11/02/2018

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0:00:09 > 0:00:09Hello.

0:00:09 > 0:00:12This is Breakfast, with Ben Thompson and Naga Munchetty.

0:00:12 > 0:00:15A warning that UK charities could have their government funding

0:00:15 > 0:00:16withdrawn if they don't co-operate with authorities

0:00:16 > 0:00:20over safeguarding issues.

0:00:20 > 0:00:23It follows reports that some Oxfam workers used prostitutes

0:00:23 > 0:00:24in Haiti in 2010.

0:00:24 > 0:00:32It's facing further allegations this morning.

0:00:43 > 0:00:46Good morning.

0:00:46 > 0:00:47The damage caused by alcohol.

0:00:47 > 0:00:50A new parliamentary report says more than one-third of child deaths

0:00:50 > 0:00:52and serious injuries through neglect in England are linked

0:00:52 > 0:00:57to parental drinking.

0:00:57 > 0:01:00The Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson arrives in Myanmar to discuss

0:01:00 > 0:01:03the plight of Rohingya refugees with the de facto leader

0:01:03 > 0:01:08Aung San Suu Kyi.

0:01:08 > 0:01:09Good morning.

0:01:09 > 0:01:10In sport.

0:01:10 > 0:01:11It's a "May Day" For Wales.

0:01:11 > 0:01:15England make it two wins out of two with a hard-fought win over Wales

0:01:15 > 0:01:19at Twickenham after two dries from Johnny May.

0:01:19 > 0:01:22Temperatures could be at a record low for athletes in South Korea.

0:01:22 > 0:01:26We'll hear how Team GB are kitted out to cope.

0:01:26 > 0:01:31But what about the temperatures here? Nick has the weather.

0:01:31 > 0:01:32But what about the temperatures here? Nick has the weather. Good

0:01:32 > 0:01:43morning. A much colder feel the things today. Snow and hail in the

0:01:43 > 0:01:52north and west of the UK. I have all of your Sunday weather and a look at

0:01:52 > 0:01:56the week to come. Thank you very much, Nick.

0:01:56 > 0:01:56Good morning.

0:01:56 > 0:01:57First, our main story.

0:01:57 > 0:02:00Charities doing overseas aid work will lose government funding

0:02:00 > 0:02:02if they fail to ensure that vulnerable people

0:02:02 > 0:02:03are properly protected.

0:02:03 > 0:02:05That warning came from International Development Secretary Penny

0:02:05 > 0:02:05Mordaunt.

0:02:05 > 0:02:08She described the behaviour of some of Oxfam's workers in Haiti,

0:02:08 > 0:02:11who were accused of using prostitutes in the aftermath

0:02:11 > 0:02:12of the 2010 earthquake, as "horrific."

0:02:12 > 0:02:15The charity is also facing new allegations about some

0:02:15 > 0:02:16of its workers in Chad.

0:02:16 > 0:02:21Andy Moore reports.

0:02:21 > 0:02:24After Haiti, now, new allegations about the behaviour of some Oxfam

0:02:24 > 0:02:29workers in Chad in central Africa.

0:02:29 > 0:02:33They date back to 2006 and also involved prostitutes.

0:02:33 > 0:02:37The head of mission in Chad at the time was the same man

0:02:37 > 0:02:40who resigned from Oxfam five years later because of the scandal in

0:02:40 > 0:02:40Haiti.

0:02:40 > 0:02:43Oxfam said it was shocked and dismayed about the latest

0:02:43 > 0:02:47revelations from Chad.

0:02:47 > 0:02:50It said it couldn't corroborate the information but it highlighted

0:02:50 > 0:02:54unacceptable behaviour by a small number of people.

0:02:54 > 0:03:02The International Development Secretary, Penny Mordaunt,

0:03:06 > 0:03:09has now sent a strong warning to charities receiving EU money

0:03:09 > 0:03:12that those funds will be withdrawn unless they can prove

0:03:12 > 0:03:14they are cooperating fully on safeguarding issues.

0:03:14 > 0:03:15She said this.

0:03:15 > 0:03:18She called the behaviour by some Oxfam workers in Haiti horrific

0:03:18 > 0:03:21and said it was just one example of a wider issue

0:03:21 > 0:03:29on which her department was already taking action.

0:03:31 > 0:03:34The former Secretary of State for International Trade is also

0:03:34 > 0:03:35calling for tougher action.

0:03:35 > 0:03:42This is now an opportunity for everyone to make sure

0:03:42 > 0:03:44that there are very clear, not just guidelines,

0:03:44 > 0:03:46but actions,

0:03:46 > 0:03:49action, will be taken and money will be withdrawn as well quite

0:03:49 > 0:03:51frankly if there is inappropriate behaviour.

0:03:51 > 0:03:53Oxfam says that after Haiti, it set up a dedicated safeguarding

0:03:53 > 0:03:55team to deal with such issues.

0:03:55 > 0:03:59The charity finds itself at the centre of this particular

0:03:59 > 0:04:01scandal that the British government said is one example

0:04:01 > 0:04:02of a wider problem.

0:04:02 > 0:04:04Andy Moore, BBC News.

0:04:04 > 0:04:09Time to speak to a political correspondent. We heard some of

0:04:09 > 0:04:10these allegations just now.

0:04:10 > 0:04:16correspondent. We heard some of these allegations just now.This is

0:04:16 > 0:04:21an extremely strong statement from her. She speaks to a wider problem

0:04:21 > 0:04:24that the department for international development is dealing

0:04:24 > 0:04:29with. She speaks in strong terms, saying it is horrific sexual

0:04:29 > 0:04:37exploitation and abuse continues to exist in the aid sector of Britain.

0:04:37 > 0:04:40Oxfam received £32 million of funding from the government last

0:04:40 > 0:04:46year. She says she will write to all charities to get them to make sure

0:04:46 > 0:04:49they are safeguarding practices, and any issues must be flagged to the

0:04:49 > 0:04:54relevant authorities. Any charities that do not, they will cease to work

0:04:54 > 0:05:02with the government any longer. Oxfam sacked four workers and had

0:05:02 > 0:05:11three resigned, but design denied any cover-ups. -- denied. She does

0:05:11 > 0:05:18not want confidence undermined. Thank you very much. Our political

0:05:18 > 0:05:24correspondent.

0:05:24 > 0:05:27More than a third of child deaths and serious injuries caused

0:05:27 > 0:05:30by neglect in England are linked to parents who drink too much

0:05:30 > 0:05:32alcohol, according to a new parliamentary report.

0:05:32 > 0:05:35It also found that nearly all councils have cut their budgets

0:05:35 > 0:05:36for alcohol support services.

0:05:36 > 0:05:38Our health correspondent, Adina Campbell, has more.

0:05:38 > 0:05:43A dad of six, Josh Conolly knows first-hand about the damage alcohol

0:05:43 > 0:05:47can have on a family. His father was an alcoholic and died when he was

0:05:47 > 0:05:53nine.I remember one example, he smashed all the windows and was

0:05:53 > 0:05:59waiting a knife through the windows and police came up and took them

0:05:59 > 0:06:03away. -- waving. At the same time you are trying to deal with it all,

0:06:03 > 0:06:08you are trying to keep it a secret, repressing it. You naturally get

0:06:08 > 0:06:14unhealthy coping mechanisms.The impact of parents abusing alcohol in

0:06:14 > 0:06:18England, outlined in a new parliamentary report. Is found more

0:06:18 > 0:06:23than a third of child deaths and injuries were linked to parents

0:06:23 > 0:06:32thinking alcohol. -- It found. Alcohol was misused. And children

0:06:32 > 0:06:36with alcohol dependent parents had feelings of stigma, shame, and

0:06:36 > 0:06:42guilt. The report also used data from a Freedom of Information

0:06:42 > 0:06:46investigation which found almost all councils in England are cutting back

0:06:46 > 0:06:52their budgets for this kind of care. When we start to understand this, it

0:06:52 > 0:06:58is all based on trauma. If we understand that, we can begin to

0:06:58 > 0:07:02break the cycles and prevent, you know, addictions of the future.The

0:07:02 > 0:07:07government says work is under way on a new children of alcoholics

0:07:07 > 0:07:14strategy. That includes higher duties to cheap alcohol. Josh has

0:07:14 > 0:07:18turned his life around, but he believes many children will end up

0:07:18 > 0:07:23suffering in silence.

0:07:25 > 0:07:26suffering in silence. Adina Campbell, BBC News.

0:07:26 > 0:07:29The Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson has met the Myanmar leader

0:07:29 > 0:07:32Aung San Suu Kyi for talks, a day after saying Rohigya refugees

0:07:32 > 0:07:34should be allowed a safe and dignified return.

0:07:34 > 0:07:37Nearly 700,000 Rohingya Muslims have crossed the border into neighbouring

0:07:37 > 0:07:39Bangladesh, after a crackdown by the Burmese military.

0:07:39 > 0:07:41Reeta Chakrabarti is travelling with the Foreign Secretary,

0:07:41 > 0:07:44and sent this report.

0:07:44 > 0:07:49It does contain some flash photography.

0:07:49 > 0:07:54There were smiles this morning as Boris Johnson shook hands with Aung

0:07:54 > 0:08:00San Suu Kyi in the capital, but the plight of the Rohingya people will

0:08:00 > 0:08:05be a difficult topic. Aung San Suu Kyi suffered a spectacular fall from

0:08:05 > 0:08:10grace after failing to safeguard the Rohingya

0:08:10 > 0:08:12grace after failing to safeguard the Rohingya. Boris Johnson met some of

0:08:12 > 0:08:18the refugees on a tour of one of the camps in Bangladesh yesterday and

0:08:18 > 0:08:24said international diplomacy needed to focus on a safe and dignified

0:08:24 > 0:08:29return to home.We need to find a solution in Myanmar from Burma

0:08:29 > 0:08:35creating a safe and dignified return for these people. That is what they

0:08:35 > 0:08:39want. They want to go back, but they do not feel safe.He admitted that

0:08:39 > 0:08:43right now that seemed a distant prospect. Later today, Boris Johnson

0:08:43 > 0:08:53will be taken by the Myanmar military nay tour of Rakhine State

0:08:53 > 0:09:00from where they fled, alleging arson, rape, and murder. BBC News,

0:09:00 > 0:09:00Myanmar.

0:09:00 > 0:09:03Theresa May will deliver a major speech within the next three weeks,

0:09:03 > 0:09:06outlining the future relationship Britain wants to have

0:09:06 > 0:09:07with the EU after Brexit.

0:09:07 > 0:09:10It is being seen as important as her Florence speech,

0:09:10 > 0:09:12which unlocked the first stage of negotiations.

0:09:12 > 0:09:15She'll outline what the Government is seeking in relation to security,

0:09:15 > 0:09:23trade and workers' rights.

0:09:27 > 0:09:32Israeli military described the airstrikes there and talk yesterday

0:09:32 > 0:09:41as the biggest they have ever undertaken -- they undertook.

0:09:43 > 0:09:46The government is proposing that energy companies be allowed to see

0:09:46 > 0:09:50the personal data of some customers at risk of being in fuel poverty.

0:09:50 > 0:09:53The idea is part of a consultation looking at how best to protect

0:09:53 > 0:09:56people who could be struggling to pay their bills.

0:09:56 > 0:10:00Our business correspondent, Joe Lynam, explains.

0:10:00 > 0:10:05We all hate getting our energy bills, but for some, it can push

0:10:05 > 0:10:10them into real financial difficulties, known as fuel poverty.

0:10:10 > 0:10:14Now the government wants to find a new way of automatically protecting

0:10:14 > 0:10:18up to 2 million energy users by letting the players know more about

0:10:18 > 0:10:23them. It is launching a consultation into something called data matching,

0:10:23 > 0:10:26which could allow them to share personal information with energy

0:10:26 > 0:10:32supplies. But only with their consent, and if users are getting

0:10:32 > 0:10:37state benefits and are in financial trouble. Then they could

0:10:37 > 0:10:40automatically be put on a cheaper safeguard tariff for their gas and

0:10:40 > 0:10:46electricity. 4 million people are already on the lower rate. The

0:10:46 > 0:10:53energy watchdog, Ofgem, said it could save £66 per year for each

0:10:53 > 0:10:58person on that lower tax rate if this plan proceeds. That could the

0:10:58 > 0:11:10valuable as household energy bills are rising. -- be.

0:11:10 > 0:11:14Now, Valentine's Day might still be a few days off, but love was in the

0:11:14 > 0:11:17air at the cast and crew screening of Idris Elba's new film, "Yardie."

0:11:17 > 0:11:23Take a look at this. This is the moment Idris went down on one knee

0:11:23 > 0:11:25and proposed to his girlfriend, Sabrina. Luckily, she said "Yes!"

0:11:25 > 0:11:28The couple have reportedly been dating since early 2017. No

0:11:28 > 0:11:38pressure. Can you imagine doing that in front of so many people!

0:11:38 > 0:11:40in front of so many people!You have to be sure. There was the cast and

0:11:40 > 0:11:44crew watching.You have to be pretty confident.Good luck to them anyway.

0:11:44 > 0:11:49Congratulations!

