22/01/2018

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0:00:08 > 0:00:13Hello. Very good morning.

0:00:13 > 0:00:15This is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin.

0:00:15 > 0:00:18The head of the Army says Britain's military needs more money to match

0:00:18 > 0:00:20potential enemies on the battlefield.

0:00:20 > 0:00:22General Sir Nick Carter's warning comes after Russia practised

0:00:22 > 0:00:30simulated attacks across northern Europe.

0:00:40 > 0:00:41Very good morning.

0:00:41 > 0:00:43It's Monday the 22nd of January.

0:00:43 > 0:00:44Also this morning:

0:00:44 > 0:00:45More turmoil for UKIP.

0:00:45 > 0:00:48The leader, Henry Bolton, refuses to step down,

0:00:48 > 0:00:53but the party's deputy resigns saying he's got to go.

0:00:53 > 0:01:01Good morning. We have first sight of a parliamentary report into

0:01:01 > 0:01:10nutrition. We are asking what are the causes and cures for

0:01:10 > 0:01:11malnutrition.

0:01:11 > 0:01:14Union leaders will be meeting the bosses of the car maker,

0:01:14 > 0:01:14Vauxhall, today.

0:01:14 > 0:01:17They'll be discussing the job losses at Ellesmere Port.

0:01:17 > 0:01:19I'll have all the details shortly.

0:01:19 > 0:01:19Good morning.

0:01:19 > 0:01:22In sport, the defending champion, Roger Federer, is in action

0:01:22 > 0:01:24at the Australian Open, looking to emulate yesterday's

0:01:24 > 0:01:26achievement of Kyle Edmund in reaching the quarter-finals.

0:01:26 > 0:01:29And Sarah has the weather.

0:01:29 > 0:01:29Good

0:01:29 > 0:01:37Good morning. A lot of lying snow in the north of the country, but milder

0:01:37 > 0:01:43air pushing through all regions today. I will bring you a full

0:01:43 > 0:01:46forecast in about 15 minutes. Thank you. See you

0:01:46 > 0:01:49forecast in about 15 minutes. Thank you. See you later on.

0:01:49 > 0:01:50Good morning.

0:01:50 > 0:01:51First, our main story.

0:01:51 > 0:01:54The head of the Army will warn today that Britain's military risks

0:01:54 > 0:01:57falling behind that of its enemies unless it

0:01:57 > 0:01:57gets additional investment.

0:01:57 > 0:02:01In a speech to the defence think tank, the Royal United Services

0:02:01 > 0:02:04Institute, General Sir Nick Carter is expected to say that Russia now

0:02:04 > 0:02:06has superior battlefield capabilities to the UK,

0:02:06 > 0:02:08and poses a significant threat in terms of cyber warfare.

0:02:08 > 0:02:14Simon Clemison reports.

0:02:14 > 0:02:19Images showing what Russia said was a strike in Syria. The missiles come

0:02:19 > 0:02:24not from the Mediterranean Sea, but the Caspian sea, 900 miles away.

0:02:24 > 0:02:28Russia is building an increasingly aggressive military, which the UK is

0:02:28 > 0:02:34struggling to match. Russia has also been scintillating attacks closer to

0:02:34 > 0:02:40home, conducting large-scale exercises. -- simulating. General

0:02:40 > 0:02:46Sir Nick Carter will warn return must take notice of what is going on

0:02:46 > 0:02:52around us and keep up, all we could be constrained. -- or. He will say

0:02:52 > 0:02:57the threats are not thousands of miles away, but on our doorstep. He

0:02:57 > 0:03:01says cyber warfare can also disrupt the lives of normal people. The head

0:03:01 > 0:03:05of the army is not saying this in so many words, but one way to avoid the

0:03:05 > 0:03:09possibility of falling behind in combat could be money from the

0:03:09 > 0:03:14Chancellor at Number 11. He will not want to see any cuts. The speech

0:03:14 > 0:03:17will be made with the approval of the Defence Secretary who has said

0:03:17 > 0:03:2980% rise be a base, not a ceiling. Simon Cleminson, BBC News -- said a

0:03:29 > 0:03:372% rise.

0:03:37 > 0:03:41And in just over half an hour, we'll speak to a former British Military

0:03:41 > 0:03:42Commander. That's at 7:40.

0:03:42 > 0:03:45UKIP's deputy leader, Margot Parker, has resigned from her position

0:03:45 > 0:03:48after the party's leader, Henry Bolton, refused to stand down

0:03:48 > 0:03:50following a vote of no confidence yesterday.

0:03:50 > 0:03:53She told the BBC that Mr Bolton's refusal had left the party

0:03:53 > 0:03:56in "limbo" and that he should go "sooner rather than later."

0:03:56 > 0:03:58Our political correspondent, Chris Mason, joins us from

0:03:58 > 0:03:58Westminster.

0:03:58 > 0:04:02Last weekend was a hard one for UKIP. More difficulties.Yes. The

0:04:02 > 0:04:06word extraordinary can be deservedly thrown around with UKIP. Now it can

0:04:06 > 0:04:10be officially attached to a meeting coming up in the next week to

0:04:10 > 0:04:16resolve the leadership issue. You will remember the row about the

0:04:16 > 0:04:22leader, Henry Bolton, he's now ex-girlfriend's racist comments

0:04:22 > 0:04:27popping up in the newspapers. He said he will not resign. But the

0:04:27 > 0:04:34party says he should. He still is refusing to go. Now his deputy this

0:04:34 > 0:04:38morning has walk the plank and suggested he should follow her along

0:04:38 > 0:04:45it. But, no, he doesn't want to go. There will be an extraordinary

0:04:45 > 0:04:49meeting taking place in the next 28 days. It will likely be towards the

0:04:49 > 0:04:55tail-end of that period. It requires 250 members to turn up and they will

0:04:55 > 0:04:59get a vote to say if he should stay up it is impossible to say if he

0:04:59 > 0:05:05will stay or go. You will have to ask Jeremy Corbyn about the prospect

0:05:05 > 0:05:12of managing to cling on as a leader when many people in your party wants

0:05:12 > 0:05:21to get rid of you. He is still around, so Bolton may be sticking

0:05:21 > 0:05:28around as well.We will have more on that later ran. -- later on.

0:05:28 > 0:05:30The Foreign Secretary, Boris Johnson, will meet his US

0:05:30 > 0:05:33counterpart, Rex Tillerson, in London today for talks on Syria,

0:05:33 > 0:05:34Iran and Yemen.

0:05:34 > 0:05:37It comes after President Donald Trump refused to visit the UK

0:05:37 > 0:05:38and open the new US embassy.

0:05:38 > 0:05:40Here's our diplomatic correspondent, James Landale.

0:05:40 > 0:05:44Donald Trump may not be coming to Britain, but his Secretary of State

0:05:44 > 0:05:49is. Rex Tillerson arrived in London last night for a fresh round of

0:05:49 > 0:05:54diplomacy in European capitals. The foreign policy chief of America is

0:05:54 > 0:05:59expected to go to the new US embassy in London, the one Donald Trump said

0:05:59 > 0:06:04he does not like, and try to smooth ruffled feathers with assurances of

0:06:04 > 0:06:11the importance of the UK - US relationship. But he is meeting

0:06:11 > 0:06:16Boris Johnson. Rex Tillerson is also expected to seek common ground on

0:06:16 > 0:06:22key international issues. On Syria, they will discuss not only the new

0:06:22 > 0:06:25Turkish assault on Kurdish forces in the north, but also upcoming

0:06:25 > 0:06:29meetings in Geneva and elsewhere, to seek, yet again, some kind of

0:06:29 > 0:06:33political solution to the conflict. Rex Tillerson also wants to discuss

0:06:33 > 0:06:39Iran, where Britain and Europe are at odds with the US over deals to

0:06:39 > 0:06:43restrict the nuclear programme. He wants to look at new ways of curbing

0:06:43 > 0:06:49the ballistic missiles of Iran. Both sides will also want to talk about

0:06:49 > 0:06:52Yemen and the fighting in the humanitarian situation continuing to

0:06:52 > 0:06:58get worse in what has become a proxy war between Iran in Saudi Arabia.

0:06:58 > 0:07:02But attention, as ever, will focus on the UK-US relationship which has

0:07:02 > 0:07:06contested by Donald Trump's apparent indifference and reluctance to

0:07:06 > 0:07:12visit. Today's diplomacy will pave the way for the president's meeting

0:07:12 > 0:07:17with the Prime Minister Theresa May expected in the Swedish port of

0:07:17 > 0:07:23Davos later this week. James Landale, BBC News.

0:07:23 > 0:07:25The US federal government will remain closed today

0:07:25 > 0:07:28after the Senate delayed a vote on a budget measure,

0:07:28 > 0:07:31which would have allowed civil servants to go back to work.

0:07:31 > 0:07:33Democrats want President Trump to negotiate over immigration,

0:07:33 > 0:07:36but Republicans say no deal is possible while federal government

0:07:36 > 0:07:37services are closed.

0:07:37 > 0:07:42The last government shutdown was in 2013, and lasted for 16 days.

0:07:42 > 0:07:45Britain should prepare for a much more economically optimistic 2018

0:07:45 > 0:07:47because global growth is better than predicted.

0:07:47 > 0:07:49That's the argument of Lord Jim O'Neill,

0:07:49 > 0:07:51the former Conservative Treasury minister and Remain supporter.

0:07:51 > 0:07:54He says the gloomy predictions of the possible effects of Brexit

0:07:54 > 0:08:02are likely to be "dwarfed" by the more positive figures.

0:08:16 > 0:08:20A charity says one in three young women in the UK are embarrassed to

0:08:20 > 0:08:23attend smear tests for cervical cancer because of issues with body

0:08:23 > 0:08:23image.

0:08:23 > 0:08:26Jo's Cervical Cancer Trust, which surveyed more than 2,000 women

0:08:26 > 0:08:29aged between 25 and 35, said it was worried about the impact

0:08:29 > 0:08:32on screening rates, which have fallen to a 20-year low.

0:08:32 > 0:08:37The key finding which has come out is that one in three women

0:08:37 > 0:08:44researched say that body image is a significant factor. That is a big

0:08:44 > 0:08:49concern. For those under 35, it is the most common cancer. Potentially,

0:08:49 > 0:08:54lives could be put at risk if they are not going to screenings.

0:08:54 > 0:08:58A man's been rescued after a week of being cut off by the snow.

0:08:58 > 0:09:00The 64-year-old, who lives in Dumfries and Galloway,

0:09:00 > 0:09:02had been attempting to reach the nearest village,

0:09:02 > 0:09:05but his path was blocked by deep snow.

0:09:05 > 0:09:07A mountain rescue team tried to drive to him,

0:09:07 > 0:09:11but had to abandon the car and go on foot to help him.

0:09:11 > 0:09:13They finally managed to reach the man after battling

0:09:13 > 0:09:19through drifts for two hours.

0:09:19 > 0:09:22Gosh, at least they got him.

0:09:22 > 0:09:24Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri, has won the top awards

0:09:24 > 0:09:27at this year's Screen Actors Guild Awards in Hollywood.

0:09:27 > 0:09:30For the first time in its history, all the presenters were women.

0:09:30 > 0:09:34It was planned before the Me Too and Times Up movements took off,

0:09:34 > 0:09:36in response to the sexual harassment scandal that's shaken Hollywood.

0:09:36 > 0:09:39The awards themselves are a good indicator of which films are likely

0:09:39 > 0:09:41to do well at the Oscars.

0:09:41 > 0:09:44Gary Oldman was overcome with emotion as he accepted his

0:09:44 > 0:09:44prize.

0:09:44 > 0:09:47We will go through the winners later. A little bit more gender

0:09:47 > 0:09:51equality for you.Go on, then.

0:09:51 > 0:09:53Now here's some positive news in the gender equality

0:09:53 > 0:09:54movement in Hollywood.

0:09:54 > 0:09:57Minnie Mouse is finally due to receive a star

0:09:57 > 0:09:58on the Hollywood Walk of Fame today.

0:09:58 > 0:10:01I thought she was going to get equal pay or something.

0:10:01 > 0:10:04She's been in the entertainment industry for 90 years,

0:10:04 > 0:10:07and many Disney fans say her star is long overdue.

0:10:07 > 0:10:10Her beloved Mickey was honoured with a star four decades ago.

0:10:10 > 0:10:13Many of her fellow Disney characters already have stars on the Walk

0:10:13 > 0:10:16of Fame, including Donald Duck, Tinker Bell, Winnie The Poo,

0:10:16 > 0:10:17Snow White, and Kermit the Frog.

0:10:17 > 0:10:20Miss Piggy, however, does not have a star of her own.

0:10:20 > 0:10:24I never thought I would be celebrating for Minnie Mouse.It is

0:10:24 > 0:10:33a disgrace Miss Piggy hasn't got one.Good morning.

0:10:33 > 0:10:38Good morning.

0:10:38 > 0:10:41Britain's Kyle Edmund is already into the last eight.

0:10:41 > 0:10:48He is all the talk. We will know tomorrow what happens.

0:10:48 > 0:10:50Can Novak Djokovic and Roger Federer join him?

0:10:50 > 0:10:53The defending champion is currently in action and two sets up

0:10:53 > 0:11:01in his last 16 match.

0:11:02 > 0:11:05Mark Allen has won the Masters snooker for the first time.

0:11:05 > 0:11:07The Northern Irishman beat England's Kyren Wilson 10-7

0:11:07 > 0:11:08in a tight match.

0:11:08 > 0:11:11Tommy Fleetwood won his fourth European Tour title yesterday

0:11:11 > 0:11:13by retaining the Abu Dhabi Championship title.

0:11:13 > 0:11:15The European number one started the day two shots behind

0:11:15 > 0:11:20the overnight leaders but shot eight birdies to win the tournament.

0:11:20 > 0:11:25And an's cricketers have salvage something from their tour of

0:11:25 > 0:11:37Australia. -- And England's. Jos Buttler scored a century. We will be

0:11:37 > 0:11:44talking to Kyle Edmund's coach later.He has done incredibly well.

0:11:44 > 0:11:50And in over 40 degrees.

0:11:51 > 0:11:53And in over 40 degrees.There you go. Talking about warmth. I will

0:11:53 > 0:11:58mention this in the papers. If your nose is colder than normal, it is a

0:11:58 > 0:12:10sign you are working too hard.I don't believe that.I cannot

0:12:10 > 0:12:11don't believe that.I cannot believe you are talking down about

0:12:11 > 0:12:22scientific research.Check your nose now.Lots of people believe the

0:12:25 > 0:12:29thing about eyeballs coming out of your head if you hold your sneeze.

0:12:29 > 0:12:35If you are thinking too much, blood goes to the wrong part of your body.

0:12:35 > 0:12:40Here you go. Proved. Scientists say there is a link between mental

0:12:40 > 0:12:51overload and facial temperature.

0:12:51 > 0:12:53overload and facial temperature. A cold hooter is a sign of thinking

0:12:53 > 0:12:56too hard in a study with thermal imaging. They found the nose

0:12:56 > 0:13:00temperatures of those overwhelmed dropped by one degree.That is

0:13:00 > 0:13:04amazing.That is one of my favourite bits of research you have ever

0:13:04 > 0:13:13brought up.Mining is absolutely freezing cold.Things will warm up.

0:13:13 > 0:13:15The rest of

0:13:15 > 0:13:17freezing cold.Things will warm up. The rest of your body will not be as

0:13:17 > 0:13:21cold as it was over the weekend. This is a picture taken by a Weather

0:13:21 > 0:13:25Watcher in Cumbria yesterday.

0:13:25 > 0:13:29A lot of snow in the north of the country. Things will change. Looking

0:13:29 > 0:13:34at Sunday afternoon. Yesterday, many places struggled to get above

0:13:34 > 0:13:40freezing to be by tomorrow, I choose to, look at the temperatures, they

0:13:40 > 0:13:48will all be back up into double figures. Mild air moving in. Cold

0:13:48 > 0:13:52air clearing to the east. Temperatures on the rise today and

0:13:52 > 0:13:59tomorrow as well. This morning.

0:13:59 > 0:14:01tomorrow as well. This morning. Rain to start in the north and west of

0:14:01 > 0:14:04Scotland. Showers in Northern Ireland and the north-west of

0:14:04 > 0:14:07England. Showers should ease later on. Largely dry but a chilly start

0:14:07 > 0:14:11in the north-east of England and down the East Anglia. A lot of snow.

0:14:11 > 0:14:15Icy stretches. Rain to the south anywhere from London to Bristol. To

0:14:15 > 0:14:24the south, heavy bursts. Through the morning, losing rain from the south

0:14:24 > 0:14:29and south-east. Clearing away. For many of us, An improving get.

0:14:29 > 0:14:37Brightness. -- improving day. Showers for the west of Scotland.

0:14:37 > 0:14:42Most should ease away. Wind from the south-west means it is more mild

0:14:42 > 0:14:49than recently. Temperatures between 6-10 degrees. Tonight, chilly first

0:14:49 > 0:14:59thing. Late in the night, wind picking up from the south-west.

0:14:59 > 0:15:01picking up from the south-west. Much milder air moving in and a weather

0:15:01 > 0:15:04front bringing rain. Tuesday will start unsettled and wet and windy.

0:15:04 > 0:15:13Rain bands will go

0:15:13 > 0:15:16Rain bands will go east as mild air goes through the south-west on

0:15:16 > 0:15:19Tuesday. A different feel to the weather in the next 24 hours. On

0:15:19 > 0:15:23Tuesday, the rain will go east. Heavy in the hills and the coast.

0:15:23 > 0:15:30Most places will

0:15:30 > 0:15:32Most places will see some rain. Followed by scattered showers and

0:15:32 > 0:15:35brighter spells. The temperatures tomorrow, 10- 13 degrees. Wednesday,

0:15:35 > 0:15:41another unsettled day. Wet and windy. Rangel link east through the

0:15:41 > 0:15:51country. Things are looking more mild.

0:15:51 > 0:15:55mild. Could turn mild towards the end of the week. But not as cold as

0:15:55 > 0:16:01it has been.

0:16:04 > 0:16:10Guardian first. Steroid abuse in Britain. This is one of the pictures

0:16:10 > 0:16:14from quite a few people in London yesterday taking part in a global

0:16:14 > 0:16:18women's march following a number of events in America and around the

0:16:18 > 0:16:24world. Lots of papers covering this story.

0:16:24 > 0:16:35She is called Miley Billingham, she was stabbed to death. -- Mylee. The

0:16:35 > 0:16:40front page of several papers. This is one of the stories we are

0:16:40 > 0:16:49covering. The Daily Telegraph, the army can't keep up with Russia.

0:16:49 > 0:16:51Matching Moscow on the battlefield. Concerns about the transatlantic

0:16:51 > 0:16:56cables, underwater cables. We haven't got the apparent ability to

0:16:56 > 0:17:04defend them. And the wintry flurry is core to the Queen by surprise at

0:17:04 > 0:17:09Sandringham yesterday. It was bitter, wasn't it? It was a

0:17:09 > 0:17:14proper stay inside day. If you are out too long, your chin

0:17:14 > 0:17:19goes cold. Col chairman anyone?That's what you

0:17:19 > 0:17:30get from a motorbike? A cold chin? What have you got? Obviously, still

0:17:30 > 0:17:38loads of analysis about Carillion, and I will give you more on that. We

0:17:38 > 0:17:41have been talking about robots taking over the world, robots will

0:17:41 > 0:17:47do everything. There is a shop in Edinburgh which took on a robot and

0:17:47 > 0:17:54he has been sacked after a week. Bad attitude? Apparently it's because,

0:17:54 > 0:17:58he had a promising start, he was greeting customers well but then he

0:17:58 > 0:18:06didn't really know what he was doing. Someone asked him, where is

0:18:06 > 0:18:11Libya? In the alcohol section. And when one of the customers came in,

0:18:11 > 0:18:19he said Hadlow, gorgeous. He hasn't done too well. Fabio the shop bot is

0:18:19 > 0:18:24no more.One shop, there was an experiment with a hologram. She has

0:18:24 > 0:18:31been booted out.Do you say hello to them?I do. No, I don't. Because I

0:18:31 > 0:18:36would rather talk to a person.I talk to cash machines sometimes as

0:18:36 > 0:18:44well.Thank you for my money.Kyle Adnam and is all over the back

0:18:44 > 0:18:51pages. Five things you didn't know. -- Edmund. He was born in

0:18:51 > 0:18:57Johannesburg, moved to the UK at three, grew up in Tipton in East

0:18:57 > 0:19:00Yorkshire, near Beverley. Cricket was his first love, he loves

0:19:00 > 0:19:06Liverpool, is a petrol hedge -- is a petrolhead and has been friends with

0:19:06 > 0:19:10Andy Murray, practised with him for five years. Now he is doing his own

0:19:10 > 0:19:19training schedule. And Sanchez is all over the papers as well. This is

0:19:19 > 0:19:28what the Sun has gone with.United have dealt the city a major blow.

0:19:28 > 0:19:35Let me show you a picture of this. Apparently he has got 400,000

0:19:35 > 0:19:40followers on Instagram. What I find extraordinary is that he looks like

0:19:40 > 0:19:45he is taking the photo.It's all cleverly set up.How is that done,

0:19:45 > 0:19:51there must be a biscuit on the side? Some sort of small fish on the side

0:19:51 > 0:19:58of the camera.Well done, nanny. High-level research about if you

0:19:58 > 0:20:03have got a cold nose, it means you are working too hard. I often have a

0:20:03 > 0:20:09cold nose but I have quite a big nose. Yes, I have quite an

0:20:09 > 0:20:14extremity. My son asked me about six months ago, dad, will miners be as

0:20:14 > 0:20:23big as yours? I sent him to his room. He has got his mother's nose.

0:20:23 > 0:20:25This morning we're talking about malnutrition in the elderly

0:20:25 > 0:20:27in the UK.

0:20:27 > 0:20:30BBC Breakfast has exclusively seen a report which estimates 1.3

0:20:30 > 0:20:31million older people suffer from hunger.

0:20:31 > 0:20:33Breakfast's John Maguire can tell us more.

0:20:33 > 0:20:41He's in St Albans for us this morning.

0:20:41 > 0:20:48Good morning to you, John. We are at the Hertfordshire independent living

0:20:48 > 0:20:51service kitchens in Saint all bones. These are some of the meals on

0:20:51 > 0:20:55wheels being loaded up into the oven. We have all-day Breakfast on a

0:20:55 > 0:21:00summer fruit crumble, looking down the menu list, salmon all,

0:21:00 > 0:21:04Cumberland sausage, steak and kidney pie, 1500 meals across

0:21:04 > 0:21:09Hertfordshire. Good morning. The staff are loading up these boxes.

0:21:09 > 0:21:13These are home from hospital packs, the idea to make sure the people,

0:21:13 > 0:21:18when they get home from hospital, have some food they are able to cook

0:21:18 > 0:21:23as well obviously as the daily meals on wheels service. They can get

0:21:23 > 0:21:26lunch and an afternoon tea. The important thing is not only the food

0:21:26 > 0:21:30but it's the contact and also here, they have a community cafe, giving

0:21:30 > 0:21:38it back, tried to tackle isolation which is one of the main causes.

