
Browse content similar to 09/07/2017. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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Hello, this is Breakfast, with Roger Johnson and Sian Lloyd. | :00:00. | :00:07. | |
More 13,000 mobile phones and 200 kilograms of drugs have been seized | :00:08. | :00:12. | |
from prisons across England and Wales in the last year. | :00:13. | :00:15. | |
Ministers say the situation is "unacceptable" - | :00:16. | :00:17. | |
and they're recruiting more officers to crack down on illegal | :00:18. | :00:19. | |
Good morning, it's Sunday the ninth of July. | :00:20. | :00:39. | |
The parents of baby Charlie Gard will help deliver a petition | :00:40. | :00:45. | |
to Great Ormond Street later, calling on doctors to let him travel | :00:46. | :00:48. | |
Iraqi government forces say they're "within hours" of declaring victory | :00:49. | :00:55. | |
over Islamic State militants in Mosul. | :00:56. | :00:59. | |
It's famous for its meres and mountains - | :01:00. | :01:01. | |
but could the Lake District become Britain's first national park | :01:02. | :01:04. | |
Former champions Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic find form | :01:05. | :01:11. | |
at Wimbledon as they book their places in the last 16. | :01:12. | :01:14. | |
Good morning. It looks like another mostly fine and warm day for England | :01:15. | :01:28. | |
and Wales but for Scotland and Northern Ireland there are changes | :01:29. | :01:31. | |
from the weather yesterday. Details in 15 minutes. | :01:32. | :01:32. | |
13,000 mobile phones and more than 200 kilograms of drugs | :01:33. | :01:37. | |
were found in prisons in England and Wales last year. | :01:38. | :01:40. | |
The government has described the situation as "unacceptable" | :01:41. | :01:43. | |
but says measures are being put in place to disrupt illegal | :01:44. | :01:46. | |
Being smuggled into jails, through whatever means possible, it only | :01:47. | :02:05. | |
highlights the scale of the challenge facing prison officers who | :02:06. | :02:09. | |
have had to deal with staff cuts and growing violence over recent years. | :02:10. | :02:14. | |
In April, a European watchdog warned that incident in UK jails were | :02:15. | :02:18. | |
spiralling out of control, making them unsafe for prisoners and staff. | :02:19. | :02:23. | |
The latest Ministry of Justice figures say there are 86,000 inmates | :02:24. | :02:29. | |
in England and Wales. 7000 Singh cards were found along with 13,000 | :02:30. | :02:34. | |
mobile phones. They are a valuable resource behind bars, sometimes | :02:35. | :02:37. | |
rented out frock to ?1000. Along with the seizure of 200 kilograms of | :02:38. | :02:43. | |
illegal drugs, it is the scale of the problems that forces the | :02:44. | :02:46. | |
government to act once more. This ?2 million investment brought into | :02:47. | :02:53. | |
every prison can detect phones. Dogs have also been trained to find | :02:54. | :02:59. | |
drugs. Ministers acknowledge they could not stop there, however. The | :03:00. | :03:03. | |
government has recently had a recruitment drive, saying it is on | :03:04. | :03:07. | |
track to bring in two and a half thousand more officers by 2018. | :03:08. | :03:08. | |
In just over half an hour, we'll be speaking to the Prison Reform Trust | :03:09. | :03:12. | |
about what needs to be done to stop contraband | :03:13. | :03:14. | |
The parents of Charlie Gard are expected to help deliver | :03:15. | :03:18. | |
a petition to Great Ormond Street Hospital later - | :03:19. | :03:22. | |
calling on doctors to allow their terminally ill baby to travel | :03:23. | :03:26. | |
A new hearing about the case is due in the High Court tomorrow. | :03:27. | :03:33. | |
John McManus is outside Great Ormond Street Hospital | :03:34. | :03:35. | |
Is this petition likely to make any difference? | :03:36. | :03:47. | |
The parents of 11 -month-old Charlie Gard would hope for. They will be | :03:48. | :03:54. | |
here at around two o'clock this afternoon at great Ormond Street | :03:55. | :03:58. | |
with their supporters to hand in this petition which has been signed | :03:59. | :04:03. | |
by over 350,000 people. Calling on the doctors behind me to allow 11 | :04:04. | :04:07. | |
-month-old Charlie to travel with his parents for experimental | :04:08. | :04:11. | |
treatment to try and tackle the genetic condition which is affecting | :04:12. | :04:15. | |
him. It has left him unable to breathe without the help of a | :04:16. | :04:19. | |
respirator and unable to move. In April the High Court said that the | :04:20. | :04:22. | |
doctors here are great Ormond Street could turn off his life support | :04:23. | :04:26. | |
system. That decision has been fought by his parents from the | :04:27. | :04:30. | |
court, so far unsuccessfully, but now the hospital itself has secured | :04:31. | :04:35. | |
a new hearing at the High Court. They say it is because they have | :04:36. | :04:40. | |
been presented by new evidence about a possible experimental treatment | :04:41. | :04:43. | |
for Charlie. The hospital says they are not convinced that will make his | :04:44. | :04:47. | |
life any better but they say the decision is now in the hands of the | :04:48. | :04:51. | |
judges at the High Court tomorrow. His parents will be pinning their | :04:52. | :04:54. | |
hopes on what happens tomorrow and they hope that today's petition will | :04:55. | :04:57. | |
help to influence events. They say the fight goes on. | :04:58. | :05:00. | |
Iraqi state television is reporting that government forces | :05:01. | :05:02. | |
are on the verge of retaking the city of Mosul. | :05:03. | :05:05. | |
It was seized by so-called Islamic State more than | :05:06. | :05:07. | |
But after nine months of intense fighting, | :05:08. | :05:10. | |
Iraqi soldiers have been celebrating on the streets - | :05:11. | :05:12. | |
despite no official word of a victory. | :05:13. | :05:14. | |
Our defence correspondent, Jonathan Beale, has more. | :05:15. | :05:25. | |
It has been the fight of their lives. Their battle to retake Mosul | :05:26. | :05:31. | |
from the group calling itself Islamic State started in October | :05:32. | :05:35. | |
last year. They have lost many, runs along the way. But today the Iraqi | :05:36. | :05:40. | |
security forces were firing their weapons in celebration, claiming | :05:41. | :05:44. | |
victory over there enemy. TRANSLATION: This joy has been | :05:45. | :05:49. | |
achieved the sacrifices our martyrs and the blood of our wounded heroes. | :05:50. | :05:57. | |
God willing, may happiness prevail in Iraq. After nearly nine months of | :05:58. | :06:00. | |
brutal street to street fighting the security forces now believe they | :06:01. | :06:04. | |
have defeated IS in a city that was once their stronghold. But there are | :06:05. | :06:09. | |
still pockets of resistance and the occasional sound of gunfire. But a | :06:10. | :06:14. | |
look, everyone around you and you will see that pretty much every | :06:15. | :06:17. | |
building has been damaged or destroyed. If this is victory, it | :06:18. | :06:23. | |
has come at a cost. No-one yet knows how me civilians have lost their | :06:24. | :06:27. | |
lives in the city. It is still a fight for survival. TRANSLATION: | :06:28. | :06:33. | |
Hunger, first, fear and aerial bombardment. We lived in the sale. | :06:34. | :06:38. | |
Look at this. Our house was destroyed above us. The extremist's | :06:39. | :06:42. | |
reign of terror may be coming to an end. But they are by no means | :06:43. | :06:46. | |
finished in Iraq. Anti-capitalist protesters clashed | :06:47. | :06:48. | |
with German police for a third night in Hamburg, following the end | :06:49. | :06:51. | |
of the G20 summit hosted Police used water cannons and tear | :06:52. | :06:54. | |
gas to push them back after some set During the summit, world leaders | :06:55. | :06:58. | |
declared the Paris Climate Agreement "irreversible", despite | :06:59. | :07:02. | |
President Trump pulling the US out. While Theresa May left | :07:03. | :07:05. | |
the meetings confident A wealthy businessman has submitted | :07:06. | :07:10. | |
alternative plans for a third runway at Heathrow, which he says | :07:11. | :07:24. | |
would save more than ?5 billion. The hotel tycoon, Surinder Arora, | :07:25. | :07:27. | |
suggests changing the design of terminal buildings and reducing | :07:28. | :07:29. | |
the amount of land built on. A spokesperson for the airport said | :07:30. | :07:32. | |
they would "welcome views" on the plans during a public | :07:33. | :07:35. | |
consultation later this year. Tens of thousands of people | :07:36. | :07:38. | |
are expected to attend a rally in the Turkish city of Istanbul | :07:39. | :07:42. | |
to protest against the government The event is being held to mark | :07:43. | :07:45. | |
the end of a 280-mile It was organised by the opposition | :07:46. | :07:51. | |
to highlight the mass arrests and sackings since last | :07:52. | :07:56. | |
year's failed coup. A state of emergency has been | :07:57. | :08:00. | |
declared in the Canadian Province of British Columbia, | :08:01. | :08:03. | |
where the authorities are trying Thousands of homes | :08:04. | :08:05. | |
have been evacuated Most of the blazes started | :08:06. | :08:11. | |
after lightning strikes The Church of England will vote | :08:12. | :08:14. | |
today on whether to allow special services for transgender people | :08:15. | :08:22. | |
after their transition. At an annual meeting in York, | :08:23. | :08:24. | |
prominent figures will address calls for the Church to update | :08:25. | :08:27. | |
its attitudes towards sexuality. The Lake District will find out | :08:28. | :08:34. | |
today whether it will be given If successful, it would become | :08:35. | :08:37. | |
the UK's 31st such site, From the Great Barrier Reef to the | :08:38. | :08:55. | |
Taj Mahal and the Grand Canyon, they are some of the most recognisable | :08:56. | :08:58. | |
sights in the world. Soon the Lancs district could be a member of the | :08:59. | :09:03. | |
club. Later today but will delegates from UNESCO will announce whether | :09:04. | :09:06. | |
they deemed the region inspiring enough and irreplaceable enough to | :09:07. | :09:09. | |
be protected under World Heritage status. It would be lovely if it | :09:10. | :09:14. | |
did. It would be very nice. It is one of the top places. I have been | :09:15. | :09:19. | |
coming here for over 40 years. It has changed a lot. It is popular but | :09:20. | :09:24. | |
there are so many beautiful things here that need to be recognised and | :09:25. | :09:29. | |
protected. With its towering peaks and glistening waters the National | :09:30. | :09:32. | |
park currently attracts around 80 million tourists a year. They | :09:33. | :09:36. | |
contribute over ?1 billion to the local economy falls Retix worried | :09:37. | :09:39. | |
that attaining World Heritage status could see even more visitors descend | :09:40. | :09:43. | |
on the region, putting extra pressure on the landscape. Others | :09:44. | :09:47. | |
argue it would mean greater funding and investment. A World Heritage | :09:48. | :09:51. | |
site, it would demonstrate the changing landscape because it is not | :09:52. | :09:55. | |
natural. That is shaped by people with their farming practices, they | :09:56. | :10:01. | |
have spoken about this landscape and people come to see it. It will draw | :10:02. | :10:04. | |
new customers and new visitors who've never heard of this area full | :10:05. | :10:10. | |
of it is a tick of the box to visit a World Heritage site. William | :10:11. | :10:15. | |
Wordsworth once described as the loveliest spot. But will UNESCO | :10:16. | :10:20. | |
agree? If successful, it will be the 31st World Heritage site in the UK | :10:21. | :10:25. | |
joining places like the houses of Parliament, Hadrian 's Wall and | :10:26. | :10:29. | |
Stonehenge. That is one of my favourite places. | :10:30. | :10:30. | |
A day of Gay Pride celebrations in London ended with the Houses | :10:31. | :10:33. | |
of Parliament lit up in the colours of the rainbow flag. | :10:34. | :10:36. | |
It's the first time the symbol has been projected on the building. | :10:37. | :10:39. | |
Earlier, an estimated one million people watched the annual pride | :10:40. | :10:42. | |
Ten minutes past six. Let's have a look at the paper this morning. On | :10:43. | :10:59. | |
the front page of the Sunday Times we have a photograph of the British | :11:00. | :11:07. | |
Lions. And the trade deal which Donald Trump said would happen | :11:08. | :11:13. | |
quickly post Brexit. That is their main story. The Sunday Telegraph... | :11:14. | :11:22. | |
A picture on the front. We're both in this photo, it says, and you are | :11:23. | :11:27. | |
in the tummy. That is Prince William speaking to Prince Harry. It is for | :11:28. | :11:32. | |
a documentary that will be shown later. They are studying a | :11:33. | :11:36. | |
photograph of prince as Diana holding Prince William while | :11:37. | :11:40. | |
pregnant with Harry at the main story there, again, Brexit Mei | :11:41. | :11:45. | |
playing the Trump card, seizing the optimism of Donald Trump over | :11:46. | :11:54. | |
Brexit. Seeing as they have got exactly the same headline, a quick | :11:55. | :12:00. | |
mention in the Sunday Express. However, a slightly different take | :12:01. | :12:04. | |
on the Brexit the Jewish and on the front page of the Observer. Here | :12:05. | :12:09. | |
German industry and stark warning to UK over Brexit. Priority to protect | :12:10. | :12:16. | |
the single market and it is hard to avoid hurting British business. The | :12:17. | :12:20. | |
Mail on Sunday has a headline, the pressure on Theresa May to quit as | :12:21. | :12:24. | |
Prime Minister is growing after it says the former Tory Cabinet | :12:25. | :12:30. | |
minister said she lost all authority and should go. It is 12 minutes past | :12:31. | :12:36. | |
six and Andrew will be with his later in the programme to review | :12:37. | :12:37. | |
papers. It was one of the worst naval | :12:38. | :12:38. | |
tragedies of the First World War. And today, a ceremony will be held | :12:39. | :12:41. | |
to remember the 843 men who lost their lives when HMS | :12:42. | :12:44. | |
Vanguard sank off Orkney To mark the centenary | :12:45. | :12:47. | |
of the disaster, a team of divers has been given special permission | :12:48. | :12:53. | |
to document the wreck. Our Scotland correspondent, | :12:54. | :12:56. | |
Lorna Gordon has more. In the cold northern waters, the | :12:57. | :13:11. | |
final resting place of HMS Vanguard, a dreadnought battleship from World | :13:12. | :13:16. | |
War I. The bow and stern almost entirely intact after 100 years | :13:17. | :13:21. | |
underwater. This the group of civilian divers to be given | :13:22. | :13:26. | |
permission to document the wreck since it was designated a war grave. | :13:27. | :13:31. | |
I think the loss of life was never far away from my mind. That said, we | :13:32. | :13:37. | |
had a job to do and an obligation to do that job to the best of our | :13:38. | :13:42. | |
ability. So you got on with the work but, yes, part of the wreck are | :13:43. | :13:49. | |
quite emotional indeed. Ships steaming into the war base... Along | :13:50. | :13:54. | |
with many other ships, Vanguard could be anchored in the seas off | :13:55. | :13:59. | |
Orkney. She had seen action at the Battle of Jutland but on a Southern | :14:00. | :14:03. | |
evening in July 1917, the entire ship was destroyed after a magazine | :14:04. | :14:09. | |
exploded. She sank almost instantly with the loss of almost all her | :14:10. | :14:15. | |
crew. 843 men died, only two of those on board at the time survived. | :14:16. | :14:26. | |
The team of volunteer divers spend hours surveying the wreck and | :14:27. | :14:29. | |
piecing together its story. It lies at the death of 100 feet and among | :14:30. | :14:34. | |
the artefacts discovered, cutlery, an anchor and the Telegraph. As part | :14:35. | :14:42. | |
of the commemorations, their sign was recently replaced by divers. One | :14:43. | :14:51. | |
century on, honouring the lives lost in what was a catastrophic accident. | :14:52. | :14:57. | |
You are watching Breakfast from BBC News. | :14:58. | :15:01. | |
The main stories this morning: Hundreds of kilograms of drugs | :15:02. | :15:04. | |
and 13,000 mobile phones were smuggled into prisons | :15:05. | :15:06. | |
in England and Wales last year, according | :15:07. | :15:08. | |
The parents of baby Charlie Gard will help deliver a petition | :15:09. | :15:15. | |
to Great Ormond Street, calling on doctors to let him travel | :15:16. | :15:18. | |
And coming up on the programme: They are some of the most | :15:19. | :15:24. | |
recognisable sites in the world, but could the Lake District soon be | :15:25. | :15:28. | |
We will find out why UNESCO is considering granting it | :15:29. | :15:35. | |
Here is Helen with a look at this morning's weather. | :15:36. | :15:42. | |
Good morning, Helen. What a lovely day to be out and about, as well, in | :15:43. | :15:53. | |
the Lake District today. This is not too far away across the Pennines, in | :15:54. | :15:58. | |
North Yorkshire. A beautiful Sunrise this morning, and it should for most | :15:59. | :16:03. | |
of England and Wales be another warm and fine day. However, we do have | :16:04. | :16:08. | |
some low cloud around at the moment across the coastline, actually, of | :16:09. | :16:11. | |
Cumbria, parts of the Irish Sea and the east, but this is where we have | :16:12. | :16:15. | |
the rain, bringing a different day for Scotland and Northern Ireland in | :16:16. | :16:19. | |
particular. To the north of that weather front we will see the | :16:20. | :16:22. | |
sunshine returned, and it won't be heavy rain, it certainly won't be a | :16:23. | :16:27. | |
wash out, but for much of Scotland and Northern Ireland a lot more | :16:28. | :16:30. | |
cloud than yesterday, and therefore it will be quite damp. Morning mist | :16:31. | :16:35. | |
lifting and some warm sunshine coming through. It will feel warmer | :16:36. | :16:38. | |
across the North of Scotland compared with yesterday, where we | :16:39. | :16:42. | |
have the cloud and very strong winds but for Aberdeenshire across the | :16:43. | :16:46. | |
Dumfries and Galloway, we have outbreaks of rain. Further south | :16:47. | :16:51. | |
towards antrum, as well, it will be cloudy. For much of northern England | :16:52. | :16:55. | |
until late in the day that weather front meanders its way south. Fine | :16:56. | :16:59. | |
and dry with the odd drizzly shower in the west, possibly in the east | :17:00. | :17:02. | |
are heavy, thundery shower, but few and far between this afternoon, and | :17:03. | :17:06. | |
it should be another full day 's play, I am hopeful, as the test | :17:07. | :17:11. | |
match continues and we have the anniversary games as well. It will | :17:12. | :17:25. | |
be hotter than yesterday. We have the humidity, having returned | :17:26. | :17:27. | |
overnight, hence the misty this this morning. It will be quite an | :17:28. | :17:30. | |
oppressive night in southern and eastern areas, but it starts to | :17:31. | :17:34. | |
freshen up behind that weather front across Scotland than in the Northern | :17:35. | :17:37. | |
Ireland by the end of the morning. As that rain and weather front | :17:38. | :17:41. | |
staggers in the western parts of England and Wales it becomes much | :17:42. | :17:43. | |
more showery tomorrow. Tomorrow looks like a date change from this | :17:44. | :17:47. | |
muddy, oppressive air across England and Wales. Brighter and drive for | :17:48. | :17:49. | |
Scotland and Northern Ireland compared with today, and for | :17:50. | :17:52. | |
Scotland, on school holidays, that will be good news. The outlook for | :17:53. | :17:56. | |
the week ahead is a more unsettled picture. So enjoy the sunshine, but | :17:57. | :18:00. | |
it will not be as nice a day across parts of Scotland and Northern | :18:01. | :18:01. | |
Ireland. Thank you very much. We will be back with | :18:02. | :18:03. | |
the headlines at 6:30am. Now it is time for Film Review, | :18:04. | :18:05. | |
with Jane Hill and Mark Kermode. Welcome to The Film | :18:06. | :18:15. | |
Review on BBC News. Taking us through the week | :18:16. | :18:17. | |
was Maximo releases is Mark Kermode. This week we have It Comes At Night, | :18:18. | :18:20. | |
which is a very creepy thriller. The Midwife with Catherine Deneuve | :18:21. | :18:24. | |
and Catherine Frot. I have read enough to know that this | :18:25. | :18:26. | |
is your kind of film, It is not a jump-scare horror | :18:27. | :18:52. | |
like the trailers make it look like. If you expect that you | :18:53. | :18:59. | |
will be disappointed. It is set after the outbreak of one | :19:00. | :19:01. | |
unspecified plague-like incident, which has pretty much | :19:02. | :19:05. | |
done for civilisation. There was a family, mother, father, | :19:06. | :19:07. | |
son living in a remote woodland. The windows are boarded up, | :19:08. | :19:11. | |
there is a corridor with a red door which is the elite access | :19:12. | :19:14. | |
to the outside world. They have to make a decision | :19:15. | :19:17. | |
about whether or not to accept They would bring friendship and food | :19:18. | :19:20. | |
supplies, but also bring suspicion and paranoia and desire, | :19:21. | :19:25. | |
and mysterious sleepwalking. She was having | :19:26. | :19:27. | |
nightmares so I woke up. I was in the back wall, | :19:28. | :19:51. | |
I saw the door open, It is all that | :19:52. | :19:55. | |
claustrophobic, is it? You get the sense of people starting | :19:56. | :20:31. | |
to distrust each other and be If you think of a film | :20:32. | :20:35. | |
like The Witch that has deep themes, they are creepy but not | :20:36. | :20:39. | |
full of jump scares. They make you feel very | :20:40. | :20:42. | |
worried and uncomfortable. The sound effects and score work | :20:43. | :20:51. | |
in favour of this film. It occupies a realm between being | :20:52. | :20:54. | |
awake and being asleep. It contracts during | :20:55. | :21:03. | |
certain sequences. Maybe we are, maybe | :21:04. | :21:05. | |
we are not awake or asleep. It is what happens when you lose | :21:06. | :21:07. | |
track of objective reality and you just start | :21:08. | :21:10. | |
to trust your fears. It is like that classic horror movie | :21:11. | :21:20. | |
with a cold hand on the back It is not the film the trailers | :21:21. | :21:24. | |
make it look like. They make it look like | :21:25. | :21:28. | |
it is a slam-bang horror. If you want something | :21:29. | :21:31. | |
that is going to cause you to lose I think you would not | :21:32. | :21:34. | |
enjoy it but admire it. It is all to do with what is implied | :21:35. | :21:42. | |
