17/02/2018

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0:00:06 > 0:00:08Hello, this is Breakfast,

0:00:08 > 0:00:10with Naga Munchetty and Charlie Stayt.

0:00:10 > 0:00:13Donald Trump visits survivors of the Florida High School shootings.

0:00:13 > 0:00:17The US President and the First Lady have been to the hospital

0:00:17 > 0:00:20where the injured were taken in the aftermath of the attack.

0:00:20 > 0:00:23The first funerals have been held amid an outpouring of grief

0:00:23 > 0:00:30and anger from the families of the victims.

0:00:40 > 0:00:44Good morning, it's Saturday 17 February.

0:00:44 > 0:00:47Also this morning: Theresa May will today warn EU leaders that

0:00:47 > 0:00:52public safety will suffer if they block a post-Brexit security deal.

0:00:52 > 0:01:00The President of Haiti says that the Oxfam scandal could be

0:01:00 > 0:01:03the "tip of the iceberg" as he accuses a second aid

0:01:03 > 0:01:03charity of misconduct.

0:01:03 > 0:01:04The future of UKIP.

0:01:04 > 0:01:08An emergency meeting will be held later to decide whether Henry Bolton

0:01:08 > 0:01:10should remain as the party's leader.

0:01:10 > 0:01:13In sport, a famous, second medal for Great Britain at the winter

0:01:13 > 0:01:13Olympics.

0:01:13 > 0:01:17At just 19, Izzy Atkin has won a bronze, after a brilliant aeriel

0:01:17 > 0:01:19display in the women's slope style.

0:01:19 > 0:01:21A first ever medal for Britain on skis.

0:01:21 > 0:01:24And beehives, bobs and blow dries.

0:01:24 > 0:01:26Our entertainment correspondent Colin Paterson takes a rather

0:01:26 > 0:01:33personal trip back through the history of hairdressing.

0:01:33 > 0:01:35And Sarah has the weather for us.

0:01:35 > 0:01:39And Sarah has the weather for us. Good morning, a chilly start to the

0:01:39 > 0:01:43day, a little bit of patchy rain forecast, the best of the sunshine

0:01:43 > 0:01:46towards the south-east of England. I will bring you a full forecast in

0:01:46 > 0:01:49about 15 minutes.

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

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

0:01:51 > 0:01:53President Trump has met survivors of Wednesday's high school shooting

0:01:53 > 0:01:56in Florida at the hospital where they're being treated.

0:01:56 > 0:01:58Mr Trump also thanked the emergency services and medical staff

0:01:58 > 0:02:01who treated those wounded when the accused, Nikolas Cruz,

0:02:01 > 0:02:02opened fire, killing 17 people.

0:02:02 > 0:02:08Barbara Plett-Usher reports.

0:02:09 > 0:02:15The funerals have begun. These students were saying goodbye to a

0:02:15 > 0:02:1814-year-old classmate. They and their parents have been

0:02:18 > 0:02:1914-year-old classmate. They and their parents have been calling to

0:02:19 > 0:02:22action from President dropped so other teenagers won't die this way.

0:02:22 > 0:02:26He and the first Lady visited some of the injured still in hospital,

0:02:26 > 0:02:31including a woman who had been shot four times. He congratulated the

0:02:31 > 0:02:37medical staff.Dig a laws need to be changed Mr President?But ignored a

0:02:37 > 0:02:41question about tougher gun control. This is where the President is in

0:02:41 > 0:02:45his element, meeting first responders who rescued the wind and

0:02:45 > 0:02:52captured the killer. He praised their speed and bravery. His wife

0:02:52 > 0:02:57thanked them for protecting the children.They are our future, and

0:02:57 > 0:03:00let's take care of them are colours they went through a lot and what

0:03:00 > 0:03:08they experienced, we need to take care of them.The president is

0:03:08 > 0:03:11talking about making schools safer and has linked the violence to

0:03:11 > 0:03:14mental health issues rather than guns. A young man who carried out

0:03:14 > 0:03:19the attack, Nikolas Cruz, was a troubled youth loved guns and found

0:03:19 > 0:03:23it easy to buy them. It has emerged that the EI ignored a tipoff about

0:03:23 > 0:03:27him last month. The caller warned he had the potential to carry out a

0:03:27 > 0:03:34school shooting. -- the FBI. Mistakes by law informants -- law

0:03:34 > 0:03:39enforcement at a new twist to a grim argument. Mass shootings in America

0:03:39 > 0:03:45revived debate about gun control. But an issue -- the school shooting

0:03:45 > 0:03:50like this one boils the issue down to our question, how can we keep our

0:03:50 > 0:03:54children safe, and the people he will judge their president on how he

0:03:54 > 0:04:01responds to that. 13 Russians have been charged with interfering with

0:04:01 > 0:04:07the pretty 16 US development in the FBI investigation. Among the

0:04:07 > 0:04:14allegations are that they promoted disparaging information about

0:04:14 > 0:04:18Hillary Clinton. The Russian government says the allegations are

0:04:18 > 0:04:20absurd.