0:21:38 > 0:21:44He always managed to finish what we deliver to you?Janet is receiving a

0:21:44 > 0:21:49check up this morning from Annabel Martin, a nutritionist on the

0:21:49 > 0:21:52Hertfordshire independent living service.OK, and that's a slightly

0:21:52 > 0:21:56more than you were last times that's fantastic.She is malnourished but

0:21:56 > 0:22:00today there is good news, she is putting on weight. Malnourishment is

0:22:00 > 0:22:05defined as when the body doesn't get the nutrients it needs to function

0:22:05 > 0:22:10properly. A Parliamentary report published today says it's a fact --

0:22:10 > 0:22:15it affects 1.3 million elderly people but it is an estimate. The

0:22:15 > 0:22:22data comes from 2011 so it is for updated information. Those who

0:22:22 > 0:22:26provide meals on wheels suspect it's a much bigger problem.Well, we are

0:22:26 > 0:22:31dealing will malnutrition on a daily basis. We've done our own research

0:22:31 > 0:22:35screening clients when they first come to our meals on wheels service

0:22:35 > 0:22:39and we discover that 44% of them are malnourished to some extent. It

0:22:39 > 0:22:42seems crazy to me that hunger amongst the elderly is something

0:22:42 > 0:22:49which is still prevalent in this country.And the best guest of the

0:22:49 > 0:22:55cost of the problem is almost £12 billion and rising.Partly about

0:22:55 > 0:23:01ageing population, may be partly through poverty, more so because of

0:23:01 > 0:23:06isolation but none of that is the reason for the government -- the

0:23:06 > 0:23:10government not thinking more imaginatively how it might spend a

0:23:10 > 0:23:15very small part of the pension Budget in a way which really helps

0:23:15 > 0:23:21people in dire need.Turn it up a bit. The report makes several

0:23:21 > 0:23:24recommendations. They include taking winter Fuel Payments from the

0:23:24 > 0:23:28wealthiest pensioners to help fund community support. More meals on

0:23:28 > 0:23:32wheels, not only to provide food but also tackle isolation and

0:23:32 > 0:23:37loneliness. And an increased role from supermarkets to offer slower

0:23:37 > 0:23:46shopping lanes and lunch clubs for the install cafe. Hello, Ruth. Ruth

0:23:46 > 0:23:51has just turned 91. Hi, Ruth. And still cooks herself in the evening.

0:23:51 > 0:23:57But has a daily lunch delivery. Oh, that looks nice. That looks lovely.

0:23:57 > 0:24:01She is well nourished and enjoys the social contact.I can't grumble

0:24:01 > 0:24:07because they never miss, they always come every day regardless of the

0:24:07 > 0:24:12climate and the weather.The report recognises that government and local

0:24:12 > 0:24:17authority budgets are under pressure and social services directors say

0:24:17 > 0:24:23they work needs proper funding.The money talked about in the report, in

0:24:23 > 0:24:29my view, would be significantly insignificant when we talk about the

0:24:29 > 0:24:34amount of money that is required to truly puts social care on the

0:24:34 > 0:24:38sustainable footing.National governments across the UK say they

0:24:38 > 0:24:41are taking steps to tackle malnutrition and in England, for

0:24:41 > 0:24:45example, the care act makes sure that vulnerable people's needs are

0:24:45 > 0:24:50met by the local authorities. But today's report is a challenge to us

0:24:50 > 0:24:56all to do something about it.

0:24:56 > 0:25:09Let us pick on those issues with Sarah ran in those reports. -- Sarah

0:25:09 > 0:25:14Wren from that report. What would make the biggest difference?A lot

0:25:14 > 0:25:18of people think it is normal to lose weight as someone ages and it's not.

0:25:18 > 0:25:23If someone is losing weight, it shows something wrong. Recognising

0:25:23 > 0:25:27that is a great starting point but giving people access to services

0:25:27 > 0:25:30like meals on wheels so they can have really good food and daily

0:25:30 > 0:25:35support to become properly nourished.Simon, the causes are

0:25:35 > 0:25:41complex. Talk is through some and what we can do?Mainly disease

0:25:41 > 0:25:46related malnutrition in England. Also social and environmental

0:25:46 > 0:25:50causes. Predominantly, disease related undernutrition. That is

0:25:50 > 0:25:57related to underlying GI disease, neurological and respiratory

0:25:57 > 0:26:00diseases, usually very multifactorial LinkedIn with social

0:26:00 > 0:26:05elements as well.When it is so complex it is presumably deep --

0:26:05 > 0:26:11difficult.It is and we had to address it. We actually have to

0:26:11 > 0:26:17tackle the problem topple it.And this report, very keen to highlight

0:26:17 > 0:26:22the issues. Also to get some sense of how widespread and prevalent to

0:26:22 > 0:26:27tears.A good opportunity to raise the profile of this issue. We can do

0:26:27 > 0:26:31an immense amount as a nation to overcome this problem. It's helpful

0:26:31 > 0:26:37to see it portrayed this way.Thank you very much indeed, much more

0:26:37 > 0:30:01later. From Hertfordshire, we will hand you to our

0:30:01 > 0:30:02in half an hour.

0:30:02 > 0:30:04Plenty more on our website at the usual address.

0:30:04 > 0:30:07Bye for now.

0:30:10 > 0:30:11Hello.

0:30:11 > 0:30:13This is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin.

0:30:13 > 0:30:15It's Monday the 22nd of January.

0:30:15 > 0:30:18Coming up on Breakfast today:

0:30:18 > 0:30:22We look at the future of Vauxhall's car plant in Ellesmere Port.

0:30:22 > 0:30:24Hundreds of jobs have already gone and there's

0:30:24 > 0:30:25an important meeting today.

0:30:25 > 0:30:26Steph will have the latest

0:30:26 > 0:30:30Steph will have the latest for us.

0:30:30 > 0:30:32Britain's new tennis hero, Kyle Edmund, is in the quarter

0:30:32 > 0:30:38finals of the Australian Open.

0:30:38 > 0:30:41We'll ask his former coach if he can go all the way.

0:30:41 > 0:30:43And the awards season is in full swing.

0:30:43 > 0:30:46We'll bring you the winners from the Screen Actors Guild Awards

0:30:46 > 0:30:47in LA overnight.

0:30:47 > 0:30:48Good morning.

0:30:48 > 0:30:56Here's a summary of today's main stories from BBC News.

0:30:56 > 0:30:59The head of the Army will warn today that Britain's military risks

0:30:59 > 0:31:01falling behind that of its enemies unless it

0:31:01 > 0:31:02gets additional investment.

0:31:02 > 0:31:06In a speech to the defence think tank, the Royal United Services

0:31:06 > 0:31:09Institute, General Sir Nick Carter is expected to say that Russia now

0:31:09 > 0:31:11has superior battlefield capabilities to the UK,

0:31:11 > 0:31:15and poses a significant threat in terms of cyber warfare.

0:31:15 > 0:31:18UKIP's deputy leader, Margot Parker, has resigned from her position

0:31:18 > 0:31:21after the party's leader, Henry Bolton, refused to stand down

0:31:21 > 0:31:24following a vote of no confidence yesterday.

0:31:24 > 0:31:28She told the BBC that Mr Bolton's refusal had left the party

0:31:28 > 0:31:36in "limbo" and that he should go "sooner rather than later."

0:31:43 > 0:31:52Detectives are continuing to examine the stabbing of an eight your old

0:31:52 > 0:32:00girl. A 54-year-old man was arrested.

0:32:02 > 0:32:05arrested. Boris Johnson will meet his US counterpart, Rex Tillerson,

0:32:05 > 0:32:12in London today, for talks around Syria, Iran, and Yemen. Rex

0:32:12 > 0:32:15Tillerson arrived last night. The meeting comes after Donald Trump

0:32:15 > 0:32:22refused to visit the UK. The day's diplomacy will pave the way for the

0:32:22 > 0:32:26meeting with the Prime Minister plans this week in the Swiss resort

0:32:26 > 0:32:32of Davos.

0:32:32 > 0:32:34The US federal government will remain closed today

0:32:34 > 0:32:37after the Senate delayed a vote on a budget measure,

0:32:37 > 0:32:40which would have allowed civil servants to go back to work.

0:32:40 > 0:32:42Democrats want President Trump to negotiate over immigration,

0:32:42 > 0:32:45but Republicans say no deal is possible while federal government

0:32:45 > 0:32:45services are closed.

0:32:45 > 0:32:51The last government shutdown was in 2013, and lasted for 16 days.

0:32:51 > 0:32:56Tokyo held its first missile evacuation drill early this morning.

0:32:56 > 0:33:03Volunteers to cover in

0:33:09 > 0:33:11Volunteers to cover in underground spaces that will double as bases in

0:33:11 > 0:33:20the event of a North Korean strike. Critics say it is a war game.

0:33:23 > 0:33:31Hundreds of thousands of parents have been left with no idea of how

0:33:31 > 0:33:33good their local child centre is. Partial inspections are taking

0:33:33 > 0:33:41place. Gary Oldman has cemented his status as favourite to win an Oscar

0:33:41 > 0:33:46this year. He got the award for Best Actor in a film at the Screen Actors

0:33:46 > 0:33:53Guild awards tonight. He got it for his role as Sir Winston Churchill in

0:33:53 > 0:34:07The Darkest Hour.Winston Churchill reminds us we make

0:34:08 > 0:34:11reminds us we make a living with what we get and make a life with

0:34:11 > 0:34:15what we give. And you have given me an enormous honour, and I am proud

0:34:15 > 0:34:22to receive this magnificent award. We spoke to him one and apparently

0:34:22 > 0:34:30his wife said he had to take the role.

0:34:31 > 0:34:35role. Priests are taking part in the annual Pope John Paul's keen

0:34:35 > 0:34:43competition in Poland. -- Paul skiing. Organisers said they wanted

0:34:43 > 0:34:56to give an example of how to pray and compete. Honestly! They are

0:34:56 > 0:34:57and compete. Honestly! They are not even wearing ski trousers.

0:34:57 > 0:35:01Fantastic!I could watch this for quite some time. Look at that!It

0:35:01 > 0:35:15looks like something out of a movie. I will show that again later.

0:35:19 > 0:35:21I will show that again later.To another more professional sport.

0:35:21 > 0:35:24Australian Open tennis.

0:35:24 > 0:35:31We have one Brit in the quarter-finals of the Australian

0:35:31 > 0:35:33Open.

0:35:33 > 0:35:34No Andy murray.

0:35:34 > 0:35:37England got off to a slow start, but an unbeaten century

0:35:37 > 0:35:41from Jos Buttler and 52 not out for Chris Woakes helped them finish

0:35:41 > 0:35:43on 302 for six.

0:35:43 > 0:35:50Six time champion Novak Djokovic will be in action at the conclusion.

0:35:50 > 0:35:57It has been 24

0:35:57 > 0:35:58It has been 24 hours of chaos for Watford.

0:35:58 > 0:36:01Watford have sacked their manager and appointed another one

0:36:01 > 0:36:03all in the space of a day.

0:36:03 > 0:36:05Marco Silva was sacked on Sunday morning with Watford 10th

0:36:05 > 0:36:08in the Premier League, four points avoid the relegation zone.

0:36:08 > 0:36:11The club, blaming the need for change on Everton

0:36:11 > 0:36:13for their interest in Silva before Christmas.

0:36:13 > 0:36:15Spaniard Javi Gracia is his replacement, his last club

0:36:15 > 0:36:16was Russian side Rubin Kazan.

0:36:16 > 0:36:23Silva is the eighth Premier League manager to lose his job this season.

0:36:23 > 0:36:26Harry Kane struck his 99th Premier League goal for Tottenham,

0:36:26 > 0:36:29but couldn't prevent them from losing ground in the race

0:36:29 > 0:36:32for the top four as his Spurs side drew 1-1 at Southampton.

0:36:32 > 0:36:34The home side made a fast start.

0:36:34 > 0:36:38An own goal from Davinson Sanchez gave Saints the lead in the opening

0:36:38 > 0:36:39quarter of an hour.

0:36:39 > 0:36:40Then came Kane's equaliser.

0:36:40 > 0:36:43Spurs miss out on the chance to go level with fourth-placed Liverpool

0:36:43 > 0:36:44who take on Swansea tonight.

0:36:44 > 0:36:46Southampton, meanwhile, are still in the relegation zone.

0:36:46 > 0:36:50You know, you watch everyone else play and win, and you have to

0:36:50 > 0:36:55decide. That makes it more difficult. Obviously, there is still

0:36:55 > 0:37:00a long way to go and many ups and downs, I am sure. We just need to

0:37:00 > 0:37:03keep working hard and keep fighting.

0:37:03 > 0:37:06Holders, Celtic, have been drawn at home to Partick Thistle

0:37:06 > 0:37:08in the Scottish Cup fiffth round draw.

0:37:08 > 0:37:11Hearts will play Albion Rovers or St Johnstone after they beat

0:37:11 > 0:37:13Hibernian 1-0 in the Edinbough derby at Tynecastle.

0:37:13 > 0:37:14Don Cowie, glancing Christophe Berra's header

0:37:14 > 0:37:15over the line.

0:37:15 > 0:37:23The full draw can be found on the BBC Sport website.

0:37:26 > 0:37:28Qualification for the quarter-finals of Rugby Union's European Champions

0:37:28 > 0:37:31Cup has been finalised. Holders, Saracens, have scraped through and

0:37:31 > 0:37:34Welsh side Scarlets have been rewarded for their good form with a

0:37:34 > 0:37:38home tie. There's no room for Wasps, though. Despite running in four

0:37:38 > 0:37:41tries past Ulster, other results didn't go their way and they miss

0:37:41 > 0:37:44out. The quarter-finals will be played at the end of March.

0:37:44 > 0:37:47Tommy Fleetwood has won his fourth European Tour event by retaining his

0:37:47 > 0:37:48Abu Dhabi Championship title.

0:37:48 > 0:37:52Fleetwood started the day two shots off the lead but hit eight birdies

0:37:52 > 0:37:55in his final round to win by two, ahead of fellow Englishman Ross

0:37:55 > 0:37:55Fisher.

0:37:55 > 0:37:59Rory McIlroy finished two shots further back.

0:37:59 > 0:38:06It was just important that we carry on going forward. It is so well and

0:38:06 > 0:38:14good having a great year. It was the best year of my life. But we need to

0:38:14 > 0:38:24take it to the next level. We need to keep improving. We had to do that

0:38:24 > 0:38:28this week, and it just feels like another step in the right way.

0:38:28 > 0:38:31Mark Allen has won the Masters snooker for a first time.

0:38:31 > 0:38:33In a tight match against England's Kyren Wilson,

0:38:33 > 0:38:37Allen made the only century break in the 12th frame to make it seven

0:38:37 > 0:38:38frames to five.

0:38:38 > 0:38:39He went on to win 10-7.

0:38:39 > 0:38:42And becomes the first Northern Irishman since Denis Taylor

0:38:42 > 0:38:44in 1987 to take the title.

0:38:44 > 0:38:50I felt calm all week except for the first session today. I was on edge.

0:38:50 > 0:38:55As the match went on, I got stronger. I felt more at ease with

0:38:55 > 0:39:02myself. Yeah, I am just very, very pleased to be on the right end of it

0:39:02 > 0:39:06for a change.

0:39:06 > 0:39:11She finally looked around. And Roger Federer is through. Just letting you

0:39:11 > 0:39:16know.

0:39:17 > 0:39:20England got off to a slow start, but an unbeaten century

0:39:20 > 0:39:23from Jos Buttler and 52 not out for Chris Woakes helped them finish

0:39:23 > 0:39:24on 302 for six.

0:39:24 > 0:39:27Australia were in contention before some impressive bowling

0:39:27 > 0:39:30from Mark Wood meant the hosts needed an unlikely 22 off

0:39:30 > 0:39:38the final over.

0:39:38 > 0:39:41British skiier, Dave Ryding, clocked the fastest time of the day

0:39:41 > 0:39:44on his second run in the World Cup slalom in Kitzbuhel yesterday.

0:39:44 > 0:39:46The 31-year-old was 25th after his first run,

0:39:46 > 0:39:47having made a big mistake.

0:39:47 > 0:39:50But he was more than six seconds quicker on his second,

0:39:50 > 0:39:52moving him up to ninth place overall.

0:39:52 > 0:39:55And finally, Cristiano Ronaldo's modelling career may be

0:39:55 > 0:40:03on the line this morning.

0:40:03 > 0:40:06His face is still there, you can relax.

0:40:06 > 0:40:09He scored twice in Real Madrid's 7-1 thrashing of Deportivo yesterday,

0:40:09 > 0:40:12but in doing so, he took a boot to the face.

0:40:12 > 0:40:14There was concern amongst the Madrid staff for some time,

0:40:14 > 0:40:17as he needed lengthy medical treatment for a cut to the cheek.

0:40:17 > 0:40:21But as he got up to his feet, what was the first thing

0:40:21 > 0:40:22he asked for?

0:40:22 > 0:40:25A mirror, or rather, a phone, to make sure the killer looks

0:40:25 > 0:40:26are still there.

0:40:26 > 0:40:30Perhaps it was a quick selfie. No, just checking.That is a nasty

0:40:30 > 0:40:36injury.

0:40:36 > 0:40:39injury.Welcome to the world of the modern footballer. If they score

0:40:39 > 0:40:43goals in the first half, obviously, they will be picked up by the

0:40:43 > 0:40:50cameras as they walk off. A few of them they check it out.Especially

0:40:50 > 0:40:55Cristiano Ronaldo. Thank you.

0:40:55 > 0:40:56Good morning.

0:40:56 > 0:40:59There's a stark warning from the head of the British Army

0:40:59 > 0:41:00this morning.

0:41:00 > 0:41:02General Sir Nick Carter says Russia's building an increasingly

0:41:02 > 0:41:05aggressive military with weapons the UK would struggle to match.

0:41:05 > 0:41:08His speech later on today at the Royal United Services Institute

0:41:08 > 0:41:12will also be interpreted as a call for more money for the armed forces.

0:41:12 > 0:41:15Joining us now from our London newsroom is Colonel Rupert Wieloch,

0:41:15 > 0:41:19a former senior British Military Commander in Libya.

0:41:19 > 0:41:24Good morning. Thank you for joining us. We know a lot of what General

0:41:24 > 0:41:29Sir Nick Carter will say today. What are the key concerns?I certainly

0:41:29 > 0:41:35agree with General Sir Nick Carter that there is a Russian threat out

0:41:35 > 0:41:38there. I visited Russia last year for the May Day parade. I found

0:41:38 > 0:41:43their capability was awesome, not only in the conventional sense, but

0:41:43 > 0:41:49also, the developments with cyber warfare. I think it is right to be

0:41:49 > 0:41:55worried about what Russia is doing. I think, in terms of what he needs

0:41:55 > 0:42:03to set out today, the reasons why the risk to Britain are increasing

0:42:03 > 0:42:12at this time, and why we need to make sure the armed forces and their

0:42:12 > 0:42:15commitments are carried through. That stock about the risks. What are

0:42:15 > 0:42:20the risks?

0:42:24 > 0:42:32the risks? -- Let's talk about the. Is Britain a target?We have

0:42:32 > 0:42:34Is Britain a target?We have seen how Russia works. It is eyeing up

0:42:34 > 0:42:40the Baltics. We have advanced Nato contributions in places like Estonia

0:42:40 > 0:42:44to make sure they are protected. Russia has been operating in Syria

0:42:44 > 0:42:49with much excess. Again, you would have heard about the developments.

0:42:49 > 0:42:59-- success. They have been doing exercises all over Russia, in

0:42:59 > 0:43:03particular, ones on the European front.One other thing that came out

0:43:03 > 0:43:09in 2016, Russian artillery and dreams destroyed two Ukrainian

0:43:09 > 0:43:18infantry battalions in 15 minutes. How do we combat that?The strategy

0:43:18 > 0:43:24and tactics of Nato, you do not want to give it away. But in terms of the

0:43:24 > 0:43:29capability, one of the most important aspects is to deter any

0:43:29 > 0:43:34aggression. You can only do that with a strong army and a forward

0:43:34 > 0:43:43presence. I think, again, you need backup to sustain that. That means a

0:43:43 > 0:43:47significant size in terms of the army. People will be working out

0:43:47 > 0:43:53what that size. Any aspect, any thought, of reducing the army below

0:43:53 > 0:43:57the numbers we have at the moment, about 80,000, I think that would put

0:43:57 > 0:44:01that at risk.We have heard this over and over again that we need

0:44:01 > 0:44:07more money for defence. The money is tight. Why should it go to defence

0:44:07 > 0:44:12rather than any where else?There are two aspects to that. The first

0:44:12 > 0:44:18is that if you go back to the planning round in 2012 when the army

0:44:18 > 0:44:25was reduced to 80,000, there was a promise made of an uplift to make

0:44:25 > 0:44:31sure the army of 2020 was properly equipped and capable. It seems to me

0:44:31 > 0:44:36the government of the moment is threatening to reduce that, and I

0:44:36 > 0:44:43think it would be a big mistake. Go on.Thank you. I just want to ask

0:44:43 > 0:44:48one thing as well. We talked heavily about the modern army and forces on

0:44:48 > 0:44:53the ground, what about what is going on in cyberspace? How dangerous is

0:44:53 > 0:44:57what is happening there regular it is very dangerous, but not only in

0:44:57 > 0:45:05the Russian area, it is also in the Chinese and terraced area. -- there?

0:45:05 > 0:45:11-- terrorist. International terrorists are good at using social

0:45:11 > 0:45:17media and images and messages which can influence young people. We have

0:45:17 > 0:45:24seen an enormous uplift in our rivals in that area. Money needs to

0:45:24 > 0:45:30be spent there.Yes, it does. There is confusion between what I would

0:45:30 > 0:45:34describe as money for security and money for the Armed Forces. The

0:45:34 > 0:45:39Armed Forces are designed to help in terms of Britain's foreign policy

0:45:39 > 0:45:42whereas the cyber threat is very much an internal Home Office type of

0:45:42 > 0:45:50activity. For the last 5-6 years, we have confused money between security

0:45:50 > 0:46:01and defence. We need to get back to the state where defence and money

0:46:01 > 0:46:05for the Armed Forces is ringfenced and not able to be taken away for at

0:46:05 > 0:46:11home such as cyber defence.

0:46:23 > 0:46:25touch mild than yesterday. Well, it certainly been a wintry weekend.