rather than what is actually shown. Which is the sort of film | :21:43. | :21:47. | |
that is the most frightening. I hear you, in terms | :21:48. | :21:49. | |
of the skill that went into it. The Midwife is about a friendship | :21:50. | :21:53. | |
between the two main characters. Catherine Deneuve is Beatrice, | :21:54. | :21:56. | |
her father's lover has had a medical It turns out maybe she wants | :21:57. | :21:59. | |
friendship, closure, These two characters start, | :22:00. | :22:27. | |
one of these characters The key distinction between them | :22:28. | :22:30. | |
is that one of them has been involved in bringing | :22:31. | :22:46. | |
children into the world. What I like about this was it has | :22:47. | :22:57. | |
well-observed characters. It has people in professions that | :22:58. | :22:59. | |
you actually believe in. I can understand all of those things | :23:00. | :23:02. | |
that happen and I can think Has a rather over-emphatic | :23:03. | :23:06. | |
and tingling score. It tells you things are moving | :23:07. | :23:21. | |
when you did not need to be taught. It was played with some | :23:22. | :23:25. | |
very fine performances. For the most part, it allows | :23:26. | :23:27. | |
you to observe the characters. And that is important, | :23:28. | :23:38. | |
to have characters that you can And that, oddly enough brings us | :23:39. | :23:43. | |
to Spider-man: Homecoming. I said that this was a low-key | :23:44. | :23:46. | |
character study posing as a superhero movie, but this | :23:47. | :23:50. | |
is like Ferris Bueller's Day Off He also happens to have | :23:51. | :23:53. | |
the superpowers, and he wants What he is desperately trying to do | :23:54. | :24:05. | |
is to punch above his weight, whilst also keeping his | :24:06. | :24:09. | |
identity absolutely secret. This is the craziest thing that has | :24:10. | :24:11. | |
ever happened to me. This is Tom Holland, | :24:12. | :25:17. | |
who won the BAFTA award, It is doing something | :25:18. | :25:21. | |
different with the character. Since I have been working | :25:22. | :25:34. | |
as a critic this is the third or fourth Spider-Man film - | :25:35. | :25:38. | |
how many times are you going They are playing to the adolescent | :25:39. | :25:41. | |
story, the school boy story, the high school story, | :25:42. | :25:49. | |
so there is all the action stuff, web spinning and dealing | :25:50. | :25:52. | |
with criminals, but really what makes it work is the high | :25:53. | :25:54. | |
school stuff, the stuff about wanting to fit | :25:55. | :25:57. | |
in and being awkward, wanting to grow up but not | :25:58. | :26:00. | |
actually growing up yet, and what he has actually got to do | :26:01. | :26:02. | |
is hang out in the canteen. I went in thinking, do | :26:03. | :26:06. | |
we really need to go here, But this does do | :26:07. | :26:10. | |
something different. He's very charming in a very | :26:11. | :26:13. | |
kind of oddball way. Only one false step in the film, | :26:14. | :26:18. | |
there's a lovely sequence which is a direct reference | :26:19. | :26:21. | |
to Ferris Bueller's Day Off, and they make direct | :26:22. | :26:24. | |
reference to it. You have been loving this, | :26:25. | :26:25. | |
this week, as anyone who has been following you on Twitter, | :26:26. | :26:39. | |
Baby Driver. It is a car chase movie | :26:40. | :26:47. | |
which is actually a musical. Everything in it is cut | :26:48. | :26:52. | |
to a fantastic selection It is really brilliant cinema, | :26:53. | :26:54. | |
C on a big screen with a good sound system, it is witty, clever, | :26:55. | :27:09. | |
poignant and nostalgic and it is made by somebody | :27:10. | :27:11. | |
who was going to direct another movie and then walked away | :27:12. | :27:15. | |
because it wasn't a film he wanted Now he has made exactly the movie | :27:16. | :27:18. | |
he wanted and it is a pleasure to see a director like Edgar Wright | :27:19. | :27:28. | |
saying, this is the film It is like an American in Paris | :27:29. | :27:31. | |
meets the French connection. I hear you, see it | :27:32. | :27:37. | |
on the big screen. That said, a quick thought | :27:38. | :27:39. | |
for anyone not wanting to see on the big screen, | :27:40. | :27:42. | |
what is out on DVD? It is a film about ageing, | :27:43. | :27:45. | |
about regret, about losing You can do something really | :27:46. | :27:49. | |
interesting with the superhero theme, and as long as we get movies | :27:50. | :27:56. | |
like that and Spider-Man, there will always be new light, | :27:57. | :27:59. | |
people say, haven't we had But as long as people | :28:00. | :28:02. | |
keep reinventing it, Yes, but you must go | :28:03. | :28:16. | |
and see It Comes At Night. Get under your skin | :28:17. | :28:21. | |
and you will appreciate it. That said, still lovely | :28:22. | :28:24. | |
to see you, as ever. A reminder that you can find | :28:25. | :28:27. | |
all the film news and reviews online And you can find all of our previous | :28:28. | :28:32. | |
programmes on the BBC iPlayer. Those that you are brave | :28:33. | :28:36. | |
enough to go and see! Hello, this is Breakfast | :28:37. | :28:41. | |
with Roger Johnson and Sian Lloyd. Coming up before seven, | :28:42. | :29:27. | |
Helen will have the weather. But first, a summary of this | :29:28. | :29:30. | |
morning's main news. 13,000 mobile phones and more | :29:31. | :29:36. | |
than 200 kilograms of drugs were found in prisons in England | :29:37. | :29:39. | |
and Wales last year. The haul comes after a ?2 million | :29:40. | :29:42. | |
investment in technology to aid detection, as well as 300 | :29:43. | :29:44. | |
specialist sniffer dogs. The government has described | :29:45. | :29:47. | |
the situation as "unacceptable" but says the figures highlight | :29:48. | :29:49. | |
the determination of prison staff The parents of Charlie Gard | :29:50. | :29:52. | |
are expected to help deliver a petition to Great Ormond Street | :29:53. | :30:05. | |
Hospital, calling on doctors to allow the terminally ill baby to | :30:06. | :30:08. | |
travel for experimental treatment. The petition has been signed by more | :30:09. | :30:11. | |
than 350,000 people. Charlie Gard's case is due to return | :30:12. | :30:14. | |
to the High Court tomorrow, after the hospital said it had seen | :30:15. | :30:17. | |
claims of new evidence relating Anti-capitalist protesters clashed | :30:18. | :30:20. | |
with German police for a third night in Hamburg, following the end | :30:21. | :30:32. | |
of the G20 summit hosted Police used water cannons and tear | :30:33. | :30:34. | |
gas to push them back after some set During the summit, world leaders | :30:35. | :30:39. | |
declared the Paris Climate Agreement "irreversible", despite | :30:40. | :30:42. | |
President Trump pulling the US out. While Theresa May left | :30:43. | :30:45. | |
the meetings confident A wealthy businessman has submitted | :30:46. | :30:47. | |
alternative plans for a third runway at Heathrow, which he says would | :30:48. | :31:01. | |
save more than five-billion pounds. The Hotel tycoon, Surinder Arora, | :31:02. | :31:04. | |
suggests changing the design of terminal buildings and reducing | :31:05. | :31:06. | |
the amount of land built on. A spokesperson for the airport said | :31:07. | :31:09. | |
they would "welcome views" on the plans during a public | :31:10. | :31:12. | |
consultation later this year. Tens of thousands of people | :31:13. | :31:20. | |
are expected to attend a rally in the Turkish city of Istanbul | :31:21. | :31:23. | |
to protest against the government The event is being held to mark | :31:24. | :31:26. | |
the end of a 280 mile It was organised by the opposition | :31:27. | :31:30. | |
to highlight the mass arrests and sackings since last | :31:31. | :31:34. | |
year's failed coup. A state of emergency has been | :31:35. | :31:40. | |
declared in the Canadian Province of British Columbia, | :31:41. | :31:43. | |
where the authorities are trying Thousands of homes | :31:44. | :31:46. | |
have been evacuated - Most of the blazes started | :31:47. | :31:49. | |
after lightning strikes The Church of England will vote | :31:50. | :31:52. | |
today on whether to allow special services for transgender people | :31:53. | :32:05. | |
following their transition. At the Synod's annual meeting | :32:06. | :32:07. | |
in York, prominent figures will address calls for the Church | :32:08. | :32:10. | |
to update its attitudes The Lake District will find out | :32:11. | :32:12. | |
today whether it will be granted If successful, it'll join | :32:13. | :32:19. | |
the likes of the Taj Mahal, It would also become the UK's 31st - | :32:20. | :32:23. | |
and largest - World Heritage site. A day of Pride celebrations | :32:24. | :32:33. | |
in London ended with the Houses of Parliament lit up in the colours | :32:34. | :32:36. | |
of the rainbow flag. It's the first time the symbol has | :32:37. | :32:39. | |
been projected on the building. Earlier, an estimated one million | :32:40. | :32:43. | |
people watched the annual pride Sixty years since it | :32:44. | :32:46. | |
took its first spin, more than a thousand Fiat 500 | :32:47. | :32:54. | |
enthusiasts have driven across Europe to attend | :32:55. | :32:56. | |
a rally in Italy. The event saw hundreds | :32:57. | :32:59. | |
of the original models parade through the town of Garlenda | :33:00. | :33:01. | |
where the ownership club More than six million of the Italian | :33:02. | :33:07. | |
classics have been built. They are quite popular. I had a Fiat | :33:08. | :33:23. | |
once, it was quite rusty because I did not look after it. I had one as | :33:24. | :33:28. | |
well. It was my first car. But will now be sport. Jeff is with us. Good | :33:29. | :33:37. | |
morning. Wimbledon and... Roger Federer, he is evergreen. Keeps on | :33:38. | :33:41. | |
going. Wimbledon fans have loved seeing him on court for many years | :33:42. | :33:47. | |
and at 35 years old it really seems as if he is rolling back the years. | :33:48. | :33:51. | |
His elegant backhand, I am so envious. He is like a ballerina on | :33:52. | :33:58. | |
court. Light on his feet and he floats around. You would not have | :33:59. | :34:02. | |
thought that a few months ago that he was injured and making people | :34:03. | :34:06. | |
wonder if he would ever return. He has played well. | :34:07. | :34:08. | |
Seven-time Wimbledon champion Roger Federer has booked his place | :34:09. | :34:10. | |
He comfortably beat the 27th seed Mischa Zverev in straight sets | :34:11. | :34:15. | |
Federer will play Bulgaria's Grigor Dimitrov next. | :34:16. | :34:26. | |
I think it is important to get through the first week of with a | :34:27. | :34:32. | |
good feeling. I think I got that. The first one, the walkover, that | :34:33. | :34:37. | |
did not give me much information but it saved my energy. Obviously, we go | :34:38. | :34:48. | |
one round at a time and, I must say, my first goal was to get to the | :34:49. | :34:52. | |
second week and I did that today. I am happy now to sit back, relax and | :34:53. | :34:54. | |
come back strongly on Monday. Three time champion Novak Djokovic | :34:55. | :34:56. | |
is also safely through to the second week of Wimbledon - | :34:57. | :34:59. | |
he hasn't even dropped a set! He beat Ernest Gulbiss | :35:00. | :35:02. | |
yesterday with ease. He was a break down in the first set | :35:03. | :35:04. | |
and argued with the umpire early on but it seemed to focus him, | :35:05. | :35:08. | |
he went through in straight sets. It was a little more precarious | :35:09. | :35:11. | |
in the women's draw, top seed Angelique Kerber only just | :35:12. | :35:14. | |
scraped through against Kerber reached the final last year, | :35:15. | :35:16. | |
but fell to a set and a break down, before eventually coming | :35:17. | :35:22. | |
through to set up what will be one of the match-ups of the next round - | :35:23. | :35:25. | |
she'll play 2016 French Open He won over the Wimbledon | :35:26. | :35:28. | |
crowd last year. The Briton didn't qualify | :35:29. | :35:39. | |
for the singles this time around but he is impressing | :35:40. | :35:42. | |
in the men's doubles. Along with fellow Brit Jay Clarke, | :35:43. | :35:45. | |
they produced the shock of the day knocking out | :35:46. | :35:47. | |
defending champions French pair Pierre-Hugues | :35:48. | :35:49. | |
Herbert and Nicolas Mahut Andy Murray plays tomorrow - | :35:50. | :35:51. | |
brother Jamie has teamed up with five-time Grand Slam champion | :35:52. | :36:01. | |
Martina Hingis in the mixed doubles this year and it looks | :36:02. | :36:06. | |
like a great pairing. secured them a place in the third | :36:07. | :36:08. | |
round when they beat Britain's Neal Skupski | :36:09. | :36:12. | |
and Anna Smith in less than an hour. The British and Irish Lions head | :36:13. | :36:17. | |
coach Warren Gatland says people will look back on the New Zealand | :36:18. | :36:20. | |
tour as a success. The Lions drew the final Test | :36:21. | :36:23. | |
match 15 points all, meaning the series against | :36:24. | :36:26. | |
the World Champions was shared. It was a thrilling finish | :36:27. | :36:28. | |
to the game in Auckland - Owen Farrell's late penalty kick | :36:29. | :36:31. | |
drew the Lions level in the game. A disputed offside decision denied | :36:32. | :36:35. | |
the All Blacks a further penalty And Gatland says he hasn't ruled out | :36:36. | :36:38. | |
taking charge of the Lions My focus now is back on Wales and | :36:39. | :37:00. | |
looking forward to 2019. I definitely finish there, unless they | :37:01. | :37:04. | |
get rid of me before then. And then I don't know. Maybe I come back home | :37:05. | :37:11. | |
or maybe something else. I might just go to the beach and put my feet | :37:12. | :37:15. | |
up for a while, I don't know. But, um, you never say never. | :37:16. | :37:18. | |
England's cricketers are in control of the First Test | :37:19. | :37:20. | |
against South Africa - they go into day four with a lead | :37:21. | :37:23. | |
They bowled the visitors out for 361 yesterday before finishing on 119 | :37:24. | :37:28. | |
for one with former captain Alastair Cook making a half century. | :37:29. | :37:35. | |
I think the morning session is key. If you get off to a good start and | :37:36. | :37:46. | |
get a decent partnership going then that sets us up for the rest of the | :37:47. | :37:51. | |
day and hopefully whether it is an hour before or after tea, | :37:52. | :37:52. | |
we have a chance to make a decision then. | :37:53. | :37:55. | |
Lewis Hamilton will have his work cut out if he's to finish | :37:56. | :37:58. | |
on the podium at today's Austrian Grand Prix. | :37:59. | :38:00. | |
He was third in qualifying, but a penalty means he'll start back | :38:01. | :38:03. | |
His team-mate Valtteri Bottas will be on pole, with World Championship | :38:04. | :38:08. | |
Striker Romelu Lukaku has been ordered to appear in court | :38:09. | :38:12. | |
in Los Angeles in October after police were called to reports | :38:13. | :38:15. | |
of excessive noise at a house in Beverley Hills. | :38:16. | :38:17. | |
Lukaku, who's been on holiday in the US, was arrested last Sunday | :38:18. | :38:20. | |
after being given verbal warnings by officers. | :38:21. | :38:24. | |
It comes as the Everton player is on the verge of a ?75 million | :38:25. | :38:28. | |
move to Manchester United, he's set to have a medical with United. | :38:29. | :38:33. | |
Lukaku's former club Chelsea had matched the fee wanted | :38:34. | :38:35. | |
The deal is believed to include another ?15 million in add-ons. | :38:36. | :38:43. | |
Meanwhile it's looking increasingly likely that Wayne Rooney will be | :38:44. | :38:46. | |
leaving Old Trafford and heading back to Everton. | :38:47. | :38:50. | |
He was seen yesterday at their training ground. | :38:51. | :38:52. | |
Manchester United and England's record goalscorer signed | :38:53. | :38:54. | |
Britain's Chris Froome will start a mountainous stage nine of the Tour | :38:55. | :39:07. | |
de France with a 12-second lead, ahead of team-mate Geraint Thomas. | :39:08. | :39:10. | |
The race has reached the Jura mountains near the Swiss border. | :39:11. | :39:13. | |
Froome had a minor scare yesterday when he and Thomas briefly went off | :39:14. | :39:17. | |
the road, but were quickly back in the action. | :39:18. | :39:19. | |
by the 24-year-old French rider Lilian Calmejane | :39:20. | :39:22. | |
Wigan Warriors have moved up to seventh place in Super League | :39:23. | :39:28. | |
after a 32-10 win at Catalan Dragons. | :39:29. | :39:31. | |
The scores were level on the hour mark, but Wigan dominated | :39:32. | :39:34. | |
Joe Burgess scored a hat trick of tries in the game | :39:35. | :39:42. | |
Wigan are now four points clear of Warrington in ninth spot with two | :39:43. | :39:47. | |
Interestingly, when you spoke their you were talking about the | :39:48. | :40:04. | |
unbelievable amounts of that soccer player. We spotted this earlier, | :40:05. | :40:13. | |
that Messi has netted a deal worth ?1 million a week. Annual ranges of | :40:14. | :40:21. | |
?50.8 million and a four-year contract. It will make him a | :40:22. | :40:28. | |
millionaire. But, you earn 1 million euros, what do you do with it? How | :40:29. | :40:32. | |
do you spend it? I would certainly try. Thank you very much indeed, | :40:33. | :40:36. | |
Jess. Mobile phone detectors, | :40:37. | :40:37. | |
sniffer dogs and drug testing - just some of the ways the government | :40:38. | :40:40. | |
is trying to combat criminal It says that the seizure of over 200 | :40:41. | :40:43. | |
kilograms of drugs and 13,000 phones from prisons in England | :40:44. | :40:50. | |
and Wales point to better detection rates, but acknowledges more | :40:51. | :40:52. | |
still needs to be done Peter Dawson is the Director of | :40:53. | :40:55. | |
the charity, The Prison Reform Trust Good morning to you. The government | :40:56. | :41:14. | |
says that this is unacceptable. Why is so much contraband getting into | :41:15. | :41:20. | |
prisons? They are I watering figures and the government is right to say | :41:21. | :41:23. | |
it is unacceptable but it is good news is that that trade is being | :41:24. | :41:28. | |
heard. It causes bullying and violence inside prison and extortion | :41:29. | :41:33. | |
of families outside prison. The trade built on a very, very strong | :41:34. | :41:38. | |
market and although this is good news and it is good that these | :41:39. | :41:42. | |
measures are being taken, the next step for the government is to ask | :41:43. | :41:47. | |
itself why there is such a high demand for drugs and phones in | :41:48. | :41:51. | |
prisons. In your view, why is that? I think there are two things that | :41:52. | :41:55. | |
contribute towards it. Life imprisonment for many people is | :41:56. | :42:00. | |
simply too idle. Enforced idleness, they are bored and have no hope. | :42:01. | :42:05. | |
Some people enter with a drug problem and some people begin to use | :42:06. | :42:09. | |
drugs in prison just to cope. That is the first thing. The second thing | :42:10. | :42:16. | |
is in relation to phones, using one legitimately is quite difficult. For | :42:17. | :42:20. | |
two reasons, the cost is high. A ten minute call home could cost one | :42:21. | :42:25. | |
quarter of your week 's wages. The second thing is that you are simply | :42:26. | :42:29. | |
not out of your cell enough to speak to your family. You are not out of | :42:30. | :42:34. | |
your cell at all in the evening when your family may be available to | :42:35. | :42:39. | |
speak. Some people may find it difficult to understand because | :42:40. | :42:44. | |
prison is a punishment. If you are suggesting that, perhaps, prisoners | :42:45. | :42:48. | |
should have more access to phones, perhaps they should be something | :42:49. | :42:52. | |
they are deprived of because it is a punishment and a deterrent. Both the | :42:53. | :42:57. | |
law and government policy are clear about whether prison is a | :42:58. | :43:01. | |
punishment. The punishment is the deprivation of liberty. Countless | :43:02. | :43:06. | |
government ministers for many years have said that. It is a very clear | :43:07. | :43:10. | |
statement of the law and policy. The point about phones in prison is that | :43:11. | :43:15. | |
they help people not only to cope with the experienced and also to | :43:16. | :43:18. | |
prepare for release after they finish their sentence. It is in all | :43:19. | :43:22. | |
our own interests that people retain family ties and the phone is an | :43:23. | :43:26. | |
obvious way of doing that. It should go much further. We all use | :43:27. | :43:30. | |
computers all the time in our life outside prison. Doing all sorts of | :43:31. | :43:35. | |
practical things. You need it for finding employment a place to live. | :43:36. | :43:39. | |
Most prisoners are denied that for most of the time and it hurts us for | :43:40. | :43:45. | |
if that is true.. There is some concern, however, that phones can be | :43:46. | :43:49. | |
used for criminal act to be inside prison. That is absolutely true. | :43:50. | :43:55. | |
Prisoners are targeted by organised crime occurs there is a huge amount | :43:56. | :43:59. | |
of money to be made from this. That is absolutely right. But part of the | :44:00. | :44:04. | |
answer is to give prisoners at legitimate access so that the people | :44:05. | :44:09. | |
who get mobiles in a rally the people who want to use them for | :44:10. | :44:12. | |
nefarious purposes, the people who want to use them for crime. A huge | :44:13. | :44:17. | |
number of prisoners will use their mobiles to call them on and it is | :44:18. | :44:21. | |
pointless to spend so much money tracking them down instead of | :44:22. | :44:24. | |
concentrating on the people who are making a profit from this business. | :44:25. | :44:28. | |
Thank you very much for joining us this morning. It is just approaching | :44:29. | :44:34. | |
quarter to seven. Let's have a look at the weather forecast. | :44:35. | :44:40. | |
I wanted to bring the changes to show you it is not all plain | :44:41. | :44:46. | |
sailing. This is the picture in Cornwall. More moisture and humidity | :44:47. | :44:50. | |
through the night has brought some fog to some of the coast and the | :44:51. | :44:54. | |
south-west and in fact across the south coast as well it is foggy in | :44:55. | :45:02. | |
Kent. We do have some sunshine. The northern Wales it will be a warmer | :45:03. | :45:06. | |
day than yesterday with some good spells of sunshine but for Scotland | :45:07. | :45:09. | |
and Northern Ireland it has changed through the night. This is a weather | :45:10. | :45:13. | |
front, the rain trundling its way slowly southwards and almost | :45:14. | :45:17. | |
grinding to a halt across southern and central Scotland in the north of | :45:18. | :45:20. | |