0:11:49 > 0:11:53The main stories. British aid agencies have been warned they could

0:11:53 > 0:11:57lose funding amid claims of horrific behaviour within the sector.Over

0:11:57 > 0:12:01one third of child deaths and injuries through neglect in England

0:12:01 > 0:12:05are links to alcohol abuse by their parents according to a new

0:12:05 > 0:12:11parliamentary report.Also coming up, up, up, and away, for the team

0:12:11 > 0:12:18at Click. They are investigating the future of flying taxis.

0:12:18 > 0:12:25Here's Nick with a look at this morning's weather.

0:12:25 > 0:12:32Nic is not the man for a flying taxi at all. Shall we? You laughed, we

0:12:32 > 0:12:37heard you. Look at the scene behind Hugh! Are never the man for

0:12:37 > 0:12:42anything. You are always the man, you are weak and weatherman and we

0:12:42 > 0:12:47love you. Do you think we will be seeing a lot of the scene behind

0:12:47 > 0:12:50you? Some of us will wake up to it, the Southern uplands of Scotland

0:12:50 > 0:12:54where we saw snow overnight in in the Pennines as well, more of that

0:12:54 > 0:12:58to come over the next couple of days and in fact it has turned colder

0:12:58 > 0:13:02today and who will season snow showers around as well. If an inland

0:13:02 > 0:13:05to relatively low levels towards northern and western parts of the

0:13:05 > 0:13:08UK, some snow, compared with yesterday Sampath, sunny spells

0:13:08 > 0:13:12around so it is and gloom but it is going to feel colder across the

0:13:12 > 0:13:13around so it is and gloom but it is going to feel colder across the UK

0:13:13 > 0:13:17today compared with yesterday. What has happened? On the satellite, one

0:13:17 > 0:13:22area of cloud that brought yesterday's weather is moving away

0:13:22 > 0:13:25and this speckled cloud on the Atlantic tells you it is colder air

0:13:25 > 0:13:29coming in and there are showers around. These lumps of white other

0:13:29 > 0:13:32snow showers coming into particularly this morning western

0:13:32 > 0:13:35Scotland and Northern Ireland, filtering through north-west

0:13:35 > 0:13:38England, into Wales and the south-west. Any of these will be of

0:13:38 > 0:13:44snow and hail and some will drift east during the days of the close --

0:13:44 > 0:13:49the some of you at three AM, dry weather across eastern Scotland but

0:13:49 > 0:13:53even moving on through there but accumulating snow particular for the

0:13:53 > 0:13:56hills of Western Scotland, Northern Ireland, into the western side of

0:13:56 > 0:14:00the Pennines, the hills in Wales as well and the odd winter the shower

0:14:00 > 0:14:04of sleaze, mainly HAL, maybe some wet snow moving into western parts

0:14:04 > 0:14:08of England as well. Actually many eastern areas will stay dry with

0:14:08 > 0:14:13some sunshine. The temperatures down compared with yesterday. Some got

0:14:13 > 0:14:16into double figures then. Factoring in the wind, it will feel colder

0:14:16 > 0:14:23still. The entry into the hills of Scotland, some drifting. Maybe not

0:14:23 > 0:14:27feeling much above freezing. Tonight, they will be at or below

0:14:27 > 0:14:31freezing so widespread frost and icy conditions where the wintry showers

0:14:31 > 0:14:36continuing to the north-west. Continuing tomorrow, particularly in

0:14:36 > 0:14:40the western Scotland, adding to the snow we already have up and icy

0:14:40 > 0:14:44start. Through the day, few are showers, a lot of fine weather

0:14:44 > 0:14:49through southern and eastern parts of the UK, so soak up the sunshine

0:14:49 > 0:14:52because it will feel a little less cold. Then another weather system

0:14:52 > 0:14:57comes in. We will watch this closely Monday night in the Tuesday, a

0:14:57 > 0:15:00frontal system from the Atlantic. Head of it, gale force winds

0:15:00 > 0:15:06developing in the west. It isn't just rain, snow as particularly into

0:15:06 > 0:15:10Scotland where some will wake up to a covering of snow on Tuesday to

0:15:10 > 0:15:14parts of northern England as well. But that's a week which will be

0:15:14 > 0:15:17changeable, further with assistance from the Atlantic with rain and snow

0:15:17 > 0:15:21at times, some disruptive snow as we have established, particularly on

0:15:21 > 0:15:27Tuesday morning and it will often be windy as well. Back to you. Do

0:15:27 > 0:15:27Tuesday morning and it will often be windy as well. Back to you. Do you

0:15:27 > 0:15:31know of much as I moan about the weather, it is a British pastime I

0:15:31 > 0:15:36don't feel bad about it, it must be interesting, weeks like this a more

0:15:36 > 0:15:39interesting than saying OK, steady temperatures, no wind, lovely

0:15:39 > 0:15:44weather. It is difficult to keep it interesting, isn't it? That is

0:15:44 > 0:15:49right, we love this sort of weather, changeable with a lot going on

0:15:49 > 0:15:52because there is a lot of information to get across but we

0:15:52 > 0:15:55can't such fans of weather presenters as high pressure when it

0:15:55 > 0:15:58is quiet although a lot of people appreciate a bit of high pressure

0:15:58 > 0:16:03when we need a good few sunny days and we haven't had many of those in

0:16:03 > 0:16:07recent summers. If you could arrange that for the week after next, that

0:16:07 > 0:16:10would be great. Working on it! I would take boring, unpredictable

0:16:10 > 0:16:18weather anyway, wouldn't you? Yes! I tell you, it is chilly in

0:16:18 > 0:16:18Pyeongchang.

0:16:18 > 0:16:21The Winter Olympics are always going to be a chilly affair but this

0:16:21 > 0:16:24year's games in Pyeongchang are expected to be the coldest

0:16:24 > 0:16:25in more than 20 years.

0:16:25 > 0:16:28With temperatures plunging to around minus 20 degrees Celsius,

0:16:28 > 0:16:31the biting cold has left some presenters struggling to talk

0:16:31 > 0:16:33and others with make-up freezing to their faces.

0:16:33 > 0:16:36Radzi Chinyanganya has more.

0:16:36 > 0:16:41First world problems still.

0:16:43 > 0:16:46Pyeongchang is situated in the mountains at 700 metres above sea

0:16:46 > 0:16:50level which the locals claim is perfect for healthy living. However,

0:16:50 > 0:16:59alongside that is the weather. The very, very cold weather.You are as

0:16:59 > 0:17:07cold as ice.The Hyeon Chung area is the coldest place in Korea --

0:17:07 > 0:17:13Pyeongchang. Because it is a mountainous area, the average

0:17:13 > 0:17:21temperature in February is about -11 centigrade. It really is cold. In

0:17:21 > 0:17:27fact, take a look at this. Now, I know it is supposed to be cold, it

0:17:27 > 0:17:30is the winter Olympics, but the coldest on record was in 94 in

0:17:30 > 0:17:34Lillehammer. But hey, Norwegian thermometers reached as low as -11

0:17:34 > 0:17:41degrees. So if temperatures stay this low, could that affect the 2018

0:17:41 > 0:17:51Winter Olympics?We continue to ask the operators at which temperature

0:17:51 > 0:17:59is impossible to operate the game, they say it is dependent on the

0:17:59 > 0:18:03situation.Which is largely determined by the amount of time the

0:18:03 > 0:18:06athlete spent outside in as freezing climates because foreign Alpine race

0:18:06 > 0:18:12it is less than two minutes on piste but a cross-country skier, more like

0:18:12 > 0:18:16two hours. Whatever the amount of time, a crucial element is the kids

0:18:16 > 0:18:20the Olympians wear to cope with the frosty conditions. So with around 60

0:18:20 > 0:18:25TNG athlete travelling here to Pyeongchang, it is a lot of sports

0:18:25 > 0:18:30and a lot of kit -- Team GB. Four years ago we were walking around in

0:18:30 > 0:18:35shorts and flip-flops in Sochi.So it is quite a shift, it is great to

0:18:35 > 0:18:39be a part of a winter games in which it is actually cold. Everybody got

0:18:39 > 0:18:42110 items of kit, everyone gets their own competition where and when

0:18:42 > 0:18:46the race village where so we have a goosedown puffer jacket, woolly

0:18:46 > 0:18:53hats, scarf, gloves, hand warmers to keep everyone toasty.You actually

0:18:53 > 0:19:00think the cold maybe helpful?Are working through the cross country,

0:19:00 > 0:19:04the preparations they have done and the work in the background getting

0:19:04 > 0:19:08their skis right is ideal for they are having a great bit of time out

0:19:08 > 0:19:12on the track but for the guys on the centre last night, they were feeling

0:19:12 > 0:19:16good as well so we are in a great shape, the cold weather is really

0:19:16 > 0:19:20looking to benefit Team GB.For the first time ever I will hope it stays

0:19:20 > 0:19:27cold?Absolutely!Love look behind the scenes.

0:19:27 > 0:19:29-- Love a look behind the scenes.

0:19:29 > 0:19:32Now it's time for The Film Review with Jane Hill and Mark Kermode.

0:19:42 > 0:19:46Hello and welcome to The Film Review on BBC News.

0:19:46 > 0:19:50To take us through this week's cinema releases is Mark Kermode.

0:19:50 > 0:19:52So, Mark, what do we have this week?

0:19:52 > 0:19:56We have Black Panther, which opens on Tuesday.

0:19:56 > 0:20:01We have Pad Man, based on a true, inspiring story.

0:20:01 > 0:20:07And 50 Shades Freed - it all comes to an end.

0:20:07 > 0:20:14Black Panther, why isn't it opening until Tuesday?

0:20:14 > 0:20:18I presume it is because it will give it a long opening weekend.

0:20:18 > 0:20:20It has been eagerly awaited.

0:20:20 > 0:20:23At the beginning of the film, it is a technologically advanced

0:20:23 > 0:20:26society and they must keep their secrets away

0:20:26 > 0:20:32from the rest of the world in case it falls into the wrong hands.

0:20:32 > 0:20:34Inevitably, to some extent, it does.

0:20:34 > 0:20:38The movie pays great attention to character and detail.

0:20:38 > 0:20:45Here is a clip.

0:20:45 > 0:20:53Remote system activated.

0:20:55 > 0:20:59Wait, which side of the road is it?

0:20:59 > 0:21:01Just drive.

0:21:01 > 0:21:09Let's go!

0:21:10 > 0:21:18Look at your suit.

0:21:18 > 0:21:26You have been taking bullets.

0:21:26 > 0:21:32Run around the track.

0:21:32 > 0:21:40Where did he go?!

0:21:42 > 0:21:44Show off.

0:21:44 > 0:21:46That is the most generic stuff.

0:21:46 > 0:21:48There's much more interesting stuff in the film.

0:21:48 > 0:21:52Its strengths are threefold.

0:21:52 > 0:21:53It looks great.

0:21:53 > 0:21:55The world of Wakanda is superbly realised.

0:21:55 > 0:21:59You really feel that you're in that world and it is well evoked.

0:21:59 > 0:22:02The second thing, it sounds great - everything from the sharp dialogue

0:22:02 > 0:22:10to the superb music keeps the action moving along.

0:22:11 > 0:22:14It really involves you in the characters.

0:22:14 > 0:22:15It is well played.

0:22:15 > 0:22:17It is a really good cast.

0:22:17 > 0:22:20But the most important thing is, you believe in the world

0:22:20 > 0:22:28of the film.

0:22:28 > 0:22:31You believe in the characters and you know and understand

0:22:31 > 0:22:32the characters' motivation.

0:22:32 > 0:22:35I am not a huge comic book fan.

0:22:35 > 0:22:38The thing about this is, it works on its own terms

0:22:38 > 0:22:44as a standalone piece.

0:22:44 > 0:22:47There has been a lot written about the importance of this movie

0:22:47 > 0:22:51at this moment but it will only work if the film itself works

0:22:51 > 0:22:54as a rip-roaring piece of entertainment, and it does.

0:22:54 > 0:22:57It is important, but I can look at that and say,

0:22:57 > 0:22:59as well documented on this programme, action films

0:22:59 > 0:23:07are not my thing, but they are the thing of my other half.

0:23:09 > 0:23:15Our debate will be, "Is it two hours of my life I will never get back?"

0:23:15 > 0:23:18and she will say, "No, we have to go and see it!"

0:23:18 > 0:23:21You get the spectacle, all the stuff you want,

0:23:21 > 0:23:22and it does look and sound wonderful.

0:23:22 > 0:23:26But you know the characters, you like them and understand them.

0:23:26 > 0:23:29This is a world where there are no gender imbalances you often get.

0:23:29 > 0:23:31Men and women are on an equal playing field.

0:23:31 > 0:23:34When they have the big fight sequences, even I understood

0:23:34 > 0:23:36who everyone was, who they were fighting,

0:23:36 > 0:23:39why they were fighting and what they were trying to do

0:23:39 > 0:23:42with their time.

0:23:42 > 0:23:44As a piece of drama, it is well laid out.

0:23:44 > 0:23:45I really enjoyed it.

0:23:45 > 0:23:48I might have a hope.

0:23:48 > 0:23:52I am normally nudging, going, "What?

0:23:52 > 0:23:53Who is this person?

0:23:53 > 0:23:54Why are they doing that?"

0:23:54 > 0:23:57If I can understand it, anyone can understand it!

0:23:57 > 0:23:58You give me hope.