0:46:25 > 0:46:30Around about ten centimetres of snow in Cumbria. Across parts of Highland

0:46:30 > 0:46:37Scotton, still 26. -- still 26 centimetres of snow. A lot of snow

0:46:37 > 0:46:42will be falling out. Yesterday, many of us saw temperatures struggling to

0:46:42 > 0:46:46get above freezing. By tomorrow afternoon, we will all be back in

0:46:46 > 0:46:50double figures. Things are turning milder. Some of that mild are moving

0:46:50 > 0:46:58in. The yellow colours returning to the map through the day. Got some

0:46:58 > 0:47:10outbreaks. Showers in the north and West Corp. -- western Scotland. It

0:47:10 > 0:47:14is a largely dry story towards the Midlands and East Anglia that

0:47:14 > 0:47:18southern England, rain to stop the morning. Quite a wet morning commute

0:47:18 > 0:47:25to Kent, Somerset, much of Devon and Cornwall. Just the odd isolated

0:47:25 > 0:47:31shower around. Many of us, and improving day. We will slowly lose

0:47:31 > 0:47:35that rain from the south-east of England and the showers across

0:47:35 > 0:47:39Scotland believes. Drying up in Northern Ireland, northern England,

0:47:39 > 0:47:43a little bit of sunshine breaking through this afternoon, especially

0:47:43 > 0:47:47towards the east of higher ground and those temperatures are a lot of

0:47:47 > 0:47:52milder than they have been. Selley and the down a largely quiet and dry

0:47:52 > 0:47:57note. Quite chilly but through the second half of the night, that is

0:47:57 > 0:48:02the winds really pick up. Outbreaks of rain working in from the west.

0:48:02 > 0:48:08Many of us wake up to a soggy start to Tuesday morning. Frost free. Much

0:48:08 > 0:48:15milder in place. When you in the cloud and the outbreaks of rain, a

0:48:15 > 0:48:22chilly start but through the day, these bands of rain will shift

0:48:22 > 0:48:26slowly eastwards. Perhaps sunnier, heading in from the north-west but

0:48:26 > 0:48:31squally showers set to continue for all of us but temperatures will be

0:48:31 > 0:48:36around ten, 13 degrees. Much milder than they have been. Wednesday,

0:48:36 > 0:48:41another wet and windy day. The heavy spell of rain moving eastwards

0:48:41 > 0:48:47across the country. Temperatures around eight, 13 degrees but

0:48:47 > 0:48:51remaining unsettled through the middle of the week. A hint of

0:48:51 > 0:48:55something a little bit colder once again but not as cold as a wintry

0:48:55 > 0:49:02weather we had last week. We will talk about winter kit now. You've

0:49:02 > 0:49:04got to dress for success.

0:49:04 > 0:49:08talk about winter kit now. You've got to dress for success. Only a

0:49:08 > 0:49:13couple of weeks from the start of the Winter Olympics and today is the

0:49:13 > 0:49:24day members of Team GB have their kids unveiled.I love these days.

0:49:24 > 0:49:30Jane is there where athletes will get suited and booted. Good morning.

0:49:30 > 0:49:36Like getting a new coat. Seriously? Come on, it is better than that. The

0:49:36 > 0:49:42next three days, this will be Team GB HQ because this is where they are

0:49:42 > 0:49:49getting kitted out. This is all the kit they will possibly need. To take

0:49:49 > 0:49:58them to Pyeongchang. And hopefully, hopefully onto a podium. M K is the

0:49:58 > 0:50:05chef demission. Did I say that correctly? You're the in charge.

0:50:05 > 0:50:11Tell us why this jacket is so important?This is the one you will

0:50:11 > 0:50:14see the team in the Opening Ceremony dressed in but more importantly on

0:50:14 > 0:50:20the podium, this is the podium jacket. Hopefully warm for what will

0:50:20 > 0:50:25be a cold Olympics.And hopefully very successful.The target is five

0:50:25 > 0:50:32medals at least, one more than we got four years ago. We want to keep

0:50:32 > 0:50:37going forward from there.You are the man in charge then and hopefully

0:50:37 > 0:50:41you will be the man leading us to more gold success. What will the

0:50:41 > 0:50:47atmosphere be like?A great experience we hope. They have been

0:50:47 > 0:50:51selected so this is the time to get the rings on the chest, which will

0:50:51 > 0:50:57be a great moment. Come in as a bobsleigh, a skeleton or a curling

0:50:57 > 0:51:02athlete and Leavers one team, Team GB.Good luck with everything. Hang

0:51:02 > 0:51:09around for a bit. Michael's game in the past was curling. We have

0:51:09 > 0:51:14something special. You will be chatting to some of the key

0:51:14 > 0:51:20athletes, busy's athletes, in a little bit, including Lizzie Arnold.

0:51:20 > 0:51:25She will be on the sofa soon but we have some of the Team GB ambassadors

0:51:25 > 0:51:32around here. Good morning, ladies. Give us a wave. Good morning. Jenny

0:51:32 > 0:51:39Jones, I know this isn't your sport. Amy, this isn't your sport but take

0:51:39 > 0:51:51it away. Let's have a go on the curling. Not bad. Not bad. Go on.

0:51:51 > 0:51:57Oh, I think Amy Williams, Amy Williams, you just about nailed it.

0:51:57 > 0:52:07A bit more practice. There is ice, though. Bake ice.Skeleton.

0:52:07 > 0:52:16Fantastic.Jenny Jones?Snowboarder, no ice hopefully.How exciting is

0:52:16 > 0:52:21it? You have been through this before. What is going through your

0:52:21 > 0:52:28head?It's really exciting. You feel that you are actually part of the

0:52:28 > 0:52:32team, are very proud moment but that the T-shirt on, the jumpers on so

0:52:32 > 0:52:36you initially don't think much of it but when you do it, you are blown

0:52:36 > 0:52:43away.Eight years ago from Vancouver and I remember coming to work

0:52:43 > 0:52:47kitting out day and having those five rings on your chest, the of it

0:52:47 > 0:52:52is such an emotional moment that you are suddenly representing your

0:52:52 > 0:52:58country at the highest level so this is really exciting.What is

0:52:58 > 0:53:03possible, what you might be wearing. You are at the Opening Ceremony

0:53:03 > 0:53:08behind that Union Jack flag and you have the rings and Team GB on you

0:53:08 > 0:53:13and it's a symbol but...What do you think of it this year? It's very

0:53:13 > 0:53:24blue.We get to have a proper look in a bit.Can you do some modelling

0:53:24 > 0:53:32for us? Modelling and curling. What you think is going to happen?Skiing

0:53:32 > 0:53:36and snowboarding for freestylers is looking great. I think of got a

0:53:36 > 0:53:41strong team in that department and if we look at skeleton and things...

0:53:41 > 0:53:48We have our greatest team so far. With the most amount of potential

0:53:48 > 0:53:52athletes winning medals. Skeleton, we always very strong. Let's hope we

0:53:52 > 0:53:59get another one with Lizzie or Laura. I have my money on a lease

0:53:59 > 0:54:08Christie.Literally?No, I haven't. You seem interested in that. Are you

0:54:08 > 0:54:15going to take some tips? We are going to do that a little later,

0:54:15 > 0:54:20definitely. We will chat to you more later. The hell kitting out ceremony

0:54:20 > 0:54:24is important. What is happening in Russia with the doping ceremony,

0:54:24 > 0:54:28they are having their kitting out. They have a minimal team carefully

0:54:28 > 0:54:32selected and they haven't been able to use their full pay to the colours

0:54:32 > 0:54:36because of that scandal and they have gone to something very neutral,

0:54:36 > 0:54:44they have had to. Something beige.I haven't seen it. At least we are

0:54:44 > 0:54:48going to be out there with our Blues, reds, whites. Flying the flag

0:54:48 > 0:54:56of Great Britain. We always do special things in each days of the

0:54:56 > 0:55:01team always looks exactly the same. You sit in the food hall. Go Team

0:55:01 > 0:55:10GB.We are going to chat to you more later. Back to you now.I completely

0:55:10 > 0:55:14and utterly share their excitement. There is nothing like getting new

0:55:14 > 0:55:26kit. I have kids envy.Oh, look at that. That's what she was saying. A

0:55:26 > 0:55:31guy called Chris Young put an appeal on social media trying to find his

0:55:31 > 0:55:36teacher called Lynden Ward who looks after school in the 1970s. He has

0:55:36 > 0:55:43bought a book out. He launched this to try and find Miss Ward. He is

0:55:43 > 0:55:50still looking for her.

0:55:50 > 0:55:55still looking for her. I'm sure you are trying. Banks are telling us

0:55:55 > 0:56:03about your favourite teachers. Beverley says Miss James taught

0:56:03 > 0:56:09music, inspire my love of musical theatre and opera. Katie says my

0:56:09 > 0:56:13favourite teacher was called Mrs Tuck, the director of special

0:56:13 > 0:56:16schools for Hertfordshire and wrote loads of books on special education,

0:56:16 > 0:56:23made a massive difference. Caroline says Mrs Field had faith in me when

0:56:23 > 0:56:28others didn't. She said I could achieve all I could and I did. Do

0:56:28 > 0:56:38keep in touch. My favourite teacher was my Spanish teacher. Tennis at

0:56:38 > 0:56:47lunchtime and did a bit of everything. A guy called Mr lowell.

0:56:47 > 0:56:53I did a history degree because of him. Let's get the news and travel

0:56:53 > 1:00:12where you

1:00:12 > 1:00:20Plenty more on our website at the usual address.

1:00:50 > 1:00:52Hello.

1:00:52 > 1:00:53Very good morning.

1:00:53 > 1:00:55This is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin.

1:00:55 > 1:00:59The head of the Army says Britain's military needs more money to match

1:00:59 > 1:01:00potential enemies on the battlefield.

1:01:00 > 1:01:03General Sir Nick Carter's warning comes after Russia practised

1:01:03 > 1:01:11simulated attacks across northern Europe.

1:01:21 > 1:01:23It's Monday the 22nd of January.

1:01:23 > 1:01:23Also this morning:

1:01:23 > 1:01:25More turmoil for UKIP.

1:01:25 > 1:01:27The leader, Henry Bolton, refuses to step down,

1:01:27 > 1:01:35but the party's deputy resigns saying he's got to go.

1:01:41 > 1:01:43We have first sight of a parliamentary report

1:01:43 > 1:01:45into malnutrition with the elderly.

1:01:45 > 1:01:51We are asking what are the causes and cures for malnutrition.

1:01:51 > 1:02:02One week on from the collapse of the construction

1:02:02 > 1:02:05construction giant, Carillion, I'm asking how to minimise the cost to

1:02:05 > 1:02:05taxpayers.

1:02:05 > 1:02:08In sport, the defending champion, Roger Federer, is in action

1:02:08 > 1:02:10at the Australian Open, looking to emulate yesterday's

1:02:10 > 1:02:12achievement of Kyle Edmund in reaching the quarter-finals.

1:02:12 > 1:02:16And there has been reduced excess at the Screen Actors Guild in

1:02:16 > 1:02:24Hollywood. -- British success.The award goes to Gary Oldman.And Sarah

1:02:24 > 1:02:26has the weather.

1:02:26 > 1:02:30A lot of lying snow in the north of the country, but milder air

1:02:30 > 1:02:31pushing through all regions today.

1:02:31 > 1:02:36Most of us should the brightness as well. All of the details in 15

1:02:36 > 1:02:40minutes. Thank you.

1:02:40 > 1:02:41Good morning.

1:02:41 > 1:02:42First, our main story.

1:02:42 > 1:02:45The head of the Army will warn today that Britain's military risks

1:02:45 > 1:02:47falling behind that of its enemies unless it

1:02:47 > 1:02:48gets additional investment.

1:02:48 > 1:02:51In a speech to the defence think tank, the Royal United Services

1:02:51 > 1:02:54Institute, General Sir Nick Carter is expected to say that Russia now

1:02:54 > 1:02:56has superior battlefield capabilities to the UK,

1:02:56 > 1:02:59and poses a significant threat in terms of cyber warfare.

1:02:59 > 1:03:04Simon Clemison reports.

1:03:04 > 1:03:08Images showing what Russia said was a strike on Syria.

1:03:08 > 1:03:11But the rockets come not from the Mediterranean Sea,

1:03:11 > 1:03:15but the Caspian Sea, more than 900 miles away.

1:03:15 > 1:03:18The head of the Army says Russia is building an increasingly

1:03:18 > 1:03:21aggressive military, which the UK is struggling to match.

1:03:21 > 1:03:23Russia has also been simulating attacks closer to home,

1:03:23 > 1:03:30conducting large-scale exercises.

1:03:30 > 1:03:34This, the heavily armed Klinongrad bordering Lithuania.

1:03:34 > 1:03:37General Sir Nick Carter will warn Britain must take notice

1:03:37 > 1:03:40of what is going on around us and keep up, or we could be

1:03:40 > 1:03:43massively constrained.

1:03:43 > 1:03:46He will say the threats are not thousands of miles away,

1:03:46 > 1:03:47but are now on our doorstep.

1:03:47 > 1:03:55He says cyber warfare can also disrupt the lives of normal people.

1:03:55 > 1:04:00One of the most important aspects is to deter any aggression.

1:04:00 > 1:04:06You can only do that with a forward army and forward presence. We need a

1:04:06 > 1:04:10significant size in terms of the army. Any thought of reducing the

1:04:10 > 1:04:16army below the numbers we have at the moment, about 80,000, I think it

1:04:16 > 1:04:18would put security at risk.

1:04:18 > 1:04:20The head of the army is not saying

1:04:20 > 1:04:24this in so many words, but one way to avoid the possibility

1:04:24 > 1:04:27of Britain falling behind in combat could be money from the Chancellor

1:04:27 > 1:04:28here at Number 11.

1:04:28 > 1:04:30He certainly won't want to see any cuts.

1:04:30 > 1:04:38The speech will be made with the approval of

1:04:39 > 1:04:42the Defence Secretary who has already said a 2% rise should be

1:04:42 > 1:04:44a base, not a ceiling.

1:04:44 > 1:04:54No word yet from the Chancellor. Simon Cleminson, BBC News.

1:04:54 > 1:04:56UKIP's deputy leader, Margot Parker, has resigned from her position

1:04:56 > 1:04:59after the party's leader, Henry Bolton, refused to stand down

1:04:59 > 1:05:01following a vote of no confidence yesterday.

1:05:01 > 1:05:04She told the BBC that Mr Bolton's refusal had left the party

1:05:04 > 1:05:07in "limbo" and that he should go "sooner rather than later."

1:05:07 > 1:05:09sOur political correspondent, Chris Mason, joins us from

1:05:09 > 1:05:10Westminster.

1:05:10 > 1:05:13What happens next?There will be an emergency general meeting for the

1:05:13 > 1:05:19party which will take place within one month. It has not yet been

1:05:19 > 1:05:25scheduled. What will happen is that as long as 250 members of the party

1:05:25 > 1:05:29turns up, that makes it legitimate, and there is a vote among those

1:05:29 > 1:05:35members to decide whether Bolton stays or goes. He is absolutely

1:05:35 > 1:05:46determined to cling on.

1:05:46 > 1:05:48determined to cling on. He won the leadership race recently relatively

1:05:48 > 1:05:52comfortably. If you can assemble in our support is at the meeting, it is

1:05:52 > 1:05:55entirely possible despite the fact his deputy has resigned because he

1:05:55 > 1:05:58will not go, despite the fact everyone on the national executive

1:05:58 > 1:06:03other than him says he issued resigned, he might still be able to

1:06:03 > 1:06:12cling on. Word around these parts talk about Jeremy Corbyn and how his

1:06:12 > 1:06:17members wanted him to stay despite his party wanting him to leave, and

1:06:17 > 1:06:25he is still here.Thank you very much. We will talk about it in the

1:06:25 > 1:06:32next two days. Thank you. -- few days.

1:06:32 > 1:06:34The Foreign Secretary, Boris Johnson, will meet his US

1:06:34 > 1:06:37counterpart, Rex Tillerson, in London today for talks on Syria,

1:06:37 > 1:06:38Iran and Yemen.

1:06:38 > 1:06:41It comes after President Donald Trump refused to visit the UK

1:06:41 > 1:06:42and open the new US embassy.

1:06:42 > 1:06:48Here's our diplomatic correspondent, James Landale.

1:06:48 > 1:06:50The US federal government will remain closed today

1:06:50 > 1:06:53after the Senate delayed a vote on a budget measure,

1:06:53 > 1:06:55which would have allowed civil servants to go back to work.

1:06:55 > 1:06:57Democrats want President Trump to negotiate over immigration,

1:06:57 > 1:07:00but Republicans say no deal is possible while federal government

1:07:00 > 1:07:08services are closed.

1:07:10 > 1:07:14The last government shutdown was in 2013, and lasted for 16 days.

1:07:14 > 1:07:16Britain should prepare for a much more economically optimistic 2018

1:07:16 > 1:07:18because global growth is better than predicted.

1:07:18 > 1:07:20That's the argument of Lord Jim O'Neill,

1:07:20 > 1:07:23the former Conservative Treasury minister and Remain supporter.

1:07:23 > 1:07:25He says the gloomy predictions of the possible effects of Brexit

1:07:25 > 1:07:33are likely to be "dwarfed" by the more positive figures.

1:07:43 > 1:07:46Hundreds of people have paid their respects to the Cranberries

1:07:46 > 1:07:48singer, Dolores O'Riordan, in her home city of Limerick.

1:07:48 > 1:07:51She died suddenly in London last week, aged 46.

1:07:51 > 1:07:53Large crowds gathered at St Joseph's Church

1:07:53 > 1:07:55to view her open coffin ahead of her funeral tomorrow.

1:07:55 > 1:07:58Nearly 1,000 children's centres across England have not been

1:07:58 > 1:08:00inspected by Ofsted for more than five years.

1:08:00 > 1:08:02The government temporarily suspended inspections in 2015.

1:08:02 > 1:08:05The charity Action for Children says it's left hundreds of thousands

1:08:05 > 1:08:08of parents with no idea how good their local centre is,

1:08:08 > 1:08:16as Marc Ashdown reports.

1:08:21 > 1:08:24Gary Oldman has cemented his status as favourite to win

1:08:24 > 1:08:25an Oscar this year.

1:08:25 > 1:08:28He won the award for Best Actor at the Screen Actors

1:08:28 > 1:08:29Guild Awards overnight.

1:08:29 > 1:08:32It's for his role as Sir Winston Churchill in the Darkest Hour.

1:08:32 > 1:08:40The British actor was overcome with emotion as he accepted his prize.

1:08:43 > 1:08:46Churchill reminds us we make a living with what we get and make

1:08:46 > 1:08:47a life with what we give.

1:08:47 > 1:08:51And you have given me an enormous honour, and I am proud to receive

1:08:51 > 1:08:59this magnificent award.

1:09:03 > 1:09:06Now here's some positive news in the gender equality movement in

1:09:06 > 1:09:17Hollywood. I think I

1:09:17 > 1:09:21Hollywood. I think I called her Minnie the Mouse earlier. There's no

1:09:21 > 1:09:22"the" in it

1:09:22 > 1:09:24Minnie Mouse is finally due to receive a star

1:09:24 > 1:09:27"the" in it receive a star

1:09:27 > 1:09:29on the Hollywood Walk of Fame today.

1:09:29 > 1:09:31She's been in the entertainment industry for 90 years,

1:09:31 > 1:09:34and many Disney fans say her star is long overdue.

1:09:34 > 1:09:37Her beloved Mickey was honoured with a star four decades ago.

1:09:37 > 1:09:40Many of her fellow Disney characters already have stars on the Walk

1:09:40 > 1:09:43of Fame, including Donald Duck, Tinker Bell, Winnie The Poo,

1:09:43 > 1:09:45Snow White, and Kermit the Frog.

1:09:45 > 1:09:48Miss Piggy, however, does not have a star of her own.

1:09:48 > 1:09:50All is not right.It needs to be looked at.

1:09:50 > 1:09:53It's a week on since the collapse of construction services company

1:09:53 > 1:09:54Carillion.

1:09:54 > 1:09:56Many questions remain unanswered, including the overall cost

1:09:56 > 1:09:58to the taxpayer of its failure.

1:09:58 > 1:10:01Steph's here to try and shed some light on where we are

1:10:01 > 1:10:01now

1:10:01 > 1:10:04and how the Government is trying to move forward.

1:10:04 > 1:10:08We will talk about where we are now and what the government is trying to

1:10:08 > 1:10:11do.It was this time last week I announced the company was going into

1:10:11 > 1:10:15liquidation because it was basically drowning under the weight of its

1:10:15 > 1:10:22debt, £1.3 million. We found out more about the financials behind it.

1:10:22 > 1:10:27We knew they only had $27 billion left in the bank when they went into

1:10:27 > 1:10:36administration, sorry, liquidation. Sorry, million. We have been talking

1:10:36 > 1:10:40to many workers about it and it is a mixed picture. Some have been taken

1:10:40 > 1:10:49on by other companies. For example, the HS2 Project. They have carried

1:10:49 > 1:10:56on in jobs paid by the government, services. It is a mixed picture. It

1:10:56 > 1:11:00is especially uncertain for subcontractors and suppliers. We

1:11:00 > 1:11:07have heard various MPs talking about it. The chief Secretary to the

1:11:07 > 1:11:12Treasury, Liz Truss, but we do not know what the cost will be to the

1:11:12 > 1:11:16taxpayer. Chris Grayling, the tramp of secretary, will be in front of a

1:11:16 > 1:11:20Select Committee today explaining why the government did not do much

1:11:20 > 1:11:29about it. The Prime Minister says she wants to clamp down on anyone

1:11:29 > 1:11:32lying in these situations like bosses and companies.And pensions

1:11:32 > 1:11:38are important to many of them.Many people have asked about pensions.

1:11:38 > 1:11:43Carillion have 27,000 people receiving a pension or are set to

1:11:43 > 1:11:49receive one. It is rejected by the pension fund, which is good news.

1:11:49 > 1:11:55People will still get them. There is a lot of money in it. It is designed

1:11:55 > 1:11:58to help people when a company goes bust. There are £34 billion of

1:11:58 > 1:12:04assets in this fund. There is enough money. If you are already retired,

1:12:04 > 1:12:10you will get the full amount. What is more tricky is if you have not

1:12:10 > 1:12:17retired yet, you will get 90%. You will lose basically 10% of it. But,

1:12:17 > 1:12:22yeah, people were worried about that, but it is much better news for

1:12:22 > 1:12:28pensioners.Many people are getting in contact to be we will try to

1:12:28 > 1:12:33answer more questions. -- in contact.

1:12:33 > 1:12:37Former Pensions Minister Sir Steve Webb, who is the director of policy

1:12:37 > 1:12:39at the Royal London Pensions Company, joins us now

1:12:39 > 1:12:41from our newsroom in Bristol.

1:12:41 > 1:12:44Thank you. I know you were listening. What is the latest advice

1:12:44 > 1:12:47for those impacted by the liquidation of Carillion last week?

1:12:47 > 1:12:52Some workers will be completely unaffected. If you joined Carillion

1:12:52 > 1:12:56recently and have a new style pension, a pot of money with your

1:12:56 > 1:13:01name on it, it is unaffected. That is good news that be if you are

1:13:01 > 1:13:05already in the pension scheme, it will continue to be paid. Sooner or

1:13:05 > 1:13:11later, the pension protection fund will be in touch with you. There is

1:13:11 > 1:13:16nothing you can do to change the situation. As she said, it is a

1:13:16 > 1:13:23robust insurance scheme.She also mentioned the words from Prime

1:13:23 > 1:13:27Minister Theresa May, she wants to crack down on executives in order to

1:13:27 > 1:13:32protect pensions of workers. We have heard this before from the Prime

1:13:32 > 1:13:38Minister. What do you think of the proposals and what will they entail?