Northern Ireland. That means behind it will be a brighter day for the | :45:21. | :45:24. | |
North of Scotland, where we had the cloud, the wind in the rain | :45:25. | :45:27. | |
yesterday afternoon. A very different feeling day for northern | :45:28. | :45:38. | |
Scotland while for England and Wales we have the morning fog which will | :45:39. | :45:42. | |
clear away, and the only fly in the oink is if you don't like the heat | :45:43. | :45:46. | |
we could have a few isolated showers. The odd isolated shower for | :45:47. | :45:49. | |
Aultbea in the far north-west of Scotland, the rain tapping up a bit | :45:50. | :45:53. | |
and it is cool. Just 14 or 15 degrees. Not like a summer day at | :45:54. | :45:56. | |
all across Scotland and Northern Ireland. Down across Wales and the | :45:57. | :46:00. | |
south-west, that mist and low cloud lifting. Temperatures 27, a couple | :46:01. | :46:03. | |
of degrees up yesterday, so as high as 28 or 29 for the south-east of | :46:04. | :46:08. | |
England. If you are heading off to the anniversary games it is strong | :46:09. | :46:12. | |
sunshine and quite humid air. It will be a warm evening and warm well | :46:13. | :46:16. | |
into the night. There is just the possibility into the evening and | :46:17. | :46:19. | |
overnight that these thunderstorms across France will creep into the | :46:20. | :46:23. | |
south-east of England, and we may have our own home-grown | :46:24. | :46:26. | |
thunderstorms which will rumble away, and weather fronts pushing | :46:27. | :46:42. | |
southwards into northern England and Wales. That means a chilly night | :46:43. | :46:46. | |
into the North of Scotland but a warm night elsewhere and really | :46:47. | :46:48. | |
quite oppressive into the south-east. Especially with that | :46:49. | :46:50. | |
threat of thunderstorms around tomorrow morning. Tomorrow is a day | :46:51. | :46:54. | |
of change. It is that transition from the heat to the humidity to a | :46:55. | :46:57. | |
much more showery picture when we finally get rid of that humid air | :46:58. | :47:01. | |
and we allow the Atlantic weather fronts to come in from Tuesday on. | :47:02. | :47:05. | |
It is all change but another nice day for many, but not all today. | :47:06. | :47:08. | |
Noticing there that London is markedly hotter at times than other | :47:09. | :47:11. | |
parts. Is this my A-level geography letting me down? Is that in the | :47:12. | :47:14. | |
urban heat island? Absolutely, London at self will be a couple of | :47:15. | :47:18. | |
degrees perhaps on Reading, further west, but quite a big conurbation as | :47:19. | :47:22. | |
well. We have to remember the highest temperatures normally do not | :47:23. | :47:25. | |
get into more than the mid-teens at this time of year and five degrees | :47:26. | :47:28. | |
of latitude across the British Isles as well. We are more likely to be | :47:29. | :47:32. | |
having the influence of the continental air at this time of the | :47:33. | :47:36. | |
year across the southern half of the UK. The Atlantic influences never | :47:37. | :47:39. | |
too far away from the North of Scotland. It doesn't help when you | :47:40. | :47:42. | |
have a weather fronts at across us. With the sunshine in the Central | :47:43. | :47:45. | |
Lowlands, temperatures into the high teens and low 20s. It does even | :47:46. | :47:49. | |
itself out a little bit more if we get the worn out pushing northwards. | :47:50. | :47:53. | |
I asked you a question that you were not expecting, and we get so much | :47:54. | :47:58. | |
detail. That is why you are top of your game, Helen. Thank you very | :47:59. | :48:00. | |
much indeed. We will be back with | :48:01. | :48:03. | |
the headlines at 7:00am. Now on Breakfast, | :48:04. | :48:06. | |
it is time for Click. On July 12th, the internet, | :48:07. | :48:27. | |
as we know it, will change. Go to Amazon, Twitter, | :48:28. | :48:33. | |
Reddit or many other sites and you could be asked to wait | :48:34. | :48:36. | |
on a slower connection, or pay extra, or you may | :48:37. | :48:39. | |
be blocked altogether. Thankfully, these | :48:40. | :48:45. | |
warnings aren't real. They're part of an internet-wide | :48:46. | :48:47. | |
protest, with the aim Net neutrality is the basic | :48:48. | :48:49. | |
principle that protects our freedom It's the guiding rules that | :48:50. | :48:58. | |
have made the internet into what it is today, | :48:59. | :49:02. | |
and it prevents our internet service providers - so the cable | :49:03. | :49:05. | |
companies like Comcast, Horizon and AT - | :49:06. | :49:07. | |
from controlling what we can see Under the net neutrality principle, | :49:08. | :49:10. | |
all data should be treated That means they can't slow down | :49:11. | :49:19. | |
companies who refuse to pay to have their data prioritised, | :49:20. | :49:23. | |
and they can't charge customers But the US Federal Communications | :49:24. | :49:26. | |
Commission, the FCC, voted recently to overturn rules | :49:27. | :49:46. | |
from 2015 which enshrined these neutrality principles, | :49:47. | :49:48. | |
and which meant telecoms firms And that, says the organiser | :49:49. | :49:50. | |
of the July 12th protest, will play right into the big | :49:51. | :49:58. | |
cable companies' hands. If we lose net neutrality, | :49:59. | :50:04. | |
you're going to start to see the internet look | :50:05. | :50:07. | |
more like cable TV. You can imagine trying to go | :50:08. | :50:09. | |
to a social media site and getting a notification from your internet | :50:10. | :50:12. | |
service provider saying - oh, sorry, if you want to access | :50:13. | :50:15. | |
this site, you need to upgrade You need to upgrade to our | :50:16. | :50:18. | |
streaming video package. You need to pay us more, | :50:19. | :50:26. | |
in order to access the same sites that you've been using day | :50:27. | :50:30. | |
after day for years. They can also go to those sites | :50:31. | :50:32. | |
and charge them extra fees in order And, of course, those fees get | :50:33. | :50:36. | |
passed on to all of us. So it's really an issue that affects | :50:37. | :50:41. | |
every single person that uses the internet, regardless | :50:42. | :50:44. | |
of your political views. And this won't just | :50:45. | :50:46. | |
affect US internet users. If you use an American web service - | :50:47. | :50:51. | |
which, let's face it, is most of us - it may affect | :50:52. | :50:54. | |
the service that they provide to us. The FCC says that the 2015 rules | :50:55. | :50:58. | |
are unnecessary and may have stifled investment in | :50:59. | :51:02. | |
next-generation networks. Well, this fight could have been | :51:03. | :51:05. | |
resolved ten years ago if it were really just | :51:06. | :51:12. | |
about net neutrality. This has really primarily been | :51:13. | :51:15. | |
a fight about the FCC's power We had our first major update | :51:16. | :51:18. | |
to our communications law 20 years ago, and that law made it | :51:19. | :51:26. | |
unclear exactly how the FCC was going to regulate the internet, | :51:27. | :51:30. | |
and that ambiguity has left the agency to wrestle | :51:31. | :51:34. | |
with this issue for a decade. And in a nutshell, there | :51:35. | :51:42. | |
were simpler, better ways of dealing There were other agencies that | :51:43. | :51:45. | |
could have addressed net neutrality concerns when they arose, | :51:46. | :51:50. | |
starting back in 2008. And Congress has three | :51:51. | :51:56. | |
times tried to legislate, and both Republicans and Democrats, | :51:57. | :51:58. | |
I think, share the blame for missing the opportunity to craft a solution | :51:59. | :52:03. | |
that would resolve this issue. And that, unfortunately, | :52:04. | :52:08. | |
has led us to where we are today, which is a thorough rule-making | :52:09. | :52:14. | |
at the FCC to deal with this issue of legal authority, | :52:15. | :52:18. | |
when the rules themselves - the core of net neutrality - | :52:19. | :52:20. | |
have really never been Well, I wonder what the original | :52:21. | :52:23. | |
inventor of the concept of net neutrality would make | :52:24. | :52:27. | |
of these changes. You know, it's...very disappointing, | :52:28. | :52:29. | |
let's put it that way. So, you know, the Obama | :52:30. | :52:32. | |
administration had finally put net neutrality into law, | :52:33. | :52:35. | |
done a good job with it, everyone was happy, but out | :52:36. | :52:38. | |
of nowhere, the Trump And it's not been any public | :52:39. | :52:42. | |
movement against net neutrality, it's really the cable and phone | :52:43. | :52:46. | |
companies wanna make more money, And they have somehow, | :52:47. | :52:49. | |
kind of under the cover of Trump's madness, | :52:50. | :52:59. | |
managed to start the process The thing is making the government | :53:00. | :53:01. | |
realise that there are severe electoral consequences for messing | :53:02. | :53:05. | |
with net neutrality. It has to be understood as the third | :53:06. | :53:07. | |
rail, that you mess with this and you're going to get people very | :53:08. | :53:10. | |
angry and descending Well, whatever happens next week, | :53:11. | :53:13. | |
I have a feeling it won't be the last word we hear | :53:14. | :53:19. | |
on net neutrality. Volvo announced they'll only make | :53:20. | :53:23. | |
electric and hybrid cars from 2019. Formula One racing team Williams | :53:24. | :53:35. | |
unveiled a carbon-fibre baby carrier that can transport critically | :53:36. | :53:38. | |
ill newborn infants The Babypod protects | :53:39. | :53:40. | |
against vibrations and can be kept Dubai police are to introduce | :53:41. | :53:45. | |
a robot cop and autonomous patrol The vehicles will use 360-degree | :53:46. | :53:57. | |
surveillance technology to identify suspicious objects, | :53:58. | :54:01. | |
launch a mini drone, and they claim, even | :54:02. | :54:06. | |
give chase to suspects. Google is in the doghouse again - | :54:07. | :54:10. | |
this time, for a deal with a UK hospital that didn't respect | :54:11. | :54:14. | |
the privacy of patients. The UK's Information Commissioner | :54:15. | :54:17. | |
ruled that 1.6 million patient details were provided | :54:18. | :54:19. | |
to Google's DeepMind illegally, to help develop an app | :54:20. | :54:23. | |
to diagnose kidney failure. And could tickets be replaced | :54:24. | :54:26. | |
by inaudible sounds? TicketMaster has teamed up | :54:27. | :54:28. | |
with Listener, a company that uses ultrasonic sound technology | :54:29. | :54:32. | |
to transmit information Checking into a venue with an app | :54:33. | :54:34. | |
would give off the sound, and organisers could log | :54:35. | :54:41. | |
who was in and where they are - Whether you love or loathe | :54:42. | :54:45. | |
a trip to the shops, But there's more to | :54:46. | :55:05. | |
it than people just Can I just see what colours | :55:06. | :55:08. | |
there are downloaded? Here's an idea that takes shopping | :55:09. | :55:15. | |
online a step further. One company's software allows | :55:16. | :55:18. | |
you to go a shop's website and, from there, you can connect | :55:19. | :55:22. | |
to a shop assistant in store, who will be wearing | :55:23. | :55:26. | |
a pair of smart glasses. Yeah, what do we have | :55:27. | :55:29. | |
there on the right? Can you please take the cream bag | :55:30. | :55:31. | |
off the shelf, and can you open it The shop has actually found | :55:32. | :55:38. | |
that the same experience being streamed through a mobile has | :55:39. | :55:45. | |
actually proved more popular And although I found | :55:46. | :55:48. | |
the experience pretty good, it does of course have | :55:49. | :55:51. | |
some limitations. I wasn't expecting that, | :55:52. | :55:55. | |
I thought it was going If, when shopping online, you're | :55:56. | :56:02. | |
worried about getting your size right, then these smart | :56:03. | :56:07. | |
leggings could help. They aim to be able to measure | :56:08. | :56:09. | |
you and tell you the exact right size of jeans that | :56:10. | :56:13. | |
you should be buying. LikeAGlove hopes to measure women | :56:14. | :56:15. | |
for the right size and style The stretchy measuring leggings | :56:16. | :56:18. | |
connect via Bluetooth to a smartphone app, | :56:19. | :56:24. | |
where your stats will be stored, so you can keep track | :56:25. | :56:26. | |
of your body shape. Oh, my waist measurement here seems | :56:27. | :56:30. | |
to be about five inches larger than I thought it was, | :56:31. | :56:35. | |
and a fair bit bigger than the jeans size | :56:36. | :56:39. | |
I normally wear. When I clicked through to | :56:40. | :56:40. | |
the suggestions, my size The company say these measurements | :56:41. | :56:43. | |
represent where the jeans would sit, rather than actual | :56:44. | :56:46. | |
measurements you would expect. Might upset a few people | :56:47. | :56:48. | |
along the way, though! But another trend emerging | :56:49. | :56:52. | |
is that we head back to the high street, but shop | :56:53. | :57:00. | |
assistants as we know them don't. Wheelies unmanned stores | :57:01. | :57:08. | |
are open 24 hours a day, with only a series | :57:09. | :57:10. | |
of cameras and microphones You gain access through your | :57:11. | :57:13. | |
smartphone, use it to scan your purchases | :57:14. | :57:18. | |
and pay, then head off. Their first branch opened | :57:19. | :57:20. | |
in Sweden last year, followed by another | :57:21. | :57:22. | |
in Shanghai recently. The launch of Amazon Go's first | :57:23. | :57:23. | |
store in Seattle appears to have been delayed, but aims to replace | :57:24. | :57:27. | |
queues and checkouts by using computer vision, deep | :57:28. | :57:34. | |
learning, and data from sensors. It will see what you've | :57:35. | :57:37. | |
picked up in store and, But one US company has another | :57:38. | :57:39. | |
idea about self-service. Well, on first view, | :57:40. | :57:43. | |
this does just look like an ordinary vending machine, that happens | :57:44. | :57:50. | |
to have a TV screen on it. But a machine like this | :57:51. | :57:53. | |
could soon be selling alcohol, The device uses biometric sensors | :57:54. | :57:55. | |
to identify users by the veins in their fingers, meaning you can | :57:56. | :58:06. | |
turn a standard machine into an apparently secure one, | :58:07. | :58:10. | |
only dispensing goods to the person And yes, in the US, that | :58:11. | :58:13. | |
item could be a gun. The company claims the machinery | :58:14. | :58:22. | |
uses the same level of security employed by US military and large | :58:23. | :58:27. | |
corporations to access facilities, If it's connected to the internet, | :58:28. | :58:30. | |
they say 'Where there's Where there's internet connectivity, | :58:31. | :58:38. | |
somebody can make their way We've jumped through every | :58:39. | :58:41. | |
possible hoop we can do, to make sure that | :58:42. | :58:46. | |
only the person standing in front of it is able to get | :58:47. | :58:49. | |
the product that they want, Right, and there are guns | :58:50. | :58:52. | |
and alcohol available too. So some fellas are going out hunting | :58:53. | :58:59. | |
and they leave late from work, and they rush out there to catch | :59:00. | :59:04. | |
up with their friends. Usually, you're far outside the city | :59:05. | :59:09. | |
limits, you've made a whole plan, you've made your trip, | :59:10. | :59:12. | |
you get out and you say, In this situation, a secure machine | :59:13. | :59:15. | |
would allow you to pick up some ammo, or even a replacement gun, | :59:16. | :59:20. | |
if you're in the system. Maybe get their whiskey off the one | :59:21. | :59:23. | |
side, get their ammo off the other, and head on into the camp | :59:24. | :59:27. | |
and have a fine week of hunting. OK, maybe this isn't solving | :59:28. | :59:31. | |
a problem that many people have. And suddenly, the idea of shops | :59:32. | :59:33. | |
without assistants doesn't And that's it for the short | :59:34. | :59:36. | |
version of Click from the Royal Society's Summer | :59:37. | :59:43. | |
Science Exhibition. More from us in the full-length | :59:44. | :59:44. | |
version, which is on iPlayer, and you can find us | :59:45. | :59:47. | |
on Twitter as well. Thanks for watching | :59:48. | :59:50. | |
and see you soon. Hello, this is Breakfast, | :59:51. | :00:18. | |
with Roger Johnson and Sian Lloyd. More than 13,000 mobile phones | :00:19. | :00:20. | |
and 200 kilograms of drugs were seized in prisons in England | :00:21. | :00:23. | |
and Wales last year. Ministers say the situation | :00:24. | :00:26. | |
is "unacceptable" - and they're recruiting more officers | :00:27. | :00:28. | |
to crack down on illegal Good morning, it's Sunday | :00:29. | :00:30. | |
the ninth of July. The parents of baby Charlie Gard | :00:31. | :00:51. | |
will help deliver a petition to Great Ormond Street later, | :00:52. | :00:56. | |
calling on doctors to let him travel Iraqi government forces say they're | :00:57. | :00:59. | |
"within hours" of declaring victory over Islamic State | :01:00. | :01:05. | |
militants in Mosul. It's famous for its | :01:06. | :01:11. | |
meres and mountains - but could the Lake District | :01:12. | :01:13. | |
make history and achieve In sport, Roger Federer and Novak | :01:14. | :01:30. | |
Djokovic are in impressive form as they reach the final 16. | :01:31. | :01:31. | |
Four-time Olympic champion Sir Mo Farah is the latest athlete | :01:32. | :01:36. | |
to take on our Breakfast mug challenge. | :01:37. | :01:42. | |
Good morning. It looks like any other mostly fine and warm day for | :01:43. | :01:55. | |
England and Wales but for Scotland and Northern Ireland there are | :01:56. | :01:59. | |
changes. I will fill you in on in about 15 minutes. | :02:00. | :02:01. | |
The number of mobile phones and drugs smuggled into prisons | :02:02. | :02:05. | |
is "unacceptable" according to the government. | :02:06. | :02:07. | |
More than 20,000 phones and SIM cards and over 200 kilograms | :02:08. | :02:11. | |
of narcotics were found in jails in England and Wales last year. | :02:12. | :02:20. | |
The seizures follow a ?2 million pound investment in technology | :02:21. | :02:22. | |
to detect contraband, as James Waterhouse reports. | :02:23. | :02:28. | |
Many will say this continuing trend of contraband being smuggled into | :02:29. | :02:34. | |
jail through whatever means possible, | :02:35. | :02:35. | |
only highlights the scale of the challenge facing prison | :02:36. | :02:37. | |
officers who have had to deal with staff cuts and growing | :02:38. | :02:40. | |
violence over recent years. In April, a European watchdog warned | :02:41. | :02:43. | |
that incidents in UK jails were spiralling out | :02:44. | :02:46. | |
of control, making The latest Ministry of Justice | :02:47. | :02:47. | |
figures say there are 86,000 inmates 7000 SIM cards were | :02:48. | :02:52. | |
found along with 13,000 They are a valuable resource | :02:53. | :02:55. | |
behind bars, sometimes Along with the seizure | :02:56. | :03:01. | |
of 200 kilograms of illegal drugs, it is the scale | :03:02. | :03:05. | |
of the problems that forces it is good that these measures are | :03:06. | :03:25. | |
being taken, the next of for the government is to ask why there is | :03:26. | :03:30. | |
such a demand for drugs and phones in prisons. 300 dogs have also been | :03:31. | :03:42. | |
trained to find drugs and these will have helped with this recovery. | :03:43. | :03:45. | |
Ministers acknowledge that can not stop there, however. | :03:46. | :03:48. | |
The government has recently had a recruitment drive, | :03:49. | :03:50. | |
saying it is on track to bring in two and a half | :03:51. | :03:53. | |
Justice Secretary David Lidington will be on the Andrew Marr programme | :03:54. | :03:57. | |
He will be talking about that subject and others here on BBC One | :03:58. | :04:07. | |
this morning at nine o'clock. The parents of Charlie Gard | :04:08. | :04:08. | |
are expected to help deliver a petition to Great Ormond | :04:09. | :04:11. | |
Street Hospital later - calling on doctors to allow | :04:12. | :04:13. | |
their terminally ill baby to travel A new hearing about the case is due | :04:14. | :04:16. | |
in the High Court tomorrow. John McManus is outside | :04:17. | :04:21. | |
Great Ormond Street Hospital Is this petition likely | :04:22. | :04:23. | |
to make any difference? Many people have signed the | :04:24. | :04:38. | |
petition. Well, yes. Over 350,000 people have signed this petition | :04:39. | :04:42. | |
which will be delivered here at around two o'clock this afternoon by | :04:43. | :04:48. | |
supporters of Charlie's parent. They are sending this petition into | :04:49. | :04:51. | |
doctors because they want them to change their mind about allowing | :04:52. | :04:55. | |
them to take 11 -month-old Charlie out of the hospital behind me and | :04:56. | :04:58. | |
take him abroad for experimental treatment to tackle the genetic | :04:59. | :05:03. | |
condition that has left him unable to breathe without a respirator, | :05:04. | :05:06. | |
unable to move and unable to cry, according to some reports. In April, | :05:07. | :05:11. | |
doctors went to the High Court and received permission to turn off the | :05:12. | :05:14. | |
life support machine that keeps Charlie alive. His parents have | :05:15. | :05:19. | |
fought that all the way, all the way to the Supreme Court but | :05:20. | :05:23. | |
unsuccessfully so far. The hospital itself is going to the High Court | :05:24. | :05:27. | |
tomorrow. They say they want to see judges there because they have been | :05:28. | :05:30. | |
given new evidence about this potentially new treatment that may | :05:31. | :05:33. | |
help Charlie, which has come from two hospitals based abroad. It could | :05:34. | :05:37. | |
help Charlie and his parents would like the hospital to consider | :05:38. | :05:41. | |
letting them take him out of hospital. The hospital said it is up | :05:42. | :05:46. | |
to the High Court to make the decision. | :05:47. | :05:47. | |
Iraqi state television is reporting that government forces | :05:48. | :05:49. | |
are on the verge of retaking the city of Mosul. | :05:50. | :05:52. | |
It was seized by so-called Islamic State more than | :05:53. | :05:54. | |
But after nine months of intense fighting, | :05:55. | :05:57. | |
Iraqi soldiers have been celebrating on the streets - | :05:58. | :06:00. | |
despite no official word of a victory. | :06:01. | :06:02. | |
Our defence correspondent, Jonathan Beale, has more. | :06:03. | :06:09. | |
It has been the fight of their lives. | :06:10. | :06:11. | |
Their battle to retake Mosul from the group calling itself | :06:12. | :06:14. | |
Islamic State started in October last year. | :06:15. | :06:18. | |
They have lost many comrades along the way. | :06:19. | :06:21. | |