0:23:58 > 0:24:00Pad Man.

0:24:00 > 0:24:01Sounds unusual?

0:24:01 > 0:24:04It is a man in India who invented a low-cost machine

0:24:04 > 0:24:11for making sanitary pads.

0:24:11 > 0:24:14He's credited with breaking the taboo around menstruation.

0:24:14 > 0:24:18The hears a newly-wed young man who doesn't understand

0:24:18 > 0:24:26why his new bride spends five days every month out of the house.

0:24:26 > 0:24:31Then he is appalled why the women around him suffer every month.

0:24:31 > 0:24:37He designs a machine to make low-cost sanitary pads

0:24:37 > 0:24:40which will not only protect the health of the women

0:24:40 > 0:24:41but provide employment.

0:24:41 > 0:24:45But he does so in a culture in which there is a lot of shame

0:24:45 > 0:24:46around this subject.

0:24:46 > 0:24:49The director of the film said he wanted to make the story

0:24:49 > 0:24:50as accessible as possible.

0:24:50 > 0:24:53He does - it has slapstick comedy, music sequences, laughs,

0:24:53 > 0:24:56romance and tension.

0:24:56 > 0:25:01It is a joyful and uplifting film.

0:25:01 > 0:25:05It is telling the story which has its roots in a real-life story.

0:25:05 > 0:25:08It is a fictionalised version of a real-life story but it does

0:25:08 > 0:25:10stick close to the truth.

0:25:10 > 0:25:13It is charmingly done and playing to the widest possible audience

0:25:13 > 0:25:16and succeeding in taking that story and making it completely accessible,

0:25:16 > 0:25:19and it is charming and uplifting.

0:25:19 > 0:25:22Another hit.

0:25:22 > 0:25:28Fantastic, wonderful story.

0:25:28 > 0:25:31Based on a true story, which is more than can be said

0:25:31 > 0:25:33for 50 Shades Freed.

0:25:33 > 0:25:35We do have Twilight to thank for this.

0:25:35 > 0:25:37The story is, having tamed Christian Grey,

0:25:37 > 0:25:39Anastasia must see if she can find independence and happiness

0:25:39 > 0:25:47within their marriage.

0:25:48 > 0:25:55Here is a clip.

0:25:55 > 0:25:58You do want to have kids someday, right?

0:25:58 > 0:26:00Someday, sure.

0:26:00 > 0:26:05You don't really sound sure.

0:26:05 > 0:26:07You know what I am sure about?

0:26:07 > 0:26:09That's great steak.

0:26:09 > 0:26:13Christian...

0:26:13 > 0:26:17Do you not want to have kids?

0:26:17 > 0:26:18Of course.

0:26:18 > 0:26:21One day, just not now.

0:26:21 > 0:26:29I'm not ready to share you with anyone.

0:26:32 > 0:26:33He doesn't want children.

0:26:33 > 0:26:36I can tell her that now.

0:26:36 > 0:26:38There is a narrative arc...

0:26:38 > 0:26:41It is easy to sneer at the Fifty Shades movies

0:26:41 > 0:26:42because they are not very good.

0:26:42 > 0:26:44The first one, they tried to do something interesting,

0:26:44 > 0:26:46but it was too restricted.

0:26:46 > 0:26:48The second one stuck to the ear-scraping dialogue

0:26:48 > 0:26:52of the source.

0:26:52 > 0:26:55It is badly written, the actors are doing their best

0:26:55 > 0:27:03with pretty intolerable dialogue.

0:27:05 > 0:27:10James Foley is directing on autopilot.

0:27:10 > 0:27:13He has been given this as a safe pair of hands.

0:27:13 > 0:27:16It ends up looking like a promo simply for a glamorous lifestyle

0:27:16 > 0:27:18for fast cars and designer apartments.

0:27:18 > 0:27:21Although there is some kinky fetishism, it is very peripheral.

0:27:21 > 0:27:24What the film is interested in is look at that private jet.

0:27:24 > 0:27:32It is a film about possessions and about those kind of aspirations.

0:27:33 > 0:27:36In the end, it ends up looking like a commercial or pop promo.

0:27:36 > 0:27:41It makes you look back to the days of Nine and A Half Weeks and think

0:27:41 > 0:27:49"Wow, what a ground-breaking, Citizen Kane-like movie that was!"

0:27:51 > 0:27:55I don't know why people get angry, because it is playing to a certain

0:27:55 > 0:27:56audience who are devoted to it.

0:27:56 > 0:27:59It will pack the audiences out on the first weekend.

0:27:59 > 0:28:02I am clearly not the target audience.

0:28:02 > 0:28:05As a cinemagoer, the first one was the only one that was vaguely

0:28:05 > 0:28:10interesting and the next two are just dull.

0:28:10 > 0:28:14Fantastically unremarkable.

0:28:14 > 0:28:18You cannot criticise the cast.

0:28:18 > 0:28:21If anybody gave you that dialogue to read, Laurence Olivier

0:28:21 > 0:28:23would struggle to deliver some of those lines,

0:28:23 > 0:28:29which are on the level of, is everything all right?

0:28:29 > 0:28:30Can I get you a latte?

0:28:30 > 0:28:32LAUGHTER.

0:28:32 > 0:28:37I think I will see Black Panther.

0:28:37 > 0:28:39Have you seen Phantom Thread again?

0:28:39 > 0:28:42The last time we met, you had seen it four times.

0:28:42 > 0:28:44No, I have not seen it again.

0:28:44 > 0:28:49I love Johnny Greenwood's score.

0:28:49 > 0:28:52He's been Oscar-nominated.

0:28:52 > 0:28:57People say they don't like the central character.

0:28:57 > 0:28:59You are not meant to like him.

0:28:59 > 0:29:01He is meant to be difficult.

0:29:01 > 0:29:07Lesley Manville steals the show.

0:29:07 > 0:29:10I think it is Paul Thomas Anderson's best film since Punch Drunk Love

0:29:10 > 0:29:16and they make a crack romance double bill.

0:29:16 > 0:29:21I would watch Phantom Thread again, but alongside Punch Drunk Love.

0:29:21 > 0:29:29There is something about it.

0:29:32 > 0:29:36There was a debate whether the costumes he designs

0:29:36 > 0:29:41are deliberately not very good.

0:29:41 > 0:29:45Everybody says he is a fabulous dress designer but the first thing

0:29:45 > 0:29:48he designs has somebody dressed up like the Queen of Hearts.

0:29:48 > 0:29:51But that is kind of the point, I like it.

0:29:51 > 0:29:55It's certainly a talking point.

0:29:55 > 0:29:58The DVD, Loving Vincent.

0:29:58 > 0:30:01It reminds me of our conversation last week when I said "Can you watch

0:30:01 > 0:30:02Blade Runner on a DVD?"

0:30:02 > 0:30:05It is the same about Loving Vincent.

0:30:05 > 0:30:09It is an extraordinary achievement in technical terms.

0:30:09 > 0:30:12An oil painted animated movie - as far as I know, the world's first.

0:30:12 > 0:30:15The narrative is a bit flimsy.

0:30:15 > 0:30:18It is about going back to find out what happened in Vincent van

0:30:18 > 0:30:21Gogh's life.

0:30:21 > 0:30:26I have seen it on the big screen and the small screen and it has

0:30:26 > 0:30:28the same - it is hypnotising, like watching paintings

0:30:28 > 0:30:35you know moving around.

0:30:35 > 0:30:37Slightly odd, but stunning.

0:30:37 > 0:30:41If you have it on DVD, you can go back and watch it again

0:30:41 > 0:30:47and marvel at the hours of work that must have gone into creating it.

0:30:47 > 0:30:50Six years of painting to create the film.

0:30:50 > 0:30:50Astonishing.

0:30:50 > 0:30:51Thank you.

0:30:51 > 0:30:52An interesting week.

0:30:52 > 0:30:56A quick reminder, you can find all the film news and reviews

0:30:56 > 0:30:57across the BBC on the website.

0:30:57 > 0:31:00All our previous programmes are on the iPlayer as well.

0:31:00 > 0:31:01That's it for this week.

0:31:01 > 0:31:02Enjoy your cinemagoing.

0:31:02 > 0:31:10Goodbye.

0:31:25 > 0:31:26Hello.

0:31:26 > 0:31:29This is Breakfast with Ben Thompson and Naga Munchetty.

0:31:29 > 0:31:30Good morning.

0:31:30 > 0:31:34Here's a summary of today's main stories from BBC News.

0:31:34 > 0:31:37Charities doing overseas aid work will lose funding if they fail

0:31:37 > 0:31:39to ensure that vulnerable people are properly protectedm,

0:31:39 > 0:31:40the government has warned.

0:31:40 > 0:31:42International Development Secretary, Penny Mordaunt, has condemned

0:31:42 > 0:31:45as "Horrific" the behaviour of some of Oxfam's workers in Haiti,

0:31:45 > 0:31:48who were accused of using prostitutes in the aftermath

0:31:48 > 0:31:49of the 2010 earthquake.

0:31:49 > 0:31:51The charity is also facing new allegations about some

0:31:51 > 0:31:59of its workers in Chad.

0:32:00 > 0:32:03More than a third of child deaths and serious injuries caused

0:32:03 > 0:32:06by neglect in England are linked to parents who have a problem

0:32:06 > 0:32:08with alcohol, according to a new parliamentary report.

0:32:08 > 0:32:12The study, which was commissioned by a group of MPs, also found that

0:32:12 > 0:32:14nearly all councils in England have cut funding

0:32:14 > 0:32:15to alcohol support services.

0:32:15 > 0:32:18The Department of Health said it was working to see what support

0:32:18 > 0:32:24it could offer to families.

0:32:24 > 0:32:27The Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson has met the Myanmar leader

0:32:27 > 0:32:30Aung San Suu Kyi for talks, a day after saying Rohigya refugees

0:32:30 > 0:32:32should be allowed a safe and dignified return.

0:32:32 > 0:32:35Nearly 700,000 Rohingya Muslims have crossed the border into neighbouring

0:32:35 > 0:32:43Bangladesh, after a crackdown by the Burmese military.

0:32:52 > 0:32:55The Israeli military has described the airstrikes it carried out

0:32:55 > 0:32:57in Syria yesterday as probably the biggest of their kind

0:32:57 > 0:32:59in the last 30 years.

0:32:59 > 0:33:01The attacks took place after an Israeli military aircraft

0:33:01 > 0:33:02was brought down.

0:33:02 > 0:33:05A spokesman said 12 sites were hit, including four Iranian targets.

0:33:05 > 0:33:07The attacks took place after an Israeli military aircraft

0:33:07 > 0:33:09was brought down.

0:33:09 > 0:33:12The government is proposing that energy companies be allowed to see

0:33:12 > 0:33:16the personal data of some customers at risk of being in fuel poverty.

0:33:16 > 0:33:19The idea is part of a consultation looking at how best to protect

0:33:19 > 0:33:22people who could be struggling to pay their bills -

0:33:22 > 0:33:25and suggests that they could be moved onto special lower tariffs.

0:33:25 > 0:33:28The government thinks as many as two million people might

0:33:28 > 0:33:36benefit from scheme.

0:33:38 > 0:33:54Good morning.Good morning.We knew it would be cold in Pyeongchang.

0:33:54 > 0:33:56it would be cold in Pyeongchang. Now it is too cold for the winter

0:33:56 > 0:34:05Olympics.They go

0:34:21 > 0:34:24Olympics.They go out in that for 2-3 hours at a time. The events last

0:34:24 > 0:34:28an hour and three minutes. This, the combination of the 15k and the

0:34:28 > 0:34:34classic, we'll get onto that in a second. The women's slope

0:34:34 > 0:34:37snowboarding has been cancelled. They will have a straight final,

0:34:37 > 0:34:40with everyone through. We were joking about it downstairs. We heard

0:34:40 > 0:34:47from our reporter. Apparently it was all part of the contingency plan. It

0:34:47 > 0:34:53was in place following discussions at the captaincy meeting. It was

0:34:53 > 0:35:00agreed by all representatives and nations present. And now for the

0:35:00 > 0:35:01offence overnight.

0:35:01 > 0:35:04Day two of the Winter Olympics is well under way now.

0:35:04 > 0:35:07The overnight action has seen the USA's Red Gerard take gold

0:35:07 > 0:35:11in the men's slopestyle snowboarding.

0:35:11 > 0:35:20They were easily done and run by the time the big wind came through.

0:35:20 > 0:35:22Yesterday's action in South Korea saw Britain's Elise Christie

0:35:22 > 0:35:25start her speed skating campaign with victory in the heats.

0:35:25 > 0:35:28Joe Lynskey reports.

0:35:30 > 0:35:35Things are rarely friendly in a skate race. It is a fight from the

0:35:35 > 0:35:40start. The instinct was impeccable. When she got there, they would not

0:35:40 > 0:35:45catch her. The winter sprinter from Britain was off and running.She is

0:35:45 > 0:35:54through!She has three medals in sights this month, but so much can

0:35:54 > 0:35:58go wrong. No one is invincible.I am so nervous. Perhaps I will not do

0:35:58 > 0:36:08this, I thought. But I was excited. She returns to go for medals on

0:36:08 > 0:36:15Tuesday. It does not get any friendlier from here. An easier path

0:36:15 > 0:36:19for Amy Fuller of Britain. There was too much wind for the snowboarding.