1:13:38 > 1:13:44One of the challenges with a profit in company if it wants to invest it

1:13:44 > 1:13:50back in the business and pay-out to shareholders and senior executives.

1:13:50 > 1:13:53There is an issue of the balance between bat. With Carillion, one of

1:13:53 > 1:13:58the concerns was dividends where increased year after year with a

1:13:58 > 1:14:04huge hole in the pension scheme. Regulators should be able to say the

1:14:04 > 1:14:09pension schemes and employers, too much money is going out in dividends

1:14:09 > 1:14:15and top pay and not enough to the pension. We heard Sports Direct last

1:14:15 > 1:14:24year. Now we have Carillion. 5500 of these schemes are out there and two

1:14:24 > 1:14:32thirds of them have a deficit.I wanted to talk about that. 5.5

1:14:32 > 1:14:39thousand. How many are in deficit? Two thirds. It is like a race. There

1:14:39 > 1:14:44can be a deficit allowed, but there has to be a plan to fix it. In

1:14:44 > 1:14:49normal circumstances, employers will fix it over a 5- ten year period.

1:14:49 > 1:14:52What often happens is sometimes fortunes can change quickly before

1:14:52 > 1:14:57it is plugged. There will be more insolvencies and pension funds going

1:14:57 > 1:15:04into the pension protection fund. Not if, but how many.Many people

1:15:04 > 1:15:10involved in the scheme is have asked questions. What is your advice for

1:15:10 > 1:15:21those impacted?

1:15:22 > 1:15:24pensions will be paid, there is a good solid skin behind it so there

1:15:24 > 1:15:28is no need to panic so it is right the government to look at these

1:15:28 > 1:15:32things. It is a matter of urgency. The danger could be years away from

1:15:32 > 1:15:38changing the law of the land.Really handy advice. Thank you very much

1:15:38 > 1:15:42for joining us.

1:15:42 > 1:15:48It was a bitter weekend, wasn't it? It really was. Hope you have some

1:15:48 > 1:15:50better news on the horizon.

1:15:50 > 1:15:53It really was. Hope you have some better news on the horizon.

1:15:53 > 1:15:58Love it or loathe it, we had a lot of lying snow around that most of

1:15:58 > 1:16:02the snow across northern England and Scotland and Northern Ireland will

1:16:02 > 1:16:05be falling out of the next day or two because temperatures are going

1:16:05 > 1:16:09to be on the rise. If you compare temperatures we saw yesterday

1:16:09 > 1:16:17afternoon, many places struggling to get much above freezing. Still

1:16:17 > 1:16:21holding on to a little bit of cold air this morning, first thing. But

1:16:21 > 1:16:26much milder our sweeping in from the south-west. Through today and on

1:16:26 > 1:16:30into tomorrow. If you are heading out tomorrow, across Scotland, quite

1:16:30 > 1:16:36a bit of wet and windy weather. Showers in the north and west. Most

1:16:36 > 1:16:43of these showers should ease away, and in improving picture. Try and

1:16:43 > 1:16:49frost free. Some heady bursts of rain across the South coast of

1:16:49 > 1:16:57England. Much of Devon and Cornwall should stay dry. Quite cloudy but

1:16:57 > 1:17:02dry across Wales. In improving picture. The rain clears away from

1:17:02 > 1:17:06the south-east of England. A few showers towards the west of

1:17:06 > 1:17:11Scotland.

1:17:11 > 1:17:15Scotland. Anywhere towards the east of higher ground, we will just about

1:17:15 > 1:17:20see those temperatures, at least in the South into double figures in

1:17:20 > 1:17:24through the first part of tonight, fairly chilly and mostly dry. Things

1:17:24 > 1:17:28are set to change as rain sweeps in from the West. The wind picking up

1:17:28 > 1:17:33as well. Quite a wet and windy start for Tuesday morning but frost free

1:17:33 > 1:17:36with the milder in charge and that they will pile in from the

1:17:36 > 1:17:40south-west as we head through the day tomorrow. Certainly milder but

1:17:40 > 1:17:46we will see a lot of windy and wet weather sweeping from west to east

1:17:46 > 1:17:49across the country during Tuesday. Some heady bursts of southern

1:17:49 > 1:17:55England and Scotland through the morning. 'S quarterly wins as well.

1:17:55 > 1:17:58It will feel pretty unsubtle. Although the temperatures are much

1:17:58 > 1:18:04milder, it won't feel particularly pleasant with outbreaks of rain and

1:18:04 > 1:18:08strong wind. Wednesday, more of the same. Another front from west to

1:18:08 > 1:18:14east. A spell of fairly heavy rain. Brisk winds as well and return to

1:18:14 > 1:18:18some sunshine and showers from the West. It looks like the temperatures

1:18:18 > 1:18:23will dip a bit towards the end of the week, staying fairly unsettled

1:18:23 > 1:18:31but certainly today, not a bad day and temperatures are on the rise.

1:18:31 > 1:18:34This morning we're talking about malnutrition in the elderly

1:18:34 > 1:18:35in the UK.

1:18:35 > 1:18:37BBC Breakfast has exclusively seen a report which estimates 1.3

1:18:37 > 1:18:42million older people suffer from hunger.

1:18:42 > 1:18:45Breakfast's John Maguire can tell us more.

1:18:45 > 1:18:53Good morning to you, John.

1:18:54 > 1:18:56We are at the Hertfordshire Independent Living

1:18:56 > 1:19:04Service kitchens in St Albans.

1:19:04 > 1:19:07It is a well oiled machine. You can

1:19:07 > 1:19:09It is a well oiled machine. You can see Lizzie is taking out one of the

1:19:09 > 1:19:15meals. Stabbing it with the temperature probe, it needs to be 83

1:19:15 > 1:19:19degrees. That is an all-day Breakfast which is one of the most

1:19:19 > 1:19:22popular things that the folks who take advantage of this enjoy. You

1:19:22 > 1:19:28can see that they get an afternoon tea as well. Around £4 55, I think

1:19:28 > 1:19:35it is, for a meal. The afternoon tea goes on top of that. The other thing

1:19:35 > 1:19:39that is very interesting about where we are at the moment in Saint Alden

1:19:39 > 1:19:44is, there is also a community cafe here and I think we got a

1:19:44 > 1:19:48good-looking full Breakfast about to be taken by Gemma off to one of the

1:19:48 > 1:19:54tables. Something to look forward to. The community cafe offers a

1:19:54 > 1:19:58different aspect because one of the things about meals on wheels, places

1:19:58 > 1:20:03like this, it's not just about the food and nutrition, it's about that

1:20:03 > 1:20:09social contact, tackling isolation.

1:20:09 > 1:20:11Do you always manage to finish what we deliver to you?

1:20:11 > 1:20:12Yeah.

1:20:12 > 1:20:14Janet is receiving a check up-this morning from Annabel Martin,

1:20:14 > 1:20:15a nutritionist from

1:20:15 > 1:20:17the Hertfordshire Independent Living Service.

1:20:17 > 1:20:20OK, and that's a slightly more than you were last time

1:20:20 > 1:20:21so that's fantastic.

1:20:21 > 1:20:26She is malnourished but today there is good news,

1:20:26 > 1:20:27putting on weight.

1:20:27 > 1:20:29Malnourishment is defined as when the body doesn't get

1:20:29 > 1:20:33the nutrients it needs to function properly.

1:20:33 > 1:20:41A parliamentary report published today says it affects 1.3 million

1:20:42 > 1:20:47elderly people, but it's an estimate.

1:20:47 > 1:20:50The data comes from 2011 so it's calling for updated information.

1:20:50 > 1:20:53Those who provide Meals on Wheels suspect it's a much bigger problem.

1:20:53 > 1:20:56Well, we're dealing with malnutrition on a daily basis.

1:20:56 > 1:20:58We've done our own research screening clients when they first

1:20:58 > 1:21:02come to our Meals on Wheels service and we discover that 44% of them

1:21:02 > 1:21:07are malnourished to some extent.

1:21:07 > 1:21:10It seems crazy to me that hunger amongst the elderly is something

1:21:10 > 1:21:14which is still prevalent in this country.

1:21:14 > 1:21:18And the best guess for the cost of the problem is almost £12

1:21:18 > 1:21:21billion and rising.

1:21:21 > 1:21:25Partly about ageing population, maybe partly through poverty,

1:21:25 > 1:21:31more so because of isolation but none of that is a reason

1:21:31 > 1:21:35for the government not thinking more imaginatively how it might spend

1:21:35 > 1:21:42a very small part of the pension budget in a way which really helps

1:21:42 > 1:21:43people in dire need.

1:21:43 > 1:21:44Turn it up a bit.

1:21:44 > 1:21:46The report makes several recommendations.

1:21:46 > 1:21:49They include taking winter fuel payments from the wealthiest

1:21:49 > 1:21:52pensioners to help fund community support.

1:21:52 > 1:21:55More Meals on Wheels, not only to provide food but also

1:21:55 > 1:21:59tackle isolation and loneliness.

1:21:59 > 1:22:01And an increased role from supermarkets to offer slower

1:22:01 > 1:22:08shopping lanes and lunch clubs for the in-store cafe.

1:22:08 > 1:22:09Hello, Ruth.

1:22:09 > 1:22:11Ruth has just turned 91...

1:22:11 > 1:22:13Hi, Ruth.

1:22:13 > 1:22:16..and still cooks herself in the evening

1:22:16 > 1:22:23but has a daily lunch delivery.

1:22:23 > 1:22:24Lemon chicken today.

1:22:24 > 1:22:25Oh, that looks nice.

1:22:25 > 1:22:26That looks lovely.

1:22:26 > 1:22:28She is well nourished and enjoys the social contact.

1:22:28 > 1:22:31I can't grumble because they never miss, they always come every motral

1:22:31 > 1:22:34day regardless of the climate and the weather.

1:22:34 > 1:22:38day regardless of the climate and the weather.

1:22:38 > 1:22:40day regardless of the climate and the weather.

1:22:40 > 1:22:43The report recognises that government and local authority

1:22:43 > 1:22:45budgets are under pressure but social services directors

1:22:45 > 1:22:47say their work needs proper funding.

1:22:47 > 1:22:50The money talked about in the report, in my view,

1:22:50 > 1:22:58would be significantly insignificant when we talk about the amount

1:22:58 > 1:23:00of money that's required to truly put social care

1:23:00 > 1:23:01on a sustainable footing.

1:23:01 > 1:23:04National governments across the UK say they are taking steps to tackle

1:23:04 > 1:23:07malnutrition and in England, for example, the Care Act makes sure

1:23:07 > 1:23:10malnutrition and in England, for example, the Care Act makes sure

1:23:10 > 1:23:13that vulnerable people's needs are met by the local authorities.

1:23:13 > 1:23:21But today's report is a challenge to us all to do something about it.

1:23:27 > 1:23:35Let's talk to Sarah from the report and Doctor Simon Gade.Sarah, you

1:23:35 > 1:23:40are concerned about some of the mixed messages.Absolutely.

1:23:40 > 1:23:44Obviously obesity is a problem throughout the nature and that the

1:23:44 > 1:23:50only messages we hear are about that on to someone who is older and

1:23:50 > 1:23:54losing weight and undernourished, low fat and low sugar food is

1:23:54 > 1:23:59absolutely the wrong thing to be having so what we really feel is

1:23:59 > 1:24:03needed is multiple messages so that someone who needs to put on weight

1:24:03 > 1:24:11can learn what is good nutrition for them.Doctor Gade, you are a

1:24:11 > 1:24:15gastroenterologist and you see people at their most poorly. What is

1:24:15 > 1:24:22going wrong?There are lots of reasons. We are dealing with medical

1:24:22 > 1:24:26problems that result in nutrition but the nutritional issues have been

1:24:26 > 1:24:30dealt with as well is the medical problem. I often think about having

1:24:30 > 1:24:35nutrition vision. If you go around the hospital, you will see that 30%

1:24:35 > 1:24:39of patients, one in three are malnourished or at risk of

1:24:39 > 1:24:43malnutrition. They have lost a lot of weight in all of those patients

1:24:43 > 1:24:47have complications that then develop. The cost is enormous as a

1:24:47 > 1:24:52result of that.You believe people shouldn't be losing weight as they

1:24:52 > 1:24:57get older because a lot of people think that is normal.The perception

1:24:57 > 1:25:02is getting thinner as we age but we've got to change that perception

1:25:02 > 1:25:07because it's truly not, that doesn't necessarily happen.Thank you very

1:25:07 > 1:25:17much. We have had responses from both national -- from all the

1:25:17 > 1:25:19national governments who say they have policies to attack these

1:25:19 > 1:25:25issues. Also, a multi- nutrition universal screening tool that you

1:25:25 > 1:25:32saw being used, a way of measuring patients to see how they are coping,

1:25:32 > 1:25:36making this unit will soar across the board. Another way to understand

1:25:36 > 1:25:41exactly what is going on in the community.John, thank you very

1:25:41 > 1:25:49much.You are watching Breakfast. One of the things I love about being

1:25:49 > 1:26:01in a team, kit is close to the top. The countdown is on early Olympic --

1:26:01 > 1:26:07the Winter Olympics in South Korea. Team GB's kit is being unveiled.

1:26:07 > 1:26:16Jane is looking at it.Kit envy. Louise has kit envy. Can we steal

1:26:16 > 1:26:21something for her? Good morning from all of us. Team GB and some of the

1:26:21 > 1:26:27support crew and Jenny Jones. Very exciting today. Today's the day they

1:26:27 > 1:26:31get kitted out to the main event in Pyeongchang. This is the first

1:26:31 > 1:26:37anybody has seen all of this kit put together, 60 athletes in total

1:26:37 > 1:26:44kitted out. 101 items each including the illusion outfits. You'll be

1:26:44 > 1:26:49going 100 miles an hour feet first and down the mountain. If you are

1:26:49 > 1:26:53wearing this one in the middle, you will be wearing it on the podium.

1:26:53 > 1:30:14Hopefully with a gold medal. More

1:30:14 > 1:30:16Plenty more on our website at the usual address.

1:30:16 > 1:30:23Bye for now.

1:30:24 > 1:30:25Hello.

1:30:25 > 1:30:28This is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin.

1:30:28 > 1:30:29It's Monday the 22nd of January.

1:30:29 > 1:30:32Coming up on Breakfast today:

1:30:32 > 1:30:35The head of the Army will warn today that Britain's military risks

1:30:35 > 1:30:37falling behind that of its potential enemies

1:30:37 > 1:30:38without additional investment.

1:30:38 > 1:30:40General Sir Nick Carter's comments are being seen

1:30:40 > 1:30:43as an attempt to win more funding for the forces.

1:30:43 > 1:30:46He will also point to Russia's growing battlefield capabilities,

1:30:46 > 1:30:48including the threat posed by its long-range missiles

1:30:48 > 1:30:54and cyber warfare skills.

1:30:54 > 1:31:00One of the most important aspects is to deter any aggression. And you can

1:31:00 > 1:31:05only do that if you have a strong army and a firm presence. And I

1:31:05 > 1:31:12think, again, you need the backup to sustain that, and that means a

1:31:12 > 1:31:16significant size in terms of the army, and any aspect or any thought

1:31:16 > 1:31:19of reducing the army below the numbers that we have at the moment

1:31:19 > 1:31:26which is about 80,000, I think it would put that at risk.

1:31:26 > 1:31:28The deputy leader of UKIP, Margot Parker, has resigned

1:31:28 > 1:31:31from her position in the party because leader, Henry Bolton,

1:31:31 > 1:31:32has refused to resign.

1:31:32 > 1:31:35Yesterday, Mr Bolton lost a no confidence vote at a meeting

1:31:35 > 1:31:38of senior UKIP members, but said he will not stand down.

1:31:38 > 1:31:41Mrs Parker told the BBC that his refusal to leave has left

1:31:41 > 1:31:44the party in "limbo" and that he should go "sooner

1:31:44 > 1:31:45rather than later."

1:31:45 > 1:31:47Detectives are continuing to investigate the fatal stabbing

1:31:47 > 1:31:49of an eight-year-old girl in the West Midlands.

1:31:49 > 1:31:52Mylee Billingham was named by police as the schoolgirl who died

1:31:52 > 1:31:55at an address near Walsall on Saturday night.

1:31:55 > 1:31:58A 54-year-old man, who was arrested in connection with the attack,

1:31:58 > 1:32:05remains in a critical condition in hospital.

1:32:05 > 1:32:07The Foreign Secretary, Boris Johnson, will meet his US

1:32:07 > 1:32:10counterpart, Rex Tillerson, in London today for talks on Syria,

1:32:10 > 1:32:11Iran and Yemen.

1:32:11 > 1:32:12America's foreign policy chief arrived last night.

1:32:12 > 1:32:16The meeting comes after Donald Trump refused to visit the UK and open

1:32:16 > 1:32:18the new US embassy in the capital.

1:32:18 > 1:32:21Today's diplomacy will prepare the way for the President's meeting

1:32:21 > 1:32:29with the Prime Minister later this week in the Swiss resort of Davos.

1:32:31 > 1:32:35A charity says one in three young women in the UK are embarrassed

1:32:35 > 1:32:38to attend smear tests for cervical cancer because of issues

1:32:38 > 1:32:38with body image.

1:32:38 > 1:32:40Jo's Cervical Cancer Trust, which surveyed more

1:32:40 > 1:32:42than 2,000 women aged between 25 and 35,

1:32:42 > 1:32:46said it was worried about the impact on screening rates, which have

1:32:46 > 1:32:54fallen to a 20-year low.

1:32:56 > 1:32:59Priests are taking part in the annual Pope John Paul II

1:32:59 > 1:33:07Skiing Competition in Poland.

1:33:07 > 1:33:10It's a week on since the collapse of construction services company

1:33:10 > 1:33:10Carillion.

1:33:10 > 1:33:12Many questions remain unanswered, including the overall cost

1:33:12 > 1:33:18to the taxpayer of its failure.

1:33:18 > 1:33:21Debate has been promised over the future of workplace pensions.Two

1:33:21 > 1:33:28thirds of them are in deficit. It is like a race. There can be a deficit

1:33:28 > 1:33:33allowed, but there has to be a plan to fix it. Most employers will fix

1:33:33 > 1:33:42that

1:33:42 > 1:33:45that over a 5-10 year period, but sometimes fortunes of a company can

1:33:45 > 1:33:49turn down before a hole is plugged. There will be more insolvencies. The

1:33:49 > 1:33:57question is not whether, it is how many.

1:33:57 > 1:34:02We have been talking about the Olympics, the winter Olympics, this

1:34:02 > 1:34:03is not that, but it is close.

1:34:03 > 1:34:06Priests are taking part in the annual Pope John Paul II

1:34:06 > 1:34:07Skiing Competition in Poland.

1:34:07 > 1:34:10The oldest participant is 76 and has been taking part

1:34:10 > 1:34:12in the event for several years.

1:34:12 > 1:34:15Organisers say they wanted priests to not only give an example of how

1:34:15 > 1:34:21to pray, but also how to compete honestly.

1:34:21 > 1:34:28Nice style, nice and steady. There we go. Look at this! Taking it to a

1:34:28 > 1:34:43completely different level.You do not want to get that garment caught.

1:34:43 > 1:34:47We are talking about the winter Olympics later.How do I follow that

1:34:47 > 1:34:52those pictures are amazing.We talk about the winter Olympics because

1:34:52 > 1:35:01they get their kit today.And the tennis. Roger Federer...He is like

1:35:01 > 1:35:11a gazelle. So smooth. His first day match. Better than getting to sleep

1:35:11 > 1:35:15at 3am after a night match. He makes it look easy.

1:35:15 > 1:35:18Roger Federer make quick work of this morning's match

1:35:18 > 1:35:21against Hungary's Marton Fucsovics, wrapping it up in two hours and one

1:35:21 > 1:35:22minute, 6-4, 7-6, 6-2.

1:35:22 > 1:35:24He'll face Tomas Berdych in the last eight,

1:35:24 > 1:35:32a player he beat in last year's third round.

1:35:41 > 1:35:44It looks like Alexis Sanchez is the next in line to don the famous

1:35:44 > 1:35:52number seven. He just has to get a medical completed. He is apparently

1:35:52 > 1:35:56taking a selfie at Old Trafford, which is doing the rounds in the

1:35:56 > 1:35:59papers this morning and on social media.

1:35:59 > 1:36:02Watford have sacked their manager and appointed another one

1:36:02 > 1:36:04all in the space of a day.

1:36:04 > 1:36:06It has been some 24 hours.

1:36:06 > 1:36:09Marco Silva was sacked on Sunday morning with Watford 10th

1:36:09 > 1:36:12in the Premier League, four points avoid the relegation zone.

1:36:12 > 1:36:14The club, blaming the need for change on Everton

1:36:14 > 1:36:16for their interest in Silva before Christmas.

1:36:16 > 1:36:18Spaniard Javi Gracia is his replacement, his last club

1:36:18 > 1:36:20was Russian side Rubin Kazan.

1:36:20 > 1:36:24Silva is the eighth Premier League manager to lose his job this season.

1:36:24 > 1:36:26Harry Kane struck his 99th Premier League goal for Tottenham,

1:36:26 > 1:36:29but couldn't prevent them from losing ground in the race

1:36:29 > 1:36:32for the top four as his Spurs side drew 1-1 at Southampton.

1:36:32 > 1:36:34The home side made a fast start.

1:36:34 > 1:36:38An own goal from Davinson Sanchez gave Saints the lead in the opening

1:36:38 > 1:36:39quarter of an hour.

1:36:39 > 1:36:40Then came Kane's equaliser.

1:36:40 > 1:36:43Spurs miss out on the chance to go level with fourth-placed Liverpool

1:36:43 > 1:36:45who take on Swansea tonight.

1:36:45 > 1:36:50Southampton, meanwhile, are still in the relegation zone.

1:36:50 > 1:36:53Holders, Celtic, have been drawn at home to Partick Thistle

1:36:53 > 1:36:55in the Scottish Cup fiffth round draw.

1:36:55 > 1:36:58Hearts will play Albion Rovers or St Johnstone after they beat

1:36:58 > 1:37:00Hibernian 1-0 in the Edinbough derby at Tynecastle.

1:37:00 > 1:37:02Don Cowie, glancing Christophe Berra's header

1:37:02 > 1:37:03over the line.

1:37:03 > 1:37:06The full draw can be found on the BBC Sport website.

1:37:06 > 1:37:10Tommy Fleetwood has won his fourth European Tour event by retaining his

1:37:10 > 1:37:11Abu Dhabi Championship title.

1:37:11 > 1:37:14Fleetwood started the day two shots off the lead but hit eight birdies

1:37:14 > 1:37:18in his final round to win by two, ahead of fellow Englishman Ross

1:37:18 > 1:37:18Fisher.

1:37:18 > 1:37:26Rory McIlroy finished two shots further back.

1:37:31 > 1:37:35It was just important that we carry on going forward. It is all well and

1:37:35 > 1:37:40good having a great year. It was the best year of my life. But we need to

1:37:40 > 1:37:44take it to the next level. We need to keep improving. We had to do that

1:37:44 > 1:37:48this week, and it just feels like another step in the right way.