But today the Iraqi security forces were firing their | :06:22. | :06:23. | |
weapons in celebration, claiming victory over their enemy. | :06:24. | :06:28. | |
TRANSLATION: This joy has been achieved by the sacrifices | :06:29. | :06:30. | |
of our martyrs and the blood of our wounded heroes. | :06:31. | :06:33. | |
God willing, may happiness prevail in Iraq. | :06:34. | :06:41. | |
After nearly nine months of brutal street to street fighting | :06:42. | :06:44. | |
the security forces now believe they have defeated IS in a city | :06:45. | :06:47. | |
But there are still pockets of resistance and the occasional | :06:48. | :06:51. | |
But take a look everywhere around you and you | :06:52. | :06:57. | |
will see that pretty much every building has been | :06:58. | :07:00. | |
If this is victory, it has come at a cost. | :07:01. | :07:06. | |
No-one yet knows how many civilians have lost their lives in the city. | :07:07. | :07:09. | |
TRANSLATION: Hunger, thirst, fear and aerial | :07:10. | :07:15. | |
The extremist's reign of terror may be coming to an end. | :07:16. | :07:26. | |
But they are by no means finished in Iraq. | :07:27. | :07:34. | |
Anti-capitalist protesters clashed with German police in Hamburg | :07:35. | :07:37. | |
The continuing unrest marked the end of the G20 summit | :07:38. | :07:43. | |
where During the summit, world leaders declared | :07:44. | :07:45. | |
the Paris Climate Agreement "irreversible", despite | :07:46. | :07:47. | |
Jonathan Blake our political correspondent and joins | :07:48. | :07:54. | |
Donald Trump and Theresa May were keen to put a positive spin on the | :07:55. | :08:07. | |
talks? That is unsurprising. The summit began with violence on the | :08:08. | :08:11. | |
streets and disagreement among world leaders and, as you said, it ended | :08:12. | :08:16. | |
with violence on the street and more disagreement. And Teller Merkel | :08:17. | :08:21. | |
called for countries to come together and compromise to find | :08:22. | :08:29. | |
solutions -- Angela Merkel. From his point of view, Donald Trump as US | :08:30. | :08:33. | |
President was not budging on his decision to withdraw from the Paris | :08:34. | :08:37. | |
agreement on climate change and in fact won a concession on this | :08:38. | :08:41. | |
statement around trade which all world leaders signed, saying the | :08:42. | :08:44. | |
country should be allowed to find ways to protect their own markets. | :08:45. | :08:48. | |
We have outlined from him as well saying he would look to do a trade | :08:49. | :08:52. | |
deal with the UK after Brexit quite quickly but, really, that is a | :08:53. | :08:57. | |
statement of intent at this stage. Negotiations cannot start until | :08:58. | :09:02. | |
Brexit is done. The Vladimir between him and Vladimir Putin was the most | :09:03. | :09:05. | |
significant moment of this summer altogether. The relationship will be | :09:06. | :09:10. | |
key, particularly in looking to solve the crisis in Syria. Donald | :09:11. | :09:14. | |
Trump can return to the US saying, look, I put America first and I did | :09:15. | :09:19. | |
not let anyone push me around. As many people are saying this morning, | :09:20. | :09:26. | |
it was not so much a G20 as it was a G 19 plus one. | :09:27. | :09:27. | |
A wealthy businessman has submitted alternative plans for a third runway | :09:28. | :09:30. | |
at Heathrow, which he says would save more than five-billion pounds. | :09:31. | :09:33. | |
The hotel tycoon, Surinder Arora, suggests changing the design | :09:34. | :09:35. | |
of terminal buildings and reducing the amount of land built on. | :09:36. | :09:38. | |
A spokesperson for the airport said they would "welcome views" | :09:39. | :09:41. | |
on the plans during a public consultation later this year. | :09:42. | :09:49. | |
Tens of thousands of people are expected to attend a rally | :09:50. | :09:52. | |
in the Turkish city of Istanbul to protest against the government | :09:53. | :09:55. | |
The event is being held to mark the end of a 280-mile | :09:56. | :10:01. | |
It was organised by the opposition to highlight the mass arrests | :10:02. | :10:06. | |
and sackings since last year's failed coup. | :10:07. | :10:12. | |
A state of emergency has been declared in the Canadian Province | :10:13. | :10:15. | |
of British Columbia, where the authorities are trying | :10:16. | :10:17. | |
Thousands of homes have been evacuated - | :10:18. | :10:21. | |
Most of the blazes started after lightning strikes | :10:22. | :10:26. | |
The Church of England will vote today on whether to allow special | :10:27. | :10:31. | |
The Lake District will find out today whether it will be given | :10:32. | :10:35. | |
If successful, it would become the UK's 31st such site, | :10:36. | :10:38. | |
From the Great Barrier Reef to the Taj Mahal and the Grand Canyon, | :10:39. | :10:47. | |
they are some of the most recognisable | :10:48. | :10:49. | |
Soon the Lake District could be a member of the club. | :10:50. | :10:53. | |
Later today, delegates from UNESCO will announce whether they deemed | :10:54. | :10:57. | |
enough and irreplaceable enough to be protected under World Heritage | :10:58. | :11:01. | |
I have been coming here for over 40 years. | :11:02. | :11:10. | |
It is popular but there are so many beautiful things | :11:11. | :11:15. | |
here that need to be recognised and protected. | :11:16. | :11:17. | |
With its towering peaks and glistening waters, | :11:18. | :11:20. | |
the National Park currently attracts around 80 | :11:21. | :11:22. | |
They contribute over ?1 billion to the | :11:23. | :11:29. | |
But critics are worried that attaining World Heritage status | :11:30. | :11:33. | |
could see even more visitors descend on the region, | :11:34. | :11:36. | |
putting extra pressure on the landscape. | :11:37. | :11:37. | |
Others argue it would mean greater funding | :11:38. | :11:39. | |
A World Heritage site, it would demonstrate the changing | :11:40. | :11:42. | |
That is shaped by people with their farming practices, | :11:43. | :11:47. | |
they have spoken about this landscape and people come to see it. | :11:48. | :11:52. | |
It will draw new customers and new visitors | :11:53. | :11:54. | |
It is a tick of the box to visit a World Heritage site. | :11:55. | :11:59. | |
Poet William Wordsworth once described as the | :12:00. | :12:01. | |
If successful, it will be the 31st World Heritage site in the UK | :12:02. | :12:11. | |
joining places like the Houses of Parliament, | :12:12. | :12:12. | |
12 minutes past seven and you are up-to-date with the main stories. | :12:13. | :12:29. | |
The Church of England's National Assembly - | :12:30. | :12:31. | |
the General Synod - will vote today on whether services | :12:32. | :12:34. | |
should be held for transgender people to mark their transition. | :12:35. | :12:36. | |
As part of its annual meeting, the Synod has also been addressing | :12:37. | :12:40. | |
criticism that the church's approach to sexuality is outdated. | :12:41. | :12:42. | |
Reverend Chris Newlands is a prominent campaigner | :12:43. | :12:44. | |
for the rights of LGBTI people within the Church, | :12:45. | :12:46. | |
Good morning and thank you for your time this morning. Given what we | :12:47. | :13:03. | |
have just said about outdated attitudes towards sexuality, isn't | :13:04. | :13:08. | |
this a bit of a big leap? It is a huge leap and yesterday said that | :13:09. | :13:15. | |
took a leap which no-one was expecting in a motion which was a | :13:16. | :13:19. | |
private members motion to ban conversion therapy for Lesbian and | :13:20. | :13:22. | |
gay people. That was a tremendous boost to those campaigning for | :13:23. | :13:26. | |
equality for LGBTI people. That has given me hope that this afternoon | :13:27. | :13:30. | |
when we discuss trans people we will be met with a warm welcome. How | :13:31. | :13:35. | |
surprised are you, as the man who has been in the church for a while, | :13:36. | :13:39. | |
how surprised are you at the pace of change which you have intimated | :13:40. | :13:44. | |
seems to be occurring? It has been a slow process of acceptance until | :13:45. | :13:48. | |
now. There is still a lot of discrimination in the church and | :13:49. | :13:52. | |
people speak of the institutional homophobia which exists that so many | :13:53. | :13:56. | |
levels. But what we saw yesterday was a remarkable change with people | :13:57. | :14:00. | |
asserting from the floor that people are not better nor worse for being | :14:01. | :14:06. | |
gay or straight. They are all equal in the sight of God and even the | :14:07. | :14:10. | |
Archbishop of York made a significant intervention saying that | :14:11. | :14:13. | |
we need to really a firm and welcome our LGBTI members. That was | :14:14. | :14:19. | |
significant and it made a huge difference to the debate. You | :14:20. | :14:25. | |
touched on this a little bit there but to those people who are very... | :14:26. | :14:28. | |
Have a traditional view of the church and its teachings and the way | :14:29. | :14:32. | |
they believe it should go, what you say to to reassure them? What we are | :14:33. | :14:39. | |
proposing is inviting people to welcome people most warmly. | :14:40. | :14:45. | |
Especially at this very small but very vulnerable community and no | :14:46. | :14:48. | |
clergy person is being required to do anything that goes against their | :14:49. | :14:52. | |
conscience. We are merely giving advice to clergy about how | :14:53. | :14:56. | |
appropriate it is to welcome trans- members of the congregation, their | :14:57. | :15:00. | |
parishes, and the number of trans people will increase. The numbers of | :15:01. | :15:05. | |
referrals to gender identity clinics are soaring. And so we must be | :15:06. | :15:10. | |
prepared to accept people coming to our churches and saying I am trans, | :15:11. | :15:18. | |
what can you to help me, to support me? We are trying to create | :15:19. | :15:22. | |
resources for the church so that any vicar who was asked that question by | :15:23. | :15:26. | |
a trans person can say that the church has discussed this and we | :15:27. | :15:29. | |
have some present resources to provide you with a warm welcome on | :15:30. | :15:34. | |
the two affirm you in your identity as a trans person and we welcome you | :15:35. | :15:38. | |
most warmly. That is what Jesus would do, we believe, and that is | :15:39. | :15:42. | |
what we asked the church to do today. When the numbers are soaring, | :15:43. | :15:48. | |
do you believe that is because society in general... Those people | :15:49. | :15:52. | |
have always been there but society is more accepting? There has been | :15:53. | :15:57. | |
much publicity from high profile people, from cyclists to Olympic | :15:58. | :16:03. | |
athlete, Caitlin Jennett being the most famous. Others on soaps and in | :16:04. | :16:07. | |
media. People are aware now and they know it is something that they can | :16:08. | :16:11. | |
accept in themselves and except in others. There is much more ability | :16:12. | :16:17. | |
to share what may have been held before is a closely guarded secret | :16:18. | :16:22. | |
but now it is much more open. We are seeing pictures of the Pride | :16:23. | :16:25. | |
celebrations in London yesterday to is one of the most high-profile | :16:26. | :16:32. | |
celebrations of people's sexuality. You are in a same-sex partnership in | :16:33. | :16:37. | |
the legal guardian of a child. Can you give us an indication of some of | :16:38. | :16:41. | |
the resistance that you have received in the past to the views | :16:42. | :16:47. | |
you are espousing? When you are putting your head above the parapet | :16:48. | :16:51. | |
then things will be thrown at it. We have received some appalling | :16:52. | :16:55. | |
homophobic letters, extreme violence being threatened to us because we | :16:56. | :16:59. | |
are fairly public about the fact that we are in a civil partnership | :17:00. | :17:06. | |
and we have a foster son that is part of our family. He is now nearly | :17:07. | :17:11. | |
20 years old, not really a child. We have received terrible abuse because | :17:12. | :17:17. | |
of that and untrue allegations which are just vile and we reported them | :17:18. | :17:21. | |
to the police as hate crimes but that sort of thing does happen. If | :17:22. | :17:25. | |
the church can take the lead in speaking out in favour of acceptance | :17:26. | :17:29. | |
and support, that is what this country needs to know that if the | :17:30. | :17:33. | |
church supports it then it is a good thing. | :17:34. | :17:38. | |
We are almost out of time, but do you think ultimately the church is | :17:39. | :17:45. | |
almost on a path where we will one day see same-sex marriages in | :17:46. | :17:49. | |
church? I hope that is the case, and I believe we are on the right path | :17:50. | :17:54. | |
and on the right direction. Thank you very much, and you did it quite | :17:55. | :17:58. | |
so simply as well. Thank you very much for your time this morning. | :17:59. | :17:59. | |
Here is Helen with a look at this morning's weather. | :18:00. | :18:03. | |
If you are waking up in Suffolk, a bit of cloud in the skies. Further | :18:04. | :18:11. | |
west, in Cornwall we have some fog around. There is some fog in the | :18:12. | :18:16. | |
south, and even along the Kent coast. This is the first snapshot, | :18:17. | :18:21. | |
satellite pictures showing us the cloud. This band of rain is | :18:22. | :18:24. | |
distinctive across Scotland and Northern Ireland, it is the biggest | :18:25. | :18:27. | |
change in the weather today. We had lovely sunshine here yesterday and | :18:28. | :18:32. | |
it is all change today. The sunshine returns to the north of Scotland, | :18:33. | :18:36. | |
the odd passing shower here, and we will see the fog lifting around the | :18:37. | :18:40. | |
coast of England and Wales to allow plenty of sunshine to come through. | :18:41. | :18:44. | |
In fact, it will be warmer today across the North of Scotland than it | :18:45. | :18:48. | |
was yesterday. We have more sunshine. 17 or 18 around the Murray | :18:49. | :18:52. | |
Firth, but it will be distinctly chilly for the time of year | :18:53. | :18:57. | |
underneath this rain band. Much of Northern Ireland not quite so wet, | :18:58. | :19:05. | |
potentially, in Antrim. 17 or 18 around the coast but it will be | :19:06. | :19:09. | |
hotter inland. We could have 28 or 29 in a few localities, so picking | :19:10. | :19:15. | |
up a bit more humidity again. So if you are heading off the Lords, 28, | :19:16. | :19:20. | |
even 18 on the coast. The sun is still as strong. As we go through | :19:21. | :19:25. | |
the evening and overnight that could be a few showers sparked across East | :19:26. | :19:29. | |
Anglia and the south-east, perhaps East Wales. We could pick up | :19:30. | :19:32. | |
thunderstorms crossing from France and we also have this weather front | :19:33. | :19:36. | |
advancing in the north England and the west side of Wales. Behind it we | :19:37. | :19:41. | |
have this cooler, fresh Atlantic F. Ahead of it some milder McGuinness, | :19:42. | :19:46. | |
especially eastern areas, but eventually that will clear out that | :19:47. | :19:53. | |
humidity -- mugginess. We won't see the same contrast as we move in from | :19:54. | :19:58. | |
Monday and Tuesday, but not too far from average. A bit above in | :19:59. | :20:02. | |
southern areas but it is looking at much more unsettled and fresher next | :20:03. | :20:05. | |
week, especially by night, which is what most people were finding | :20:06. | :20:10. | |
uncomfortable. That change for central and southern Scotland and | :20:11. | :20:14. | |
Northern Ireland. We will make the most of it, thank you, Helen. | :20:15. | :20:16. | |
It was one of the worst naval tragedies of the First World War, | :20:17. | :20:20. | |
and today a ceremony will be held to remember the 843 men | :20:21. | :20:23. | |
who lost their lives when HMS Vanguard sank off Orkney | :20:24. | :20:26. | |
To mark the centenary of the disaster, a team of divers | :20:27. | :20:29. | |
has been given special permission to document the wreck. | :20:30. | :20:32. | |
Our Scotland correspondent Lorna Gordon has more. | :20:33. | :20:42. | |
In the cold northern waters, the final resting place of HMS | :20:43. | :20:49. | |
Vanguard, a dreadnought battleship from World War I. | :20:50. | :20:51. | |
The bow and stern almost entirely intact after 100 years underwater. | :20:52. | :21:03. | |
This the first group of civilian divers to be given permission | :21:04. | :21:06. | |
to document the wreck since it was designated a war grave. | :21:07. | :21:14. | |
I think the loss of life was never far away from my mind, | :21:15. | :21:17. | |
That said, we had a job to do, and an obligation to do that job | :21:18. | :21:23. | |
So you got on with the work but, yes, parts of the wreck | :21:24. | :21:28. | |
are very emotional - very emotional indeed. | :21:29. | :21:30. | |
Along with many other ships, Vanguard would be anchored | :21:31. | :21:34. | |
She had seen action at the Battle of Jutland, but on a summer evening | :21:35. | :21:39. | |
in July 1917, the entire ship was destroyed after a magazine exploded. | :21:40. | :21:43. | |
She sank almost instantly, with the loss of almost | :21:44. | :21:45. | |
Only two of those on board at the time survived. | :21:46. | :22:00. | |
The team of volunteer divers spent hundreds of hours surveying | :22:01. | :22:03. | |
the wreck, piecing together its story. | :22:04. | :22:12. | |
Lying at a death of 100 feet, and among the artefacts | :22:13. | :22:21. | |
discovered - the telegraph, cutlery, an anchor. | :22:22. | :22:23. | |
As part of the commemorations, the sign was recently | :22:24. | :22:25. | |
A century on, honouring the many lives lost | :22:26. | :22:30. | |
in what was a catastrophic accident. | :22:31. | :22:32. | |
You are watching Breakfast from BBC News. | :22:33. | :22:35. | |
Now let's take a look at the newspapers. | :22:36. | :22:41. | |
The writer and broadcaster Robert Meakin is here to tell us | :22:42. | :22:44. | |
The suggestion is some moderate Labour MPs could jump before they | :22:45. | :23:13. | |
are pushed. If we go back a few weeks the consensus was that Jeremy | :23:14. | :23:17. | |
Corbyn would have this terrible general election and the moderate | :23:18. | :23:21. | |
wing could say your left-wing experiment has failed and let's get | :23:22. | :23:26. | |
back to mainstream politics. It didn't happen and it is an awkward | :23:27. | :23:30. | |
situation for a lot of Labour MPs who are still there sitting behind | :23:31. | :23:34. | |
him. And now Jeremy Corbyn's side can say toe the line or we can do | :23:35. | :23:39. | |
without you. It is a great personal victory for him, he might privately | :23:40. | :23:44. | |
think. I think so, the amount of flak he got for him from all | :23:45. | :23:49. | |
quarters, that alone his own party. He faced a leadership election the | :23:50. | :23:53. | |
previous year and won by a landslide in 2015. They tried to get rid of | :23:54. | :23:57. | |
him the following year, the one big a second time, and then Efron said | :23:58. | :24:02. | |
all right, the reality will come in. He won't be able to survive a | :24:03. | :24:06. | |
general election. He has defied the odds again and is in a strong | :24:07. | :24:10. | |
position at the moment. You have picked out another story regarding | :24:11. | :24:15. | |
MPs in the Times, MPs going on austerity holidays, all having | :24:16. | :24:25. | |
staycations, who are in Sardinia. I think it is representative of the | :24:26. | :24:28. | |
political climate at the moment. It is rather volatile, and I am not | :24:29. | :24:33. | |
sure many MPs will want to go too far away. You never know when there | :24:34. | :24:37. | |
will be another general election. The suggestion is that most of them | :24:38. | :24:42. | |
are referring to stay in Britain this time around. Cornwall is a | :24:43. | :24:46. | |
preferred destination, I am not sure it is great for Cornwall to be full | :24:47. | :24:51. | |
of holidaying MPs! And 84% of Scottish MPs are not even leaving | :24:52. | :24:56. | |
Scotland. It is a great place to go for a holiday. It certainly is! And | :24:57. | :25:02. | |
for the Prime Minister, may be a walking holiday. I think another | :25:03. | :25:06. | |
walking holiday. I wonder if she will go back to Snowdonia. And in | :25:07. | :25:12. | |
the Express, this is about a documentary which is going to be | :25:13. | :25:16. | |
aired, and Prince William and Prince Harry have been talking about Diana | :25:17. | :25:20. | |
as the greatest mother in the world, as we see they are on the title, and | :25:21. | :25:24. | |
also they have been looking back at some of the photographs, haven't | :25:25. | :25:28. | |
they? They have been doing a couple of big TV events, and the | :25:29. | :25:32. | |
anniversary I know is in the next couple of months, the 20th | :25:33. | :25:35. | |
anniversary of her death. It looks like it will be a very nostalgic, | :25:36. | :25:39. | |
rather informal, as informal as any of these things can be, of William | :25:40. | :25:43. | |
and Harry reminiscing about their time with their mother, going | :25:44. | :25:47. | |
through old family pictures. When you go back 20 years ago and what | :25:48. | :25:51. | |
the climate was like them, and how the feeling against the Royal Family | :25:52. | :25:56. | |
when she died, the journey it has been on, you have to say that | :25:57. | :25:59. | |
William and Harry have been a big part of transforming the image of | :26:00. | :26:03. | |
the royals, and then opening up like this really helps the perception of | :26:04. | :26:06. | |
the modern royal family. I think Harry in particular I think has been | :26:07. | :26:10. | |
really impressive in the media in opening up about his feelings in | :26:11. | :26:14. | |
recent times. It has just been very recently that that has happened. I | :26:15. | :26:19. | |
say Harry has been more impressive, only because William is going to be | :26:20. | :26:24. | |
king. It is far more difficult. I think Harry is able as the younger | :26:25. | :26:28. | |
brother to be more open about his feelings and what he has been recent | :26:29. | :26:33. | |
times. William gets so much more scrutiny. For those of the | :26:34. | :26:37. | |
generation, people remember where they were when JFK died, the twin | :26:38. | :26:42. | |
towers more recently, and in 1997 many people will remember where they | :26:43. | :26:46. | |
were when they heard about Diana. The atmosphere in London, people say | :26:47. | :26:51. | |
that day, it felt like other royal family going to survive this? It is | :26:52. | :26:56. | |
very difficult to imagine now, but it was a very different world. Just | :26:57. | :27:00. | |
a final one inside the Daily Mail, the shop scanner which shows you how | :27:01. | :27:06. | |