0:36:19 > 0:36:29She goes

0:36:30 > 0:36:33She goes straight to the final along with everyone else. This is Red

0:36:33 > 0:36:37Gerard of the USA, born in 2000. The 17-year-old was never meant to do

0:36:37 > 0:36:47this. Norway and Canada will dominate, but this gold was set for

0:36:47 > 0:36:52Red Gerard.He get first is above me. I do not know what is going on.

0:36:52 > 0:36:57Inspiration, perhaps, for the outsiders. Attention, Andrew

0:36:57 > 0:37:03Musgrave. He is not far off of the best of the world. Months spent on

0:37:03 > 0:37:08snow.

0:37:10 > 0:37:15snow. BBC News.

0:37:20 > 0:37:33A big crash here stop some of the medals hopes. Doing well so far. 15

0:37:33 > 0:37:39kilometres of classic cross-country skiing. And then freeze Garske it. I

0:37:39 > 0:37:48did not know what that was. -- freestyle skiing. I had to look it

0:37:48 > 0:37:58up, it is more controlled. You use the edge of the ski to push along.

0:37:58 > 0:38:06The shorter the length, more waxed, the quicker...You

0:38:06 > 0:38:09the quicker...You can get off and out of the tracks and into the

0:38:09 > 0:38:12mountain areas. We will see more... Apparently they call it freestyle

0:38:12 > 0:38:25because you are the cool kid.I am cool.

0:38:25 > 0:38:28Wales coach, Warren Gatland, claims the decision to disallow his side

0:38:28 > 0:38:30a try in their 12-6 Six Nations defeat to England,

0:38:30 > 0:38:31was a "terrible mistake."

0:38:31 > 0:38:35England made it two wins out of two with a 12-6 victory.

0:38:35 > 0:38:38While Ireland kept up their perfect start with a 56-19 win over Italy.

0:38:38 > 0:38:46Our sports correspondent, Joe Wilson, reports.

0:38:48 > 0:38:52Don't be afraid to stand out in the crowd at Twickenham. Most players

0:38:52 > 0:39:00arrived in tracksuits, headphones to drown out the distractions. Rhys was

0:39:00 > 0:39:06playing for the first time. Cameras everywhere. Two minutes played. A

0:39:06 > 0:39:10high ball. Did not make it. Into the hands of Owen Farrell, knowing where

0:39:10 > 0:39:25he was kicking it. Jonny May did the rest. His second try soon followed.

0:39:25 > 0:39:29But watch Joe. Two Welsh players on him but he got it away anyway. So,

0:39:29 > 0:39:36how did Wales respond? A clever kick.

0:39:43 > 0:39:45kick. Confusion followed. The TV official looking for control. "No,"

0:39:45 > 0:39:50he said. Welsh penalties kept them close. They needed a drive. This is

0:39:50 > 0:39:54how close they came. The line was there, along with Sam Underhill to

0:39:54 > 0:40:00grab his men.

0:40:02 > 0:40:04grab his men. 12-6 to England it finished. England, two wins from

0:40:04 > 0:40:10two, a perfect start to the Six Nations. This game is exhausting and

0:40:10 > 0:40:15enthralling. They will want a week off. Ireland can reflect on three

0:40:15 > 0:40:27tries conceded, but more positively on the eighth they scored.

0:40:27 > 0:40:29on the eighth they scored. Ireland, Two wins from two, ending the

0:40:29 > 0:40:32tournament at Twickenham, five weeks away. Joe Wilson, BBC News.

0:40:32 > 0:40:36England's women also made it two wins out of two as they thrashed

0:40:36 > 0:40:36Wales, 52-0.

0:40:36 > 0:40:38Scotland, meanwhile, were overpowered at home by France.

0:40:38 > 0:40:46They went down 26-3.

0:40:59 > 0:41:01Sergio Aguero scored four second-half goals as Premier League

0:41:01 > 0:41:04leaders Manchester City thrashed Leicester 5-1 at the Etihad.

0:41:04 > 0:41:07With the game at 1-1 at half-time, the Argentine striker scored two

0:41:07 > 0:41:10quick-fire goals after the break and then took full advantage

0:41:10 > 0:41:12of a Kasper Schmeichel error for his hat-trick.

0:41:12 > 0:41:14Aguero saved the best till last though, this incredible strike

0:41:14 > 0:41:18making it 5-1, a result that sees City extend their lead at the top

0:41:18 > 0:41:26to 16 points.

0:41:42 > 0:41:45Celtic held a minute's silence ahead of their Scottish Cup game

0:41:45 > 0:41:48to remember their former player, Liam Miller, who died on Friday

0:41:48 > 0:41:48aged just 36.

0:41:48 > 0:41:51The holders went on to beat Partick Thistle, 3-2,

0:41:51 > 0:41:52to reach the quarter-finals.

0:41:52 > 0:41:53James Forrest scoring a hat-trick.

0:41:53 > 0:41:56They're joined in the last eight by Falkirk, Motherwell,

0:41:56 > 0:42:04Hearts, Kilmarnock, and Morton.

0:42:21 > 0:42:27We will get an update on what is happening with the weather soon.

0:42:27 > 0:42:32We will have that soon. Good morning.

0:42:32 > 0:42:34Nearly 700,000 Rohingya Muslims have fled to neighbouring Bangladesh,

0:42:34 > 0:42:37following a crackdown by the Burmese military which began

0:42:37 > 0:42:38in August last year.

0:42:38 > 0:42:40Today, Foreign Secretary, Boris Johnson, shook hands

0:42:40 > 0:42:43with the Myanmar leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, in the capital,

0:42:43 > 0:42:46Nay Pyi Taw, but the plight of the Rohingya people will be

0:42:46 > 0:42:47a difficult topic.

0:42:47 > 0:42:49So, how significant is this meeting?

0:42:49 > 0:42:52Justin Wintle is a commentator on Southeast Asian Affairs and has

0:42:52 > 0:42:57written a biography of Ms Suu Kyi.

0:42:57 > 0:43:04Good morning.Good morning.For those of us not familiar with Aung

0:43:04 > 0:43:11San Suu Kyi and why she is so now pivotal in what happens in terms of

0:43:11 > 0:43:15recognising what is happening to the Rohingya Muslims, tell us about her

0:43:15 > 0:43:18background and why there is disappointment and expectation

0:43:18 > 0:43:23surrounding her.I am not sure she is pivotal. She should be, but she

0:43:23 > 0:43:28is not. Everyone knows she was a Nobel peace laureate and stood up

0:43:28 > 0:43:40courageously to the Burmese military when

0:43:40 > 0:43:44when Myanmar was Burma and was under house arrest for a long time and got

0:43:44 > 0:43:57the Nobel Peace Prize. She was let out from house arrest 5-6 years ago.

0:44:04 > 0:44:07She won a quasi-democratic election. She could not be President as she

0:44:07 > 0:44:11was married to an Englishman, but she became de facto Head of State.

0:44:11 > 0:44:14Now, there has been a lot of talk about the Rohingya Muslims, an

0:44:14 > 0:44:17emerging ethnicity in western Myanmar, bordering Bangladesh. These

0:44:17 > 0:44:22people were persecuted for decades and decades, and it's got very nasty

0:44:22 > 0:44:30this time, and the great

0:44:37 > 0:44:39this time, and the great majority of Rohingya, about 700,000 of a

0:44:39 > 0:44:42million, picked up and went to Bangladesh.That is what Boris

0:44:42 > 0:44:45Johnson is now addressing.That is correct.This meeting has happened,

0:44:45 > 0:44:53the handshake has happened. As I said in my introduction to you, what

0:44:54 > 0:44:57progress should, could, will be made, do you think?I do not know

0:44:57 > 0:45:00what progress can be made. Boris Johnson talked about a political

0:45:00 > 0:45:05solution, and he said he will push for, well, he said he would push for

0:45:05 > 0:45:09the return of the Rohingya to Myanmar with guarantees of their

0:45:09 > 0:45:14safety. Anyone who thinks the Burmese army, who control the

0:45:14 > 0:45:18country still effectively, can guarantee their safety, is barking

0:45:18 > 0:45:25mad. The real aim should be a humanitarian solution. And I think

0:45:25 > 0:45:27that that would involve a comprehensive resettlement of the

0:45:27 > 0:45:36ranger elsewhere in a sensible, humane way so that their communities

0:45:36 > 0:45:41are kept in peace. But if they are forced back if they have to go back

0:45:41 > 0:45:51because the

0:45:57 > 0:46:00because the international, you know, community wants to sort of make a

0:46:00 > 0:46:03point with the Myanmar government, the same thing will happen again and

0:46:03 > 0:46:07it will be horrible.It is a sad affair.

0:46:07 > 0:46:10Here's Nick with a look at this morning's weather.

0:46:10 > 0:46:11Here's Nick with a look at this morning's weather.

0:46:11 > 0:46:13If he had a drab

0:46:13 > 0:46:15If he had a drab Saturday it is a sunny Sunday but there are snow

0:46:15 > 0:46:18showers and a cold north-westerly wind blowing across the UK.

0:46:18 > 0:46:19showers and a cold north-westerly wind blowing across the UK. Some of

0:46:19 > 0:46:24us will wake up the snow after some across Scotland last night, heavy

0:46:24 > 0:46:28four a time. Speckled cloud on the satellite indicates showers coming

0:46:28 > 0:46:33in. They are coming from the west, so western parts of the UK will see

0:46:33 > 0:46:37most of these. Sundry Madaya going to drift further east and a lot of

0:46:37 > 0:46:41these showers even away from hills will be falling snow or hail but

0:46:41 > 0:46:45particularly in the hills of western Scotland, Northern Ireland in the

0:46:45 > 0:46:49north-west England we will see some settling snow and the wind may be

0:46:49 > 0:46:52drifting in the hills of western Scotland we are creatures will be

0:46:52 > 0:46:57barely above freezing -- where temperatures. Eastern Scotland, this

0:46:57 > 0:47:01is the picture at 3pm down the eastern side of England but also

0:47:01 > 0:47:05here, one or two showers drifting through. Which snow or hail or sleet

0:47:05 > 0:47:10coming through. What is certainly a much colder feeling day compared to

0:47:10 > 0:47:14yesterday, especially with the wind. More like around two or three

0:47:14 > 0:47:17degrees from Northern Ireland and Scotland. Even into the hills,

0:47:17 > 0:47:22closer to freezing. 87 across southern England but not really

0:47:22 > 0:47:26double figures for anyone. A feed of the snow showers coming in towards

0:47:26 > 0:47:30the western parts in particular, adding to the snow we have on the

0:47:30 > 0:47:34ground, especially in the hills, and turning icy again with a widespread

0:47:34 > 0:47:38frost going into Monday morning. You know there is a cold filter things

0:47:38 > 0:47:42on Monday morning, showers around particularly in the western Scotland

0:47:42 > 0:47:47but few elsewhere, warned the way a fun trying. The wind still do more

0:47:47 > 0:47:51to the south-westerly later in the day so temperatures are going to be

0:47:51 > 0:47:56quite as low -- are not going to be quite as low. The system in the

0:47:56 > 0:48:00Atlantic is coming Monday into Tuesday to let look at that. Frontal

0:48:00 > 0:48:04system, it tells the head of it in the western coast is, and with it,

0:48:04 > 0:48:10rain and snow. We could well see some significant snow falling into

0:48:10 > 0:48:13Scotland, especially in the hills but not just, many in Scotland

0:48:13 > 0:48:17waking to a covering of snow on Tuesday morning and some parts of

0:48:17 > 0:48:21northern England as well. Rain and snow at times in the week ahead,

0:48:21 > 0:48:26some of it disruptive. It will often be windy with gales and places too.

0:48:26 > 0:48:35Nick, thank you. It is just before 6:50 AM. It is time for click.

0:48:58 > 0:49:02This is how a self-driving car sees the world.

0:49:02 > 0:49:04Lidar sensors feed the car with a continuous 360-degree view

0:49:04 > 0:49:11of its surroundings, along with crucial depth information.

0:49:11 > 0:49:18It is the key technology for a successful autonomous drive.

0:49:18 > 0:49:22This week, in the US, a mighty court case got under way

0:49:22 > 0:49:24as Google's autonomous car spin-off company

0:49:24 > 0:49:27Waymo and Uber locked horns in a battle that could have seen

0:49:27 > 0:49:31Uber's self-driving taxi plans stall.

0:49:31 > 0:49:35What was expected to be a three-week battle over who had access

0:49:35 > 0:49:38to the secret keys that make autonomous cars work was suddenly

0:49:38 > 0:49:41ended on Friday, as the two sides agreed to stop locking horns

0:49:41 > 0:49:43and work together.

0:49:43 > 0:49:48An out-of-court settlement seems to have sealed the deal.

0:49:48 > 0:49:50With that possible roadblock removed, Uber's plans to taxi us

0:49:50 > 0:49:53around without a driver are a step closer, and they're

0:49:53 > 0:49:57not stopping there.

0:49:57 > 0:50:01Uber continues to look to the future of transportation,

0:50:01 > 0:50:04which in just a few years might look very different to the way

0:50:04 > 0:50:05it looks now.