1:37:48 > 1:37:51Mark Allen has won the Masters snooker for a first time.

1:37:51 > 1:37:53In a tight match against England's Kyren Wilson,

1:37:53 > 1:37:57Allen made the only century break in the 12th frame to make it seven

1:37:57 > 1:37:57frames to five.

1:37:57 > 1:37:59He went on to win 10-7.

1:37:59 > 1:38:01And becomes the first Northern Irishman since Denis Taylor

1:38:01 > 1:38:04in 1987 to take the title.

1:38:04 > 1:38:07I felt calm all week except for the first session today.

1:38:07 > 1:38:08I was on edge.

1:38:08 > 1:38:10As the match went on, I got stronger.

1:38:10 > 1:38:12I felt more at ease with myself.

1:38:12 > 1:38:15Yeah, I am just very, very pleased to be on the right end

1:38:15 > 1:38:23of it for a change.

1:38:24 > 1:38:26She finally looked around.

1:38:26 > 1:38:28British skiier, Dave Ryding, clocked the fastest time of the day

1:38:28 > 1:38:32on his second run in the World Cup slalom in Kitzbuhel yesterday.

1:38:32 > 1:38:34The 31-year-old was 25th after his first run,

1:38:34 > 1:38:35having made a big mistake.

1:38:35 > 1:38:38But he was more than six seconds quicker on his second,

1:38:38 > 1:38:46moving him up to ninth place overall.

1:38:48 > 1:38:54Kyle Edmund is carrying British popes in tennis on his shoulders. --

1:38:54 > 1:39:02hopes. We will speak to his former coach who joins us from the London

1:39:02 > 1:39:05newsroom. Good morning. What was your reaction when you saw that he

1:39:05 > 1:39:12got through to the quarter-finals? His first quarter-finals?Yes. I was

1:39:12 > 1:39:17obviously delighted for him. He thoroughly deserves it in my

1:39:17 > 1:39:23opinion.You started coaching him when he was just 16. I will ask you

1:39:23 > 1:39:29the inevitable. Did you see this progress coming? Did you see him as

1:39:29 > 1:39:34a possible British number one?When we started, 16, you definitely knew

1:39:34 > 1:39:42there was massive potential. And I think... I always felt he could be a

1:39:42 > 1:39:46top 100 player in the world. And then I have always believed when you

1:39:46 > 1:39:52reach that landmark, you know, you never quite know what you are

1:39:52 > 1:40:00capable of doing from then on in. And, like I said, he deserves the

1:40:00 > 1:40:04success he is getting now.What has made the difference this year? He

1:40:04 > 1:40:10swapped Beverley for the Bahamas, and his winter training, warm

1:40:10 > 1:40:15weather training, is now there. And he has hired some new coaches.Yes.

1:40:15 > 1:40:25The Bahamas. He went in pre-season in December. He enjoyed it. He was

1:40:25 > 1:40:29able to go about his business and it was quiet. He has a different

1:40:29 > 1:40:36coaching team. He has the Swedish coach in his corner and a good

1:40:36 > 1:40:41friend of mine, Mark Hylton, sharing the job. I think they have, you

1:40:41 > 1:40:50know, changed his serve slightly, which has helped in this tournament.

1:40:50 > 1:40:57In general, it has given him bigger determination through the matches.

1:40:57 > 1:41:03You can see that is what has happened in this tournament. There

1:41:03 > 1:41:08was the other day, he had some tough moments.He has always been

1:41:08 > 1:41:14well-known for his impressive form. The other day, they were saying what

1:41:14 > 1:41:21it has learned is the ability to grind out results. -- what he has

1:41:21 > 1:41:28learned. Is that inert?His forehand has always been a huge weapon. We

1:41:28 > 1:41:34last saw him at 16. That was just so evident, it was a massive shock. It

1:41:34 > 1:41:41got better and better year by year. I think it is the mental side of it

1:41:41 > 1:41:44that has definitely been a big difference, you know, at the start

1:41:44 > 1:41:53of this year. In Brisbane he got a couple of tight matches.

1:41:53 > 1:41:56couple of tight matches. He got Dmitrov in a tight match. He has

1:41:56 > 1:42:01been digging a fraction deeper. It has made a massive difference so far

1:42:01 > 1:42:08this year.Thank you so much for joining us this morning.It was a

1:42:08 > 1:42:15pleasure. Thank you.He faces Dmitrov early tomorrow. He has

1:42:15 > 1:42:20learned how to make everything count.Hopefully this time tomorrow

1:42:20 > 1:42:24we will know which way it is going. Come on!

1:42:24 > 1:42:27British actor Gary Oldman has come another step closer to an Oscar

1:42:27 > 1:42:30with a win at the Screen Actors Guild Awards.

1:42:30 > 1:42:32He won the prize for outstanding performance for his portrayal

1:42:32 > 1:42:34of Winston Churchill in 'Darkest Hour'.

1:42:34 > 1:42:36Along with 'The Crown' star Claire Foy, the pair

1:42:36 > 1:42:37were the only

1:42:37 > 1:42:40British winners at the ceremony, which saw big wins for movie

1:42:40 > 1:42:43'Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri' and TV series 'Big Little

1:42:43 > 1:42:43Lies'.

1:42:43 > 1:42:46Our North America correspondent Peter Bowes sent us this report

1:42:46 > 1:42:54from the red carpet.

1:42:55 > 1:42:59An award season like no other. Rarely has a single issue dominated

1:42:59 > 1:43:08the red carpet like the sexual harassment scandal and the Me Too

1:43:08 > 1:43:12and Times Up movements. But this is the response to months of

1:43:12 > 1:43:15revelations.For these women to have these stories out and being told is

1:43:15 > 1:43:19so important. To keep reiterating that we believe you and we are

1:43:19 > 1:43:23listening to you and we are doing what we can to change it.I don't

1:43:23 > 1:43:28think this is just a flash in the pan. I do not think it will whiplash

1:43:28 > 1:43:32to the way things have always been. You know, Hollywood has a lot of

1:43:32 > 1:43:37power. What we do influences a lot of people. And I am proud of the

1:43:37 > 1:43:40industry for facing this had on. This business is changing quite

1:43:40 > 1:43:45quickly.Really.Across-the-board. Many people lost their jobs. They

1:43:45 > 1:43:52will feel it. It will depend on how stall ward the movement is in

1:43:52 > 1:43:57keeping it up.It is just wonderful to be here at this time to witness

1:43:57 > 1:44:03hopefully great change. It has been a long time coming. And, umm, it is

1:44:03 > 1:44:10about time.

1:44:10 > 1:44:13about time. Time's up.For the first time in its history, all of the

1:44:13 > 1:44:17presenters of the Screen Actors Guild awards were women. Tribute was

1:44:17 > 1:44:23paid to those who have spoken up about abuse.We are inspired that so

1:44:23 > 1:44:31many powerful voices are no longer silenced by the fear of retaliation.

1:44:31 > 1:44:37We can control our own destiny.And you are one of those voices. You are

1:44:37 > 1:44:45one of the silence breakers, and we all owe you a debt of gratitude.The

1:44:45 > 1:44:50awards themselves are good indicator of which films are likely to do well

1:44:50 > 1:44:54the Oscars. Harry Oldman plays Winston Churchill in The Darkest

1:44:54 > 1:45:00Hour, and was overcome by emotion as he got a prize for the leading role.

1:45:00 > 1:45:05Churchill reminds us we make a living by what we get, but we make a

1:45:05 > 1:45:14life I what we give. And you have given... You have given an enormous

1:45:14 > 1:45:18honour to meet a nicer but it was dominated by the three, a film about

1:45:18 > 1:45:22a mother's quest to find the killer of her teenage daughter. -- Three

1:45:22 > 1:45:27Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri. It had best ensemble for the entire

1:45:27 > 1:45:30cast. Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri is now a hot

1:45:30 > 1:45:36favourite to do well at the Oscars. Denominations are out tomorrow. It

1:45:36 > 1:45:41is clear the scandal which has overwhelmed Hollywood in the past

1:45:41 > 1:45:45few months will continue to dominate the awards season is The

1:45:45 > 1:45:54nominations.

1:45:56 > 1:45:57Oldman. If you are just waking up, find out what

1:45:57 > 1:45:57Oldman. If you are just waking up, find out what

1:45:57 > 1:45:58Oldman. If you are just waking up, find out what is happening to the

1:45:58 > 1:46:03weather. A cold weekend and a few concerns about flooding in the

1:46:03 > 1:46:07coming days as well.We had some really heavy rain yesterday which

1:46:07 > 1:46:18turned to snow quite quickly. And it did cause persistent heavy rain. I

1:46:18 > 1:46:26think today will be a respite. As you say, there are

1:46:26 > 1:46:29think today will be a respite. As you say, there are concerns it will

1:46:29 > 1:46:33be unsettled later. More rain on the cards and snow that got lying across

1:46:33 > 1:46:39many northern parts of the country. This was the scene yesterday

1:46:39 > 1:46:44afternoon in Cumbria. We've still got around ten centimetres of snow.

1:46:44 > 1:46:51Up to 26 across parts of Scotland. Temperatures struggled to get above

1:46:51 > 1:46:58freezing. Temperatures well up into double figures. Certainly those

1:46:58 > 1:47:04temperatures are on the rise. The cold air is getting pushed away to

1:47:04 > 1:47:13the north-east. Let's start off across Scotland this morning. Heavy

1:47:13 > 1:47:19rain across northern and western Scotland.

1:47:19 > 1:47:24Scotland. It will be an improving date. Mostly dry but cloudy through

1:47:24 > 1:47:30the Midlands and East Anglia. This area of rain is affecting parts of

1:47:30 > 1:47:36London, Sussex towards Somerset. Towards Cornwall and much of Devon,

1:47:36 > 1:47:43trying up -- drying up the south-west. Through the day, we keep

1:47:43 > 1:47:48quite a lot of cloud. That rain fairly quickly. A few sunny spells

1:47:48 > 1:47:55merging. Especially the some parts of England. Mostly dry, just the odd

1:47:55 > 1:48:01shower continuing. Temperatures between around seven and 10 degrees.

1:48:01 > 1:48:05To the first half of tonight, dry and fairly chilly but during the

1:48:05 > 1:48:09second half of the night, that's when the next area of rain arrives

1:48:09 > 1:48:15from the West. Warley winds moving. A soggy old start to Tuesday

1:48:15 > 1:48:28morning. Mild air to start the day on Tuesday. We will see bands of

1:48:28 > 1:48:33rain crossing west to east. That will be followed by something a bit

1:48:33 > 1:48:37brighter than the north-west but plenty of squally showers around.

1:48:37 > 1:48:41Temperatures around 11- 13 degrees. Unsettled right through the middle

1:48:41 > 1:48:46of the week. Active both.

1:48:46 > 1:48:49Unsettled right through the middle of the week. Active both.I hardly

1:48:49 > 1:48:57recognise that is temperatures.Time to ditch the big coat. I don't think

1:48:57 > 1:49:04Team GB are going to give you one of our coats. They have launched their

1:49:04 > 1:49:10Winter Olympic kit.Jane is down there. You have not qualified.It's

1:49:10 > 1:49:18like going into a shop in somebody's saying, grab what you like. We are

1:49:18 > 1:49:24talking about Team GB.

1:49:24 > 1:49:27talking about Team GB. Car insurance, I renewed last week. Mine

1:49:27 > 1:49:33has gone up sick of Wembley. You're not alone in people who are

1:49:33 > 1:49:44upset that fact. Even they have your no claim bonus. Good morning. This

1:49:44 > 1:49:49is research, comparison sites saying the average car insurance policy

1:49:49 > 1:49:54costs £827 which is close to a record high. They are predicting it

1:49:54 > 1:50:01will rise further. Thank you very much the joining us. Why is it going

1:50:01 > 1:50:07up?If you are unlucky enough to have an accident, the cost of fixing

1:50:07 > 1:50:14a car is increasing so insurers are passing those costs on Swiss

1:50:14 > 1:50:25important to you shop around. I was chatting to a guy the other day who

1:50:25 > 1:50:33had a renewal for £1200. You can see there are huge savings out there.

1:50:33 > 1:50:39Just in terms of how comparison sites were, how do you decide to

1:50:39 > 1:50:44list them? Everything is ranked on price. We work with over 100

1:50:44 > 1:50:53different Rands. All the information as they are. You can very calmly see

1:50:53 > 1:51:02what is good and speak to the insurer.How do you make money?

1:51:02 > 1:51:07Insurers pay is a small fee. They don't pass it on to the customers so

1:51:07 > 1:51:11the price a customer would get from the insurer is the same as they

1:51:11 > 1:51:16would get from us. Do they all pay the same fee? The average is about

1:51:16 > 1:51:23the same. Whatever the price of the actual policy.You guys are owned by

1:51:23 > 1:51:30an insurance company. How can you be independent?We are part of the same

1:51:30 > 1:51:34group of companies but we work with hundreds of insurers is that we are

1:51:34 > 1:51:37fully separate and make all of our decisions and everything is

1:51:37 > 1:51:47transparent.There has been criticism of comparison sites. The

1:51:47 > 1:51:50competition watchdog has said if you use comparison sites, you should

1:51:50 > 1:51:58shop around, don't just use yours, use different ones. What you make of

1:51:58 > 1:52:02that advice because it seems ridiculous to shop around for

1:52:02 > 1:52:09shopping around.It adds a level of hassle into it. The whole purpose is

1:52:09 > 1:52:14to save customers time and money. We are really good shoppers in the UK,

1:52:14 > 1:52:18however we shop, we wonder how we are going to get the best deal. I

1:52:18 > 1:52:24agree you should shop around. Focusing on drivers. Providing a

1:52:24 > 1:52:29guaranteed. That is a great reason to come to us. Have a look at other

1:52:29 > 1:52:33sites as well. You never know if you get a cheap price.You can spend

1:52:33 > 1:52:41your life shopping around, can't you?You don't need to go to many,

1:52:41 > 1:52:45just a couple would suffice. Louise O'Shea, thank you the talking to us.

1:52:45 > 1:52:51I will be talking more about Carillion later.As you say, good

1:52:51 > 1:52:56advice but time-consuming. We are looking ahead to the Winter

1:52:56 > 1:53:03Olympics. Just over two weeks until it starts in South Korea and today

1:53:03 > 1:53:11is the day that Team GB's kit is revealed.We have got kit envy. Jane

1:53:11 > 1:53:17is in Stockport us where we can look at it all. Good morning.Good

1:53:17 > 1:53:21morning to you and from everybody here at HQ this morning. Good

1:53:21 > 1:53:31morning. It is actually Adidas HQ but this is where all the athletes

1:53:31 > 1:53:37led by Michael, this is where they will be kitted out. They are going

1:53:37 > 1:53:44to be given 101 pieces of kit. 200 members of Team GB in total. Amy

1:53:44 > 1:53:51Williams. Let me afresh our memory. You of course the gold in Vancouver.

1:53:51 > 1:53:58This is kind of what you were bearing.This is the skeleton team

1:53:58 > 1:54:02suit. A lot of science and technology goes into all the

1:54:02 > 1:54:07competition clothes. Hours spent in wind tunnels, perfecting body

1:54:07 > 1:54:13positions, and it comes down to hundreds of this on a second.

1:54:13 > 1:54:20Anything that can give your little competitive edge. Do we think?I

1:54:20 > 1:54:26like it. I like the calligraphy. The little theme that is tying in.I

1:54:26 > 1:54:34like it. They give are coming down. Chat to us later. Jenny Jones,

1:54:34 > 1:54:39bronze in Russia. This is what you would be wearing if you are

1:54:39 > 1:54:47competing.I think it's nice, I'm into it. The main thing is, it's got

1:54:47 > 1:54:55loads of space. Jumping on rails, big kickers, what have you. Stahl

1:54:55 > 1:55:05comes into it a bit more.To rethink its stylish?The guys like that it's

1:55:05 > 1:55:16dark.Double denim is not bad.

1:55:16 > 1:55:19dark.Double denim is not bad. It's more about the competitive edge and

1:55:19 > 1:55:27comfort and warmth.They want to feel good and look good as well.

1:55:27 > 1:55:31This is warm, isn't it? I know, I know. Let's hope we see our

1:55:31 > 1:55:45athletes.We have a treat.What do we think? Give it to me, sister.

1:55:45 > 1:55:56There was another turquoise one.

1:55:57 > 1:55:59There was another turquoise one. I should be wearing that. On the

1:55:59 > 1:56:09opening morning. It's in our time, isn't it. Really exciting. We have

1:56:09 > 1:59:32got presenters and quite a few pundits.

2:00:14 > 2:00:17This is Breakfast. The head of the army says that Britain needs more

2:00:17 > 2:00:26money to match potential enemies in modern warfare. General Sir Nick

2:00:26 > 2:00:29Carter's warning comes after Russia practised simulated attacks across

2:00:29 > 2:00:36northern Europe.

2:00:39 > 2:00:45Good morning. It is eight o'clock on Monday the 22nd of January.

2:00:45 > 2:00:51More turmoil for Henry Bolton, who refuses to step down. The party

2:00:51 > 2:00:53deputy resigns, saying he has got to go.

2:00:53 > 2:00:56And dying of embarassment - a charity says one in three young

2:00:56 > 2:00:58women aren't getting tested for cervical cancer

2:00:58 > 2:01:01because of concerns over body image.

2:01:01 > 2:01:04Union leaders will be meeting the bosses of the car

2:01:04 > 2:01:06maker Vauxhall today.

2:01:06 > 2:01:08They'll be discussing the job losses at Ellesmere Port,

2:01:08 > 2:01:10I'll have all the details shortly.

2:01:10 > 2:01:14Good morning.

2:01:14 > 2:01:16In sport, defending champion Roger Federer joins

2:01:16 > 2:01:23Britain's Kyle Edmund in the quarter finals of the Australian Open.

2:01:23 > 2:01:31And British success at the Screen Actors Guild award.Gary Oldman.

2:01:31 > 2:01:34Having also won at the Golden Globes, Gary Oldman will now be a

2:01:34 > 2:01:37favourite for Oscar success.

2:01:37 > 2:01:44And Sarah has the weather.Well, it has been a wintry weekend. Still a

2:01:44 > 2:01:48lot of lying snow around. Most of it will thaw out over the next few days

2:01:48 > 2:01:51as temperatures are on the rise. I will bring you all the details in

2:01:51 > 2:01:54about 15 minutes.

2:01:54 > 2:01:55Good morning.

2:01:55 > 2:01:56First, our main story.

2:01:56 > 2:01:59In a rare public intervention, the head of the Army will warn today

2:01:59 > 2:02:01that Britain's military risks falling behind that of its enemies

2:02:01 > 2:02:03unless it gets extra money.

2:02:03 > 2:02:06General Sir Nick Carter will point to Russia's growing

2:02:06 > 2:02:08battlefield capabilities, including the threat posed

2:02:08 > 2:02:11by its long-range missiles and cyber warfare skills.

2:02:11 > 2:02:14Simon Clemison reports.

2:02:14 > 2:02:17Images showing what Russia said was a strike on Syria.

2:02:17 > 2:02:20But the rockets come not from the Mediterranean Sea,

2:02:20 > 2:02:23but the Caspian Sea, more than 900 miles away.

2:02:23 > 2:02:27The head of the Army says Russia is building an increasingly

2:02:27 > 2:02:31aggressive military, which the UK is struggling to match.

2:02:31 > 2:02:33Russia has also been simulating attacks closer to home,

2:02:33 > 2:02:36conducting large-scale exercises.

2:02:36 > 2:02:41This, the heavily armed Klinongrad bordering Lithuania.

2:02:41 > 2:02:44General Sir Nick Carter will warn Britain must take notice

2:02:44 > 2:02:48of what is going on around us and keep up, or we could be

2:02:48 > 2:02:51massively constrained.

2:02:51 > 2:02:53He will say the threats are not thousands of miles away,

2:02:53 > 2:02:57but are now on our doorstep.

2:02:57 > 2:03:02He says cyber warfare can also disrupt the lives of normal people.

2:03:02 > 2:03:05One of the most important aspects is to deter any aggression.

2:03:05 > 2:03:12You can only do that with a forward army and forward presence.

2:03:16 > 2:03:21You need the back-up to sustain that. That means a significant size

2:03:21 > 2:03:25in terms of the army and any thought of reducing the army below the

2:03:25 > 2:03:30numbers that we have at the moment, about 80,000, I think would put at

2:03:30 > 2:03:34risk.

2:03:34 > 2:03:37The head of the army is not saying this in so many words,

2:03:37 > 2:03:40but one way to avoid the possibility of Britain falling behind

2:03:40 > 2:03:42in combat could be more money from the Chancellor here

2:03:42 > 2:03:43at Number 11.

2:03:43 > 2:03:46He certainly won't want to see any cuts.

2:03:46 > 2:03:48The speech will be made with the approval of

2:03:48 > 2:03:51the Defence Secretary, who has already said a 2% rise should be

2:03:51 > 2:03:52a base, not a ceiling.

2:03:52 > 2:03:53No word yet from the Chancellor.

2:03:53 > 2:03:55Simon Cleminson, BBC News.

2:03:55 > 2:03:57UKIP's deputy leader, Margot Parker has resigned

2:03:57 > 2:03:59from her position after the party's leader, Henry Bolton, refused

2:03:59 > 2:04:07to stand down following a vote of no confidence yesterday.

2:04:08 > 2:04:12She told the BBC that Mr Bolton's refusal had left the party in limbo

2:04:12 > 2:04:14and that he should go sooner rather than later.

2:04:14 > 2:04:17Our political correspondent Chris Mason joins us from Westminster.

2:04:17 > 2:04:23Good morning, Chris. News of another resignation in Ukip this morning?

2:04:23 > 2:04:27Yes, it is happening by the hour this morning, senior Ukip figures

2:04:27 > 2:04:30are clambering onto the plant, walking down it and encouraging

2:04:30 > 2:04:36their boss, the leader Henry Bolton, to do exactly the same. But, as

2:04:36 > 2:04:41things stand, he is not budging. Margot Parker, MEP for the East

2:04:41 > 2:04:45Midlands, deputy leader until this morning. She has resigned, saying

2:04:45 > 2:04:51that Mr Bolton has to go as well. John Bickley, the immigration and

2:04:51 > 2:04:55integration spokesman for the party is doing the same thing. That

2:04:55 > 2:04:58follows a unanimous verdict of the National executive committee

2:04:58 > 2:05:02yesterday that Mr Bolton should go. I say unanimous, one person said he

2:05:02 > 2:05:06shouldn't, Mr Bolton himself. Lots of senior figures in the party this

2:05:06 > 2:05:10week are also calling for him to go will stop he says he is staying

2:05:10 > 2:05:14exactly where he is. If he does that, there will be an emergency

2:05:14 > 2:05:17meeting taking place in the next month, where members will turn up

2:05:17 > 2:05:23and decide his fate. This story hasn't quite finished yet.Was it a

2:05:23 > 2:05:30week ago today that we have him on the show?Yes, you talked to him.