healthy your shopping basket is. It is some sort of traffic light system | :27:07. | :27:10. | |
they are threatening, so you will have read, amber and green. The | :27:11. | :27:14. | |
receipt will come out and it will say how calorie friendly your shop | :27:15. | :27:19. | |
is -- red. On Friday night my shop would not hold up to scrutiny. It is | :27:20. | :27:24. | |
a worrying development, potentially. Pizzas, wine and beer? Something | :27:25. | :27:31. | |
close to that, yes. I have become a convert to shop and scan, I get a | :27:32. | :27:36. | |
childish pleasure out of zapping my own shop as I put it in. | :27:37. | :27:40. | |
The Andrew Marr Programme is on BBC One this morning at 9am. | :27:41. | :27:43. | |
Lots of intrigues and plots all over the Sunday papers when it comes to | :27:44. | :27:50. | |
politics. I am joined by Theresa May's key ally the Justice Secretary | :27:51. | :27:55. | |
David Livingstone to talk about spending, Grenfell Tower and much | :27:56. | :28:02. | |
else. I have the new education spokesman and the man who appears to | :28:03. | :28:06. | |
be on the verge of being crowned as the new leader of the Lib Dems, | :28:07. | :28:11. | |
Vince Cable. Some great music and some great actors as well. | :28:12. | :28:13. | |
Coming up in the next half-hour: The Travel Show heads to Chile, | :28:14. | :28:16. | |
in South America, to meet a surfing community trying to hold back | :28:17. | :28:20. | |
Hello, this is Breakfast with Roger Johnson and Sian Lloyd. | :28:21. | :29:31. | |
Coming up before eight, Helen will have the weather. | :29:32. | :29:33. | |
But first, a summary of this morning's main news. | :29:34. | :29:42. | |
13,000 mobile phones and more than 200 kilograms of drugs | :29:43. | :29:45. | |
were found in prisons in England and Wales last year. | :29:46. | :29:51. | |
The haul comes after a ?2 million investment in technology | :29:52. | :29:54. | |
to aid detection, as well as 300 specialist sniffer dogs. | :29:55. | :29:58. | |
The government has described the situation as "unacceptable" | :29:59. | :30:01. | |
but says it's introduced measures to tackle the problem | :30:02. | :30:03. | |
but the Prison Reform Trust says that the underlying problems remain. | :30:04. | :30:13. | |
Some people are going into prison with a drug problem and some people | :30:14. | :30:19. | |
start to use drugs in prison as a way of coping. That is the first | :30:20. | :30:25. | |
thing. The second thing in relation to phones is that legitimate use of | :30:26. | :30:29. | |
the telephone in prison is difficult. First reason is because | :30:30. | :30:32. | |
the cost is high, a ten minute call to your family could cost you one | :30:33. | :30:36. | |
quarter of your week's wages in prison. The second thing, | :30:37. | :30:38. | |
practically, is that you are simply not out of your sell enough times | :30:39. | :30:41. | |
speak to your family. The parents of Charlie Gard | :30:42. | :30:42. | |
are expected to help deliver a petition to Great Ormond Street | :30:43. | :30:44. | |
Hospital, calling on doctors to allow the terminally ill baby to | :30:45. | :30:47. | |
travel for experimental treatment. The petition has been signed by more | :30:48. | :30:50. | |
than 350,000 people. Charlie Gard's case is due to return | :30:51. | :30:53. | |
to the High Court tomorrow, after the hospital said it had seen | :30:54. | :30:56. | |
claims of new evidence relating State television in Iraq reports | :30:57. | :31:13. | |
that the security forces there are on the verge of retaking the city of | :31:14. | :31:18. | |
Mosul. It was seized more than three years ago by the so-called Islamic | :31:19. | :31:21. | |
State and has been the focus of intense fighting over the last few | :31:22. | :31:24. | |
months. Iraqi soldiers have been celebrating on the street despite no | :31:25. | :31:26. | |
official word. Anti-capitalist protesters clashed | :31:27. | :31:27. | |
with German police for a third night in Hamburg, following the end | :31:28. | :31:29. | |
of the G20 summit hosted Police used water cannons and tear | :31:30. | :31:32. | |
gas to push them back after some set During the summit, world leaders | :31:33. | :31:37. | |
declared the Paris Climate Agreement "irreversible", despite | :31:38. | :31:40. | |
President Trump pulling the US out. While Theresa May left | :31:41. | :31:43. | |
the meetings confident The Church of England will vote | :31:44. | :31:44. | |
today on whether to allow special services for transgender people | :31:45. | :31:59. | |
following their transition. At the Synod's annual meeting | :32:00. | :32:01. | |
in York, prominent figures will address calls for the Church | :32:02. | :32:04. | |
to update its attitudes It has been a very slow process of | :32:05. | :32:16. | |
acceptance until now. There is still a lot of discrimination in the | :32:17. | :32:21. | |
church and people talk about the institutional homophobia which | :32:22. | :32:24. | |
exists at so many levels. What we saw yesterday was a remarkable | :32:25. | :32:26. | |
change from that with people asserting from the floor that people | :32:27. | :32:31. | |
are not that nor worse for being gay or straight that they are all equal | :32:32. | :32:33. | |
in the sight of God. The Lake District will find out | :32:34. | :32:35. | |
today whether it will be granted If successful, it'll join | :32:36. | :32:38. | |
the likes of the Taj Mahal, It would also become the UK's 31st - | :32:39. | :32:42. | |
and largest - World Heritage site. If you're walking in the great | :32:43. | :32:48. | |
outdoors this summer, you might want to pack | :32:49. | :32:50. | |
your waterproofs. But research suggests | :32:51. | :32:53. | |
they could actually be harming the environment - because some | :32:54. | :32:55. | |
chemicals used to coat them Our Science Reporter, | :32:56. | :32:58. | |
Victoria Gill, has more. The great British summer. But with | :32:59. | :33:15. | |
British weather, the chances are it will not be long before you are | :33:16. | :33:18. | |
reaching for your raincoat. An unlikely source of pollution. One of | :33:19. | :33:23. | |
the most common treatments used to make our jackets waterproof, flora | :33:24. | :33:27. | |
chemicals, they can pollute the environment. The problem with a | :33:28. | :33:32. | |
chemicals is that they are persistent and stick around. They do | :33:33. | :33:36. | |
not break down and can last hundreds of years. That is why the scientists | :33:37. | :33:41. | |
are testing new and more environmentally friendly waterproof | :33:42. | :33:46. | |
coatings using indoor rain. This is the rain room and apparently it is | :33:47. | :33:53. | |
set to a Manchester drizzle. This is a mannequin wearing a raincoat to be | :33:54. | :33:58. | |
tested so she can just switch on the rain... And, yeah, that is a pretty | :33:59. | :34:05. | |
accurate artificial Manchester drizzle. I should leave. The team | :34:06. | :34:13. | |
used industry-standard tests to see how waterproof fabric stood at | :34:14. | :34:16. | |
everything from drizzle to a simulated downpour. The repellent | :34:17. | :34:22. | |
coatings that are not based on flora chemicals are just as good as | :34:23. | :34:26. | |
neurochemical water repellents. The flora chemicals are unnecessary. | :34:27. | :34:31. | |
Newton Honfleur chemical coatings are still being developed but the | :34:32. | :34:35. | |
researchers now hope that the industry will start to roll them out | :34:36. | :34:38. | |
to protect us from the elements without damaging the environment. | :34:39. | :34:45. | |
How interesting. You are really aware of that sort of thing. Just | :34:46. | :34:49. | |
pull your waterproofs on and head off into the hills. 7:30 for now. | :34:50. | :34:54. | |
Let's get to the sport. Wimbledon dominating as ever. You just get | :34:55. | :35:01. | |
group, don't you? Especially by that guy. Yes, he is playing fantastic | :35:02. | :35:07. | |
tennis at the moment. Roger Federer is paying some of the best tennis he | :35:08. | :35:10. | |
has ever played and he has entered the second week as has Novak | :35:11. | :35:14. | |
Djokovic and two British players as well, Johanna Konta and Andy Murray | :35:15. | :35:17. | |
doing quite well for that nothing today and because today's middle | :35:18. | :35:22. | |
Sunday. We have had a few where they have played because of bad weather | :35:23. | :35:26. | |
so it is nice that they got a day off. Yes, it happened last year. I | :35:27. | :35:32. | |
was hoping for a day off when I was there working because of the | :35:33. | :35:35. | |
weather. But not so much this year with the beautiful sunshine. A | :35:36. | :35:38. | |
fantastic second week to look forward to. | :35:39. | :35:51. | |
Seven-time Wimbledon champion Roger Federer has booked his place | :35:52. | :35:54. | |
He comfortably beat the 27th seed Mischa Zverev in straight sets | :35:55. | :35:58. | |
Federer will play Bulgaria's Grigor Dimitrov next. | :35:59. | :36:01. | |
I think it is important to get through the first week | :36:02. | :36:04. | |
The first one, the walkover, that did not give me much | :36:05. | :36:09. | |
Obviously, we go one round at a time and, | :36:10. | :36:13. | |
I must say, my first goal was to get to the second week | :36:14. | :36:17. | |
I am happy now to sit back, relax and | :36:18. | :36:21. | |
Three time champion Novak Djokovic is also safely through to the second | :36:22. | :36:25. | |
week of Wimbledon - he hasn't even dropped a set! | :36:26. | :36:28. | |
He beat Ernest Gulbiss yesterday with ease. | :36:29. | :36:30. | |
He was a break down in the first set and argued with the umpire early | :36:31. | :36:34. | |
on but it seemed to focus him, he went through in straight sets. | :36:35. | :36:40. | |
It was a little more precarious in the women's draw, | :36:41. | :36:42. | |
top seed Angelique Kerber only just scraped through against | :36:43. | :36:45. | |
Kerber reached the final last year, but fell to a set and a break down, | :36:46. | :36:52. | |
before eventually coming through to set up what will be one | :36:53. | :36:55. | |
of the match-ups of the next round - she'll play 2016 French Open | :36:56. | :36:59. | |
He won over the Wimbledon crowd last year. | :37:00. | :37:09. | |
The Briton didn't qualify for the singles this time around | :37:10. | :37:17. | |
but he is impressing in the men's doubles. | :37:18. | :37:23. | |
Along with fellow Brit Jay Clarke, they produced the shock | :37:24. | :37:25. | |
of the day knocking out defending champions | :37:26. | :37:27. | |
French pair Pierre-Hugues Herbert and Nicolas Mahut | :37:28. | :37:29. | |
The British pair, amazingly, only played their first event together | :37:30. | :37:45. | |
one fortnight ago. Andy Murray plays tomorrow - | :37:46. | :37:45. | |
brother Jamie has teamed up with five-time Grand Slam champion | :37:46. | :37:48. | |
Martina Hingis in the mixed doubles this year and it looks | :37:49. | :37:51. | |
like a great pairing. secured them a place in the third | :37:52. | :37:54. | |
round when they beat Britain's Neal Skupski | :37:55. | :37:58. | |
and Anna Smith in less than an hour. The British and Irish Lions head | :37:59. | :38:02. | |
coach Warren Gatland says people will look back on the New Zealand | :38:03. | :38:05. | |
tour as a success. The Lions drew the final Test | :38:06. | :38:08. | |
match 15 points all, meaning the series against | :38:09. | :38:11. | |
the World Champions was shared. It was a thrilling finish | :38:12. | :38:13. | |
to the game in Auckland - Owen Farrell's late penalty kick | :38:14. | :38:17. | |
drew the Lions level in the game. A disputed offside decision denied | :38:18. | :38:21. | |
the All Blacks a further penalty And Gatland says he hasn't ruled out | :38:22. | :38:24. | |
taking charge of the Lions My focus now is back on Wales | :38:25. | :38:29. | |
and looking forward to 2019. I definitely finish | :38:30. | :38:40. | |
there, unless they Maybe I come back home | :38:41. | :38:42. | |
or maybe something else. I might just go to the | :38:43. | :38:50. | |
beach and put my feet England's cricketers | :38:51. | :38:53. | |
are in control of the First Test Striker Romelu Lukaku has been | :38:54. | :39:05. | |
ordered to appear in court in Los Angeles in October | :39:06. | :39:07. | |
after police were called to reports of excessive noise at | :39:08. | :39:10. | |
a house in Beverley Hills. Lukaku, who's been on holiday | :39:11. | :39:13. | |
in the US, was arrested last Sunday after being given verbal | :39:14. | :39:16. | |
warnings by officers. It comes as the Everton player | :39:17. | :39:18. | |
is on the verge of a ?75 million move to Manchester United, he's set | :39:19. | :39:22. | |
to have a medical with United. Lukaku's former club Chelsea had | :39:23. | :39:25. | |
matched the fee wanted The deal is believed to include | :39:26. | :39:27. | |
another ?15 million in add-ons. Meanwhile it's looking increasingly | :39:28. | :39:35. | |
likely that Wayne Rooney will be leaving Old Trafford | :39:36. | :39:38. | |
and heading back to Everton. He was seen yesterday | :39:39. | :39:43. | |
at their training ground. Manchester United and England's | :39:44. | :39:45. | |
record goalscorer signed England's cricketers | :39:46. | :39:47. | |
are in control of the First Test against South Africa - | :39:48. | :39:55. | |
they go into day four with a lead They bowled the visitors out for 361 | :39:56. | :39:58. | |
yesterday before finishing on 119 for one with former captain | :39:59. | :40:03. | |
Alastair Cook making a half century. If you get off to a good start | :40:04. | :40:10. | |
and get a decent partnership going then that sets us up | :40:11. | :40:16. | |
for the rest of the day and hopefully whether it is an hour | :40:17. | :40:19. | |
before or after tea, we have a chance to | :40:20. | :40:22. | |
make a decision then. Lewis Hamilton will have his work | :40:23. | :40:27. | |
cut out if he's to finish on the podium at today's | :40:28. | :40:30. | |
Austrian Grand Prix. He was third in qualifying, | :40:31. | :40:32. | |
but a penalty means he'll start back His team-mate Valtteri Bottas will | :40:33. | :40:36. | |
be on pole, with World Championship Britain's Chris Froome will start | :40:37. | :40:40. | |
a mountainous stage nine of the Tour de France with a 12-second lead, | :40:41. | :40:51. | |
ahead of team-mate Geraint Thomas. The race has reached the Jura | :40:52. | :40:54. | |
mountains near the Swiss border. Froome had a minor scare yesterday | :40:55. | :40:57. | |
when he and Thomas briefly went off the road, but were quickly | :40:58. | :41:01. | |
back in the action. by the 24-year-old French | :41:02. | :41:03. | |
rider Lilian Calmejane Wigan Warriors have moved up | :41:04. | :41:06. | |
to seventh place in Super League after a 32-10 win | :41:07. | :41:16. | |
at Catalan Dragons. The scores were level on the hour | :41:17. | :41:18. | |
mark, but Wigan dominated Joe Burgess scored a hat trick | :41:19. | :41:21. | |
of tries in the game Wigan are now four points clear | :41:22. | :41:27. | |
of Warrington in ninth spot with two now, both of you may enjoy this. | :41:28. | :41:45. | |
Every footballer dreams of scoring a wonder goal. | :41:46. | :41:54. | |
He scored this stunning goal this afternoon in the final of an under | :41:55. | :42:01. | |
It was the second goal in a 2-0 win for his PG Ten Academy | :42:02. | :42:10. | |
Do you think you intended that? Should we give it to him? Look at | :42:11. | :42:20. | |
all of the parents and everyone on the sidelines there. This is his | :42:21. | :42:28. | |
team 's parents on the near side and the opposition on the far side | :42:29. | :42:30. | |
because they are stonefaced. They did not even react. If that | :42:31. | :42:35. | |
fantastic?!. And that is a fair hit for an under nine. He needs to be | :42:36. | :42:39. | |
snapped up by the Premier League. Thank you. We have seen on the | :42:40. | :42:44. | |
programme for the last week the Wimbledon mug, the breakfast mug. | :42:45. | :42:49. | |
Andy Murray has had a go at the mug, Heather Watson has tried as well. . | :42:50. | :43:02. | |
But now it is time for Mo Farah. I have a sneaky suspicion he will be | :43:03. | :43:06. | |
good at this. I just have a feeling. He is usually good at everything. | :43:07. | :43:12. | |
Mo Farah, you have won five World Championship golds and for Olympic | :43:13. | :43:21. | |
but this is the game set mug challenge. You play much tennis? I | :43:22. | :43:25. | |
do when I get a chance. I am nervous. Are you ready? Go! Though, | :43:26. | :43:33. | |
straightaway, the first one in, the second hit the rim. Great support | :43:34. | :43:39. | |
making the difference. So close, so close. We reach 15, 12, 15 seconds | :43:40. | :43:49. | |
now. So close. This shows what a challenge this is. Yes, they are | :43:50. | :43:53. | |
reining in our. We have seen a couple go in. Let's count down | :43:54. | :43:59. | |
three, two, one. Moe, I must stop you there. We will give you the one. | :44:00. | :44:07. | |
Paddy think you did? You were so close. There were so many. If all of | :44:08. | :44:15. | |
the ones that hit the rim had gone in you would be challenging Andy | :44:16. | :44:18. | |
Murray's score. Let's have a look. One, two, three, four. That is | :44:19. | :44:26. | |
competitive. Charlie got seven. If you had counted the ones that hit | :44:27. | :44:31. | |
the rim... They were so close. It is hard. Thank you for taking the | :44:32. | :44:38. | |
challenge. Do not let it put you off to thank you, guys. I think you may | :44:39. | :44:45. | |
have gotten more than four Etihad run back and forth. Let's have a | :44:46. | :44:49. | |
look at the leaderboard. Charlie state has done brilliantly! | :44:50. | :45:06. | |
Mo Farah almost equal with another tennis player, and Charlie are much | :45:07. | :45:16. | |
the greats of -- Charlie among the greats of British sport. And Mo | :45:17. | :45:24. | |
Farah running at the anniversary games of the Olympic Stadium. | :45:25. | :45:26. | |
You are watching Breakfast from BBC News. | :45:27. | :45:28. | |
The main stories this morning: Hundreds of kilograms of drugs | :45:29. | :45:31. | |
and 13,000 mobile phones were found in prisons in England and Wales last | :45:32. | :45:34. | |
year, according to the Ministry of Justice. | :45:35. | :45:37. | |
The parents of baby Charlie Gard will help deliver a petition | :45:38. | :45:40. | |
to Great Ormond Street, calling on doctors to let him travel | :45:41. | :45:44. | |
You got on with the work, but yes, parts of the wreck are very | :45:45. | :46:00. | |
emotional indeed. HMS | :46:01. | :46:01. | |
Vanguard sank in one of the worst 100 years on, we meet the divers | :46:02. | :46:03. | |
given special permission Travel Show is on the way in just a | :46:04. | :46:23. | |
minute, although who would want to go abroad? Did I go a little bit | :46:24. | :46:30. | |
premature the? For today in Scotland, this is Argyll Bute. We | :46:31. | :46:33. | |
have a real change across the north today. We do have some rain. It is | :46:34. | :46:42. | |
not as nice and sunny as it was yesterday. This is the band of cloud | :46:43. | :46:46. | |
associated with that weather front. Some cloud across England and Wales | :46:47. | :46:50. | |
but as you hinted there is a lot of fine and very warm weather to come. | :46:51. | :46:53. | |
It is quite oppressive and Mudgee. Our rain band looks light, but it | :46:54. | :46:59. | |
will pep up as the day goes on. It doesn't move very much, that is the | :47:00. | :47:03. | |
issue. It stays cloudy. There will be outbreaks of rain through the | :47:04. | :47:07. | |
day. For the north of Scotland it will be an improvement on this time | :47:08. | :47:11. | |
yesterday. They were picking up the breeze and rain here. Further south | :47:12. | :47:15. | |
are morning fog will clear. The afternoon is a complexion of 18 or | :47:16. | :47:19. | |
so degrees in the sunshine on the far north of Scotland. Perhaps the | :47:20. | :47:23. | |
odd shower but a cool 14 or 15 with cloudy skies and outbreaks of rain | :47:24. | :47:27. | |
across central and southern Scotland, and England and Wales | :47:28. | :47:31. | |
ghoulish around the coast. The sea temperatures are lower, as you would | :47:32. | :47:38. | |
expect. -- coolish. Inland it could be warmer. We could have 28 degrees, | :47:39. | :47:47. | |
so if you are heading off to watch Mo Farah and many others, to cover | :47:48. | :47:56. | |
up and take some sunscreen, quite a lot of cooler weather to the south | :47:57. | :47:59. | |
and east, and freshening up overnight. We could have some late | :48:00. | :48:03. | |
thunderstorms across parts of East Wales, the Midlands and East Anglia | :48:04. | :48:07. | |
and even the south-east. That will rumble on and into the evening. You | :48:08. | :48:13. | |
can see that monkey weather with us. That weather front will trundle | :48:14. | :48:17. | |
southwards, it is only a band of showers tomorrow but it does denote | :48:18. | :48:20. | |
that much fresher Atlantic air heading our way. Still some very | :48:21. | :48:24. | |
warm weather, potentially some thundery downpours across the | :48:25. | :48:28. | |
southern and eastern parts of the country, but the most of us it is | :48:29. | :48:32. | |
getting fresher, showery and more unsettled. There could be a late | :48:33. | :48:35. | |
thunderstorms today. Henceforth I shall stop trying to pre-empt what | :48:36. | :48:41. | |
you're saying and leave the weather forecasting to experts. | :48:42. | :48:44. | |
We will be back with the headlines at 8am. | :48:45. | :48:46. | |
Now on Breakfast, time for The Travel Show. | :48:47. | :48:48. | |
This week, they are by the coast in Chile and Canada. | :48:49. | :48:56. | |
On this week's Travel Show, we're in a surfing community trying | :48:57. | :48:59. | |
to hold back the tide of development on the Chilean coast. | :49:00. | :49:02. | |
We go looking for lost ships beaneath the Canadian waves. | :49:03. | :49:20. | |
Let's start this week's programme on the stunning Pacific coastline | :49:21. | :49:23. | |
Punta de Lobos is best known for its dramatic high cliffs, | :49:24. | :49:26. | |
with views over black sandy beaches and rocky outcrops, | :49:27. | :49:29. | |
And it's also become famous as one of the best places to surf in South | :49:30. | :49:39. | |
With a consistent swell and regular runs of huge waves, | :49:40. | :49:52. | |
Punta de Lobos is considered one of the best breaks in South America. | :49:53. | :49:59. | |
And it's become a paradise for big wave surfers. | :50:00. | :50:05. | |
I've arrived in Punta de Lobos at a particularly good time, | :50:06. | :50:08. | |
because word has gone around that this morning's swell will be | :50:09. | :50:11. | |
unusually strong, with waves of up to 30 feet. | :50:12. | :50:21. | |