0:50:05 > 0:50:13Dan Simmons has been looking up.

0:50:13 > 0:50:15Even self-driving cabs will get stuck in jams,

0:50:15 > 0:50:18so this is Uber's vision.

0:50:18 > 0:50:21When you're tight for time, go by air.

0:50:21 > 0:50:26It's ambitious and so is the time scale.

0:50:26 > 0:50:30Our goals is by 2022 to launch our first demonstrator

0:50:30 > 0:50:33flights in Dallas and Los Angeles, to show that as a proof of concept

0:50:33 > 0:50:37that can work, and then work to scale by 2023 and 2025,

0:50:37 > 0:50:40so we're providing commercial flights to a lot of our riders,

0:50:40 > 0:50:46giving them a new way to travel.

0:50:46 > 0:50:49One of Uber's partners, Bell Helicopters, has shown

0:50:49 > 0:50:52off its design for a four-seater cabin, which could include a pilot.

0:50:52 > 0:50:55Here's their 360-view with the alternative set up -

0:50:55 > 0:50:59four seats, four passengers.

0:50:59 > 0:51:02The aircraft, like our cars, would navigate automatically.

0:51:02 > 0:51:09It's electric with a range of about 60 miles, they say.

0:51:09 > 0:51:12We've seen other designs for air taxis of late,

0:51:12 > 0:51:14including Chinese firm EHang's 184, which recently shuttled actual

0:51:14 > 0:51:21people in this autopiloted drone.

0:51:21 > 0:51:25And this air cab by German firm Volocopter, which uses 18 motors

0:51:25 > 0:51:32and nine separate battery packs - just in case.

0:51:32 > 0:51:35While NASA and the FAA are working on new air traffic control systems

0:51:35 > 0:51:40for this type of craft in the United States,

0:51:40 > 0:51:43it's the FAA that will have to be convinced self-piloting electric air

0:51:43 > 0:51:46cabs are safe.

0:51:46 > 0:51:49We will ask the applicants to come forward with engineering proposals

0:51:49 > 0:51:57and what tests they propose to do, so that we can assure that

0:51:59 > 0:52:02if there's a fire or a short or if something goes wrong

0:52:02 > 0:52:06during a flight, that somebody can safely land and get away from that

0:52:06 > 0:52:08aircraft before it does damage to people on the aircraft,

0:52:08 > 0:52:10or on the ground, for that matter.

0:52:10 > 0:52:11So, will it work?

0:52:11 > 0:52:12Here's Uber's case study.

0:52:12 > 0:52:18We've landed in LA, traffic's a nightmare and a taxi would take us

0:52:18 > 0:52:1980 minutes.

0:52:19 > 0:52:21Whereas the air trip to the sky port,

0:52:21 > 0:52:24plus a short transfer, is less than half an hour.

0:52:24 > 0:52:32And Uber says it could end up costing about the same amount.

0:52:32 > 0:52:35OK, there are many reasons why self-flying taxis sound like a good

0:52:35 > 0:52:37idea, but when you're saving less than one

0:52:37 > 0:52:45hour, Uber's dream will need to run smoothly to deliver.

0:52:53 > 0:52:55Apologies, Mr Simmons, very busy airspace right now.

0:52:55 > 0:52:58It's blade-to-blade up there.

0:52:58 > 0:53:02BLEEP.

0:53:02 > 0:53:04Unfortunately, the weather's closing in, Mr Simmons.

0:53:04 > 0:53:07We're not quite sure we're going to be able to get

0:53:07 > 0:53:08you in tonight.

0:53:08 > 0:53:12BLEEP.

0:53:12 > 0:53:16Really sorry, we're just cleaning out the cabin.

0:53:16 > 0:53:18BLEEP.

0:53:18 > 0:53:20You're two kilograms over, I'm afraid.

0:53:20 > 0:53:22Might want to lose the penguin?

0:53:22 > 0:53:26BLEEP.

0:53:26 > 0:53:26Ah!

0:53:26 > 0:53:30We're just recharging your taxi at the moment, Mr Simmons,

0:53:30 > 0:53:31it'll be a while.

0:53:31 > 0:53:35At least that last one shouldn't be too much of a problem.

0:53:35 > 0:53:37Uber have teamed up with EV specialists Charge Point

0:53:37 > 0:53:39and are predicting a four-minute charge up time.

0:53:39 > 0:53:45Now, that would be special.

0:53:45 > 0:53:48Sorry, you're running 17.5 seconds late and the pilot's had to cancel.

0:53:48 > 0:53:52Please do book again via the app.

0:53:52 > 0:53:55But perhaps the most challenging part of this project is to get us,

0:53:55 > 0:54:00the public, comfortable with the idea of taking an air taxi.

0:54:00 > 0:54:02When we think about consumer adoption of new technologies,

0:54:02 > 0:54:08this is not a problem that's novel or unique to air travel.

0:54:08 > 0:54:12We saw this with elevators, when they first came out,

0:54:12 > 0:54:14and actually, in order to get consumers comfortable with it,

0:54:14 > 0:54:22an elevator operator would remain in the elevator,

0:54:24 > 0:54:28even after it was made electronic, just to give consumers comfort.

0:54:28 > 0:54:32We're going to be doing the same with the autonomous vehicles right

0:54:32 > 0:54:34now as we have safety drivers staying in the car,

0:54:34 > 0:54:36explaining this sort of technology to riders,

0:54:36 > 0:54:39and the same will be true with our pilots.

0:54:39 > 0:54:42We will be launching with pilots who will serve not

0:54:42 > 0:54:43only as the operators of the flight,

0:54:43 > 0:54:46but as an ambassador to get riders comfortable with this

0:54:46 > 0:54:51new mode of transport, so soon enough they'll forget

0:54:51 > 0:54:54about its novelty and get back to their texting and making other

0:54:54 > 0:54:56use of their time during transit.

0:54:56 > 0:54:59Just like the Uber-Waymo court case over who owns the specialist tech

0:54:59 > 0:55:02that makes self-driving cars work, the creation of the flying cab

0:55:02 > 0:55:05will no doubt have its own dogfight in court.

0:55:05 > 0:55:13Perhaps that's another reason why Uber's keen to get in early.

0:55:14 > 0:55:17Flying high isn't fun for everyone, though.

0:55:17 > 0:55:24Ooh!

0:55:24 > 0:55:25Hello, world.

0:55:25 > 0:55:29Acrophobia, or fear of heights, is one of the most common phobias,

0:55:29 > 0:55:31but this virtual reality therapy hopes to help.

0:55:31 > 0:55:33Sweating again.

0:55:33 > 0:55:36Chan here can confidently fly a plane, but when it comes

0:55:36 > 0:55:41to heights in general, it's a different story.

0:55:41 > 0:55:44Oh, no.

0:55:44 > 0:55:48Oh, I've gotta move.

0:55:48 > 0:55:50Oh, I can't do it.

0:55:50 > 0:55:52Come back.

0:55:52 > 0:55:58I can't move while I'm out there.

0:55:58 > 0:56:00I need to be back here to do that.

0:56:00 > 0:56:01I couldn't go up the ladder.

0:56:01 > 0:56:03I just couldn't go up the ladder.

0:56:03 > 0:56:05I couldn't go over high bridges.

0:56:05 > 0:56:08If I drove to Wales, I went round the long way as opposed

0:56:08 > 0:56:10to going over the bridge.

0:56:10 > 0:56:13I just don't like open heights but I can jump in an aeroplane

0:56:13 > 0:56:16and fly an aeroplane - that's a completely different

0:56:16 > 0:56:16environment.

0:56:16 > 0:56:19In my head it is, at least, for sure.

0:56:19 > 0:56:19Welcome back.

0:56:19 > 0:56:22Oh, God, it is dark.

0:56:22 > 0:56:23Oh, it's dark.

0:56:23 > 0:56:25How are you feeling?

0:56:25 > 0:56:29Anxious, sweaty, nervous.

0:56:29 > 0:56:32Even though you've been to the process of doing this before...

0:56:32 > 0:56:33Yeah.

0:56:33 > 0:56:37..you still feel the same level of anxiety doing that now,

0:56:37 > 0:56:39Or would you say it's dramatically reduced?

0:56:39 > 0:56:40I'm way more confident.

0:56:40 > 0:56:43I've got much more confidence in doing it now than I did

0:56:43 > 0:56:44the first time round.

0:56:44 > 0:56:47Having taken part in this trial, using VR to recreate the sensation

0:56:47 > 0:56:51of being high up and dealing with that, he feels to some extent

0:56:51 > 0:56:54that he's overcome his phobia.

0:56:54 > 0:56:57I was on holiday with some friends, they were going

0:56:57 > 0:56:58on the roller-coasters.

0:56:58 > 0:57:05I talked about this VR thing that we were doing and they said

0:57:05 > 0:57:08"Well, then, you should be able to come on the ride."

0:57:08 > 0:57:11So I watched my family and my friends go round a couple

0:57:11 > 0:57:14more times and then just thought "Well, I can do this."

0:57:14 > 0:57:18If you look to your left, you'll see a basket of light balls.

0:57:18 > 0:57:21What I need you to do is throw the light balls down

0:57:21 > 0:57:25into the atrium.

0:57:25 > 0:57:28I think VR can treat pretty much any type of fear or phobia,

0:57:28 > 0:57:33so it might be, for example, a fear of a cat or a spider or dogs.

0:57:33 > 0:57:36What VR can enable you to do is relearn that actually

0:57:36 > 0:57:38you are safe in the situations you fear.

0:57:38 > 0:57:40The beauty of VR is, in fact, that disconnect.

0:57:40 > 0:57:43When you're there, you know actually you're not really

0:57:43 > 0:57:44in that environment.

0:57:44 > 0:57:47And that enables you to do things you wouldn't normally do in the real

0:57:47 > 0:57:51world, but all the scientific data says that the learning that you make

0:57:51 > 0:57:53in VR does transfer into the real world.

0:57:53 > 0:57:56So that's the potential, it makes people much more willing

0:57:56 > 0:57:58So that's the real potential in VR.

0:57:58 > 0:57:59It makes people much more willing

0:57:59 > 0:58:02to try things and to actually engage in therapy.

0:58:02 > 0:58:04Although I am slightly terrified of roller-coasters,

0:58:04 > 0:58:06I don't actually suffer from a fear of heights,

0:58:06 > 0:58:09but naturally, I wanted to have a go.

0:58:09 > 0:58:12OK, I did just suddenly get that funny kind of tingy feeling

0:58:12 > 0:58:13at my feet.

0:58:13 > 0:58:17I hope I don't drop the cat.

0:58:17 > 0:58:19But it was certainly an immersive VR experience.

0:58:19 > 0:58:23I believed at some points I was looking down over a building.

0:58:23 > 0:58:27I get how this could work and take you to a certain level that

0:58:27 > 0:58:29you could then do certain things in the real world.

0:58:29 > 0:58:31The concept here goes further, though.

0:58:31 > 0:58:34In this programme, you're going to try a series of tasks.

0:58:34 > 0:58:36Earlier this month, it was announced that the UK's

0:58:36 > 0:58:39National Health Service is invested in this idea of using virtual

0:58:39 > 0:58:45reality therapy to battle severe mental health issues,

0:58:45 > 0:58:47by putting sufferers in a virtual environment they would struggle

0:58:47 > 0:58:50with in the real world.

0:58:50 > 0:58:52This immersive approach, plus the availability of virtual

0:58:52 > 0:58:55therapists, could more readily provide more therapy to more people,

0:58:55 > 0:59:00at a lower cost.

0:59:00 > 0:59:04At the heart of all mental health problems are difficulties

0:59:04 > 0:59:07interacting in the world and with VR, we can put people back

0:59:07 > 0:59:11in the situations that trouble them and coach them in the best ways

0:59:11 > 0:59:15to think, feel and behave in those situations.

0:59:15 > 0:59:18We have got to test it, we have got to trial and make sure

0:59:18 > 0:59:22that things work, but the potential is enormous.

0:59:22 > 0:59:25That was Lara looking at how doctors may soon be veering away

0:59:25 > 0:59:28from traditional therapies and prescribing a good dose

0:59:28 > 0:59:31of virtual reality.

0:59:31 > 0:59:34That's it for the short cut of Click this week.

0:59:34 > 0:59:37The full-length version is waiting for you right now on iPlayer,

0:59:37 > 0:59:40and we are waiting for you on Facebook and on Twitter

0:59:40 > 0:59:46throughout every week too.

0:59:46 > 0:59:47We live @ BBCClick.

0:59:47 > 0:59:55Thanks for watching and we'll see you soon.

1:00:09 > 1:00:09Hello.

1:00:09 > 1:00:12This is Breakfast, with Ben Thompson and Naga Munchetty.

1:00:12 > 1:00:15A warning that UK charities could have their government funding

1:00:15 > 1:00:16withdrawn if they don't co-operate with authorities

1:00:16 > 1:00:24over safeguarding issues.

1:00:26 > 1:00:28It follows reports that some Oxfam workers used prostitutes

1:00:28 > 1:00:29in Haiti in 2010.

1:00:29 > 1:00:37It's facing further allegations this morning.

1:00:40 > 1:00:43Good morning.

1:00:43 > 1:00:44The damage caused by alcohol.