2:05:30 > 2:05:33Then he said he was not stepping down and he continues to say that.

2:05:33 > 2:05:35Detectives are continuing to investigate the fatal stabbing

2:05:35 > 2:05:38of an 8-year-old girl in the West Midlands.

2:05:38 > 2:05:41Mylee Billingham was named by police as the schoolgirl who died

2:05:41 > 2:05:43at an address near Walsall on Saturday night.

2:05:43 > 2:05:45A 54-year-old man, who was arrested in connection with the attack,

2:05:45 > 2:05:49remains in a critical condition in hospital.

2:05:49 > 2:05:51The Foreign Secretary, Boris Johnson, will meet his US

2:05:51 > 2:05:53counterpart, Rex Tillerson, in London today for talks

2:05:53 > 2:05:55on Syria, Iran and Yemen. America's foreign policy

2:05:55 > 2:06:01chief arrived last night.

2:06:01 > 2:06:04The meeting comes after Donald Trump refused to visit the UK and open

2:06:04 > 2:06:08the new US embassy in the capital.

2:06:08 > 2:06:11Today's diplomacy will prepare the way for the President's meeting

2:06:11 > 2:06:18with the Prime Minister later this week in the Swiss resort of Davos.

2:06:18 > 2:06:20Britain should prepare for a much more economically optimistic 2018

2:06:20 > 2:06:23because global growth is better than predicted.

2:06:23 > 2:06:25That's the argument of Lord Jim O'Neill,

2:06:25 > 2:06:29the former Conservative Treasury minister and Remain supporter.

2:06:29 > 2:06:32He says the economy should perform better this year than many opponents

2:06:32 > 2:06:36of Brexit had feared and UK growth forecasts were likely to be upgraded

2:06:36 > 2:06:38because of increased demand from China, America and continental

2:06:38 > 2:06:46Europe.

2:06:47 > 2:06:50In early 1000 children centres across England have not been

2:06:50 > 2:06:53inspected by Ofsted for more than five years. The Government

2:06:53 > 2:06:57temporarily suspended inspections in 2015. The charity Action For

2:06:57 > 2:07:01Children says it has left hundreds of thousands of parents with no idea

2:07:01 > 2:07:05how good their local centre is.

2:07:05 > 2:07:10For babies and toddlers, it is a chance to play. For parents, a

2:07:10 > 2:07:14chance to socialise and get free support from health workers. There

2:07:14 > 2:07:18are 3000 or so children's centres across England. Like schools, Ofsted

2:07:18 > 2:07:22inspects them for safety and quality. In 2015, the Government

2:07:22 > 2:07:25decided to consult over their future and told inspectors to stop

2:07:25 > 2:07:34inspecting. The charity Action For Children says two years on, some 969

2:07:34 > 2:07:37centres G1 inspection have not had one. That is 40% of the total. In

2:07:37 > 2:07:42that time, councils have invested £1.4 billion in children's centres,

2:07:42 > 2:07:47but it is not clear how well the money has been spent.What it means

2:07:47 > 2:07:50is that local authorities under pressure for cash, if the centres

2:07:50 > 2:07:53are not inspected, they are sort of invisible. What that means is that

2:07:53 > 2:07:57it is much easier to close them.Two years ago, this woman lost her

2:07:57 > 2:08:01mother just after giving birth to her son and was heading towards

2:08:01 > 2:08:05depression.At the centres were not here to help me, and the health

2:08:05 > 2:08:10visitor, one consistent person throughout two help me, I'm not sure

2:08:10 > 2:08:13how we would have coped, and I don't think we would have coped very well.

2:08:13 > 2:08:18These centres are a lifeline.Ofsted confirmed that the inspections are

2:08:18 > 2:08:22still suspended. The Department for education said robust and regular

2:08:22 > 2:08:24partial inspections do still take place.

2:08:24 > 2:08:26Gary Oldman has cemented his status as favourite

2:08:26 > 2:08:27to win an Oscar this year.

2:08:27 > 2:08:31He won the award for best actor at the Screen Actors

2:08:31 > 2:08:32Guild awards overnight.

2:08:32 > 2:08:35It's for his role as Sir Winston Churchill in the Darkest Hour.

2:08:35 > 2:08:42The British actor was overcome with emotion as he accepted his prize.

2:08:42 > 2:08:45Churchill reminds us we make a living with what we get and make

2:08:45 > 2:08:53a life with what we give.

2:08:54 > 2:08:58And you have given me an enormous honour, and I am proud to receive

2:08:58 > 2:09:06this magnificent award.

2:09:06 > 2:09:12Good luck to him for the Oscars as well.He is on a roll.

2:09:12 > 2:09:15It is the most common cancer in women under 35 and can be

2:09:15 > 2:09:17detected by a simple test, yet the number of women

2:09:17 > 2:09:20going for cervical screening has reached a 20-year low.

2:09:20 > 2:09:23A smear test can prevent 75% of cervical cancers.

2:09:23 > 2:09:26But a survey of 2,000 women by a charity found about a third

2:09:26 > 2:09:30were too embarrassed to get checked.

2:09:30 > 2:09:33And in some areas in the UK up to half of young women aren't taking

2:09:33 > 2:09:36up the offer of free tests.

2:09:36 > 2:09:38We're joined now by Laura Flaherty, who had a hysterectomy

2:09:38 > 2:09:40following smear test, and practise nurse manager

2:09:40 > 2:09:44Annmarie Kennedy.

2:09:44 > 2:09:51Good morning, both. It is quite shocking to hear these figures, that

2:09:51 > 2:09:53young women, particularly 25-35, they are too embarrassed to have a

2:09:53 > 2:10:04cheque. -- check. Is that your story?I think there is not a woman

2:10:04 > 2:10:07who doesn't say she was embarrassed, I would put a lot of things in front

2:10:07 > 2:10:11of mine, I would clean the house or go shopping, anything not to go. It

2:10:11 > 2:10:16is very embarrassing.You did go, and what was found?With the

2:10:16 > 2:10:23cervical smear, I was found to have high-grade cell changes, so I had a

2:10:23 > 2:10:28biopsy which indicated cervical cancer.Which is scary to hear?

2:10:28 > 2:10:33Shocking, devastating. Devastating news. I don't think anybody likes to

2:10:33 > 2:10:40hear the C word, but then to find out that it is treatable and that in

2:10:40 > 2:10:45a few short months I would be cancer free, it is amazing. You know, I

2:10:45 > 2:10:49always remember the day I got told I had cancer, the day after was my

2:10:49 > 2:10:52little boy's birthday. At that point I didn't know what stage it was. I

2:10:52 > 2:10:56didn't know if it would be the last birthday I would see, which is

2:10:56 > 2:11:02shocking. You know, women are out there now and not attending their

2:11:02 > 2:11:06smears, I hope they hear that and think I need to go, I need to go

2:11:06 > 2:11:12today, make the appointment. It can make a big difference.Anne-Marie,

2:11:12 > 2:11:16does not tally with your experience as to notYes, you get there were

2:11:16 > 2:11:18women see the whole procedure as embarrassing. And yet when they are

2:11:18 > 2:11:23pregnant and having a baby, they are OK with that, they don't find any

2:11:23 > 2:11:27embarrassment, because they have this prize at the end, which is a

2:11:27 > 2:11:30baby. However, if you have prevented cancer and you are going to be there

2:11:30 > 2:11:36for your baby, that is a far bigger prize. Women will say, I have had

2:11:36 > 2:11:43one woman asked me not to look while I was doing a smear, which defeats

2:11:43 > 2:11:47the object, because you have to get it from a certain area. It is not a

2:11:47 > 2:11:53convex procedure, we look very carefully and it takes a very short

2:11:53 > 2:11:56period of time, and it saves lives. I have had abnormal cells myself, if

2:11:56 > 2:12:00I had not gone and had that done, before I had children, there would

2:12:00 > 2:12:07be no children. Obviously that puts it in perspective. We treat people

2:12:07 > 2:12:13compassionately. It is not a painful procedure.Can I ask you about that?

2:12:13 > 2:12:18We talk about it not being painful, that is one of the... It's not just

2:12:18 > 2:12:20embarrassment, is it? People are worried about it being

2:12:20 > 2:12:24uncomfortable. What would you say to that?Anne-Marie could tell you this

2:12:24 > 2:12:28as well, we need to give more information. You can ask for a

2:12:28 > 2:12:32smaller speculum, there is a cream you can get from the pharmacy to

2:12:32 > 2:12:36make it less uncomfortable. Maybe this needs to be on the invitation

2:12:36 > 2:12:40letter? Give women their options. It is your test, you know? I meet women

2:12:40 > 2:12:47when I did the road show, thousands of women on the street, I met with

2:12:47 > 2:12:53people who had said they didn't like their nests, and they have had that

2:12:53 > 2:12:57nurses they were a baby. Ask for a different nurse!Yes, it is your

2:12:57 > 2:13:01test. We do a clinic in the evening as well, because timing is

2:13:01 > 2:13:10important.Yes, busy lives?That age group have busy lives. We do 6-8 and

2:13:10 > 2:13:14we only did smears. People come in and it is great. We tried doing a

2:13:14 > 2:13:17Saturday clinic, but that is their day off and they have plans for

2:13:17 > 2:13:23Saturday. I think GP surgeries making the time.And it is OK having

2:13:23 > 2:13:28a busy life, but you won't have a life if you don't attend your smear.

2:13:28 > 2:13:31If I hadn't gone, dizziness would have gone out of the window.What

2:13:31 > 2:13:39convinced you to go in the end? -- busyness.I just had this feeling, I

2:13:39 > 2:13:44said to the lady on the phone, I need to attend, can I come today? If

2:13:44 > 2:13:47I don't come today, I will find something else to do. I am really

2:13:47 > 2:13:51fortunate. I rang my mother and said, I've been coming and stop

2:13:51 > 2:13:56ringing me, leave me alone, I am pretty sure I would know if I had

2:13:56 > 2:14:01cancer. Those were my exact words to my mum.But he said you had a funny

2:14:01 > 2:14:09feeling?A gut feeling, I kept looking at this letter, they kept

2:14:09 > 2:14:14sending me reminders. I didn't even find a letter in the end, I just

2:14:14 > 2:14:19thought, I will go.You made the point about being a mother and still

2:14:19 > 2:14:23being embarrassed, for young women that are not mothers, how do we get

2:14:23 > 2:14:26that message across? You are both doing a brilliant job.I think

2:14:26 > 2:14:31parents as well, mums can explain when their daughter gets to the age

2:14:31 > 2:14:35of 25, this is something that is important.That is when the test

2:14:35 > 2:14:40becomes routine?Yes. We have to acknowledge that it is embarrassing.

2:14:40 > 2:14:45I will say that to a patient, I will say, I had somebody last week, 33,

2:14:45 > 2:14:58she attended for contraceptive checks, and I persuaded her to have

2:14:58 > 2:15:01a smear. It is a passion of mine come I would have done anything, I

2:15:01 > 2:15:04said, I will extend this appointment and do it, and she did agree to it.

2:15:04 > 2:15:08It is not painful, it is just slightly embarrassing. I always say,

2:15:08 > 2:15:14if there is any issue, I will stop immediately. I will not enforce it.

2:15:14 > 2:15:19How are you now by the way?I had my 12 months all clear, the future is

2:15:19 > 2:15:23looking bright. I go every six months to have a checkup. I have to

2:15:23 > 2:15:26go through it every six months, so women can put up with it once every

2:15:26 > 2:15:32three years.Thank you both very much for coming to talk to us.I

2:15:32 > 2:15:36think you have effectively got the message across.There will be a lot

2:15:36 > 2:15:42of phone calls today!You might be busy!

2:15:42 > 2:15:44Heavy rain over the weekend caused "widespread

2:15:44 > 2:15:45flooding" in North Devon.

2:15:45 > 2:15:49A number of properties were evacuated and police said heavy

2:15:49 > 2:15:51rainfall had caused landslides, flooding and road damage.

2:15:51 > 2:15:58Here's Sarah with a look at this morning's weather.

2:15:58 > 2:16:01This is off the back of really cold temperatures and snow in some parts

2:16:01 > 2:16:10of the UK. Sarah has all the details. We had some really heavy

2:16:10 > 2:16:14rain particular across the south-west yesterday. Further north

2:16:14 > 2:16:15it

2:16:15 > 2:16:18south-west yesterday. Further north it was snow. It's been a really

2:16:18 > 2:16:22wintry weekend. Still a lot of lying snow. This is Sheffield captured by

2:16:22 > 2:16:28one of our Weather Watchers.

2:16:28 > 2:16:31one of our Weather Watchers. Some rain is on the cards particularly

2:16:31 > 2:16:37tomorrow. Take a look at the temperatures during Sunday. By

2:16:37 > 2:16:41tomorrow, by Tuesday afternoon, we are all going to be back in double

2:16:41 > 2:16:45figures. Much milder air filtering in. The cold air getting squeezed

2:16:45 > 2:16:49away towards the north-east and the winds changing from a north-westerly

2:16:49 > 2:16:55to a south-westerly. A bit of rain across parts of southern England.

2:16:55 > 2:17:00That should clear away over the next few hours. A future was continuing

2:17:00 > 2:17:03for North and western parts of Scotland but for the rest of the

2:17:03 > 2:17:09country not a bad day ahead. This afternoon still quite breezy across

2:17:09 > 2:17:13Scotland. You can see a few showers across the West but they are fairly

2:17:13 > 2:17:19light and falling as rain. Eastern Scotland looking drier. Drying up

2:17:19 > 2:17:22for Northern Ireland and northern England with the best of any

2:17:22 > 2:17:26sunshine towards the east of the Pennines. Some brighter spells down

2:17:26 > 2:17:29across the East Midlands and south-east of England. Slightly

2:17:29 > 2:17:34cloudy skies for the south-west of England and Wales. Most of us

2:17:34 > 2:17:38looking at a mild and dry afternoon to come. Through the afternoon and

2:17:38 > 2:17:43into this evening it's looking dry at first with temperatures dropping

2:17:43 > 2:17:46fairly quickly. Turning milder through the second half of the night

2:17:46 > 2:17:51has the winds pick up from a south-westerly direction. Outbreaks

2:17:51 > 2:17:55of fairly heavy rain and strong squally winds by first thing

2:17:55 > 2:18:01tomorrow morning. Keeping us frost free. Mild air is piling in from the

2:18:01 > 2:18:04south-west through the day. A different feel to the weather and a

2:18:04 > 2:18:08lot of that lying snow thawing out over the next day or two. On Tuesday

2:18:08 > 2:18:13not only mild but wet and windy. Some fairly heavy spells of rain

2:18:13 > 2:18:18across southern England and Scotland. Moving eastwards, sunny

2:18:18 > 2:18:22spells and scattered squally showers moving in behind the barn door rain.

2:18:22 > 2:18:29It is mild but also pretty blustery with further rain. More rain on

2:18:29 > 2:18:32Wednesday, combined with the snow melting there could be a few

2:18:32 > 2:18:40problems with flooding. Is that band of rain moves south-east it

2:18:40 > 2:18:47accompanied by some strong winds too. Temperatures dipping back down

2:18:47 > 2:18:50by the time we get to Thursday and Friday but still much milder than

2:18:50 > 2:19:00it's been over the past week or so. We are talking about union leaders

2:19:00 > 2:19:06and the makers of Vauxhall today.

2:19:06 > 2:19:08We are talking about union leaders and the makers of Vauxhall today.

2:19:08 > 2:19:12Yes, they are heading off to Paris to try and secure the future of

2:19:12 > 2:19:17those who work at Ellesmere Port. Last August Vauxhall was bought out

2:19:17 > 2:19:23by the French PSA group. Since that take over 650 jobs have been cut at

2:19:23 > 2:19:27Ellesmere Port in Cheshire. Unions want the owners to commit to making

2:19:27 > 2:19:30another model at the plant to secure its future and stop further job

2:19:30 > 2:19:36losses. One week on and the collapse of Carillion and there's still a lot

2:19:36 > 2:19:40of uncertainty about jobs. It's something I'll be talking about for

2:19:40 > 2:19:44a long time. The Transport Secretary will be facing a grilling from MPs

2:19:44 > 2:19:47today about what the government could have done to stop that

2:19:47 > 2:19:55collapse. Dixons carphone has just told us they had a decent Christmas

2:19:55 > 2:20:00but said its profits for the year might not be as good as originally

2:20:00 > 2:20:03thought. Two directors have also announced they'll be leaving the

2:20:03 > 2:20:06company including the chief executive said James who is going to

2:20:06 > 2:20:14be the boss of the chemists Boots. It's interesting seeing them go from

2:20:14 > 2:20:23an electrical retailer to Boots.Did you have a favourite teacher at

2:20:23 > 2:20:27school? My maths teacher. He taught me a brilliant way of remembering

2:20:27 > 2:20:39things, like trigonometry... All of that I remember. Very sadly he died

2:20:39 > 2:20:44last year and I went to his funeral and I proper sobbed because he's the

2:20:44 > 2:20:49reason I loved maths so much in the end.And one of the reasons why you

2:20:49 > 2:20:53are doing this job then. The reason we are asking you who your favourite

2:20:53 > 2:20:57teacher at school.

2:20:57 > 2:20:59Well author Chris Young was inspired by his English

2:20:59 > 2:21:01teacher 40 years ago - and now, he's trying

2:21:01 > 2:21:02to track her down.

2:21:02 > 2:21:05Chris appealed on Twitter for help to find Lynn Ward,

2:21:05 > 2:21:07who supported him at Lodge Park School in Corby after his

2:21:07 > 2:21:11mother died and his alcoholic father couldn't cope.

2:21:11 > 2:21:13We'll talk to Chris in a moment, but first, let's hear memories

2:21:13 > 2:21:15of your favourite teachers.

2:21:15 > 2:21:16MUSIC: GRANGE HILL THEME.

2:21:16 > 2:21:20I was one of the shyest pupils ever.

2:21:20 > 2:21:23And we did productions, and he believed in me and I got

2:21:23 > 2:21:24into two of his productions.

2:21:24 > 2:21:25Very loud.

2:21:25 > 2:21:26Very...

2:21:26 > 2:21:27Regimental.

2:21:27 > 2:21:28But a really nice guy.

2:21:28 > 2:21:33Any time we couldn't do homework, she'd always offer to help.

2:21:33 > 2:21:35Explained it in a way that was understandable, entertaining.

2:21:35 > 2:21:38And that was the key thing.

2:21:38 > 2:21:40Made me completely fall in love with the subject,

2:21:40 > 2:21:43so I went on to study it at university as well.

2:21:43 > 2:21:46Every morning, all the children would line above the doorway and

2:21:46 > 2:21:48she'd hug each and everyone of us.

2:21:48 > 2:21:55We'd sing the song in the morning and she was really lovely.

2:21:55 > 2:21:57Just inspired - quite a lot of people from inner-city

2:21:57 > 2:22:00backgrounds just didn't have that opportunity and they loved it too.

2:22:00 > 2:22:03I loved going to her classes and I still remember her,

2:22:03 > 2:22:04and I'm in my 60s.

2:22:04 > 2:22:12So that's got to be good, hasn't it?

2:22:13 > 2:22:16And the man who started all of this with that tweet is Chris Young.

2:22:16 > 2:22:17He joins us now.

2:22:17 > 2:22:25Good morning. Lots of people will be familiar with this but you wanted to

2:22:25 > 2:22:30find your particular teacher. Basically I classify myself as a

2:22:30 > 2:22:33mental health campaigner. Very often when you look back at your past you

2:22:33 > 2:22:37think of all the bad things that happened. With my book coming out

2:22:37 > 2:22:43and having a book launch in Edinburgh on the 1st of February I

2:22:43 > 2:22:51was thinking, Miss Ward. I did really badly the year before I met

2:22:51 > 2:22:56her at school because my mum died and my dad turned to the bottle.

2:22:56 > 2:23:01Suddenly under her tutelage things changed.What did she do?She

2:23:01 > 2:23:06treated me like a rock star. I felt fantastic. Anything I wrote she

2:23:06 > 2:23:10thought was brilliant. She was saying, you will be an author, you

2:23:10 > 2:23:15will be a writer. I was forever being hauled up in front of the

2:23:15 > 2:23:19class to read things. It was lovely. She was only in my life for one

2:23:19 > 2:23:25year.How old were you?13.And are completely changed your outlook,

2:23:25 > 2:23:29your confidence?I went from being bottom of the year to being fourth

2:23:29 > 2:23:34in the year thanks to her. The lovely thing with her, she said

2:23:34 > 2:23:43Chris, you've come forth in the year. She said it was Mr Douglas,

2:23:43 > 2:23:47he's a really hard marker.She sounds amazing. We've had a lot of

2:23:47 > 2:23:55messages. One viewer says, the best teacher for me was Mrs Alexander who

2:23:55 > 2:23:58taught English. Should I was a troubled teenager and she believed

2:23:58 > 2:24:03in me even after I was expelled from school. She let me send her my

2:24:03 > 2:24:06poetry to read and make comments. Just wonderful teachers out there.

2:24:06 > 2:24:14Yes, and I think it's great. One interesting thing it's not just

2:24:14 > 2:24:22these teachers but other people have walked into people's lives. Doctors,

2:24:22 > 2:24:28dentists, social workers and nurses. Subtypes it's a comment or a phrase

2:24:28 > 2:24:32and it makes such a difference. Steph was saying she can still

2:24:32 > 2:24:39remember what her maths teacher taught her. Have you found her?I

2:24:39 > 2:24:43was this close. I spoke to an old colleague of hers who believed she

2:24:43 > 2:24:47had her phone number. She tried to phone her yesterday and it turns out

2:24:47 > 2:24:50she doesn't have her phone number. The phone number no longer exists

2:24:50 > 2:24:55but she's hoping she might have her address.Where might she live?I

2:24:55 > 2:25:11know nothing at all.What was her first name?Lyn.It's the 1st of

2:25:11 > 2:25:17February countdown. Obviously you could meet her at any other time.I

2:25:17 > 2:25:23will weep uncontrollably. If she can turn up...Do you think she knows?

2:25:23 > 2:25:27We were able to tell her at the time?Yes, I think she knew. That's

2:25:27 > 2:25:31why she said to me it wasn't me that marked your paper, it was Mr

2:25:31 > 2:25:38Douglas. She had a massive effect on me. Getting back into writing, and

2:25:38 > 2:25:45as soon as I was writing the book, I was immediately thinking of her and

2:25:45 > 2:25:49thinking of the launch pad she gave me.She said at that time one day

2:25:49 > 2:25:54you will be an author.She was a fantastic woman. I bet you she's

2:25:54 > 2:26:03done that with hundreds of folk. What is the book about?It's called

2:26:03 > 2:26:08Walk A mild, it's about me walking around the edge of the UK relying on

2:26:08 > 2:26:15people for hospitality, talking about mental health and look at me,

2:26:15 > 2:26:26I'm starving to death. -- it's called Walk A Mile.One viewer says

2:26:26 > 2:26:31Mr Owen was an inspirational teacher who introduced me to chess,

2:26:31 > 2:26:36photography. He gave up so much of his time for us and was the reason I

2:26:36 > 2:26:42went into education. Thank you, good luck with your search. I'm really

2:26:42 > 2:26:48hoping you find her and please bring her back here to have a chat!I

2:26:48 > 2:26:53will!Try to control your emotions. I can see when you get that call to

2:26:53 > 2:27:00say I've found her...I'm filling up now!Thank you.