These huge waves have been tracked all the way from Antarctica, | :50:22. | :50:24. | |
and have drawn out locals and people from across the world to watch them | :50:25. | :50:28. | |
come in and crash against these rocks. | :50:29. | :50:30. | |
If you look really carefully out there, what looks like little birds | :50:31. | :50:33. | |
bobbing on the surface of the water, are surfers taking on these | :50:34. | :50:37. | |
gargantuan waves, at the risk of their lives.. | :50:38. | :50:39. | |
I've got my wet suit, about to jump on a surfboard and try | :50:40. | :50:59. | |
My teacher is a local who introduces novices to the art | :51:00. | :51:03. | |
I suspect, however, that he's used to rather more coordinated students. | :51:04. | :51:12. | |
It turns out surfing is definitely not as easy as it looks. | :51:13. | :51:26. | |
I got whacked in the face with about ten waves in a row, | :51:27. | :51:29. | |
so I swallowed most of that water, I think. | :51:30. | :51:32. | |
Luckily, Punta de Lobos has plenty of beautiful views to enjoy | :51:33. | :51:42. | |
for those who aren't the most gifted of surfers. | :51:43. | :51:48. | |
But despite its idyllic appearance, this place is not all paradise. | :51:49. | :51:55. | |
In fact, it's been the site of a battle between local private | :51:56. | :51:58. | |
Until recently, Punta de Lobos was relatively unknown, | :51:59. | :52:07. | |
but over the past couple of decades its popularity has | :52:08. | :52:10. | |
soared, as a surfing and a tourist destination. | :52:11. | :52:19. | |
These days, 5,000 visitors arrive to the point | :52:20. | :52:21. | |
Perhaps not surprisingly, this has attracted developers, | :52:22. | :52:34. | |
keen to capitalise on the area's newfound popularity. | :52:35. | :52:38. | |
Much of the coast is in the hands of private owners, and plans | :52:39. | :52:43. | |
were made for extensive building along the cliffs. | :52:44. | :52:56. | |
A lot of private projects, real estate projects, | :52:57. | :52:58. | |
big ones, were wanting to be developed here. | :52:59. | :53:04. | |
Where we're standing here, there will be houses hanging | :53:05. | :53:06. | |
on the cliffs, four buildings seven storeys high, like a surf resort, | :53:07. | :53:09. | |
or not even a surf resort, but huge density of construction | :53:10. | :53:12. | |
We have a real threatening situation for such a special place like this. | :53:13. | :53:20. | |
Matias is a director of the Punta de Lobos Foundation - | :53:21. | :53:24. | |
a nonprofit organisation created among locals to fight | :53:25. | :53:27. | |
Along with other conservation bodies, such as Save The Waves, | :53:28. | :53:36. | |
they've worked to halt shore-side construction and to keep the cliffs | :53:37. | :53:39. | |
But that was only their first challenge. | :53:40. | :53:46. | |
If you put 1,000 or 1,500 cars here, you could take an hour, | :53:47. | :53:56. | |
an hour and a half to just go a mile out back to the highway. | :53:57. | :54:00. | |
And the second thing is that there were no bathrooms | :54:01. | :54:03. | |
here, so people would do their needs in the cliffs, in wherever, | :54:04. | :54:06. | |
The Foundation responded by regulating the traffic | :54:07. | :54:11. | |
with a roundabout and installing eco-bathroom facilities. | :54:12. | :54:16. | |
Along with a recycled fence along the cliff line, | :54:17. | :54:19. | |
to protect it from the erosion of visitors' feet. | :54:20. | :54:43. | |
Many involved in the efforts here see Punta de Lobos | :54:44. | :54:46. | |
as a landmark conservation case for Chile, one that | :54:47. | :54:48. | |
could have a much broader impact than just protecting one | :54:49. | :54:51. | |
We are very eager that Punta de Lobos is successful, | :54:52. | :54:54. | |
because it's the example in order to scale this project throughout | :54:55. | :54:57. | |
There's a need for conservation in Chile, we are a developing | :54:58. | :55:01. | |
country, we're just getting started, and we can learn | :55:02. | :55:03. | |
Through Punta de Lobos we could set the example for future developments | :55:04. | :55:07. | |
And to finish this week's programme, we're off to Canada | :55:08. | :55:23. | |
and the Magdalen Islands in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. | :55:24. | :55:26. | |
The waters can be treacherous, and many ships have run aground | :55:27. | :55:29. | |
on the rocks here, meaning that lots of people who live in the area | :55:30. | :55:33. | |
now are descendants of shipwrecked sailors, who were washed ashore | :55:34. | :55:35. | |
when their ships went down, giving them a unique respect | :55:36. | :55:38. | |
I was born and raised on this island. | :55:39. | :55:55. | |
As an islander, when we say "home", it's something very strong | :55:56. | :56:00. | |
and something very rooted, because our ancestry | :56:01. | :56:07. | |
is, like, all in one island, so our sense of belonging | :56:08. | :56:10. | |
It affects them in some way or another. | :56:11. | :56:27. | |
My uncle, her brother, drowned and my father's brother also | :56:28. | :56:32. | |
drowned, so I've two uncles that have drowned. | :56:33. | :56:37. | |
My father's brother actually drowned just over there, | :56:38. | :56:39. | |
This is where Robert Best, he would be my grandmother's | :56:40. | :56:51. | |
grandfather, and he shipwrecked from the Channel Islands on a ship | :56:52. | :56:54. | |
We have very strong ties to the sea, because it's generational. | :56:55. | :58:36. | |
So my family, it's like six generations of fishermen | :58:37. | :58:40. | |
and also my brother's fifth-generation boat builder, | :58:41. | :58:44. | |
so these things are handed down through the families. | :58:45. | :58:52. | |
I feel so comfortable here, and I've never felt | :58:53. | :58:55. | |
that feeling anywhere else. | :58:56. | :58:57. | |
Like knowing every little nook and cranny, and the beach | :58:58. | :58:59. | |
and the cape and just feeling completely at ease. | :59:00. | :59:19. | |
Well, unfortunately that's all we've got time for on this week's Travel | :59:20. | :59:23. | |
Continuing the shipwrecked theme, Ade's in Bermuda, where he'll be | :59:24. | :59:31. | |
meeting the team who are digitally mapping the hundreds of underwater | :59:32. | :59:34. | |
lost ships there, for everyone to be able to see online around the world. | :59:35. | :59:38. | |
That was quite literally breathtaking! | :59:39. | :59:41. | |
So do join us then, if you can, and in the meantime, | :59:42. | :59:44. | |
don't forget you can keep up with us while we're out on the road | :59:45. | :59:48. | |
in real-time, by signing up to our social media feeds. | :59:49. | :59:51. | |
But for now, from me Christa Larwood, and the rest | :59:52. | :59:55. | |
of the Travel Show team here in Chile, it's goodbye. | :59:56. | :00:10. | |
Hello, this is Breakfast, with Roger Johnson and Sian Lloyd. | :00:11. | :00:12. | |
More than 13,000 mobile phones and 200 kilograms of drugs | :00:13. | :00:15. | |
were seized in prisons in England and Wales last year. | :00:16. | :00:18. | |
Ministers say the situation is "unacceptable", and they're | :00:19. | :00:20. | |
recruiting more officers to crack down on illegal activity in jails. | :00:21. | :00:39. | |
Good morning, it's Sunday 9th July. | :00:40. | :00:42. | |
The parents of baby Charlie Gard will help deliver a petition | :00:43. | :00:45. | |
to Great Ormond Street later, calling on doctors to let him travel | :00:46. | :00:47. | |
Iraqi government forces say they're "within hours" of declaring | :00:48. | :00:53. | |
victory over Islamic State militants in Mosul. | :00:54. | :00:59. | |
It's famous for its meres and mountains, but could | :01:00. | :01:01. | |
the Lake District make history and achieve World Heritage status? | :01:02. | :01:04. | |
Former Wimbledon champions Djokovic and Federer are in impressive form | :01:05. | :01:10. | |
And it's game, set and... Mo? | :01:11. | :01:21. | |
Four-time Olympic champion Sir Mo Farah is the latest athlete | :01:22. | :01:23. | |
to take on our Breakfast mug challenge. | :01:24. | :01:38. | |
The Scotland and Northern Ireland there are changes from this is a's | :01:39. | :01:43. | |
weather, I will fill you in on the details in 15 minutes. | :01:44. | :01:46. | |
The number of mobile phones and drugs smuggled into prisons | :01:47. | :01:51. | |
is "unacceptable", according to the Government. | :01:52. | :01:59. | |
More than 20,000 phones and SIM cards and over 200-kilograms | :02:00. | :02:02. | |
of narcotics were found in jails in England and Wales last year. | :02:03. | :02:06. | |
The seizures follow a ?2 million investment in technology | :02:07. | :02:10. | |
to detect contraband, as James Waterhouse reports. | :02:11. | :02:12. | |
Many will say this continuing trend of contraband being smuggled | :02:13. | :02:16. | |
into jails through whatever means possible only highlights the scale | :02:17. | :02:22. | |
of the challenge facing prison officers, who've had to deal | :02:23. | :02:25. | |
with staff cuts and growing violence over recent years. | :02:26. | :02:28. | |
Just in April, a European watchdog warned that incidents in UK jails | :02:29. | :02:31. | |
were spiralling out of control, making them unsafe for | :02:32. | :02:33. | |
The latest Ministry of Justice figures say there are 86,000 inmates | :02:34. | :02:37. | |
7000 mobile SIM cards were found in 2016, along | :02:38. | :02:46. | |
They're a valuable resource behind bars, too, sometimes being rented | :02:47. | :02:55. | |
Along with the seizure of 200 kilograms of illegal drugs, | :02:56. | :02:58. | |
it is the scale of the problems that forces the Government | :02:59. | :03:01. | |
The trade is built on a very, very strong market, and although this | :03:02. | :03:06. | |
is good news and it is good that these measures are being taken, | :03:07. | :03:13. | |
the next step for the Government is to ask itself why the demand | :03:14. | :03:22. | |
drugs and phones is so high in prisons. | :03:23. | :03:25. | |
This ?2 million investment in equipment brought | :03:26. | :03:27. | |
300 dogs have also been trained to find drugs. | :03:28. | :03:31. | |
Ministers acknowledge they could not stop there, though. | :03:32. | :03:34. | |
The Government has recently had a recruitment drive, | :03:35. | :03:40. | |
saying it is on track to bring in 2500 | :03:41. | :03:43. | |
And Justice Secretary David Lidington will be on the Andrew Marr | :03:44. | :03:51. | |
The parents of Charlie Gard are expected to help deliver a petition | :03:52. | :03:56. | |
to Great Ormond Street Hospital later, calling on doctors | :03:57. | :03:59. | |
to allow their terminally ill baby to travel abroad | :04:00. | :04:01. | |
A new hearing about the case is due in the High Court tomorrow. | :04:02. | :04:05. | |
John McManus is outside Great Ormond Street Hospital | :04:06. | :04:07. | |
The court hearing tomorrow, but the petition later today, obviously his | :04:08. | :04:13. | |
parents are going to hope it will make some sort of difference? | :04:14. | :04:21. | |
That's right, more than 325,000 people have signed this petition, | :04:22. | :04:25. | |
with the help of Charlie's parents. They watched doctors at Great Ormond | :04:26. | :04:28. | |
Street to change their mind and allow the parents of Charlie to take | :04:29. | :04:32. | |
him out of the country so that he can be treated abroad with an | :04:33. | :04:35. | |
experimental treatment that might start to halt or perhaps in some | :04:36. | :04:38. | |
weight reverse the genetic disorder that he has which means that he is | :04:39. | :04:43. | |
being kept alive here on a life-support machine. In April the | :04:44. | :04:47. | |
High Court told Great Ormond Street doctors they could | :04:48. | :05:05. | |
turn off the life-support machine but his parents have been fighting | :05:06. | :05:09. | |
that through the courts. Up until now the hospital have opposed them | :05:10. | :05:12. | |
but as you say there is a hearing in the High Court tomorrow which the | :05:13. | :05:14. | |
hospital has called for, they say that is because they have received | :05:15. | :05:16. | |
new potential evidence from researchers aboard about these | :05:17. | :05:18. | |
experimental treatments which might be able to help Charlie. They want | :05:19. | :05:20. | |
the High Court to decide whether that means the ruling should be | :05:21. | :05:22. | |
changed and Charlie could leave London, but they say they want that | :05:23. | :05:25. | |
decision to be made by the judges themselves. Charlie's parents of | :05:26. | :05:27. | |
course said they are going to carry on fighting for their son. Thank you | :05:28. | :05:29. | |
very much. Iraqi state television is reporting | :05:30. | :05:30. | |
that government forces are on the verge of retaking | :05:31. | :05:32. | |
the city of Mosul. It was seized by so-called Islamic | :05:33. | :05:34. | |
State more than three years ago. But after nine months | :05:35. | :05:37. | |
of intense fighting, Iraqi soldiers have been celebrating | :05:38. | :05:40. | |
on the streets, despite no Our defence correspondent | :05:41. | :05:42. | |
Jonathan Beale has more. Their battle to retake Mosul | :05:43. | :05:47. | |
from the group calling itself Islamic State started | :05:48. | :05:51. | |
in October last year. They've lost many | :05:52. | :05:55. | |
comrades along the way. But today the Iraqi security forces | :05:56. | :05:58. | |
were firing their weapons in celebration, claiming victory | :05:59. | :06:00. | |
over their enemy. TRANSLATION: This joy has been | :06:01. | :06:07. | |
achieved by the sacrifices of our martyrs and the blood | :06:08. | :06:10. | |
of our wounded heroes. God willing, may happiness | :06:11. | :06:14. | |
prevail in Iraq. After nearly nine months of brutal | :06:15. | :06:22. | |
street-to-street fighting, the security forces now believe | :06:23. | :06:30. | |
they have defeated IS in a city But there are still | :06:31. | :06:33. | |
pockets of resistance But look everywhere around | :06:34. | :06:36. | |
you and you'll see that pretty much every building has been | :06:37. | :06:42. | |
damaged or destroyed. If this is victory, | :06:43. | :06:44. | |
it's come at a cost. No-one yet knows how many civilians | :06:45. | :06:46. | |
have lost their lives in the city. TRANSLATION: Hunger, thirst, | :06:47. | :06:49. | |
fear and aerial bombardment. The extremists' reign of terror may | :06:50. | :06:53. | |
be coming to an end. But they're by no means | :06:54. | :07:12. | |
finished in Iraq. Anti-capitalist protesters | :07:13. | :07:15. | |
have clashed with German police in Hamburg for | :07:16. | :07:17. | |
a third consecutive night. The violence came at the end | :07:18. | :07:19. | |
of the G20 summit, where world leaders discussed climate change | :07:20. | :07:22. | |
and trade among other issues. Our political reporter | :07:23. | :07:26. | |
Jonathan Blake joins us now. At the end of these things, the | :07:27. | :07:38. | |
leaders are always keen to put a good spin on whatever they have | :07:39. | :07:41. | |
contributed all got out of these things and that is very much the | :07:42. | :07:44. | |
case with Donald Trump and Theresa May, isn't it? | :07:45. | :07:48. | |
Yes, at the start of the G20 summit in Hamburg, Angela Merkel, the | :07:49. | :07:51. | |
German leader who is hosting it, said she wanted world leaders to | :07:52. | :07:55. | |
come together and find compromise to help find solutions to some of the | :07:56. | :07:59. | |
world's biggest problems, but when you have 19 countries plus the | :08:00. | :08:02. | |
European Union altogether in the same place it is difficult to get | :08:03. | :08:04. | |
them to agree on the detail of any specific plan. | :08:05. | :08:23. | |
This summit will be remembered more for the face-to-face meetings | :08:24. | :08:25. | |
between leaders, firstly Donald Trump and that Amir Putin, who met | :08:26. | :08:28. | |
for the first time at the G20 in hamburg, every detail of their body | :08:29. | :08:30. | |
language and the comments they made to the media has been analysed | :08:31. | :08:32. | |
closely. Their relationship will be key, not least to what happened in | :08:33. | :08:35. | |
Syria. But also between Donald Trump and Theresa May, we are seeing this | :08:36. | :08:38. | |
morning talk of a trade deal between the US and UK after Brexit in play, | :08:39. | :08:41. | |
Donald Trump saying it will be a very powerful trade deal which will | :08:42. | :08:44. | |
be done very quickly. You have to take very quickly with a pinch of | :08:45. | :08:47. | |
salt because they cannot even start talking about it really until the UK | :08:48. | :08:53. | |
has left the European Union in March 2019, so it is all relative, but it | :08:54. | :08:56. | |
gives Theresa May something of a boost coming back from Hamburg to | :08:57. | :09:00. | |
show she is at least partly in control of that process a little bit | :09:01. | :09:03. | |
more than before the election. Jonathan, thank you. | :09:04. | :09:06. | |
A wealthy businessman has submitted alternative plans | :09:07. | :09:08. | |
for a third runway at Heathrow, which he says would save more | :09:09. | :09:13. | |
The hotel tycoon, Surinder Arora, suggests changing the design | :09:14. | :09:19. | |
of terminal buildings and reducing the amount of land built on. | :09:20. | :09:22. | |
A spokesperson for the airport said they would "welcome views" | :09:23. | :09:24. | |
on the plans during a public consultation later this year. | :09:25. | :09:27. | |
Tens of thousands of people are expected to attend a rally | :09:28. | :09:31. | |
in the Turkish city of Istanbul to protest against the government | :09:32. | :09:34. | |
The event is being held to mark the end of a 280-mile | :09:35. | :09:39. | |
It was organised by the opposition to highlight the mass arrests | :09:40. | :09:43. | |
and sackings since last year's failed coup. | :09:44. | :09:49. | |
A state of emergency has been declared in the Canadian province | :09:50. | :09:51. | |
of British Columbia, where the authorities are trying | :09:52. | :09:53. | |
Thousands of homes have been evacuated, and some destroyed. | :09:54. | :10:02. | |
Most of the fires started after lightning strikes | :10:03. | :10:04. | |
The Church of England will vote today on whether to allow special | :10:05. | :10:11. | |
services for transgender people following their transition. | :10:12. | :10:13. | |
At the Synod's annual meeting in York, prominent figures | :10:14. | :10:15. | |
will address calls for the Church to update its attitudes | :10:16. | :10:18. | |
The Lake District will find out today whether it will be given | :10:19. | :10:26. | |
If successful, it would become the UK's 31st such site, | :10:27. | :10:32. | |
From the Great Barrier Reef to the Taj Mahal and the Grand Canyon, | :10:33. | :10:39. | |
they're some of the most recognisable sights in the world. | :10:40. | :10:49. | |
Soon, the Lake District could be a member of their prestigious club. | :10:50. | :10:52. | |
Later today, delegates from Unesco will announce whether they deemed | :10:53. | :10:54. | |
the region inspiring enough and irreplaceable enough | :10:55. | :10:56. | |
to be protected under World Heritage status. | :10:57. | :10:57. | |
It would be very nice if it was voted one of the top | :10:58. | :11:15. | |
I have been coming here for over 40 years. | :11:16. | :11:19. | |
It is popular but there are so many beautiful things here that need | :11:20. | :11:23. | |
With its towering peaks and glistening waters, | :11:24. | :11:26. | |
the National Park currently attracts around 80 million tourists a year. | :11:27. | :11:29. | |
They contribute over ?1 billion to the local economy. | :11:30. | :11:31. | |
But critics worry that attaining World Heritage status | :11:32. | :11:33. | |
could see even more visitors descend on the region, putting extra | :11:34. | :11:36. | |
Others argue it would mean greater funding and investment. | :11:37. | :11:39. | |
A World Heritage site, it would demonstrate the changing | :11:40. | :11:41. | |
that's shaped by people with their farming practices, | :11:42. | :11:55. | |
poets, they have spoken about this landscape and people come to see it. | :11:56. | :11:58. | |
It will draw new customers and new visitors who've | :11:59. | :12:00. | |
It is a tick of the box to visit a World Heritage site. | :12:01. | :12:04. | |
Poet William Wordsworth once described as the loveliest | :12:05. | :12:06. | |
If successful, it would become the 31st World Heritage site in the UK | :12:07. | :12:14. | |
joining places like Hadrian's Wall and Stonehenge, and the | :12:15. | :12:16. | |
The current levels of violence, drugs and mobile phones in prisons | :12:17. | :12:19. | |
in England and Wales are "unacceptable", | :12:20. | :12:21. | |
Last year alone, following investments in technology | :12:22. | :12:34. | |
and sniffer dogs, prison officers confiscated about 225-kilos | :12:35. | :12:39. | |
in narcotics and 20,000 mobile phones and SIM cards. | :12:40. | :12:41. | |
But with illegal activity remaining stubbornly high behind bars, | :12:42. | :12:44. | |
Dave Todd from the Prison Officers Association joins us. | :12:45. | :12:48. | |
Thank you for coming in. We are hearing the Government saying this | :12:49. | :12:52. | |
is an acceptable, it is trying to do something about it with this | :12:53. | :12:55. | |
investment programme. What is your take on contraband in prisons? It is | :12:56. | :13:00. | |
the first time I will agree with the Government, it is a massive problem | :13:01. | :13:04. | |
and it needs addressing, and it needs addressing fundamentally by | :13:05. | :13:07. | |
recruitment and retention of prison officers. If we haven't got prison | :13:08. | :13:13. | |
officers in post, we cannot develop searching strategies, we can't stop | :13:14. | :13:15. | |
mobile phones coming in, we can't stop drugs coming in, which | :13:16. | :13:29. | |
destabilises regimes and makes it very, very difficult for prison | :13:30. | :13:31. | |
officers to do their job. The Government says it is hiring new | :13:32. | :13:34. | |
prison officer is so are you reassured by that? I'm reassured but | :13:35. | :13:36. | |
the retention rate currently is running at 9%, which leaves a | :13:37. | :13:40. | |
massive skills gap in the workforce. JL Kraft is all-important and if you | :13:41. | :13:43. | |
haven't got experienced staff to pass that two new stuff, there are | :13:44. | :13:49. | |
massive issues. The big issue as how does it come into prisons in the | :13:50. | :13:53. | |
first place and presumably there is not one answer on that? No, there is | :13:54. | :14:03. | |
not. I would like to see blockers rather than mobile phone detectors. | :14:04. | :14:08. | |
If you haven't got staff, you could detect a signal, but you haven't got | :14:09. | :14:12. | |