1:00:44 > 1:00:47A new parliamentary report says more than one-third of child deaths

1:00:47 > 1:00:50and serious injuries through neglect in England are linked

1:00:50 > 1:00:58to parental drinking.

1:00:58 > 1:01:01The Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson arrives in Myanmar to discuss

1:01:01 > 1:01:03the plight of Rohingya refugees with the de facto leader

1:01:03 > 1:01:05Aung San Suu Kyi.

1:01:05 > 1:01:05Good morning.

1:01:05 > 1:01:06In sport.

1:01:06 > 1:01:07It's a "May Day" For Wales.

1:01:07 > 1:01:11England make it two wins out of two with a hard-fought win over Wales

1:01:11 > 1:01:19at Twickenham after two dries from Johnny May.

1:01:23 > 1:01:26Temperatures could be at a record low for athletes in South Korea.

1:01:26 > 1:01:29We'll hear how Team GB are kitted out to cope.

1:01:29 > 1:01:30But what about the temperatures here?

1:01:30 > 1:01:31Nick has the weather.

1:01:31 > 1:01:41Good morning. A much colder feel to things today. Icy in places.

1:01:41 > 1:01:44Snow and hail in the north and west of the UK.

1:01:44 > 1:01:48I have all of your Sunday weather and a look at the week to come.

1:01:48 > 1:01:50Thank you very much, Nick.

1:01:50 > 1:01:51Good morning.

1:01:51 > 1:01:54Charities doing overseas aid work will lose government funding

1:01:54 > 1:01:56if they fail to ensure that vulnerable people

1:01:56 > 1:01:57are properly protected.

1:01:57 > 1:01:59That warning came from International Development Secretary Penny

1:01:59 > 1:01:59Mordaunt.

1:01:59 > 1:02:02She described the behaviour of some of Oxfam's workers in Haiti,

1:02:02 > 1:02:05who were accused of using prostitutes in the aftermath

1:02:05 > 1:02:06of the 2010 earthquake, as "horrific."

1:02:06 > 1:02:09The charity is also facing new allegations about some

1:02:09 > 1:02:10of its workers in Chad.

1:02:10 > 1:02:17Andy Moore reports.

1:02:17 > 1:02:20After Haiti, now, new allegations about the behaviour of some Oxfam

1:02:20 > 1:02:22workers in Chad in central Africa.

1:02:22 > 1:02:24They date back to 2006 and also involve prostitutes.

1:02:24 > 1:02:28The head of mission in Chad at the time was the same man

1:02:28 > 1:02:31who resigned from Oxfam five years later because of the scandal in

1:02:31 > 1:02:39Haiti.

1:02:42 > 1:02:45Oxfam said it was shocked and dismayed about the latest

1:02:45 > 1:02:47revelations from Chad.

1:02:47 > 1:02:49It said it couldn't corroborate the information but it highlighted

1:02:49 > 1:02:51unacceptable behaviour by a small number of people.

1:02:51 > 1:02:52The International Development Secretary, Penny Mordaunt,

1:02:52 > 1:02:55has now sent a strong warning to charities receiving EU money

1:02:55 > 1:02:58that those funds will be withdrawn unless they can prove

1:02:58 > 1:03:00they are cooperating fully on safeguarding issues.

1:03:00 > 1:03:01She said this.

1:03:01 > 1:03:04She called the behaviour by some Oxfam workers in Haiti "Horrific,"

1:03:04 > 1:03:07and said it was just one example of a wider issue

1:03:07 > 1:03:09on which her department was already taking action.

1:03:09 > 1:03:12The former Secretary of State for International Trade is also

1:03:12 > 1:03:20calling for tougher action.

1:03:34 > 1:03:37This is now an opportunity for everyone to make sure

1:03:37 > 1:03:39that there are very clear, not just guidelines,

1:03:39 > 1:03:42but actions, action, will be taken and money will be

1:03:42 > 1:03:45withdrawn as well quite frankly if there is inappropriate behaviour.

1:03:45 > 1:03:48Oxfam says that after Haiti, it set up a dedicated safeguarding

1:03:48 > 1:03:50team to deal with such issues.

1:03:50 > 1:03:52The charity finds itself at the centre of this particular

1:03:52 > 1:03:54scandal that the British government said is one example

1:03:54 > 1:03:56of a wider problem.

1:03:56 > 1:03:59Andy Moore, BBC News.

1:03:59 > 1:04:02Let's speak now to our political correspondent, Emma Vardy who's

1:04:02 > 1:04:03in our London newsroom.

1:04:03 > 1:04:09Emma, how significant are these warnings?

1:04:09 > 1:04:16What is most significant here is that it shows concerns over the

1:04:16 > 1:04:19behaviour of aid workers overseas is not just limited to this scandal

1:04:19 > 1:04:29over Oxfam. Penny Mordaunt said it is despicable this exists in the aid

1:04:29 > 1:04:33sector. Charities around the country will receive these letters asking

1:04:33 > 1:04:40them to ensure safeguarding, and to make sure any issues are flagged to

1:04:40 > 1:04:45the relevant authorities. It could not be much clearer. Anyone that

1:04:45 > 1:04:50does not stick to the letter of the law will not get government funding.

1:04:50 > 1:04:54Oxfam got £32 million of government money last year. The swift action

1:04:54 > 1:05:02pending boarded is taking shows she knows the potential this has to

1:05:02 > 1:05:05undermine public confidence in the way foreign aid money is spent. --

1:05:05 > 1:05:13penny

1:05:13 > 1:05:14penny -- Penny Mordaunt.

1:05:14 > 1:05:17More than a third of child deaths and serious injuries caused

1:05:17 > 1:05:20by neglect in England are linked to parents who drink too much

1:05:20 > 1:05:22alcohol, according to a new parliamentary report.

1:05:22 > 1:05:25It also found that nearly all councils have cut their budgets

1:05:25 > 1:05:26for alcohol support services.

1:05:26 > 1:05:28Our health correspondent, Adina Campbell, has more.

1:05:28 > 1:05:31Dad of six, Josh Conolly, knows first-hand about the damage

1:05:31 > 1:05:32alcohol can have on a family.

1:05:32 > 1:05:35His father was an alcoholic and died when he was nine.

1:05:35 > 1:05:38I remember one particular instant he smashed all the windows

1:05:38 > 1:05:42by the door and was waving a knife through one of the windows

1:05:42 > 1:05:44and police came up and took him away.

1:05:44 > 1:05:47At the same time you are trying to deal with it all,

1:05:47 > 1:05:50you are also trying to keep it a secret, and so it's

1:05:50 > 1:05:51about repressing it.

1:05:51 > 1:05:53You naturally get an unhealthy coping mechanism.

1:05:53 > 1:05:56The impacts of parents abusing alcohol in England are outlined

1:05:56 > 1:05:57in a new parliamentary report.

1:05:57 > 1:06:01It found more than a third of child deaths and injuries through neglect

1:06:01 > 1:06:02were linked to parents thinking alcohol.

1:06:02 > 1:06:05While nearly two thirds of all care applications involved misuse

1:06:05 > 1:06:06of alcohol or drugs.

1:06:06 > 1:06:08And children with alcohol-dependent parents had feelings of stigma,

1:06:08 > 1:06:09shame, and guilt.

1:06:09 > 1:06:12The report also used data from a Freedom of Information

1:06:12 > 1:06:15investigation which found almost all councils in England are cutting

1:06:15 > 1:06:23back their budgets for this kind of care.

1:06:36 > 1:06:39When we start to understand that addiction and alcoholism

1:06:39 > 1:06:42is all based on trauma, it's all based on some kind

1:06:42 > 1:06:45of trauma, if we understand that, we can begin to break the cycles

1:06:45 > 1:06:48and prevent, you know, addictions of the future.

1:06:48 > 1:06:56The government says work is under way on a new Children

1:07:01 > 1:07:03of Alcoholics Strategy in addition to new higher duties

1:07:03 > 1:07:04to target cheap alcohol.

1:07:04 > 1:07:07Josh has turned his life around, but he believes there are many

1:07:07 > 1:07:10children who will end up suffering in silence.

1:07:10 > 1:07:16Adina Campbell, BBC News.

1:07:16 > 1:07:19The Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson has met the Myanmar leader

1:07:19 > 1:07:22Aung San Suu Kyi for talks, a day after saying Rohigya refugees

1:07:22 > 1:07:24should be allowed a safe and dignified return.

1:07:24 > 1:07:27Nearly 700,000 Rohingya Muslims have crossed the border into neighbouring

1:07:27 > 1:07:29Bangladesh, after a crackdown by the Burmese military.

1:07:29 > 1:07:31Reeta Chakrabarti is travelling with the Foreign Secretary,

1:07:31 > 1:07:39and sent this report.

1:07:43 > 1:07:46There were smiles this morning as Boris Johnson shook hands

1:07:46 > 1:07:48with Aung San Suu Kyi in the capital, Naypyidaw,

1:07:48 > 1:07:52but the plight of the Rohingya people will be a difficult topic.

1:07:52 > 1:07:54The Burmese leaders has suffered a spectacular fall from grace

1:07:54 > 1:07:57in international public opinion after failing to defend the rights

1:07:57 > 1:07:58of the Rohingya.

1:07:58 > 1:08:01Boris Johnson met some of the refugees on a tour of one

1:08:01 > 1:08:04of the camps in Bangladesh yesterday, and said that

1:08:04 > 1:08:06international diplomacy needed to focus on a safe and dignified

1:08:06 > 1:08:13return to home for them.

1:08:13 > 1:08:15It's about finding a political solution, finding an answer

1:08:15 > 1:08:18in Myanmar from Burma, creating the conditions for a safe,

1:08:18 > 1:08:19dignified return for these people.

1:08:19 > 1:08:21That's what they want.

1:08:21 > 1:08:24They do want to go back, but they don't feel safe.

1:08:24 > 1:08:31But he admitted that right now that seemed like a distant prospect.

1:08:33 > 1:08:36Later today, Mr Johnson will be taken by the Myanmar military

1:08:36 > 1:08:39on a tour of the Rakhine State from where the refugees fled,

1:08:39 > 1:08:41alleging arson, looting, rape, and murder by soldiers

1:08:41 > 1:08:42and Buddhist mobs.

1:08:42 > 1:08:50Reeta Chakrabati, BBC News, Naypyidaw, in Myanmar.

1:08:50 > 1:08:53The Israeli military has described the airstrikes it carried out

1:08:53 > 1:08:55in Syria yesterday as probably the biggest of their kind

1:08:55 > 1:08:57in the last 30 years.

1:08:57 > 1:08:59The attacks took place after an Israeli military aircraft

1:08:59 > 1:09:00was brought down.

1:09:00 > 1:09:08A spokesman said 12 sites were hit, including four Iranian targets.

1:09:18 > 1:09:21The government is proposing that energy companies be allowed to see

1:09:21 > 1:09:24the personal data of some customers at risk of being in fuel poverty.

1:09:24 > 1:09:28The idea is part of a consultation looking at how best to protect

1:09:28 > 1:09:30people who could be struggling to pay their bills.

1:09:30 > 1:09:32Our business correspondent, Joe Lynam, explains.

1:09:32 > 1:09:34We all hate getting our energy bills, but for some,

1:09:34 > 1:09:37it can push them into real financial difficulties,

1:09:37 > 1:09:38known as "fuel poverty."

1:09:38 > 1:09:41Now the government wants to find a new way of automatically

1:09:41 > 1:09:44protecting up to 2 million energy users by letting suppliers know

1:09:44 > 1:09:48a lot more about them.

1:09:48 > 1:09:50It's launching a consultation into something called "data

1:09:50 > 1:09:55matching,"

1:09:55 > 1:09:57which could allow local authorities to share personal information

1:09:57 > 1:09:58with energy suppliers.

1:09:58 > 1:10:01But only with their consent, and if users are getting state

1:10:01 > 1:10:05benefits and are in financial trouble.

1:10:05 > 1:10:08Then they could automatically be placed on a cheaper safeguard tariff

1:10:08 > 1:10:11for their gas and electricity.

1:10:11 > 1:10:194 million people are already on that lower rate.

1:10:19 > 1:10:21The energy watchdog, Ofgem, says anyone placed

1:10:21 > 1:10:25on the new safeguard tariff could save £66 per year for each

1:10:25 > 1:10:31if this plan proceeds.

1:10:31 > 1:10:36That could be valuable as household energy bills are rising.

1:10:36 > 1:10:38Joe Lynam, BBC News.

1:10:38 > 1:10:41We all know that drinking too much alcohol can be damaging

1:10:41 > 1:10:44to our own health, but as we've been hearing this morning,

1:10:44 > 1:10:47the effects on the children of alcoholics can be devastating.

1:10:47 > 1:10:50Let's talk to two people now who have direct experience of this

1:10:50 > 1:10:53problem, Jo Huey, whose father was an alcoholic,

1:10:53 > 1:10:56and Tod Sulivan, who also had an alcoholic parent and now works

1:10:56 > 1:10:57in the sector.