2:27:00 > 2:30:20Time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are.

2:30:20 > 2:30:26Bye for now.

2:30:26 > 2:30:33Hello, this is Breakfast, with Dan Walker and Louise Minchin.

2:30:33 > 2:30:36Good morning.

2:30:36 > 2:30:42The head of the Army will warn today that Britain's military risks

2:30:42 > 2:30:47falling behind that of other countries. General Nick Carter's

2:30:47 > 2:30:56comments are seen as leading to more funding for the Army. There are

2:30:56 > 2:30:59threats posed by Russia and the long-range

2:30:59 > 2:31:05missiles and cyber warfare skills. One of the most important aspect is

2:31:05 > 2:31:08to deal with aggression and you can only do that if you have a strong

2:31:08 > 2:31:13army and forward presence. You need the back-up to sustain that and that

2:31:13 > 2:31:20means a significant side in terms of the Army and any aspect or any

2:31:20 > 2:31:23thought of reducing the Army below the numbers that we have at the

2:31:23 > 2:31:29moment, which is about 80,000, I think would put that at risk.Two

2:31:29 > 2:31:34Ukip members have quit their positions due to the failure of the

2:31:34 > 2:31:40leader Henry Bolton to step down as leader.

2:31:40 > 2:31:42The deputy leader of Ukip, Margot Parker has resigned

2:31:42 > 2:31:44from her position in the party because leader, Henry Bolton,

2:31:44 > 2:31:47has refused to stand down.

2:31:47 > 2:31:53Ukip's immigration spokesperson cited Mr Bolton's poor judgment.

2:31:53 > 2:31:55The Foreign Secretary, Boris Johnson, will meet his US

2:31:55 > 2:31:57counterpart, Rex Tillerson, in London today for talks

2:31:57 > 2:31:58on Syria, Iran and Yemen.

2:31:58 > 2:32:00America's foreign policy chief arrived last night.

2:32:00 > 2:32:03The meeting comes after Donald Trump refused to visit the UK and open

2:32:03 > 2:32:07the new US embassy in the capital.

2:32:07 > 2:32:09Today's diplomacy will prepare the way for the President's meeting

2:32:09 > 2:32:12with the Prime Minister later this week in the Swiss resort of Davos.

2:32:12 > 2:32:14Detectives are continuing to investigate the fatal stabbing

2:32:14 > 2:32:18of an 8-year-old girl in the West Midlands.

2:32:18 > 2:32:20Mylee Billingham was named by police as the schoolgirl who died

2:32:20 > 2:32:23at an address near Walsall on Saturday night.

2:32:23 > 2:32:25A 54-year-old man, who was arrested in connection with the attack,

2:32:25 > 2:32:30remains in a critical condition in hospital.

2:32:30 > 2:32:32Hundreds of people have paid their respects

2:32:32 > 2:32:34to the Cranberries singer, Dolores O'Riordan,

2:32:34 > 2:32:36in her home city of Limerick.

2:32:36 > 2:32:40She died suddenly in London last week, aged 46.

2:32:40 > 2:32:43Large crowds gathered at St Joseph's church to view her open coffin

2:32:43 > 2:32:48ahead of her funeral tomorrow.

2:32:48 > 2:32:51A charity says one in three young women in the UK are embarrassed

2:32:51 > 2:32:53to attend smear tests for cervical cancer because of issues

2:32:53 > 2:32:55with body image.

2:32:55 > 2:32:58Jo's Cervical Cancer Trust, which surveyed more than 2000 women

2:32:58 > 2:33:01aged between 25 and 35, said it was worried about the impact

2:33:01 > 2:33:09on screening rates, which have fallen to a 20-year low.

2:33:10 > 2:33:13In the early hours of this morning, Tokyo held its first

2:33:13 > 2:33:14missile evacuation drill.

2:33:14 > 2:33:16Volunteers took cover in subway stations and other underground

2:33:16 > 2:33:19spaces that would double as shelters in the event of a North Korean

2:33:19 > 2:33:21missile strike.

2:33:21 > 2:33:29Critics say it was a war game that fanned public fear.

2:33:30 > 2:33:33We are talking a lot about the Winter Olympics which are less than

2:33:33 > 2:33:40two weeks away now. This is skiing of a slightly different kind.

2:33:40 > 2:33:43Priests are taking part in the annual Pope John Paul II

2:33:43 > 2:33:47skiing competition in Poland.

2:33:47 > 2:33:48The oldest participant is 76 and has been taking part

2:33:48 > 2:33:56in the event for several years.

2:34:00 > 2:34:03It is an annual event that this is the first time we have brought to

2:34:03 > 2:34:05pictures of it!

2:34:05 > 2:34:07Organisers say they wanted priests to not only give

2:34:07 > 2:34:10an example of how to pray, but also how to compete honestly.

2:34:10 > 2:34:16Well, yes, quite right too. It was quite a good technique there.

2:34:16 > 2:34:21I have never skied because of dodgy knees but that looked very good.

2:34:21 > 2:34:23That brings you up to date.

2:34:23 > 2:34:25Coming up on Breakfast this morning...

2:34:25 > 2:34:27More than 1 million older people in the UK suffer hunger,

2:34:27 > 2:34:30according to a report seen exclusively by BBC Breakfast.

2:34:30 > 2:34:31We'll ask what's being done to help.

2:34:31 > 2:34:33With the number of girls experiencing anxiety increasing,

2:34:33 > 2:34:35we'll meet 15-year-old Ellie who's now managing her condition.

2:34:35 > 2:34:37And the awards season is in full swing.

2:34:37 > 2:34:43We'll bring you the winners from the Screen Actors Guild Awards in LA.

2:34:43 > 2:34:51But first let's get the sport with Sonali.

2:34:51 > 2:34:58Kyle Edmund 's's got a big bus.I spotted this this morning. What do

2:34:58 > 2:35:02you get the Yorkshireman who was born in South Africa and now lives

2:35:02 > 2:35:08in the Bahamas to stand next to in Melbourne? A London bus. He has

2:35:08 > 2:35:14tweeted saying he feels very much ahead at home ahead of his

2:35:14 > 2:35:23quarterfinal. It is his very first grand slam quarterfinal. Around this

2:35:23 > 2:35:28time tomorrow we will know where he stands. Roger Federer is going to be

2:35:28 > 2:35:29joining him.

2:35:29 > 2:35:34Roger Federer make quick work of this morning's match

2:35:34 > 2:35:37against Hungary's Marton Fucsovics - wrapping it up in two hours

2:35:37 > 2:35:38one minute, 6-4, 7-6, 6-2.

2:35:38 > 2:35:40He'll face Tomas Berdych in the last eight -

2:35:40 > 2:35:46a player he beat in last year's third round.

2:35:47 > 2:35:53Simona Halep is on course to win her first grand slam after her marathon

2:35:53 > 2:36:00third round win which lasted for macro hours. Jamie Murray is out of

2:36:00 > 2:36:03the mixed doubles.

2:36:03 > 2:36:06Just think of some of the great players to have worn the iconic

2:36:06 > 2:36:09number 7 shirt at Manchester United - George Best, Bryan Robson,

2:36:09 > 2:36:10Eric Cantona, Cristiano Ronaldo.

2:36:10 > 2:36:13Well, it looks like Alexis Sanchez is the next in line

2:36:13 > 2:36:14to don the famous shirt.

2:36:14 > 2:36:16The Chilean is expected to complete his transfer

2:36:16 > 2:36:19from Arsenal in the next 24 hours, once his medical is completed.

2:36:19 > 2:36:22This picture of Sanchez apparently taking a selfie on the Old Trafford

2:36:22 > 2:36:30pitch is doing the rounds in the papers and on social media.

2:36:30 > 2:36:38Watford replaced their manager within just a few hours yesterday.

2:36:38 > 2:36:41Marco Silva was given the boot yesterday morning with Watford 10th

2:36:41 > 2:36:43in the Premier League, four points avoid the relegation

2:36:43 > 2:36:46zone - the club blaming the move on Everton for their interest

2:36:46 > 2:36:47in Silva before Christmas.

2:36:47 > 2:36:48Spaniard Javi Gracia is his replacement.

2:36:48 > 2:36:50Harry Kane struck his 99th Premier League goal for Tottenham,

2:36:50 > 2:36:53but couldn't prevent them from losing ground in the race

2:36:53 > 2:36:56for the top four as his Spurs side drew 1-1 at Southampton.

2:36:56 > 2:36:57The home side made a fast start.

2:36:57 > 2:37:00An own goal from Davinson Sanchez gave Saints the lead

2:37:00 > 2:37:02in the opening quarter of an hour.

2:37:02 > 2:37:03Then came Kane's equaliser.

2:37:03 > 2:37:05Spurs miss out on the chance to go level with fourth-placed Liverpool

2:37:05 > 2:37:07who take on Swansea tonight.

2:37:07 > 2:37:10Southampton, meanwhile, are still in the relegation zone.

2:37:10 > 2:37:13Holders Celtic have been drawn at home to Partick Thistle

2:37:13 > 2:37:15in the Scottish Cup fifth round draw.

2:37:15 > 2:37:20Hearts will play Albion Rovers or St Johnstone after they beat

2:37:20 > 2:37:22Hibernian 1-0 in the Edinburgh derby at Tynecastle -

2:37:22 > 2:37:23Don Cowie with the late goal.

2:37:23 > 2:37:31The full draw can be found on the BBC Sport website.

2:37:31 > 2:37:34Mark Allen has won the Masters snooker for a first time.

2:37:34 > 2:37:38In a tight match against England's Kyren Wilson,

2:37:38 > 2:37:40Allen made the only century break in the 12th frame

2:37:40 > 2:37:42to make it 7 frames to 5.

2:37:42 > 2:37:43He went on to win 10-7.

2:37:43 > 2:37:46And becomes the first Northern Irishman since Denis Taylor

2:37:46 > 2:37:47in 1987 to take the title.

2:37:47 > 2:37:50I felt calm all week except for the first session today.

2:37:50 > 2:37:53I was on edge.

2:37:53 > 2:37:55As the match went on, I got stronger.

2:37:55 > 2:37:58I felt more at ease with myself.

2:37:58 > 2:38:01Yeah, I am just very, very pleased to be on the right

2:38:01 > 2:38:09end of it for a change.

2:38:10 > 2:38:13Tommy Fleetwood has won his fourth European Tour event by retaining his

2:38:13 > 2:38:14Abu Dhabi Championship title.

2:38:14 > 2:38:17Fleetwood started the day two shots off the lead but hit eight birdies

2:38:17 > 2:38:19in his final round to win by two, ahead of fellow

2:38:19 > 2:38:21Englishman Ross Fisher.

2:38:21 > 2:38:28Rory McIlroy finished two shots further back.

2:38:34 > 2:38:39Finally, fans of Cristiano Ronaldo's face can relax. He took a boot to

2:38:39 > 2:38:43the face yesterday. There was concern among the medical staff as

2:38:43 > 2:38:49he needed treatment for a cut cheek but as he got up to his feet, what

2:38:49 > 2:38:54was the first thing he asked for? Check the face. He got a phone.

2:38:54 > 2:39:00Really not very happy. Obviously Ronaldo is the biggest fan of his

2:39:00 > 2:39:07own face.He has got the perfect physique.He has been injured. I

2:39:07 > 2:39:13feel sorry for him.You would be like that, what is the face like?

2:39:13 > 2:39:17No, I would get up and carry on! As most people would, but not

2:39:17 > 2:39:22Ronaldo!

2:39:29 > 2:39:35We are getting excited about the Winter Olympics.

2:39:37 > 2:39:40Lizzy Yarnold and Laura Deas have paused their preparations to join us

2:39:40 > 2:39:41on the sofa.

2:39:41 > 2:39:48They'll be here in a moment, first let's see them in action.

2:40:07 > 2:40:16MUSIC

2:40:22 > 2:40:28Excellent! I am ready for it! Lizzy Yarnold and

2:40:28 > 2:40:33Laura Deas are here. Thank you for joining us on breakfast. How are you

2:40:33 > 2:40:39feeling?Really, really excited. I cannot believe I have been selected

2:40:39 > 2:40:45for my second Winter Olympic Games. It is a dream country.We have never

2:40:45 > 2:40:49been prolific medal winners. The target is five which has never been

2:40:49 > 2:40:53done before. You are the first person to retain an Olympic medal

2:40:53 > 2:41:01from a previous Olympic Games. Does that bring pressure, Lizzy?Does

2:41:01 > 2:41:06bring pressure but I am lucky to have that pressure. I have for years

2:41:06 > 2:41:10more experience and I am four years older. I know what it takes to get

2:41:10 > 2:41:13there. The World Cup season that I have done has been a bit up and down

2:41:13 > 2:41:17but I am really excited that I am back on form and really looking

2:41:17 > 2:41:22forward to competing in Pyeongchang. When you look back at Sochi I'm sure

2:41:22 > 2:41:26when you see the pictures it all comes flooding back. You took a

2:41:26 > 2:41:36break away

2:41:40 > 2:41:43from the. Did that give you a renewed hunger for it, the early

2:41:43 > 2:41:46morning and the sprinting and the work to get back to the level of

2:41:46 > 2:41:48physical preparation?If I had not taken that break, I would not be

2:41:48 > 2:41:51here now. This was my dream to come back and compete in Pyeongchang. It

2:41:51 > 2:41:54is not only for myself, but for the nation and my family. There is no

2:41:54 > 2:42:00better feeling.Oh, my goodness, we are so excited! Nora, it is

2:42:00 > 2:42:06extraordinary watching this sport. -- Laura. It looks exhilarating

2:42:06 > 2:42:11which is an understatement. When you started you are not necessarily an

2:42:11 > 2:42:15easy fit?For people who are doing it for the first time, it is a

2:42:15 > 2:42:19massive shock to the system. It is unlike anything you have done

2:42:19 > 2:42:23before. You're going headfirst, with your arms underneath you. You're

2:42:23 > 2:42:29going 80 to 90 mph. You have corners coming at you and to start with you

2:42:29 > 2:42:36Army making sense of it all. Then the more skills you build up but to

2:42:36 > 2:42:41start with when you are a beginner you are just holding on, trying to

2:42:41 > 2:42:47keep on. That sounds really silly. It does not sound silly at all, it

2:42:47 > 2:42:51sounds scary!On my first run I did not know what was coming. Then on

2:42:51 > 2:42:55the second, third and fourth, it was terrifying because you knew what was

2:42:55 > 2:43:00happening and you had to do it again.And Lizzy, you're hurtling

2:43:00 > 2:43:06down when you have an inner ear condition. Is it all about the

2:43:06 > 2:43:10visualisation of knowing the course? Yes, my issues have affected me for

2:43:10 > 2:43:16a few years but luckily the Pyeongchang is a track where I do

2:43:16 > 2:43:19not suffer any in a issues. Visualisation is a massive part of

2:43:19 > 2:43:24our training. Through the summer we do not have our own ice track. We

2:43:24 > 2:43:28are training in Bath. There are about 20 athletes in the team. So

2:43:28 > 2:43:32train, train, train, visualise and then get ready.When you are

2:43:32 > 2:43:37travelling at that speed, I imagine with that pressure on your body, one

2:43:37 > 2:43:41little flick of the helmet at the wrong place or your hand at the

2:43:41 > 2:43:46side, you can pick up some serious injuries and the sport is over them?

2:43:46 > 2:43:52A tiny mistake can cost you so much time. You can separate people by

2:43:52 > 2:44:00100th of a second. Any movement you might slightly skewed and then hit a

2:44:00 > 2:44:03wall which will affect your speed. A lot of being a really good slide is

2:44:03 > 2:44:05learning to be really still when these things are happening to you

2:44:05 > 2:44:08and to almost not think about the physicality of what is happening to

2:44:08 > 2:44:12you and you just think about the corner and the next corner and the

2:44:12 > 2:44:16next corner.You have to be consistent.The sprinting is a key

2:44:16 > 2:44:23part of it. That is what your training is about?When we find

2:44:23 > 2:44:26athletes through the talent searches it is all about being fast over 30

2:44:26 > 2:44:31metres and then teaching people how to do the skeleton. But running bent

2:44:31 > 2:44:36over holding onto the sled is really tricky and I do fall over sometimes!

2:44:36 > 2:44:41We should not laugh! How does it work with your team-mates and your

2:44:41 > 2:44:46rivals? How much do you help each other out?We are the athletes on

2:44:46 > 2:44:50the track but we are part of a much bigger team. There is the big

2:44:50 > 2:44:54support team and other athletes as well. We'll work together because we

2:44:54 > 2:44:59are all trying to work out the track every week. You go to a new track

2:44:59 > 2:45:03and you have 16 corners and only six training runs to try and work it

2:45:03 > 2:45:07out. Everyone is together. It is when it is you and the sled on race

2:45:07 > 2:45:11day that it becomes a competition but the rest of the time we are

2:45:11 > 2:45:20working as a team.I have been told off by Matthew Pinsent today.

2:45:20 > 2:45:23off by Matthew Pinsent today. We have seen shots of your kit and I

2:45:23 > 2:45:25was saying, Matthew Pinsent said it was a great day when you get your

2:45:25 > 2:45:29new kit and he said you have got to earn it so I am not allowed to wear

2:45:29 > 2:45:34it!

2:45:34 > 2:45:40I know that you love your triathlons Lewies.Blue tips why I did it!That

2:45:40 > 2:45:48you are getting ready, it's exciting for the Winter Olympics?It is

2:45:48 > 2:45:50exciting, it is a physical and visual representation of everything

2:45:50 > 2:45:55you have worked for and to have it on you is an amazing feeling. I

2:45:55 > 2:45:59cannot wait!And to be part of the team, you talk about being part of

2:45:59 > 2:46:03the team that there will be people you will not have seen or met

2:46:03 > 2:46:07altogether.I think that is what is really exciting for me. It will be

2:46:07 > 2:46:20my first Games. I haven't experienced the Team GB thing yet.

2:46:23 > 2:46:25Where all of the sports come together and you are one big team

2:46:25 > 2:46:28for the duration of the games and I'm looking forward to that.Do you

2:46:28 > 2:46:31have any kit left over from last time? It is all in the attic, I

2:46:31 > 2:46:34haven't touched it since! You get a wash bag, sunglasses... It is the

2:46:34 > 2:46:37best day!Imex all of the hard work worth it! -- it makes all of the

2:46:37 > 2:46:41hard work worth it!We will be watching, the time fits really well

2:46:41 > 2:46:44for us on Breakfast, we will be watching avidly. Thank you to both

2:46:44 > 2:46:49of you.We will have you back foot in a few weeks' time with some

2:46:49 > 2:46:53medals! -- we will have you back.

2:46:53 > 2:46:56There will be coverage of the Winter Olympics across BBC Television,

2:46:56 > 2:46:58Radio and online from the 9th February.

2:46:58 > 2:47:00We will be back in Stockport where the athletes are picking up their

2:47:00 > 2:47:01kit

2:47:01 > 2:47:01later

2:47:01 > 2:47:08in the programme.It is a dream, to be involved! You can be a Team GB

2:47:08 > 2:47:17athlete like me! A level of ability is required... I sit in the couch

2:47:17 > 2:47:19and cheer everyone on...

2:47:19 > 2:47:19We appreciate that!

2:47:19 > 2:47:22We appreciate that! Let's find out what is happening with the

2:47:22 > 2:47:26weather... I cannot speak, Cabaye! Good morning. A wintry weekend, we

2:47:26 > 2:47:36had heavy snowfall and rain. This is the view in Hartlepool, though.

2:47:36 > 2:47:41Taken by one of our Weather Watchers in the last 30 minutes. Through

2:47:41 > 2:47:44today, the main theme will be the temperature difference. Yesterday,

2:47:44 > 2:47:50many struggle to get above freezing but by tomorrow, we will all be back

2:47:50 > 2:47:55up in double figures. Today, we feel that much milder air working in from

2:47:55 > 2:47:58the south-west. Colder air is gradually cleared away towards the

2:47:58 > 2:48:08north-east through the course of today. A few showers to start the

2:48:08 > 2:48:10morning. Rain in southern England. It should clear away fairly quickly.

2:48:10 > 2:48:14And improving picture as we had through the day. Showers continuing

2:48:14 > 2:48:18in western Scotland, in most places it looks dry, sunshine breaking

2:48:18 > 2:48:24through in the afternoon. In eastern Scotland, some brightness. On the

2:48:24 > 2:48:26Western Isles, we continue to see some fairly light showers in the

2:48:26 > 2:48:31afternoon. The afternoon is looking dry in Northern Ireland and for much

2:48:31 > 2:48:36of northern England. Some isolated showers, temperatures are warmer

2:48:36 > 2:48:41than they have been in recent days. Brighter spells developing in East

2:48:41 > 2:48:45Anglia, down towards the south-east of England. Cloudy conditions in

2:48:45 > 2:48:50south-west England and in Wales, we could see some spots of light rain.

2:48:50 > 2:48:55Most places having a relatively decent and dry day. Not as windy as

2:48:55 > 2:48:59it has been. Through tonight, things change, especially overnight, the

2:48:59 > 2:49:04winds pick up from the south-west, they will bring in some heavy spells

2:49:04 > 2:49:08of rain, through into the early hours of Tuesday morning.

2:49:08 > 2:49:14Temperatures of 5-9d overnight. A lot of milder air pushing in from

2:49:14 > 2:49:18the south-west. A different feel to the weather on Tuesday. Looking mild

2:49:18 > 2:49:24but it is also wet and windy. We see some rain through the day. It moves

2:49:24 > 2:49:28from the west to east through the day. Brighter spells and plenty of

2:49:28 > 2:49:33squally showers heading in later in the day. Temperatures for all of us

2:49:33 > 2:49:38back there into double figures, 10-13d. Above average for this time

2:49:38 > 2:49:43of year. Wednesday is unsettled. No pressure brings in the rain and some

2:49:43 > 2:49:51strong winds. We see a combination of heavy rainfall with all of that

2:49:51 > 2:49:53slow thawing. There could be some flooding problems through the week.

2:49:53 > 2:49:57Things turning colder as we look towards the end of the working week.

2:49:57 > 2:50:00Still unsettled and certainly a different feel. Nothing as wintry as

2:50:00 > 2:50:02we had through the weekend.

2:50:02 > 2:50:04different feel. Nothing as wintry as we had through the weekend. STUDIO:

2:50:04 > 2:50:10That is some good news.Bring on the double figures! Lovely.

2:50:10 > 2:50:11This morning we're talking about malnutrition in

2:50:11 > 2:50:12the elderly in the UK.

2:50:12 > 2:50:15BBC Breakfast has exclusively seen a report which estimates

2:50:15 > 2:50:191.3 million older people suffer from hunger.

2:50:19 > 2:50:20Breakfast's John Maguire can tell us more.

2:50:20 > 2:50:24He's in St Albans for us this morning.