staff to receive it. Block the whole prison system? Absolutely. What | :14:13. | :14:20. | |
about prison officers themselves? There is some evidence that corrupt | :14:21. | :14:24. | |
officers are bringing some of this contraband in, what do you know | :14:25. | :14:30. | |
about that? I think in every profession you get corruption and | :14:31. | :14:33. | |
unfortunately the prison service is no different. Why is that? Do you | :14:34. | :14:37. | |
think they are tempted because of the page, do you think they are | :14:38. | :14:40. | |
threatened to bring them in? What is being looked at about that? This is | :14:41. | :14:48. | |
what I refer to as jail craft experience being handed down. New | :14:49. | :14:51. | |
prison officers may be compromised by threats, they may be taken in by | :14:52. | :14:58. | |
financial gain, which is not acceptable and my union does not | :14:59. | :15:04. | |
defend those people. What are prison officers saying to you about what an | :15:05. | :15:11. | |
epidemic this is? It is repetitive throughout the country, Spice is | :15:12. | :15:19. | |
such a nasty drug, we have never seen anything like it before in the | :15:20. | :15:24. | |
prison service and it can turn a decent man into an animal. The | :15:25. | :15:29. | |
Prison Reform Trust were on the programme earlier and they were | :15:30. | :15:33. | |
telling us that the problem is that a lot of the inmates haven't got | :15:34. | :15:39. | |
anything to do, they are not being allowed out of their cells, | :15:40. | :15:42. | |
presumably because of recruitment issues because there are not enough | :15:43. | :15:45. | |
of this is perhaps to be doing anything with them, but it seems to | :15:46. | :15:48. | |
be a spiral that we keep on hearing and it is not going away, if it? No, | :15:49. | :15:55. | |
you can backtrack in time to around 2010 with the failed concept of | :15:56. | :16:04. | |
benchmarking which was to reduce prison officer numbers, we lost 8000 | :16:05. | :16:06. | |
and although there is a promise of 2500, in real terms Government needs | :16:07. | :16:10. | |
to recruit 4000 year on year for the next two years to bring us to where | :16:11. | :16:14. | |
we were. In terms of the ones they are recruiting, how much of an issue | :16:15. | :16:22. | |
privatised prisons have been, those run by companies rather than | :16:23. | :16:25. | |
directly by Government? They are facing the same problems, we have | :16:26. | :16:29. | |
members in private jails as well as public jails, we would like to see | :16:30. | :16:33. | |
all jails return to the public sector but they are no different, | :16:34. | :16:36. | |
this epidemic, it doesn't matter what service provider is there, it | :16:37. | :16:41. | |
is in them. Thank you very much for coming on, interesting to speak to | :16:42. | :16:45. | |
you, Dave Todd from the Prison Officers' Association. | :16:46. | :16:50. | |
You're watching Breakfast from BBC News. | :16:51. | :16:53. | |
Hundreds of kilograms of drugs and 13,000 mobile phones were found | :16:54. | :17:00. | |
in prisons in England and Wales last year, according to the | :17:01. | :17:03. | |
The parents of baby Charlie Gard will help deliver a petition | :17:04. | :17:07. | |
to Great Ormond Street, calling on doctors to let him travel | :17:08. | :17:09. | |
A mixed weather picture this morning, I think it is fair enough | :17:10. | :17:23. | |
to say that, Alan? I think so, it is a different data | :17:24. | :17:28. | |
yesterday. I thought this is a beautiful picture, it is not exactly | :17:29. | :17:32. | |
bright and sunny but very atmospheric in Cornwall. We are | :17:33. | :17:35. | |
fairly confident that misty low cloud will lift and things will | :17:36. | :17:39. | |
brighten through the day. But here in Argyll and Bute we are stuck | :17:40. | :17:42. | |
under a weather front though there will be rain on and off, brighter | :17:43. | :17:45. | |
spells across Scotland but you can see the band of Cloutier, that is | :17:46. | :17:50. | |
the weather front I am talking about, the mist and low cloud | :17:51. | :17:51. | |
sitting around the coast. We have got rain | :17:52. | :18:05. | |
to go with the cloud but this is the radar picture, the rainfall latest, | :18:06. | :18:08. | |
and that will pack up as we go through the day because we have got | :18:09. | :18:10. | |
this next wiggle of the weather front moving in from the Atlantic. | :18:11. | :18:12. | |
Northern Ireland, Southern and central parts of Scotland will see | :18:13. | :18:15. | |
that through the afternoon. To the north and south of that, much | :18:16. | :18:17. | |
brighter compared with yesterday across the North of Scotland | :18:18. | :18:19. | |
including the Highlands and Islands, and warm as well we have lost the | :18:20. | :18:21. | |
breeze and cloud, but in contrast after yesterday's warns it will feel | :18:22. | :18:24. | |
chilly if you are under the rain band today in Northern Ireland, | :18:25. | :18:27. | |
Southern and central Scotland. Back into the sunshine across England and | :18:28. | :18:31. | |
Wales, still coastal fog around but temperatures will store inland, | :18:32. | :18:40. | |
higher than yesterday by a degree or two, into the 80s Fahrenheit | :18:41. | :18:42. | |
potentially in southern and eastern areas and we could see strong | :18:43. | :18:44. | |
sunshine again, and those temperatures could spark a late | :18:45. | :18:49. | |
afternoon shower or the possibility of thunderstorms, very small chance | :18:50. | :18:52. | |
of that at Lord's, I think we will get a good day's play but it will be | :18:53. | :18:56. | |
sunny at times, strong sunshine at this time of year. Those | :18:57. | :18:59. | |
thunderstorms if they develop will rumble into the evening and | :19:00. | :19:03. | |
overnight and then we see the weather front across Scotland and | :19:04. | :19:05. | |
Northern Ireland starting to move south. Behind that, fresh air will | :19:06. | :19:10. | |
arrive, so a chilly night for parts of Scotland and Northern Ireland but | :19:11. | :19:14. | |
we still have that very muggy air across southern and eastern areas, | :19:15. | :19:18. | |
possibly storms from France late into the night into tomorrow | :19:19. | :19:21. | |
morning, so the potential to wake up and drive to work in those downpours | :19:22. | :19:25. | |
across central and eastern parts of England across the morning and it | :19:26. | :19:28. | |
will turn out to be a showery day, it is a day of transition tomorrow. | :19:29. | :19:35. | |
Still quite warm in 25 in the south-east, but thereafter next week | :19:36. | :19:38. | |
looks much more unsettled and for some of us suffering with the heat | :19:39. | :19:44. | |
it won't be as oppressive by night, we will have some more comfortable | :19:45. | :19:45. | |
nights. Back to you two. It was one of the worst naval | :19:46. | :19:49. | |
tragedies of the First World War. And today, a ceremony will be held | :19:50. | :19:52. | |
to remember the 843 men who lost their lives when HMS | :19:53. | :19:55. | |
Vanguard sank off To mark the centenary | :19:56. | :19:57. | |
of the disaster, a team of divers has been given special permission | :19:58. | :20:01. | |
to document the wreck. Our Scotland correspondent | :20:02. | :20:04. | |
Lorna Gordon has more. In the cold northern | :20:05. | :20:10. | |
waters of Scapa Flow, the final resting place of HMS | :20:11. | :20:14. | |
Vanguard, a dreadnought The bow and stern almost | :20:15. | :20:17. | |
entirely intact after 100 This the first group of civilian | :20:18. | :20:24. | |
divers to be given permission to document the wreck | :20:25. | :20:33. | |
since it was designated a war grave. I think the loss of life was never | :20:34. | :20:39. | |
very far away from my mind That said, we had a job to do, | :20:40. | :20:42. | |
and an obligation to do that job So you got on with the work but, | :20:43. | :20:48. | |
yes, parts of the wreck Ships steaming into the war | :20:49. | :20:52. | |
base at Scapa Flow... Along with many other ships, | :20:53. | :21:06. | |
Vanguard would be anchored She had seen action at the Battle | :21:07. | :21:08. | |
of Jutland, but on a summer evening in July 1917, | :21:09. | :21:12. | |
the entire ship was destroyed She sank almost instantly, with | :21:13. | :21:14. | |
the loss of almost all her crew. Only two of those on board | :21:15. | :21:18. | |
at the time survived. The team of volunteer divers | :21:19. | :21:26. | |
spent hundreds of hours surveying the wreck, | :21:27. | :21:29. | |
piecing together its story. Lying at a death of around 100 feet, | :21:30. | :21:41. | |
and among the artefacts discovered, the telegraph, cutlery, an anchor | :21:42. | :21:51. | |
lying half buried in the sand. As part of the commemorations, | :21:52. | :21:54. | |
the sign was recently A century on, honouring | :21:55. | :21:56. | |
the many lives lost Some poignant pictures there ahead | :21:57. | :22:00. | |
of that commemoration today. 8:22am. You're watching | :22:01. | :22:10. | |
Breakfast from BBC News. Now let's take a look | :22:11. | :22:11. | |
at the newspapers. The writer and broadcaster | :22:12. | :22:16. | |
Robert Meakin is here to tell us First of all, let's take a look at | :22:17. | :22:26. | |
the front pages for you this morning. We are going to head to the | :22:27. | :22:32. | |
Sunday Times, and they are talking about Donald Trump throw-in Theresa | :22:33. | :22:36. | |
May a lifeline with a trade deal. Picture there on the front, the | :22:37. | :22:42. | |
lion's share of the glory in that Test series clincher, Kieran Read | :22:43. | :22:46. | |
and Sam Warburton both raising the trophy there. | :22:47. | :22:51. | |
Front page of the Telegraph also has that story about Donald Trump and | :22:52. | :22:55. | |
Theresa May and a trade deal, the trump card, they call it, not the | :22:56. | :23:00. | |
only paper to pick up on that for a headline. And the photograph is of | :23:01. | :23:04. | |
Prince William and Prince Harry, who are going to be in a new documentary | :23:05. | :23:08. | |
on ITV about their mother, Diana. Let's take a look at the Observer. | :23:09. | :23:13. | |
Their top story is about German industry warning Britain not to rely | :23:14. | :23:18. | |
on its help in securing a good Brexit deal. In a stark | :23:19. | :23:22. | |
intervention, it says, it strikes a blow at the Government's EU | :23:23. | :23:25. | |
departure plans. The front page of the Mail, we will | :23:26. | :23:29. | |
mention this briefly, because we will talk about it in more detail, | :23:30. | :23:33. | |
Andrew Mitchell has said Theresa May must quit now, he is a former Tory | :23:34. | :23:37. | |
Cabinet minister of course. He said David Davis is the man to take over | :23:38. | :23:43. | |
and that is in the Observer. It is, and there is a picture rob | :23:44. | :23:48. | |
him. Is he ready to take on the top job As it is a job he had his eye on | :23:49. | :23:54. | |
before? He certainly did, it is a long time ago now, back in 2000 and | :23:55. | :23:58. | |
5p was the bookies favourite to be leader and then one young David | :23:59. | :24:03. | |
Cameron came through for the Tories and comfortably beat him in a | :24:04. | :24:07. | |
two-way battle at the end, so he has been around a long time and I think | :24:08. | :24:11. | |
he has stood in a leadership contest even before then. He might be, as | :24:12. | :24:18. | |
far as the Tories are concerned, the right person as the right -- at the | :24:19. | :24:23. | |
right time. You have a caretaker Prime Minister, always an ominous | :24:24. | :24:26. | |
title to have. He is busy at the minute, he is the minister in charge | :24:27. | :24:31. | |
of delivering Brexit? Which is why people think he might be the one who | :24:32. | :24:34. | |
almost by default has to start into the role if it becomes too much for | :24:35. | :24:38. | |
Theresa May to do the job. We are getting two versions of events, we | :24:39. | :24:44. | |
need to do this now, seize the initiative, she is a lame duck Prime | :24:45. | :24:47. | |
Minister. The other side, we are going through the most difficult | :24:48. | :24:51. | |
time in our political history, certainly in recent decades, and it | :24:52. | :24:54. | |
is better to have a bit of stability and let her go out and front the | :24:55. | :24:58. | |
negotiations for the time being. I'm just not sure the way the Tory party | :24:59. | :25:01. | |
operates, there is so much manoeuvring behind the scenes, they | :25:02. | :25:04. | |
will not forgive her for the fact that she did not deliver that | :25:05. | :25:12. | |
majority for them and I think it will mean she goes sooner rather | :25:13. | :25:14. | |
than later. Which could play into Jeremy Corbyn's hands? Yes, he is | :25:15. | :25:18. | |
rightly feeling confident and the minute. | :25:19. | :25:22. | |
Talking about MPs, and Theresa May, she has ordered a review over some | :25:23. | :25:26. | |
of the abuse that MPs get online. We have heard numerous accounts, and of | :25:27. | :25:33. | |
course the terrible events of last year, Jo Cox, MPs are very much in | :25:34. | :25:38. | |
the public eye, aren't they? I really do think it is a serious | :25:39. | :25:42. | |
problem now. Certainly in my lifetime the country feels as | :25:43. | :25:45. | |
divided as it has ever been politically, and this last general | :25:46. | :25:49. | |
election I think, from what people are saying on the ground, was the | :25:50. | :25:54. | |
worst so far in terms of, OK, you have got online abuse, abuse on the | :25:55. | :26:00. | |
doorstep, campaigning on the streets, party banners, posters | :26:01. | :26:05. | |
being vandalised, it just at times the general election got pretty | :26:06. | :26:07. | |
dangerous for some of the candidates, and that has got to be a | :26:08. | :26:11. | |
very sorry state of affairs, whatever your political persuasion | :26:12. | :26:15. | |
is, if democratic debate is not being allowed, people being | :26:16. | :26:18. | |
intimidated out of saying what they believe, it is a shabby state of | :26:19. | :26:22. | |
affairs, I think. I don't know what a report or review can do about it, | :26:23. | :26:27. | |
Mike Dear is it will only get worse. We were talking about the Lions, | :26:28. | :26:31. | |
picture there on the front page of many of the papers, and the pubs | :26:32. | :26:38. | |
were open early serving up Breakfast and excitement on the television. | :26:39. | :26:42. | |
Certainly in Cardiff, where I was yesterday morning, at 8:30am they | :26:43. | :26:45. | |
were all spilling out onto the pavement! Landlords across England, | :26:46. | :26:49. | |
Wales, Scotland and Ireland are the regard of the Lions tour! I was in a | :26:50. | :26:54. | |
hostelry myself last weekend watching the second test and so glad | :26:55. | :26:57. | |
it would be decided this time around because I knew the pubs would be fun | :26:58. | :27:01. | |
again. A brilliant achievement by the Lions, we would have loved a win | :27:02. | :27:04. | |
but playing the best team in the world, the Lions only having a few | :27:05. | :27:08. | |
weeks together, it is a fantastic achievement. As a rugby fan I wanted | :27:09. | :27:12. | |
it to continue and seeing those players played together, Johnny | :27:13. | :27:16. | |
Sexton linking with Owen Farrell Ann Jonathan Davies. I was so sad it | :27:17. | :27:20. | |
ended, I certainly wanted extra time! Although if there was a New | :27:21. | :27:24. | |
Zealander sitting here now he would say there was a scandalous decision | :27:25. | :27:27. | |
at the end of the game that cost them the victory but I was happy to | :27:28. | :27:35. | |
go away with a draw! From hated to fated, Camilla, the Duchess of | :27:36. | :27:38. | |
Cornwall, is going to be 70. There is a piece in the Mirror looking at | :27:39. | :27:44. | |
the change in her image. There was a lot of work done in the last few | :27:45. | :27:50. | |
years to try and change her image and win over the public. She was | :27:51. | :27:55. | |
labelled the most hated woman in Britain for obvious reasons, because | :27:56. | :27:58. | |
most people's perception of her inevitably was she was the woman who | :27:59. | :28:01. | |
was the reason for the break-up of Charles and Diana's marriage, and | :28:02. | :28:05. | |
there were lots of polls at the time, saying, if he dares marry her, | :28:06. | :28:10. | |
he should not be king, that was the consensus. That has gone rather | :28:11. | :28:14. | |
quiet now. I think they probably managed it pretty carefully but also | :28:15. | :28:18. | |
I think they just allowed her to come out and show her true | :28:19. | :28:21. | |
personality because by all accounts she is quite funny, relaxed, an | :28:22. | :28:28. | |
informal person who likes a drink, she is probably not what people | :28:29. | :28:32. | |
imagine her to be initially. It is her 70th birthday this coming | :28:33. | :28:37. | |
weekend, so compared to where she was 20 years ago as a person in the | :28:38. | :28:42. | |
public to now, it is quite a journey. A quick mention of this one | :28:43. | :28:45. | |
in the Sunday Mirror. James Bond fans will probably be pleased. | :28:46. | :28:50. | |
Daniel Craig is staying? For a shed load of money, I'm sure! He made a | :28:51. | :28:55. | |
joke saying he would rather slashed his wrists than play James Bond | :28:56. | :29:00. | |
again, he had just had six months of torture Elaine Bond, jumping up and | :29:01. | :29:06. | |
down... It must be hard! He made that joke that he did not want to do | :29:07. | :29:10. | |
the role, I don't think that was the case. He is almost as good as Roger | :29:11. | :29:14. | |
Moore. Tom Hiddleston will have to wait a bit longer, he was the | :29:15. | :29:16. | |
bookies' favourite! Thank you. | :29:17. | :29:23. | |
They're some of the most recognisable sites in the world, | :29:24. | :29:26. | |
but could the Lake District soon be part of their club? | :29:27. | :29:29. | |
We'll find out why Unesco is considering granting it | :29:30. | :29:31. | |
Hello, this is Breakfast with Roger Johnson and Sian Lloyd. | :29:32. | :30:44. | |
But first, a summary of this morning's main news. | :30:45. | :30:54. | |
13,000 mobile phones and more than 200 kilograms of drugs | :30:55. | :30:57. | |
were found in prisons in England and Wales last year. | :30:58. | :30:59. | |
The haul comes after a ?2 million investment | :31:00. | :31:02. | |
in technology to aid detection, as well as 300 | :31:03. | :31:04. | |
The government has described the situation as "unacceptable", | :31:05. | :31:07. | |
but says it's introduced measures to tackle the problem. | :31:08. | :31:09. | |
The Prison Reform Trust says that the underlying problems remain. | :31:10. | :31:28. | |
Some people are going into prison with a drug problem and some people | :31:29. | :31:36. | |
start to use drugs in prison as a way of coping. | :31:37. | :31:39. | |
The second thing in relation to phones is that legitimate use | :31:40. | :31:42. | |
of the telephone in prison is difficult. | :31:43. | :31:44. | |
The parents of Charlie Gard are expected to help deliver a petition | :31:45. | :31:47. | |
to Great Ormond Street Hospital, calling on doctors to allow | :31:48. | :31:50. | |
the terminally ill baby to travel for experimental treatment. | :31:51. | :31:53. | |
The petition has been signed by more than 350,000 people. | :31:54. | :31:55. | |
Charlie Gard's case is due to return to the High Court tomorrow, | :31:56. | :31:58. | |
after the hospital said it had seen claims of new evidence relating | :31:59. | :32:01. | |
State television in Iraq is reporting that security forces | :32:02. | :32:09. | |
are on the verge of retaking the city of Mosul. | :32:10. | :32:11. | |
It was seized by so-called Islamic State more than three years | :32:12. | :32:14. | |
ago, and has been the focus of intense fighting over | :32:15. | :32:16. | |
Iraqi soldiers have been celebrating on the streets, | :32:17. | :32:20. | |
despite no official word of a victory. | :32:21. | :32:25. | |
Anti-capitalist protesters clashed with German police | :32:26. | :32:26. | |
for a third night in Hamburg, following the end of the | :32:27. | :32:29. | |
Police used water cannons and tear gas to push them back, | :32:30. | :32:33. | |
During the summit, world leaders declared | :32:34. | :32:36. | |
the Paris Climate Agreement "irreversible", despite | :32:37. | :32:37. | |
While Theresa May left the meetings confident | :32:38. | :32:40. | |
A wealthy businessman has submitted alternative plans | :32:41. | :32:54. | |
for a third runway at Heathrow, which he says would save | :32:55. | :32:56. | |
The Hotel tycoon, Surinder Arora, suggests changing the design | :32:57. | :33:00. | |
of terminal buildings and reducing the amount of land built on. | :33:01. | :33:02. | |
A spokesperson for the airport said they would "welcome views" | :33:03. | :33:05. | |
on the plans during a public consultation later this year. | :33:06. | :33:12. | |
Tens of thousands of people are expected to attend a rally | :33:13. | :33:15. | |
in the Turkish city of Istanbul to protest against the government | :33:16. | :33:18. | |
The event is being held to mark the end of a 280-mile | :33:19. | :33:22. | |
It was organised by the opposition to highlight the mass arrests | :33:23. | :33:25. | |
and sackings since last year's failed coup. | :33:26. | :33:34. | |
A state of emergency has been declared in the Canadian Province | :33:35. | :33:37. | |
of British Columbia, where the authorities are trying | :33:38. | :33:39. | |
Thousands of homes have been evacuated, and some destroyed. | :33:40. | :33:42. | |
Most of the blazes started after lightning strikes | :33:43. | :33:44. | |
The Church of England will vote today on whether to allow special | :33:45. | :33:55. | |
services for transgender people following their transition. | :33:56. | :33:57. | |
At the Synod's annual meeting in York, prominent figures | :33:58. | :34:04. | |
will address calls for the Church to update its attitudes | :34:05. | :34:07. | |
well. There's still a lot of discrimination in the core people | :34:08. | :34:27. | |
that exist in so many levels. We have seen a remarkable change from | :34:28. | :34:32. | |
the people exerting that they are not better or worse off for being | :34:33. | :34:35. | |
gay or straight. They are all equal in the sight of God. | :34:36. | :34:45. | |
President has been at the G20 Cevert. When he left the -- when he | :34:46. | :34:56. | |
came back to the US, he came to an end of a Marine when his hat blew | :34:57. | :34:59. | |
off. It happened in Maryland as he prepared to travel to the White | :35:00. | :35:02. | |
House. As the Marines stood to attention, it blew right of again! | :35:03. | :35:08. | |
Lucky it was just the hat that moved off. Lucky, Mr President. | :35:09. | :35:13. | |
Show will disparate? Roger Federer is showing what a class act he is. | :35:14. | :35:23. | |
