:58.

looking for witnesses, no one sees anything. It is a very clicky local

:08:59.:09:03.

pub and the victim is an outsider to the pub, so we don't get anywhere

:09:04.:09:12.

with any of the local Cleon Towle and even the landlord and landlady

:09:13.:09:14.

deny knowing this chap. We investigate that and we get the

:09:15.:09:19.

footage so we get a good CCTV image of the chap, and then we take it

:09:20.:09:22.

from there. We don't want to spoil anything about how it goes, but

:09:23.:09:27.

Simon, what is so interesting with these programmes, some people

:09:28.:09:31.

oranges did in the actual crimes and how they are investigated, some

:09:32.:09:35.

people are interested in the relationship the police have with

:09:36.:09:38.

the pub that this one showed clearly, but it is step-by-step,

:09:39.:09:43.

little nuances. It is absolute friends in detail. The cameras are

:09:44.:09:47.

everywhere and can follow everything so it makes it feel like you

:09:48.:09:51.

watching a police drama but about something that matters. In this case

:09:52.:09:57.

the victim could so have died. Fortunately, he doesn't in this

:09:58.:10:01.

case, but we can see every element of that case. You see how passionate

:10:02.:10:07.

the police get about investigating. How many cameras do you use? Does it

:10:08.:10:13.

feel a little intrusive on a case? How big a set is it and how much are

:10:14.:10:19.

you in the faces? It is a bit like filming a football match or a news

:10:20.:10:23.

event. There are 70 odd cameras in the police station at any one time,

:10:24.:10:28.

plus five crews who are following the stories as they go out there. We

:10:29.:10:41.

try to select which story we will follow on a particular day. It is a

:10:42.:10:44.

very intense amount of filming. They are smaller remote cameras on the

:10:45.:10:47.

wall so we hope they do get in the way of anything the police are

:10:48.:10:50.

doing. Sometimes the case is not appropriate to follow and sometimes

:10:51.:10:53.

we missed a bit of it and we decide not to do it or it may be that we

:10:54.:10:57.

have done similar cases in the past. We have now done a few programmes

:10:58.:11:01.

are sometimes we say let's do a new one and hold our nerve and wait for

:11:02.:11:05.

a new one. We try to choose the ones that will have the twist and turns

:11:06.:11:09.

and also that throws light on the way criminal Justice and the world

:11:10.:11:22.

is. How intrusive is it, Gary? Does it affect you or are you now used to

:11:23.:11:26.

it? We do get used to it. I made some comments on the first episode

:11:27.:11:28.

where I mentioned I am a lover and not a fighter! I would not say that

:11:29.:11:33.

now on television! But you just did! You soon get used to the cameras

:11:34.:11:39.

being present and you carry on with your normal job. They capture the

:11:40.:11:43.

human part of what we do. We laugh, we get angry, we get frustrated but

:11:44.:11:48.

we want to get to the truth, we want to get justice for the victims. We

:11:49.:11:53.

watch them all the time. We will be watching lots of streams of people

:11:54.:11:57.

doing things. They are not behaving differently when the cameras are on

:11:58.:12:03.

them. They may swear a tiny bit less but on the whole it is genuine and I

:12:04.:12:07.

think that is what people like about it. They feel that it is genuine. We

:12:08.:12:14.

are presenting a three and a quarter hour programme. Once we are done at

:12:15.:12:17.

9:15am, we are done. For the hour that you make, how many hours would

:12:18.:12:22.

you film? We are not recording all of them at all of the time. We are

:12:23.:12:28.

recording about five cameras at any one time, plus we are sending crews

:12:29.:12:34.

out like when Gary goes out and does his arrest. We do film hundreds of

:12:35.:12:38.

hours. It is not just the 24 hour period when we filmed the beginning

:12:39.:12:43.

of the crime, we try to follow a case for months, even years. We have

:12:44.:12:46.

thousands and thousands of hours. We would not be able to look at all of

:12:47.:12:52.

the hours if we recorded every single one of the streams. So it is

:12:53.:12:55.

about making a selection, following a case and the teamwork unbelievably

:12:56.:13:00.

hard to sift through it all to try and tell a story. It is crunch down

:13:01.:13:08.

time. It is certainly very popular. Thank you for coming in to talk to

:13:09.:13:10.

us. Find out what happens tonight. 24 Hours In Police Custody

:13:11.:13:15.

is on Channel 4 tonight at 9pm. That is it from us. We will be back

:13:16.:13:24.

tomorrow at 6am. Bye-bye.

:13:25.:13:33.

Download Subtitles

SRT

ASS