1:10:57 > 1:10:59Good morning. Explain your situation. The statistics are

1:10:59 > 1:11:05staggering.My father was an alcoholic. Ever since I was as young

1:11:05 > 1:11:10as I can remember, he was a drinker. The home environment was very

1:11:10 > 1:11:15difficult in terms of not knowing what he was going to say, how he was

1:11:15 > 1:11:24going to react and behave. What is common is living on shells. You do

1:11:24 > 1:11:29not know what he is going to do, what he is going to say. I would

1:11:29 > 1:11:33hope he would be pleased to see me, but you never really knew what mood

1:11:33 > 1:11:46he would be in. He would come through the door and it is a

1:11:49 > 1:11:52through the door and it is a case of wondering if he is in a good mood,

1:11:52 > 1:11:56should I back off, will this be received in a good way? It creates

1:11:56 > 1:12:00anxiety. You do not know what to do. And for me, it was an emotionally

1:12:00 > 1:12:04and physically abuse of home, a lot of loneliness for me. And I felt

1:12:04 > 1:12:07very disconnected. I did not feel understood. I did not have a good

1:12:07 > 1:12:11relationship with my dad. He was absent. He spent a lot of time

1:12:11 > 1:12:17drinking and sat in his car, in his bedroom, and would not join us for

1:12:17 > 1:12:20dinner, breakfast, anything like that. He would very much separate

1:12:20 > 1:12:25himself off.One of the statistics were looking out from this

1:12:25 > 1:12:30parliamentary report into parental alcohol misuse, it shows one third

1:12:30 > 1:12:35of serious injuries of children in England are caused by neglect by

1:12:35 > 1:12:40parents who are drinking. Did you ever get to that point?For me, it

1:12:40 > 1:12:53never got as far as Accident and Emergency, GPs, everything in a home

1:12:53 > 1:12:57of drinking is a secret. I would guess those figures are low as

1:12:57 > 1:13:00nothing is reported.What she is describing, that leads into adult

1:13:00 > 1:13:04life as well. There are issues you have to deal with. It is not just

1:13:04 > 1:13:07what happens to children now, it is how it impacts society moving

1:13:07 > 1:13:11forward.Absolutely. It does not have to be a dramatic, obvious

1:13:11 > 1:13:15situation at home where you would expect services to get involved. My

1:13:15 > 1:13:22father was very high functioning. Services were never concerned. My

1:13:22 > 1:13:27experiences were different to those. The feelings and reactions I have

1:13:27 > 1:13:32two things have carried on all through my life. Understanding that

1:13:32 > 1:13:37is huge.How difficult is it to identify these problems? In a family

1:13:37 > 1:13:43unit, it is difficult to speak out. Where do you go for help?It is

1:13:43 > 1:13:49really difficult. You have to issues. If I am a child, I never

1:13:49 > 1:13:52want to tell people my parent is doing something wrong -- two issues.

1:13:52 > 1:13:58We think our childhood is normal, whoever we are. We do not want to be

1:13:58 > 1:14:03seen as telling tales. But you do not think your family is different

1:14:03 > 1:14:09to anyone else. That is why it is incredible to hear this other voice,

1:14:09 > 1:14:14it is so powerful.What difference does this mean for you in your adult

1:14:14 > 1:14:20life? Touching on that. How has it manifested?In so many ways. Living

1:14:20 > 1:14:26in a home of addiction is complex. So, there are things like becoming

1:14:26 > 1:14:30overly responsible because you have to help out in the home and do

1:14:30 > 1:14:38things you never had to do with role model parents. You can develop

1:14:38 > 1:14:43anxiety, PTSD is very undiagnosed and can affect you into your adult

1:14:43 > 1:14:48life. Depression, loneliness, the list goes on. In afraid of figures

1:14:48 > 1:14:55of authority. Very black-and-white thinking. Things like that.We are

1:14:55 > 1:14:59talking about this now. What needs to be done? It is all well and good

1:14:59 > 1:15:05the report is identifying these issues. So...It is about giving

1:15:05 > 1:15:08opportunities for people who have had these experiences to share them

1:15:08 > 1:15:12so they feel less alone and less afraid to come forward. Having

1:15:12 > 1:15:16individual areas, strategies, for dealing with it recognising each

1:15:16 > 1:15:24individual area is different. A big town is different to a coast, a

1:15:24 > 1:15:27city, different communities, and things like that. That is vital,

1:15:27 > 1:15:31appreciate each community is different. My belief is inside each

1:15:31 > 1:15:35community they have what they need to heal themselves. You just need to

1:15:35 > 1:15:39ask the questions to figure that out.Thank you, both of you, for

1:15:39 > 1:15:43coming in.Thank you.

1:15:43 > 1:15:47Let's have a look at the weather. Good

1:15:47 > 1:15:50Let's have a look at the weather. Good morning, a colder day today, an

1:15:50 > 1:15:54icy start in places with rain and snow clearing overnight,

1:15:54 > 1:15:58temperatures have dropped and ice on untreated surfaces and where we're

1:15:58 > 1:16:02getting wintry showers in the north-west initially... Elsewhere

1:16:02 > 1:16:06today there will be sunshine around, an improvement for many compare the

1:16:06 > 1:16:09two yesterday but some of these showers on a cold feel in date. --

1:16:09 > 1:16:18compared to. -- collar, cold feeling date. The showers poised to move him

1:16:18 > 1:16:23from the Atlantic -- cold feeling day. A lot of these showers are

1:16:23 > 1:16:27falling today as snow or hail in these cold north-westerly winds.

1:16:27 > 1:16:31Where you see the Greenland, these are the clear areas to southern and

1:16:31 > 1:16:37eastern parts where we're getting sunshine -- green land. Showers

1:16:37 > 1:16:41continue to pack into western Scotland, in the hills, several

1:16:41 > 1:16:45centimetres of snow accumulating and the wind drifting into Northern

1:16:45 > 1:16:49Ireland, north-west England and into the Pennines and snow to low levels

1:16:49 > 1:16:58as well, maybe some temporary accumulations in places.

1:16:58 > 1:17:02accumulations in places. Some sunny spells. A colder day, temperatures

1:17:02 > 1:17:07around three to seven. Into the hills of northern England, Scotland

1:17:07 > 1:17:13and Northern Ireland, around freezing all day long. Overnight

1:17:13 > 1:17:16while many southern and eastern parts clear up, we continue with

1:17:16 > 1:17:20showers moving into the north-west, many falling as no. Accumulations

1:17:20 > 1:17:26especially but not just into the hills and icy conditions as the

1:17:26 > 1:17:31temperatures dip -- as snow. A frosty start, icy in places. The

1:17:31 > 1:17:35snow showers are still there pushing into western Scotland, easing later

1:17:35 > 1:17:40in the date. For many it is a dry sunny day on Monday, feeling less

1:17:40 > 1:17:45cold as the wind pivots down to a south-westerly later in the day --

1:17:45 > 1:17:50later in the day. Monday night into Tuesday night, initially the winds

1:17:50 > 1:17:55will pick up, gales along western parts but turning windier for a time

1:17:55 > 1:17:59and then as the front moves across the UK into Tuesday morning, rain,

1:17:59 > 1:18:03sleet and snow and the risk of significant snow into Scotland,

1:18:03 > 1:18:07parts of northern England as Tuesday begins perhaps with an impact on

1:18:07 > 1:18:11travel. We'll keep you updated on that. As the week plays out,

1:18:11 > 1:18:15changeable, further weather systems coming from the Atlantic at times

1:18:15 > 1:18:22with rain and snow and particularly snow in northern parts of the UK,

1:18:22 > 1:18:26not just on hills, so destructive snow and it will often be windy with

1:18:26 > 1:18:29gales at times, especially in the west and that's how your week is

1:18:29 > 1:18:38shaping up.Use of all the good stuff for us! -- you say.

1:18:38 > 1:18:38We love

1:18:38 > 1:18:41We love talking about sleep on Breakfast for obvious reasons. Is

1:18:41 > 1:18:50this your dream job? Three days in bed solid just watching box sets,

1:18:50 > 1:18:56chilling out, doing not much else. Perfect. Don't you get to the point

1:18:56 > 1:19:03when you just want to do something else, it is too much?

1:19:03 > 1:19:05They're called pillownauts and they're actually lounging around

1:19:05 > 1:19:08so scientists can learn more about the effects of zero gravity

1:19:08 > 1:19:09on astronauts in space.

1:19:09 > 1:19:11Hannah Meredith has been to meet them.

1:19:11 > 1:19:15This is the nearest I'll be to being in space.

1:19:15 > 1:19:20It's life but not as we know it.

1:19:20 > 1:19:24These are two of ten volunteers spending three days in a bit that is

1:19:24 > 1:19:27tipped by minus six degrees.

1:19:27 > 1:19:28The head lower than the body to simulate

1:19:28 > 1:19:30the effects of zero gravity.

1:19:30 > 1:19:32Pillownauts is the term used for healthy participants

1:19:32 > 1:19:35that undertake bed rest studies and they immitate being astronauts

1:19:35 > 1:19:36but lying in bed.

1:19:36 > 1:19:38On earth, our bodies are continually working against gravity

1:19:38 > 1:19:46but in space, weightlessness creates problems.

1:19:46 > 1:19:48They have muscle wasting and develop osteoporosis.

1:19:48 > 1:19:52They come back to earth prediabetic and that is because they are being

1:19:52 > 1:19:55so inactive in space, they are not contracting their muscles.

1:19:55 > 1:19:56The trial is running alongside

1:19:56 > 1:19:58a project by the European Space Agency.

1:19:58 > 1:20:01Blood tests and muscle biopsies monitor how the body is coping

1:20:01 > 1:20:05but how are the pillownauts themselves getting on?

1:20:05 > 1:20:08You're slightly upside down so it's not like literally hanging upside

1:20:08 > 1:20:11down but there's a weird distribution of sensation

1:20:11 > 1:20:12in your body.

1:20:12 > 1:20:14After a while I just got used to it

1:20:14 > 1:20:18and then you didn't really have any discomfort.

1:20:18 > 1:20:20It just feels like you're lying in bed.

1:20:20 > 1:20:22I watched an entire Netflix series yesterday.

1:20:22 > 1:20:25That got me through the day.

1:20:25 > 1:20:28Today, I've more freedom with my arms so I'll be

1:20:28 > 1:20:29writing my thesis.

1:20:29 > 1:20:31Mars and Earth are neighbours but it is estimated it

1:20:31 > 1:20:34could still take nine months for us to get there.

1:20:34 > 1:20:37With Scientists wanting humans on Mars by the 2030s,

1:20:37 > 1:20:40they are working to make sure our bodies can withstand the journey.

1:20:40 > 1:20:46All the money's being funnelled into these long-term bed rest

1:20:46 > 1:20:50projects at the moment because we're rapidly trying to develop the best

1:20:50 > 1:20:53interventions we can to make sure if we get an astronaut to Mars,

1:20:53 > 1:20:55that they can undertake their duties.

1:20:55 > 1:20:58After three days in bed, there will be three days

1:20:58 > 1:21:00rehab to observe the return-to-earth effect.

1:21:00 > 1:21:03A small step in the world of space exploration but all part

1:21:03 > 1:21:06of the giant leap toward manned missions to Mars.

1:21:06 > 1:21:09Hannah Meredith, BBC News, Nottingham.

1:21:09 > 1:21:14That's not what I had in mind, I thought it would be about duvets and

1:21:14 > 1:21:20pillows.It didn't look that relaxing, did it?Time to look at

1:21:20 > 1:21:21the papers.

1:21:27 > 1:21:30The astrophysicist Carol Mundell is with us to tell us what's caught her

1:21:30 > 1:21:37eye. Good morning. The first story is in the Times, safety of a tower

1:21:37 > 1:21:43blocks, in the light of Grenfell, but this is slightly different?This

1:21:43 > 1:21:48is a very tall tower that's been planned for London. Its 771 feet

1:21:48 > 1:21:56tall. They only have one set of stairs as a fire escape and the

1:21:56 > 1:21:59safety inspectors have looked at this and after Grenfell, it's very

1:21:59 > 1:22:04topical, looking at the safety of our skyscrapers, but there's lots of

1:22:04 > 1:22:10technology in this tower, they are pretty expensive if the sprinkler

1:22:10 > 1:22:14systems work that's fine but the idea is we should have built and

1:22:14 > 1:22:19braces, so having two sets of stairs in the modern day is a good thing.A

1:22:19 > 1:22:23similar issue when it came to Grenfell because the issue was as it

1:22:23 > 1:22:30was built, the tower was safe because you could stay in place and

1:22:30 > 1:22:34the fire would burn itself out, but the modifications made since then...