-- shall we move onto Esport. Tomorrow is manic Monday, we have a | :35:24. | :35:31. | |
four of the big for playing. Federer, the Djokovic, Murray and | :35:32. | :35:39. | |
Nadal. In women's draw will also have Johanna Konta. A massive daily | :35:40. | :35:46. | |
of tennis at Wimbledon. Let's give you a round-up of what happened | :35:47. | :35:47. | |
yesterday. Seven-time Wimbledon champion | :35:48. | :35:50. | |
Roger Federer has booked his place He comfortably beat the 27th seed, | :35:51. | :35:52. | |
Mischa Zverev, in straight Federer will play Bulgaria's | :35:53. | :35:56. | |
Grigor Dimitrov next. I think it is important to get | :35:57. | :35:59. | |
through the first week The first one, the walkover, | :36:00. | :36:01. | |
that did not give me much May crucial energy, looking down the | :36:02. | :36:06. | |
stretch. Obviously, we go one | :36:07. | :36:16. | |
round at a time and, I must say, my first goal was to get | :36:17. | :36:19. | |
to the second week I am happy now to sit back, relax | :36:20. | :36:22. | |
and come back strongly on Monday. Three-time champion Novak Djokovic | :36:23. | :36:26. | |
is also safely through to the second Although he did have a disagreement | :36:27. | :36:29. | |
with the umpire early on when he was a break | :36:30. | :36:42. | |
down in the first set But it seemed to focus Djokovic, | :36:43. | :36:44. | |
who went through in straight sets. It was a little more precarious | :36:45. | :36:48. | |
in the the women's draw. Top seed Angelique Kerber only | :36:49. | :36:51. | |
just scraped through against Kerber reached the final last year, | :36:52. | :36:53. | |
but fell to a set and a break down, before eventually coming | :36:54. | :37:00. | |
through to set up what will be one of the tastiest match-ups | :37:01. | :37:03. | |
of the next round - she'll play 2016 French Open | :37:04. | :37:07. | |
champion Garbine Muguruza. Last year he wowed the Wimbledon | :37:08. | :37:10. | |
crowd when as a qualifier ranked 772 in the world, | :37:11. | :37:16. | |
he reached the second round of the men's singles, | :37:17. | :37:18. | |
where he played Roger Federer. Well, Willis didn't make it | :37:19. | :37:20. | |
to the main draw this year - but he is impressing | :37:21. | :37:24. | |
in the men's doubles. Along with fellow Briton Jay Clarke, | :37:25. | :37:35. | |
they produced the shock They knocked out defending | :37:36. | :37:37. | |
champions, French pair Pierre-Hugues Herbert | :37:38. | :37:48. | |
and Nicolas Mahut, The British pair only | :37:49. | :37:50. | |
played their first event Andy Murray of course | :37:51. | :37:52. | |
plays tomorrow. Brother Jamie has teamed up | :37:53. | :38:02. | |
with five-time Grand Slam champion Martina Hingis in the mixed doubles | :38:03. | :38:04. | |
this year, and it looks Their first match together secured | :38:05. | :38:07. | |
them a place in the third round when they beat Britain's | :38:08. | :38:11. | |
Neal Skupski and Anna Smith The British and Irish Lions head | :38:12. | :38:13. | |
coach Warren Gatland says people will look back on the New Zealand | :38:14. | :38:17. | |
tour as a success. The Lions drew the final | :38:18. | :38:19. | |
Test match 15 points all, meaning the series against | :38:20. | :38:22. | |
the World Champions was shared. It was a thrilling finish | :38:23. | :38:24. | |
to the game in Auckland. Owen Farrell's late penalty kick | :38:25. | :38:26. | |
drew the Lions level in the game. A disputed offside decision denied | :38:27. | :38:29. | |
the All Blacks a further penalty And Gatland says he hasn't | :38:30. | :38:32. | |
ruled out taking charge My focus now is back on Wales | :38:33. | :38:35. | |
and looking forward to 2019. I definitely finish | :38:36. | :38:43. | |
there, unless they get Maybe I come back home | :38:44. | :38:46. | |
or maybe something else. I might just go to the beach | :38:47. | :38:53. | |
and put my feet up for He probably deserves a bit of a | :38:54. | :38:57. | |
holiday, doesn't he? Striker Romelu Lukaku has been | :38:58. | :39:11. | |
ordered to appear in court in Los Angeles in October | :39:12. | :39:13. | |
after police were called to reports of excessive noise | :39:14. | :39:16. | |
at a house in Beverley Hills. Lukaku, who's been on holiday | :39:17. | :39:18. | |
in the US, was arrested last Sunday after being given verbal | :39:19. | :39:21. | |
warnings by officers. It comes as the Everton player | :39:22. | :39:23. | |
is on the verge of a ?75 million He's set to have a | :39:24. | :39:26. | |
medical with United. Lukaku's former club, | :39:27. | :39:33. | |
Chelsea, had matched the fee The deal is believed to include | :39:34. | :39:34. | |
another ?15 million in add-ons. Meanwhile, it's looking increasingly | :39:35. | :39:42. | |
likely that Wayne Rooney will be leaving Old Trafford | :39:43. | :39:48. | |
and heading back to Everton. He was seen yesterday | :39:49. | :39:50. | |
at their training ground. Manchester United and England's | :39:51. | :39:52. | |
record goalscorer signed England's cricketers | :39:53. | :39:53. | |
are in control of the First Test They go into day four with a lead | :39:54. | :40:00. | |
of 216 runs at Lord's. They bowled the visitors | :40:01. | :40:07. | |
out for 361 yesterday, before finishing on 119-1 | :40:08. | :40:12. | |
with former captain Alastair Cook Lewis Hamilton will have his work | :40:13. | :40:14. | |
cut out if he's to finish on the podium at today's | :40:15. | :40:20. | |
Austrian Grand Prix. He was third in qualifying, | :40:21. | :40:22. | |
but a penalty means he'll start back His teammate, Valtteri Bottas, will | :40:23. | :40:25. | |
be on pole, with World Championship Britain's Chris Froome will start | :40:26. | :40:30. | |
a mountainous Stage 9 of the Tour de France with a 12-second lead, | :40:31. | :40:37. | |
ahead of team-mate Geraint Thomas. The race has reached the Jura | :40:38. | :40:42. | |
Mountains near the Swiss border. Froome had a minor scare | :40:43. | :40:45. | |
yesterday when he and Thomas briefly went off the road, | :40:46. | :40:47. | |
but were quickly back Stage 8 was won by the | :40:48. | :40:49. | |
24-year-old French rider Lilian Calmjan, who's | :40:50. | :40:55. | |
riding his first Tour. Wigan Warriors have moved up | :40:56. | :40:59. | |
to seventh place in Superleague after a 32-10 win | :41:00. | :41:03. | |
at Catalan Dragons. The scores were level on the | :41:04. | :41:07. | |
hour mark, but Wigan dominated Joe Burgess scored a hat trick of | :41:08. | :41:09. | |
tries in the game to secure the win. Wigan are now four points clear | :41:10. | :41:15. | |
of Warrington in ninth spot with two Now, every footballer | :41:16. | :41:18. | |
dreams of scoring a wonder For some it happens on the big | :41:19. | :41:29. | |
stage, for others maybe it's in the local park or | :41:30. | :41:38. | |
during a 5-a-side game. So this one will be replaying a | :41:39. | :41:40. | |
few times in a certain little This stunning goal was scored | :41:41. | :41:43. | |
by Noah in the final of an under Not sure if he actually | :41:44. | :41:56. | |
intended it, but who knows? Vanessa! To me, no offence, Noah, it | :41:57. | :42:13. | |
looks like you are clearing your lines, rather than aiming for the | :42:14. | :42:18. | |
goal. Do we care? That was fantastic! That means, if it is well | :42:19. | :42:25. | |
under nines, he was probably eight? Lovely to see that. | :42:26. | :42:31. | |
You mentioned bonkers money, Lionel Messi, front page of the Sunday | :42:32. | :42:39. | |
Times. How would you spend that? Breakfast mug? Breakfast Mug | :42:40. | :42:48. | |
challenge has been a real hit. Andy Murray is top of the lead. He got as | :42:49. | :42:55. | |
many tennis balls into the mug from a set distance as you can in 32nd. | :42:56. | :42:59. | |
We can of course reveal Mo Farah will be doing its second. Four-time | :43:00. | :43:07. | |
Olympic champion. I know that Mo is very competitive, so he will want to | :43:08. | :43:09. | |
beat Andy Murray in this. Earlier this week, | :43:10. | :43:14. | |
Mike Bushell, went to find out he got on when he swapped | :43:15. | :43:17. | |
the track for tennis. Net Mo Farah, you have won five | :43:18. | :43:20. | |
World Championship golds NARRATOR: This is a great start. | :43:21. | :43:46. | |
They are so close, they are so close. As we get up to 15 seconds. | :43:47. | :43:55. | |
So close, this is really hard. It's just shows what a challenge this is. | :43:56. | :44:01. | |
They're reining in our! I've seen a couple go in. Heat the room again! | :44:02. | :44:07. | |
Three, two, one. I've got to stop you there. We will give you that | :44:08. | :44:14. | |
one. How do you think you did? You were so close on so many. If they | :44:15. | :44:19. | |
had all gone in, the ones that when Sony, you would be challenging Andy | :44:20. | :44:27. | |
Murray's score of 14. That is competitive and our leaderboard, a | :44:28. | :44:31. | |
score of four. Charlie State got seven. If you'd counted those ones | :44:32. | :44:37. | |
but hippy ruin - so close! It's hard. Thank you, guys. You can see | :44:38. | :44:52. | |
he's really psyched up for it as well. He looked disappointed at the | :44:53. | :44:56. | |
end with four. He could have run back and forth and put more than for | :44:57. | :44:58. | |
its union. Let's have a look at where Mo | :44:59. | :45:00. | |
ranks on our leaderboard. Still a way off Andy Murray's 14 - | :45:01. | :45:08. | |
but four is certainly He's level with Heather | :45:09. | :45:11. | |
Watson and Milos Raonic. It has been great watching those. It | :45:12. | :45:25. | |
has, and Mo Farah is running at the London Anniversary Games. He's | :45:26. | :45:34. | |
running the 3000 metres in preparation for the World | :45:35. | :45:38. | |
Championships next month. Thank you, Jeff. Lovely to see you, take care. | :45:39. | :45:41. | |
Bradley Lowery may have lived a short life, | :45:42. | :45:43. | |
The six-year-old captured the hearts and minds of people up and down | :45:44. | :45:49. | |
the country with his determination and infectious smile. | :45:50. | :45:52. | |
Bradley died on Friday after battling a rare form of cancer. | :45:53. | :45:55. | |
But he never let his illness get in his way. | :45:56. | :46:03. | |
Net Bradley lived with neuroblastoma for most of his life. He was | :46:04. | :46:08. | |
diagnosed when he was just 18 months old. A Sunderland fan, he went on to | :46:09. | :46:16. | |
become the club's mascot, and that's where he met Akira, Jermain Defoe. | :46:17. | :46:22. | |
The England striker described him as his best friend in this emotional | :46:23. | :46:28. | |
tweet. Many took to social media to pay tribute to a young boy, whose | :46:29. | :46:30. | |
legacy is his energy and his smile. We're joined now by Alastair | :46:31. | :46:35. | |
Whitington from Neuroblastoma UK. As Sian was saying, Bradley really | :46:36. | :46:48. | |
has brought to prominence to this illness and made it something that | :46:49. | :46:52. | |
people now have heard of, if they hadn't before. Just tell us a little | :46:53. | :46:56. | |
bit more about it, and why it is such a dangerous illness for | :46:57. | :47:01. | |
youngsters. Neuroblastoma is a disease of young children, babies, | :47:02. | :47:04. | |
normally before the age of five, although it can be later. As a | :47:05. | :47:10. | |
disease it shows 35 children per year and 100 children are diagnosed, | :47:11. | :47:17. | |
that is two per week. For the dose nature of the disease, we are still | :47:18. | :47:24. | |
only 40-50% survival rate. As opposed to something like leukaemia, | :47:25. | :47:28. | |
which many years ago was in the offence that as when neuroblastoma | :47:29. | :47:33. | |
is, but is now in the 80-90 percent. What we need to do is try to invest | :47:34. | :47:39. | |
in research to get a cure for the disease and wounded in the same | :47:40. | :47:41. | |
direction as leukaemia. Bradley was incredibly brave. And his story, no | :47:42. | :47:46. | |
doubt, has raised the profile of this condition. You think that will | :47:47. | :47:51. | |
help with your aim, what you were talking about, with more of research | :47:52. | :47:55. | |
and getting people talking about it and realising that perhaps something | :47:56. | :48:00. | |
could be done? I would hope so. I think before Bradley's case, many | :48:01. | :48:04. | |
people would never have heard of neuroblastoma as a disease. He has | :48:05. | :48:08. | |
certainly raised the awareness of it. Cannot translate into moving | :48:09. | :48:12. | |
forward in terms of hopefully raising funds -- how that translates | :48:13. | :48:21. | |
in terms of moving forward. It's almost entirely done by charities | :48:22. | :48:27. | |
such as Neuroblastoma Age UK. We have put in something like ?800,000 | :48:28. | :48:33. | |
that we have raised. Bradley was a football supporter and if I'm the | :48:34. | :48:36. | |
first day of the Premier League every Premier club ?1 for everyone | :48:37. | :48:40. | |
who came through the turnstiles, that would double the amount. As we | :48:41. | :48:46. | |
were saying at the end of the sport, ?1 million for Lionel Messi in one | :48:47. | :48:53. | |
week. That's more than moderately raised in a year. It is a disease | :48:54. | :48:58. | |
that something can be done about. -- that's more than you raise in a | :48:59. | :49:03. | |
year. When I started 30 years ago, every child with high-risk disease | :49:04. | :49:10. | |
died. We are now improving up to 40-50%. We are developing treatments | :49:11. | :49:15. | |
throughout research and I can see before the end of my lifetime that | :49:16. | :49:20. | |
we could, if we get the right investment, even to the right | :49:21. | :49:24. | |
position where we are now -- where we would not be in the same | :49:25. | :49:29. | |
situation as leukaemia. Am I right in saying that Bradley went to | :49:30. | :49:33. | |
America to raise treatment? I was aware that they were fund-raising. | :49:34. | :49:39. | |
But unfortunately Bradley's disease progressed to such gusto that he was | :49:40. | :49:43. | |
unable to go. Sorry, that is my poor recollection. -- progressed to such | :49:44. | :49:52. | |
a state that he was unable to those. Manor are there other -- Merritt are | :49:53. | :50:01. | |
there other advances being made in other countries? We work with our | :50:02. | :50:03. | |
colleagues in Europe. In order to get the power, the | :50:04. | :50:18. | |
numbers in terms of power and the trials. We work closely together. | :50:19. | :50:24. | |
Certainly across Europe, the treatments are identical and we work | :50:25. | :50:28. | |
very closely with our colleagues in America, and working closely in | :50:29. | :50:31. | |
getting the same trials to ensure that we get a quick answer. That's | :50:32. | :50:36. | |
the way to move forward. Thank you very much for coming in. Of course, | :50:37. | :50:44. | |
we are thinking Bradley's family at this sad time. | :50:45. | :50:48. | |
This is where we say goodbye to Sian who will read the news for Andrew | :50:49. | :50:54. | |
Mullen he starts at nine o'clock. The first one last look at the | :50:55. | :50:58. | |
weather. Thank you very much indeed. A bit | :50:59. | :51:03. | |
more of a mixed bag today. Not a wash-out for most of us. This is in | :51:04. | :51:07. | |
Argyll and Bute where we are stuck under the weather front. This is the | :51:08. | :51:12. | |
weather front I've been talking about, that is where the thick cloud | :51:13. | :51:18. | |
is. But we have a bit more rain and some coastal mist. The Raiders is | :51:19. | :51:25. | |
patchy at the moment but it will increase -- the rain is patchy. To | :51:26. | :51:31. | |
the north and south of that, a much brighter prospect. Some fairly | :51:32. | :51:34. | |
decent weather on offer and it is coinciding with the weekend. Not too | :51:35. | :51:38. | |
many complaints with the forecast. A woman as well as bright and drier | :51:39. | :51:44. | |
day. -- a warmer as well as brighter. There will be some lighter | :51:45. | :51:52. | |
periods of rain, of course, as well. To the south of that would lift the | :51:53. | :51:56. | |
mist and low cloud off the coast and it will brighten quite nicely. A | :51:57. | :52:01. | |
little warmer than yesterday. Quite stifling in certain areas. If you | :52:02. | :52:07. | |
are heading to the sporting events, you could have a downpour. They will | :52:08. | :52:12. | |
be few and far between. A very small chance if you are heading off to the | :52:13. | :52:18. | |
Test match. Similarly so for the Anniversary Games going on. Those | :52:19. | :52:25. | |
thunderstorms across East Wales, East Anglia and the south-east will | :52:26. | :52:28. | |
rumble on, but they are few and far between. I weather front turns more | :52:29. | :52:33. | |
Shane Lowry as it tracks southwards overnight also it allows fresh air. | :52:34. | :52:42. | |
That brings with it the risk of further downpours tomorrow. Through | :52:43. | :52:47. | |
the morning rush hour we could have some through the day. There will be | :52:48. | :52:53. | |
more unsettled weather with no showers around tomorrow. It looks | :52:54. | :52:58. | |
brighter and drier for Northern Ireland and Scotland. Thereafter, a | :52:59. | :53:04. | |
more unsettled picture. If you found the night-time is uncomfortable. | :53:05. | :53:07. | |
And, it will at least be fresher. Have a good weekend. | :53:08. | :53:12. | |
We will try. You as well, Helen! From the Grand Canyon | :53:13. | :53:18. | |
to the Pyramids and Machu Picchu - they're some of the most iconic | :53:19. | :53:20. | |
sites in the world. And the Lake District could soon be | :53:21. | :53:23. | |
joining their ranks. That's if UNESCO grant the region | :53:24. | :53:25. | |
World Heritage status. Delegates are due to announce | :53:26. | :53:27. | |
their decision later today. So what makes the national | :53:28. | :53:30. | |
park so special? Well, just in case Unesco | :53:31. | :54:29. | |
still haven't made up their mind, we're joined by two people | :54:30. | :54:32. | |
who are sure to sing Nigel Wilkinson is the Managing | :54:33. | :54:34. | |
Director of Windermere Lake Cruises, and Harriet Fraser is a writer | :54:35. | :54:39. | |
and poet, who's also a patron of the charity, | :54:40. | :54:41. | |
Friends of the Lake District. Thank you both for coming in. | :54:42. | :54:54. | |
Harriet, you are a poet. Wordsworth, of course, is the one who is most | :54:55. | :54:58. | |
identified as a poet with the Lake District. What is it that inspires | :54:59. | :55:03. | |
people? You can see from the pictures you've just shown, it's the | :55:04. | :55:07. | |
most beautiful district. But it has a very deep culture which is largely | :55:08. | :55:14. | |
hill farming, but also conservation. Through writing, you can celebrate | :55:15. | :55:18. | |
that. Wordsworth did, and people have been celebrating ever since. | :55:19. | :55:26. | |
Tricks part of. Yes. Nigel, you noticed one of your boats in the | :55:27. | :55:31. | |
film. How important is tourism to the Lake District? Tourism is | :55:32. | :55:34. | |
absolutely essential. It underpins the economy to the Lake District and | :55:35. | :55:39. | |
wider Cumbria. We have around 20 million visitors a year to the Lake | :55:40. | :55:44. | |
District and it provides around 18,000 full-time employees. So it's | :55:45. | :55:49. | |
really significant. Is it difficult for local because there are times | :55:50. | :55:53. | |
when you can go to the Lakes drive around quite easily. But around this | :55:54. | :55:59. | |
time of year, there will be a lot of cars heading in off the M6 towards | :56:00. | :56:06. | |
Ambleside and Windermere. One of the challenges is to manage the Lake | :56:07. | :56:10. | |
District in a sustainable manner. We are a public transport operator, and | :56:11. | :56:13. | |
what better way to get around the Lake District sustainably and to use | :56:14. | :56:17. | |
of the fantastic services that Barack? So, yes, it's a challenge, | :56:18. | :56:23. | |
but it's one that is being actively managed. Harriet, these pictures are | :56:24. | :56:28. | |
beautiful. What are the places that inspire you? It's not always the | :56:29. | :56:33. | |
summit Woolfe, although people head there and you get spectacular views. | :56:34. | :56:39. | |
It can be the quiet woodlands, the much quieter valleys. It's important | :56:40. | :56:44. | |
not to race to the summits pausing the landscape, experienced it in all | :56:45. | :56:48. | |
different weathers. There's always a good time to go to the Lake | :56:49. | :56:53. | |
District. It's a National Park so it is protected in a large way. What | :56:54. | :57:00. | |
difference would it make to have this UNESCO world heritage status? I | :57:01. | :57:03. | |
think perhaps people appreciate it for its beauty and don't quite | :57:04. | :57:07. | |
understand the layers beneath that, the storage of the cultural history, | :57:08. | :57:11. | |
the Hill farming, the industrial history. I think it will make people | :57:12. | :57:17. | |
stay longer and become more curious, especially as we share more stories | :57:18. | :57:20. | |
about what we are sharing through the status. It's certainly has a | :57:21. | :57:26. | |
huge appeal across the world. But it puts it on to another platform on | :57:27. | :57:31. | |
another level. Does, and a dozen internationally as well as | :57:32. | :57:35. | |
domestically. What we really hope it will act as an economic driver and | :57:36. | :57:40. | |
grow the value, not the volume of tourism, by giving people more | :57:41. | :57:44. | |
aspects to consider. Reasons to make the visit and sustain visits. And to | :57:45. | :57:48. | |
benefit the whole of the county because the Lake District -- because | :57:49. | :57:55. | |
if the Lake District is designated, we will have two. We already have | :57:56. | :58:00. | |
Hadrian's Wall in Cumbria as well. With this heritage status comes the | :58:01. | :58:07. | |
obligation to maintain the same level that places like Stonehenge | :58:08. | :58:12. | |
do. Liverpool waterfront is under threat of losing it because of | :58:13. | :58:14. | |
development that is planned in Liverpool. And almost guarantees the | :58:15. | :58:21. | |
extra level of protection. Yes, but it doesn't keep it in one state | :58:22. | :58:26. | |
borrow. It is evolving and in all sectors everybody is evolving with | :58:27. | :58:34. | |
the times. Absolutely. It's conservation, not preservation. | :58:35. | :58:39. | |
Fantastic. Thank you both very much indeed. UNESCO announces its | :58:40. | :58:42. | |
decision later this afternoon so everyone has their fingers crossed. | :58:43. | :58:44. | |
Thank you both very much indeed. Dan and Louise will be | :58:45. | :58:48. | |
here tomorrow from six. | :58:49. | :58:53. |