2:50:24 > 2:50:31He is in the kitchen.Good morning, Louise. We are just watching females

2:50:31 > 2:50:37on wheels getting loaded into the hot bags -- the meals on wheels

2:50:37 > 2:50:43getting loaded into the hot bags to go around the Hatfield community.

2:50:43 > 2:50:47This is the Hertfordshire Independent Living service, to keep

2:50:47 > 2:50:52people at home as best as they can. Meals on wheels not only nourish

2:50:52 > 2:50:56people but it gives people daily contact. You can see some of the

2:50:56 > 2:51:02staff making sure things are at the right temperature. It is a main meal

2:51:02 > 2:51:07and a desert, the menu sounds fantastic. Salmon crumble,

2:51:07 > 2:51:10Cumberland sausage, Bakewell tart, blackcurrants bunch. These are

2:51:10 > 2:51:19afternoon tea kits. Gemma is ladling out sticky toffee pudding which will

2:51:19 > 2:51:27go into the cafe. Here, there is also a community cafe. It provides

2:51:27 > 2:51:31social contract which helps to tackle one of the main causes of

2:51:31 > 2:51:35malnutrition among the elderly. That is isolation.

2:51:35 > 2:51:38Do you always manage to finish what we deliver to you?

2:51:38 > 2:51:39Yeah.

2:51:39 > 2:51:41Janet is receiving a check up-this morning

2:51:41 > 2:51:43from Annabel Martin, a nutritionist from

2:51:43 > 2:51:45the Hertfordshire Independent Living Service.

2:51:45 > 2:51:49OK, and that's a slightly more than you were last time so that's

2:51:49 > 2:51:51absolutely fantastic.

2:51:51 > 2:51:53She is malnourished but today there is good news,

2:51:53 > 2:51:56she's putting on weight.

2:51:56 > 2:51:59Malnourishment is defined as when the body doesn't get

2:51:59 > 2:52:04the nutrients it needs to function properly.

2:52:04 > 2:52:06A parliamentary report published today says it affects

2:52:06 > 2:52:131.3 million elderly people, but it's an estimate.

2:52:13 > 2:52:16The data comes from 2011 so it's calling for updated information.

2:52:16 > 2:52:21Those who provide Meals on Wheels suspect it's a much bigger problem.

2:52:21 > 2:52:27Well, we're dealing with malnutrition on a daily basis.

2:52:27 > 2:52:29We've done our own research screening clients when they first

2:52:29 > 2:52:33come to our Meals on Wheels service and we discover that 44% of them

2:52:33 > 2:52:38are malnourished to some extent.

2:52:38 > 2:52:41It seems crazy to me that hunger amongst the elderly is something

2:52:41 > 2:52:44which is still prevalent in this country.

2:52:44 > 2:52:46And the best guess for the cost of the problem is almost

2:52:46 > 2:52:49£12 billion and rising.

2:52:49 > 2:52:54Partly about ageing population, maybe partly through poverty,

2:52:54 > 2:52:57more so because of isolation but none of that is a reason

2:52:57 > 2:53:02for the government not thinking more imaginatively how it might spend

2:53:02 > 2:53:05a very small part of the pensioner budget in a way which really meets

2:53:05 > 2:53:11people in dire need.

2:53:11 > 2:53:16Turn it up a bit.

2:53:16 > 2:53:18The report makes several recommendations.

2:53:18 > 2:53:19They include taking winter fuel payments

2:53:19 > 2:53:23from the wealthiest pensioners to help fund community support.

2:53:23 > 2:53:25More Meals on Wheels, not only to provide food but also

2:53:25 > 2:53:33tackle isolation and loneliness.

2:53:33 > 2:53:35And an increased role from supermarkets to offer slower

2:53:35 > 2:53:38shopping lanes and lunch clubs for the in-store cafe.

2:53:38 > 2:53:40Hello, Ruth.

2:53:40 > 2:53:42Ruth has just turned 91...

2:53:42 > 2:53:47Hi, Ruth.

2:53:47 > 2:53:49..And still cooks for herself in the evening but has

2:53:49 > 2:53:50a daily lunch delivery.

2:53:50 > 2:53:51Lemon chicken today.

2:53:51 > 2:53:52Oh, that looks nice.

2:53:52 > 2:53:53On rice.

2:53:53 > 2:53:56That looks lovely.

2:53:56 > 2:54:04She is well nourished and enjoys the social contact.

2:54:04 > 2:54:06I can't grumble because they never miss, they always come every mortal

2:54:06 > 2:54:08day regardless of the climate and the weather.

2:54:08 > 2:54:10The report recognises that government and local authority

2:54:10 > 2:54:12budgets are under pressure but social services directors

2:54:12 > 2:54:16say their work needs proper funding.

2:54:16 > 2:54:23The money talked about in the report, in my view,

2:54:23 > 2:54:25would be significantly insignificant when we talk about the amount

2:54:25 > 2:54:28of money that's required to truly put social care

2:54:28 > 2:54:33on a sustainable footing.

2:54:33 > 2:54:37National governments across the UK say they're taking steps to tackle

2:54:37 > 2:54:38malnutrition and in England, for example, the Care Act makes sure

2:54:38 > 2:54:41that vulnerable people's needs are met by the local authorities.

2:54:41 > 2:54:49But today's report is a challenge to us all to do something about it.

2:54:51 > 2:54:56Let's pick up on some of these issues with Sarah, Sarah Brown was

2:54:56 > 2:55:05in that report and Doctor Simon Gabe, who is a gastroenterologist.

2:55:05 > 2:55:09Sarah, you are concerned about the message of healthy eating, really.

2:55:09 > 2:55:18It isn't really a one size, one menu fits all?Absolutely. Many of the

2:55:18 > 2:55:21people we look after our malnourished, which means they

2:55:21 > 2:55:25really need to put on some weight. But many of the messages that you

2:55:25 > 2:55:30see in the press or you hear about on multiple programmes on television

2:55:30 > 2:55:35are about being overweight. It is important for us to get the message

2:55:35 > 2:55:38across to people that food needs change over time. One of the ways we

2:55:38 > 2:55:52do that is by screening people, so we can find out how much they

2:55:58 > 2:56:01weigh and then we can give them appropriate guidance and help.One

2:56:01 > 2:56:03of the highlights in the report is that there isn't a lot of

2:56:03 > 2:56:05information or data, parliamentarians say that we need to

2:56:05 > 2:56:07better understand the extent of the problem in the community. What is

2:56:07 > 2:56:10your experience?We have done a number of screening weeks over the

2:56:10 > 2:56:12years to work out the prevalence of my nutrition in the community and

2:56:12 > 2:56:15hospitals, and a lot of different settings. We have found that there

2:56:15 > 2:56:18is a significant amount in the community. There is more obesity,

2:56:18 > 2:56:22and in another case setting is there is and nutrition. But overall there

2:56:22 > 2:56:26are a lot of nutritional problems. It isn't normal to lose weight as

2:56:26 > 2:56:36you get older or should that not be the case?It definitely shouldn't be

2:56:36 > 2:56:39the case, we have accepted it has a population as normality but it

2:56:39 > 2:56:46shouldn't be the case. It is possible to screen for malnutrition.

2:56:46 > 2:56:50Some hospitals and care homes are good at it but in the community

2:56:50 > 2:56:53setting we are not good at doing it. The tools are there and they just

2:56:53 > 2:56:58need to be used. There is even a self screening tool that we have, so

2:56:58 > 2:57:03that it can be done by anybody. It is a way of highlighting an issue

2:57:03 > 2:57:08and gaining and seeking advice as we need it.Thank you to both of you,

2:57:08 > 2:57:13for spending your morning with us. This is the universal screening tool

2:57:13 > 2:57:20for many chip -- for malnutrition. You saw that measuring device being

2:57:20 > 2:57:24used in our film. In terms of what the national government and

2:57:24 > 2:57:28Department of Health England have said to us, they say it is a complex

2:57:28 > 2:57:32situation and they are training staff to spot the early signs of

2:57:32 > 2:57:36malnutrition. You can see that is important. In Scotland they say they

2:57:36 > 2:57:39have a healthy diet and weight strategy, tackling these issues to

2:57:39 > 2:57:43get to the root cause of the problem to make a real difference to

2:57:43 > 2:57:48people's lives. Back to you. STUDIO: John, thank you. It is really good

2:57:48 > 2:57:53to talk about that. Thank you. And thank you for your social media

2:57:53 > 2:57:58messages and e-mails about that.It is a frightening statistic. 1.3

2:57:58 > 2:58:01million people.We do not talk about it very often.

2:58:01 > 2:58:04British actor Gary Oldman has come another step closer

2:58:04 > 2:58:07to an Oscar with a win at the Screen Actors Guild Awards.

2:58:07 > 2:58:09He won the prize for outstanding performance for his portrayal

2:58:09 > 2:58:11of Winston Churchill in The Darkest Hour.

2:58:11 > 2:58:15Along with The Crown star Claire Foy, the pair were the only

2:58:15 > 2:58:18British winners at the ceremony, which saw big wins for movie

2:58:18 > 2:58:19Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri and TV series

2:58:19 > 2:58:20Big Little Lies.

2:58:20 > 2:58:23Our North America correspondent Peter Bowes sent us this report

2:58:23 > 2:58:25from the red carpet.

2:58:25 > 2:58:33An award season like no other.

2:58:33 > 2:58:40Rarely has a single issue dominated the red carpet like the sexual

2:58:40 > 2:58:48harassment scandal and the Me Too and Time's Up movements.

2:58:55 > 2:58:58But this is the response to months of revelations, about some of it's

2:58:58 > 2:58:59most prominent figures.

2:58:59 > 2:59:02For these women to have these stories out and being told

2:59:02 > 2:59:03is so important.

2:59:03 > 2:59:06To keep reiterating that we believe you and we are listening

2:59:06 > 2:59:09to you and we are doing what we can to change it.

2:59:09 > 2:59:11I don't think this is just a flash in the pan.

2:59:11 > 2:59:15I do not think it will whiplash to the way things have always been.

2:59:15 > 2:59:17You know, Hollywood has a lot of power.

2:59:17 > 2:59:18What we do influences a lot of people.

2:59:18 > 2:59:21And I am proud of the industry for facing this head on.

2:59:21 > 2:59:23This business is changing quite quickly.

2:59:23 > 2:59:24Really.

2:59:24 > 2:59:25Across-the-board.

2:59:25 > 2:59:26Many people lost their jobs.

2:59:26 > 2:59:27They will feel it.

2:59:27 > 2:59:30It will depend on how stalwart the movement is in keeping it up.

2:59:30 > 2:59:33It is just wonderful to be here at this time to witness

2:59:33 > 2:59:34hopefully great change.

2:59:34 > 2:59:36It has been a long time coming.

2:59:36 > 2:59:38And, umm, it is about time.

2:59:38 > 2:59:43Time's up.

2:59:43 > 2:59:46For the first time in its history, all of the presenters

2:59:46 > 2:59:50of the Screen Actors Guild awards were women.

2:59:50 > 2:59:55Rosanna Arquette paid tribute to those who have spoken up about

2:59:55 > 3:00:00abuse.

3:00:00 > 3:00:03We are inspired that so many powerful voices are no longer

3:00:03 > 3:00:04silenced by the fear of retaliation.

3:00:04 > 3:00:06APPLAUSE

3:00:06 > 3:00:09We can control our own destiny.

3:00:09 > 3:00:11And you are one of those voices.

3:00:11 > 3:00:14You are one of the silence breakers, and we all owe

3:00:14 > 3:00:19you a debt of gratitude.

3:00:19 > 3:00:22The awards themselves are good indicator of which films are likely

3:00:22 > 3:00:28to do well the Oscars.

3:00:28 > 3:00:35Gary Oldman plays Winston Churchill in The Darkest Hour,

3:00:35 > 3:00:38and was overcome by emotion as he accepted the prize for

3:00:38 > 3:00:39the leading role.

3:00:39 > 3:00:42Churchill reminds us we make a living by what we get,

3:00:42 > 3:00:44but we make a life by what we give.

3:00:44 > 3:00:45And you have given...

3:00:45 > 3:00:53You have given an enormous honour to me tonight.

3:00:54 > 3:00:58The awards were dominated by three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri,

3:00:58 > 3:00:59a film about a mother's quest to find

3:00:59 > 3:01:00the killer of her teenage daughter.

3:01:00 > 3:01:03It won best ensemble for the entire cast.

3:01:03 > 3:01:05Three Billboards Outside Ebbing is now a hot favourite

3:01:05 > 3:01:07to do well at the Oscars.

3:01:07 > 3:01:09The nominations are out tomorrow.

3:01:09 > 3:01:12It is clear the scandal which has overwhelmed Hollywood in the past

3:01:12 > 3:01:14few months will continue to dominate the awards season

3:01:14 > 3:01:22in the nominations.

3:01:27 > 3:01:33It is award season. Gary Oldman is now favourite for the Oscars.

3:01:33 > 3:01:42Everyone else who was nominated will have to work on that face! We will

3:01:42 > 3:03:16be back

3:03:16 > 3:03:17Have a lovely morning.

3:03:17 > 3:03:19Bye for now.

3:03:27 > 3:03:31Hello, welcome back. They say you have to dress for success and with

3:03:31 > 3:03:35just over two weeks to go until the Winter Olympics in South Korea, it

3:03:35 > 3:03:41is finally time for the official kit for Team GB to be unveiled. We had

3:03:41 > 3:03:46Laura Deas and Lizzy Yarnold on the sofa. They are making their way to

3:03:46 > 3:03:50Stockport where they get all their bits and bobs. Jayne McCubbin is

3:03:50 > 3:03:58behind the curtain. Good morning. Can you imagine today and for the

3:03:58 > 3:04:03next day and the next day, 60 athletes from Team GB will be

3:04:03 > 3:04:07stepping out from these cubicles wearing all of the kit that they

3:04:07 > 3:04:11will be competing in. It will be such an exciting moment for them.

3:04:11 > 3:04:20Let me introduce Mike Hayes. I will give you that Mike because I want to

3:04:20 > 3:04:26give the guided tour. Show us what they will be wearing. Take us to

3:04:26 > 3:04:32Pyeongchang.It is

3:04:32 > 3:04:34Pyeongchang.It is the ultimate shopping experience. It will be

3:04:34 > 3:04:39really cold out there so we have Team GB ski jacket and Sela pets. It

3:04:39 > 3:04:45is not all about red white and blue. We have genes for the first time so

3:04:45 > 3:04:48we have village where. It is probably not my style but good for

3:04:48 > 3:04:53the athletes. And when you kick back in the village you have a bit of

3:04:53 > 3:04:59time and we have some different T-shirts as well. Salmon pink, this

3:04:59 > 3:05:08one.One day will be a red day, one day will be a

3:05:08 > 3:05:10day will be a blue day, is that right?Yes, we have a theme like we

3:05:10 > 3:05:17do in the summer Olympics.And what about this?Everyone will see us in

3:05:17 > 3:05:22the opening ceremony wearing this and also this is what they will wear

3:05:22 > 3:05:29on the podium.How many medals will we get?Five, hopefully.You heard

3:05:29 > 3:05:37it here first. Follow me. Good morning, everybody. We have an

3:05:37 > 3:05:40impromptu curling competition going on. Everybody here is a volunteer

3:05:40 > 3:05:44for today. They have taken time off their day job to help address the

3:05:44 > 3:05:52athletes. What is your day job?At housing officer.What about you?I

3:05:52 > 3:06:00work for an airline.Everybody is so excited. I want you to meet some of

3:06:00 > 3:06:05the Team GB ambassadors. Hello. Amy Williams and Jenny Jones.

3:06:05 > 3:06:14Ambassadors for today. Can I give you a jacket?Yes.Bronze in Sochi,

3:06:14 > 3:06:21Golden Vancouver.Snowboarding. Skeleton.What will today be like

3:06:21 > 3:06:24for the athletes?It is an amazing day when you realise I am part of

3:06:24 > 3:06:31Team GB now and this is me putting on the kit. You feel proud.And you

3:06:31 > 3:06:36have been competing for your country for years and years but this is the

3:06:36 > 3:06:42pinnacle of your game.Hit the photo booth quickly. Everybody today will

3:06:42 > 3:06:50have their picture taken in here, striking a winning pose. Are you

3:06:50 > 3:06:58ready, you have just won gold. Hit it! Any final messages for Team

3:06:58 > 3:07:04GB?... If you want to follow them back hashtag is we are the greatest.

3:07:04 > 3:07:15And do your best for the country. Go, Team GB. Thank you so much. We

3:07:15 > 3:07:20have been following it all. And we will have full coverage on BBC

3:07:20 > 3:07:24breakfast. They are ahead of us so a lot of the results will be in our

3:07:24 > 3:07:30time. The round-up programme will start as we finish on BBC Two.

3:07:30 > 3:07:33Looking forward to that.

3:07:33 > 3:07:36Exam pressure and anxiety about body image are just two of the reasons

3:07:36 > 3:07:38researchers think there's been an increase in teenage girls

3:07:38 > 3:07:40struggling with depression in the last decade.

3:07:40 > 3:07:43It's something our next guest Ellie knows all about and she's taken part

3:07:43 > 3:07:46in a CBBC documentary to try and tackle some of the stigma

3:07:46 > 3:07:49surrounding mental health.

3:07:49 > 3:07:56Before we talk to her, let's take a look at the programme.

3:07:56 > 3:08:00I started struggling with depression when I was about eight or nine. I

3:08:00 > 3:08:05felt really different to other kids my age. The feeling was like not

3:08:05 > 3:08:13belonging, not really knowing how I was feeling and feeling empty 24/7.

3:08:13 > 3:08:20I would describe my depression like a bear. Some days it can be as big

3:08:20 > 3:08:26as the Bear and other days it can be a fly in the palm of the bear. The

3:08:26 > 3:08:32days when it is like the whole bad, are painful. They are hard days to

3:08:32 > 3:08:36get through really.

3:08:36 > 3:08:41Ellie, her mum Wendy and executive producer Cat Lewis join us now.

3:08:41 > 3:08:48Nice to see you. Thank you. Ellie. You describe in there and the

3:08:48 > 3:08:52documentary the way it makes you feel in such an honest way. Was it

3:08:52 > 3:08:57important for you to be involved in this?It was extremely important,

3:08:57 > 3:09:01not just for me, but for the recovery of other children, to get

3:09:01 > 3:09:06the message that you are not by yourself. There are social networks

3:09:06 > 3:09:10for people our age and people need to reach out and grabbed them when

3:09:10 > 3:09:14they get the opportunity.How did you deal with the anxiety and the

3:09:14 > 3:09:19depressing

3:09:26 > 3:09:29feelings you were going through?For me, I was lucky to have the

3:09:29 > 3:09:31programme of the Wilderness Project. There would be camping and projects

3:09:31 > 3:09:33and very intense counselling. That saved my life. It sounds silly, but

3:09:33 > 3:09:37you have no idea how much going out into the wilderness, hiking and

3:09:37 > 3:09:41looking at the beautiful scenery, there is so much that helps with

3:09:41 > 3:09:47mental health.Wendy, it is difficult to see your daughter going

3:09:47 > 3:09:52through bad days and worse some days, how has it been coping with

3:09:52 > 3:09:58this?Absolutely. As a parent, the main thing I want is to make things

3:09:58 > 3:10:02better. I am not able to do that but by sourcing other resources for any

3:10:02 > 3:10:06to give her support and help her game coping mechanisms and tools to

3:10:06 > 3:10:11deal with the challenges and her feelings and emotions that she deals

3:10:11 > 3:10:16with no daily basis, and just being there for any. Sometimes that is to

3:10:16 > 3:10:21absolutely nothing. The isolation that Ellie feels at times. It is

3:10:21 > 3:10:26painful to watch as a parent, because you see your child upset.

3:10:26 > 3:10:30And quite honestly, I don't know what it is to make it better.

3:10:30 > 3:10:34Sometimes that is simply nothing, other times it is simply being

3:10:34 > 3:10:39there.Are you far better at coping with it these days? Can you do it by

3:10:39 > 3:10:43yourself or do you always need external help?The strategies I have

3:10:43 > 3:10:54been able to take, at the time they are put into practice as and

3:10:54 > 3:10:56are put into practice as and when I need them, but what the wilderness

3:10:56 > 3:10:58is about is departing from them and continuing to use the skills so you

3:10:58 > 3:11:01are not alone and you still have the strategies, so when I get myself in

3:11:01 > 3:11:05a pickle, I still use the same things as I did when I was on the

3:11:05 > 3:11:10Trail.It is so important to talk about this. The figures speak for

3:11:10 > 3:11:15themselves. Young girls particularly are finding life are hard.It is a

3:11:15 > 3:11:18rising epidemic. The reason I am passionate about making these

3:11:18 > 3:11:22programmes is because I was diagnosed with anxiety at 16. I feel

3:11:22 > 3:11:30that what we can do with making these programmes, and the BBC is

3:11:30 > 3:11:32committed to it which is fantastic, is to show young people there are

3:11:32 > 3:11:35ways you can control your mental health, which means you can achieve

3:11:35 > 3:11:40all the things you want to in life, without that being a barrier.What

3:11:40 > 3:11:44is the first step? You obviously have a close relationship, but what

3:11:44 > 3:11:52is the first step for children and adults to get that help?There are

3:11:52 > 3:11:55fantastic charities out there. What we do as programme makers is look

3:11:55 > 3:11:59hard at the right charity. When I found the Wilderness foundation and

3:11:59 > 3:12:07saw the work they were doing then I thought that it Joe who was running

3:12:07 > 3:12:13it was teaching fantastic skills. The hill walking and rock climbing

3:12:13 > 3:12:18can teach resilience for young people. I was keen to make a film

3:12:18 > 3:12:25with Jo and the wilderness cat macro foundation.We can see you having a

3:12:25 > 3:12:31go at an extreme challenge here. I can see you smiling watching this

3:12:31 > 3:12:38back. Were you scared at the time?I was so nervous! I fell and I hit my

3:12:38 > 3:12:46head. There is this rope and you have to put your absolute trust in,

3:12:46 > 3:12:51this rope is holding your life.What would your advice be now for

3:12:51 > 3:12:55somebody watching this morning thinking, I feel like that, I have

3:12:55 > 3:12:59those same issues in my life?I would say the thing they need to do

3:12:59 > 3:13:05is to reach out and grab help. If it is a family member, if it is

3:13:05 > 3:13:09somebody from your school, anybody you know who has the good contacts

3:13:09 > 3:13:13to get you where you need to be. You are either going to get the help or

3:13:13 > 3:13:21you are not. You just keep trying. What an amazing piece of advice.

3:13:21 > 3:13:25Thank you very much indeed. Thank you, all.

3:13:25 > 3:13:28My Life: Hike To Happiness is on CBBC this evening at 5.30.

3:13:28 > 3:13:31If you miss it then, you can watch it on the iPlayer.

3:13:31 > 3:13:32That's it from us today.

3:13:32 > 3:13:34We'll be back tomorrow morning from six o'clock.

3:13:34 > 3:13:35Have a lovely day.

3:13:35 > 3:13:40Goodbye.