1:22:34 > 1:22:39The key area is very so in practice you want belt and braces so if

1:22:39 > 1:22:43anything fails there is another safe way to get out.If you're a designer

1:22:43 > 1:22:47you want more floor space, apartments and offices.One set of

1:22:47 > 1:22:54stairs isn't too much to argue.The world of beekeeping is always

1:22:54 > 1:22:58fascinating, it feels like a very Sundays story.This is a lovely

1:22:58 > 1:23:03story because it's very traditional but also high-tech. This is a father

1:23:03 > 1:23:06and son in Byron Bay and Australia and they spent many years working on

1:23:06 > 1:23:11a device to get the honey out of the hive without having to disturb the

1:23:11 > 1:23:17bees, because bees are in decline and this is a worry for biodiversity

1:23:17 > 1:23:22and a lot of our agriculture relies on bees.If you think about the

1:23:22 > 1:23:26basic action of taking... You take them out, kicked them out of their

1:23:26 > 1:23:30home, raid their home and put them back into replenish their home?This

1:23:30 > 1:23:34is a non-invasive way of doing this so the cells in the beehive rotate,

1:23:34 > 1:23:38the honey comes out, the bees don't know anything about it and the other

1:23:38 > 1:23:42part of this story is they thought they would raise money by crowd

1:23:42 > 1:23:46sourcing online and they have made millions, so they are stunned

1:23:46 > 1:23:50financially and they have helped the bees so that's a great story.This

1:23:50 > 1:23:56device is on sale now?For about $380, people are buying it online

1:23:56 > 1:23:59and they've raised literally millions for this so hopefully it

1:23:59 > 1:24:03will all of lotion I is the industry.We've talked a lot about

1:24:03 > 1:24:09this this week -- hopefully it will revolutionise. Early man and our

1:24:09 > 1:24:16heritage. In the Observer we are talking about Cheddar Gorge in

1:24:16 > 1:24:22Somerset.The ancient man was discovered in 1901. Recently they

1:24:22 > 1:24:27have found the DNA matches with a gentleman in the village, which is

1:24:27 > 1:24:30incredible, that link into history and they've been able to reconstruct

1:24:30 > 1:24:36what they think ancient man would have looked like, dark skin, dark

1:24:36 > 1:24:40hair and bright blue eyes so it gives us an idea about the heritage

1:24:40 > 1:24:44of our predecessors in terms of the hunter gatherers around at the time.

1:24:44 > 1:24:49Also the story about migration. There's a great quote, it says

1:24:49 > 1:24:54migration clearly has been the stand standard agent for bringing about

1:24:54 > 1:24:59cultural change. We think of it as new but...40,000 news, people move

1:24:59 > 1:25:05and mix and that gives us greater DNA diversity -- 40,000 years.This

1:25:05 > 1:25:12is from the Mail?That's right.The development of a skin cancer

1:25:12 > 1:25:17injection?That's right. This is a way to vaccinate patients that are

1:25:17 > 1:25:20particularly susceptible to one of the more deadly kinds of melanoma

1:25:20 > 1:25:24and this new vaccine is particularly effective they think for survival

1:25:24 > 1:25:29rates after five years. Medics will measure survival at one, five and

1:25:29 > 1:25:34ten years. This is a way to target the patients for whom this will be

1:25:34 > 1:25:38most effective and potentially immunise them against developing the

1:25:38 > 1:25:43kind of aggressive skin cancer they may be susceptible to. It actually

1:25:43 > 1:25:47attacks or measures how cells behave and how the immune system actually

1:25:47 > 1:25:51responds to these cancer cells so potentially very powerful for the

1:25:51 > 1:25:53patients for whom it will be relevant.

1:25:53 > 1:25:58They are targeting it and it diminishes the impact of when you're

1:25:58 > 1:26:02being given medicine, it targets the whole body?That's right, it's

1:26:02 > 1:26:05important the right people get it. It won't be relevant for everyone

1:26:05 > 1:26:10but for those that needed, this will be very effective. Obviously with

1:26:10 > 1:26:14all the same provisos to be safe in the sun and those kinds of

1:26:14 > 1:26:17conditions around skin cancer, this a particular kind.

1:26:17 > 1:26:24Can I pick your brains in astronomy terms?Please do.Do we have the

1:26:24 > 1:26:28blue suit and the red blood Moon in the last couple of years, what is

1:26:28 > 1:26:32the next big thing in the skies? I think the next big thing will be

1:26:32 > 1:26:39the first photograph of the event horizon from a black hole.Roll

1:26:39 > 1:26:44back! What is that, event Horizon, blackhole?

1:26:44 > 1:26:49A black hole is a region in space where gravity is so strong that not

1:26:49 > 1:26:53even light can get out, we have super black holes at the centre of

1:26:53 > 1:26:57the Milky Way, it's a million times the mass of the sun and it's the

1:26:57 > 1:27:01size of the solar system and it is sitting there with material spinning

1:27:01 > 1:27:05around it. Last year scientists used a network of radio telescopes around

1:27:05 > 1:27:10the globe, they used the Earth as a giant telescope, to peer into the

1:27:10 > 1:27:15heart of the Milky Way to the centre of the blackhole and they analysed

1:27:15 > 1:27:22the data, it's very complex, they've analysed the data for the last year

1:27:22 > 1:27:26and they're hoping this year will be the year when we can show the first

1:27:26 > 1:27:30time the shadowing of that blackhole as it shadows the material around

1:27:30 > 1:27:35it. That for me is a state up moment...Which will happen?We're

1:27:35 > 1:27:39hoping in a few moments but we're waiting to see how the data analysis

1:27:39 > 1:27:46goes so watch this space. -- stay up.Thanks for the Tees, see you in

1:27:46 > 1:27:47about an hour!

1:27:47 > 1:27:50The Andrew Marr Show is back at nine this morning on BBC One.

1:27:50 > 1:27:52What's coming up, Andrew?

1:27:52 > 1:27:57All across the papers, meltdown in the charity sector, not just Oxfam

1:27:57 > 1:28:00but Save the Children, many other great British institutions under

1:28:00 > 1:28:05fire and I'm joined by the Minister in charge of that, the International

1:28:05 > 1:28:09Development Secretary Penny Mordaunt and I'm talking to Labour's Andrew

1:28:09 > 1:28:12Whittingham and two of the arch Remainers plotting in Parliament

1:28:12 > 1:28:17against Brexit, Anna Soubry and Chuka Umunna, and the leader of

1:28:17 > 1:28:22Ukip, Henry Bolton, who's in trouble around the relationship with his

1:28:22 > 1:28:26former girlfriend and those tweets so a busy hour at 9am.It's always

1:28:26 > 1:28:28busy, Andrew, thanks very much!

1:28:28 > 1:28:33Coming up before the end of the programme:

1:28:33 > 1:28:36They've always had the Royal seal of approval,

1:28:36 > 1:28:39but Corgis fell out of fashion for a while.

1:28:39 > 1:28:43We'll hear how they've finally been removed from an at risk list

1:28:43 > 1:28:48thanks to the popularity of the TV show The Crown.

1:28:48 > 1:28:51Were going to have a dog on the sofa as well.

1:28:51 > 1:28:54Stay with us, headlines coming up.

1:29:30 > 1:29:30Hello.

1:29:30 > 1:29:33This is Breakfast with Ben Thompson and Naga Munchetty.

1:29:33 > 1:29:33Good morning.

1:29:33 > 1:29:38Here's a summary of today's main stories from BBC News.

1:29:38 > 1:29:41Charities doing overseas aid work will lose funding if they fail

1:29:41 > 1:29:43to ensure that vulnerable people are properly protectedm,

1:29:43 > 1:29:44the government has warned.

1:29:44 > 1:29:46International Development Secretary, Penny Mordaunt, has condemned

1:29:46 > 1:29:49as "Horrific" the behaviour of some of Oxfam's workers in Haiti,

1:29:49 > 1:29:51who were accused of using prostitutes in the aftermath

1:29:51 > 1:29:52of the 2010 earthquake.

1:29:52 > 1:29:55The charity is also facing new allegations about some

1:29:55 > 1:30:03of its workers in Chad.

1:30:08 > 1:30:11More than a third of child deaths and serious injuries caused

1:30:11 > 1:30:14by neglect in England are linked to parents who have a problem

1:30:14 > 1:30:16with alcohol, according to a new parliamentary report.

1:30:16 > 1:30:20The study, which was commissioned by a group of MPs, also found that

1:30:20 > 1:30:22nearly all councils in England have cut funding

1:30:22 > 1:30:23to alcohol support services.

1:30:23 > 1:30:26The Department of Health said it was working to see what support

1:30:26 > 1:30:28it could offer to families.

1:30:28 > 1:30:31The Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson has met the Myanmar leader

1:30:31 > 1:30:34Aung San Suu Kyi for talks, a day after saying Rohigya refugees

1:30:34 > 1:30:36should be allowed a safe and dignified return.

1:30:36 > 1:30:39Nearly 700,000 Rohingya Muslims have crossed the border into neighbouring

1:30:39 > 1:30:47Bangladesh, after a crackdown by the Burmese military.

1:30:49 > 1:30:53The Israeli military has described the airstrikes it carried out

1:30:53 > 1:30:55in Syria yesterday as probably the biggest of their kind

1:30:55 > 1:30:57in the last 30 years.

1:30:57 > 1:30:59The attacks took place after an Israeli military aircraft

1:30:59 > 1:31:00was brought down.

1:31:00 > 1:31:03A spokesman said 12 sites were hit, including four Iranian targets.

1:31:03 > 1:31:05The attacks took place after an Israeli military aircraft

1:31:05 > 1:31:12was brought down.

1:31:12 > 1:31:15The government is proposing that energy companies be allowed to see

1:31:15 > 1:31:18the personal data of some customers at risk of being in fuel poverty.

1:31:18 > 1:31:22The idea is part of a consultation looking at how best to protect

1:31:22 > 1:31:25people who could be struggling to pay their bills -

1:31:25 > 1:31:28and suggests that they could be moved onto special lower tariffs.

1:31:28 > 1:31:30The government thinks as many as two million people might

1:31:30 > 1:31:36benefit from scheme.

1:31:36 > 1:31:46And now for the latest from the winter Olympics. Interesting. The

1:31:46 > 1:31:52weather claimed some events.Some of them have been cancelled. Whatever

1:31:52 > 1:31:57way you look at it, it will be an incredible performance for Musgrave.

1:31:57 > 1:32:14He is currently in a silver medal performance. How is it going?

1:32:14 > 1:32:16performance. How is it going?Well, closing stages of the 30 kilometres

1:32:16 > 1:32:21skiathalon. He was in silver medal position, but a leader is out in

1:32:21 > 1:32:29front. Quite

1:32:29 > 1:32:32front. Quite a few skiiers in the mix. Andrew is currently seventh. He

1:32:32 > 1:32:36has just crossed the finish line. Unfortunately, no medal for Andrew.

1:32:36 > 1:32:43He does have his best events to come, the 15 kilometre skiathalon.

1:32:43 > 1:32:51He could yet get a medal. He finishes in seventh. The last best

1:32:51 > 1:32:59result was 29th, that was Andrew himself back in Sochi in 2014. A

1:32:59 > 1:33:03huge improvement for him. He will take real confidence going into the

1:33:03 > 1:33:1615 kilometre ski event.

1:33:18 > 1:33:2115 kilometre ski event. I imagine it is cold. A bit problematic for

1:33:21 > 1:33:24today. Tell us what's been cancelled.It caused a huge problem.

1:33:24 > 1:33:30Snow is falling. Visibility is not great. With windchill, it is -32,

1:33:30 > 1:33:33pretty chilly. I have all of my layers on. It has caused absolute

1:33:33 > 1:33:39schedule chaos.

1:33:46 > 1:33:48schedule chaos. The men's 100 metre final is not on, well, its

1:33:48 > 1:33:51equivalent. It has been postponed. This morning, the slope style

1:33:51 > 1:34:01qualifiers

1:34:02 > 1:34:04qualifiers for the women was abandoned. All 27 competitors,

1:34:04 > 1:34:12including Amy Fuller from Britain, they go through to the final.

1:34:19 > 1:34:21they go through to the final. Just Amy Fuller representing Britain in

1:34:21 > 1:34:26the slopestyle.

1:34:29 > 1:34:32the slopestyle. 17-year-old Red Gerard from the USA, a surprise

1:34:32 > 1:34:39winner. No Britons. We failed to poll by yesterday. Red Gerard was in

1:34:39 > 1:34:43disbelief. He could not believe that he got the gold medal. The wind is

1:34:43 > 1:34:47causing problems. Events later on tonight, we will have to see whether

1:34:47 > 1:35:00they get affected by the conditions. The men's downhill postponed, the

1:35:00 > 1:35:03women's slopestyle, cancelled. It is getting pretty cold.Go have a hot

1:35:03 > 1:35:09chocolate. That is it from Pyeongchang.

1:35:09 > 1:35:12We're here on the BBC News Channel until 9am this morning,

1:35:12 > 1:35:16and this is what is coming up before the end of the programme.

1:35:16 > 1:35:20The Travel Show team have been to a theme park with a difference

1:35:20 > 1:35:20in central Mexico

1:35:20 > 1:35:22where they recreate illegal US

1:35:22 > 1:35:24border crossings in attempt to save young lives.

1:35:24 > 1:35:27It's the biggest party on Earth, and the lead role has

1:35:27 > 1:35:31always gone to a Brazilian.

1:35:31 > 1:35:31Until now.

1:35:31 > 1:35:35We've been to meet the British woman wowing the crowds as Rio's Carnival

1:35:35 > 1:35:35Queen.

1:35:35 > 1:35:37They've always had the royal seal of approval,

1:35:37 > 1:35:40but Corgis fell out of fashion for a while.

1:35:40 > 1:35:43We'll hear how they've finally been removed from an "at-risk" list

1:35:43 > 1:35:45thanks to the popularity of the TV show "The Crown."

1:35:45 > 1:35:48All that to come on the BBC News Channel.

1:35:48 > 1:35:51But this is where we say goodbye to viewers on BBC One.

1:35:51 > 1:35:59Bye for now.