0:04:20 > 0:04:23Theresa May is expected to urge the European Union to put aside

0:04:23 > 0:04:25'political doctrine and ideology' and sign up to a post-Brexit

0:04:25 > 0:04:27security treaty with Britain.

0:04:27 > 0:04:30At a conference in Munich, she is expected to say that nothing

0:04:30 > 0:04:33must get in the way of Britain and the EU helping each other

0:04:33 > 0:04:34to keep people safe.

0:04:34 > 0:04:36Our chief political correspondent, Vicki Young, reports.

0:04:36 > 0:04:41In Berlin, with Angela Merkel, the Prime Minister called for a deep and

0:04:41 > 0:04:45special trading relationship with the EU after Brexit. But she is also

0:04:45 > 0:04:50asking for a unique arrangement on security.I will reiterate that the

0:04:50 > 0:04:55UK remains unconditionally committed to European security, and set out my

0:04:55 > 0:04:59vision for a unique new partnership between the EU and the UK. On

0:04:59 > 0:05:03defence, information sharing, security and law enforcement. We

0:05:03 > 0:05:06must work together and use all levers at our disposal to keep

0:05:06 > 0:05:11people across Europe safe will stop the thrust of her argument is that

0:05:11 > 0:05:16the UK is a special case, offering substantial defence resources and

0:05:16 > 0:05:20expertise in counterterrorism.The Prime Minister will say that failure

0:05:20 > 0:05:24to sign up to a new security treaty would have damaging consequences,

0:05:24 > 0:05:28playing into the hands of our enemies, who would like nothing more

0:05:28 > 0:05:32than to see Europe divided it comes after the head of MI6 joined with

0:05:32 > 0:05:36his French and German counterpart, to appeal to continued intelligence

0:05:36 > 0:05:41sharing after Brexit. Mrs May will tell EU leaders not to let their

0:05:41 > 0:05:46deep-seated ideology put Europe's citizens in danger. The hope is that

0:05:46 > 0:05:49the EU will take a practical approach, because they accept that

0:05:49 > 0:05:53continuing to work getter is mutually beneficial. -- work

0:05:53 > 0:05:54together.

0:05:54 > 0:05:58Theresa May will be making her speech just after 8:30 this morning.

0:05:58 > 0:06:01We'll bring that live to you as it happens.

0:06:01 > 0:06:03The President of Haiti has called for an investigation

0:06:03 > 0:06:06into the activities of aid agencies working in his country,

0:06:06 > 0:06:09saying that the sex scandal involving some Oxfam workers

0:06:09 > 0:06:12after the 2010 earthquake was just the tip of the iceberg.

0:06:12 > 0:06:14He told the Reuters news agency that one charity,

0:06:14 > 0:06:16Medecins Sans Frontiers, had repatriated some its staff

0:06:16 > 0:06:18from Haiti without any explanation.

0:06:18 > 0:06:26John McManus reports.

0:06:26 > 0:06:33Haiti in the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake. Oxfam has been on the

0:06:33 > 0:06:36defensive over allegations that some of its staff paid prostitutes here.

0:06:36 > 0:06:40I always drink of working for them... This woman who spoke an

0:06:40 > 0:06:45honest -- this and who spoke anonymously to the BBC says she was

0:06:45 > 0:06:50attacked by a colleague.He pinned me up against the wall, it was

0:06:50 > 0:06:56groping me, grabbing me, kissing me and I was just trying to shove him

0:06:56 > 0:07:02off. And got him off eventually and he got mad and he threw his class at

0:07:02 > 0:07:08me.Now, Haiti's president Jovenel Moise has said other charities also

0:07:08 > 0:07:13have questions to answer and he has made a specific allegation against

0:07:13 > 0:07:16Medecins Sans Frontiers, also known as Doctors without Borders, who

0:07:16 > 0:07:20sends medical staff around the world. The President said MSF had to

0:07:20 > 0:07:24repatriate about 17 people for misconduct, without any explanation

0:07:24 > 0:07:36why. In response, MSF said:

0:07:38 > 0:07:43MSF has already admitted that it fired 19 staff members last year

0:07:43 > 0:07:47after allegations of harassment or sexual assault. So how widespread is

0:07:47 > 0:07:55the problem?Oxfam and not alone in this, every agency in the sector has

0:07:55 > 0:08:00the problem that we work in a sector that attracts the vulnerable, that

0:08:00 > 0:08:04works sorry supports honourable people.They're for attracts

0:08:04 > 0:08:10predators. Meanwhile Oxfam's UK had says the evidence in Haiti were a

0:08:10 > 0:08:20disgrace but also told the Guardian newspaper that:

0:08:21 > 0:08:25certainly the intense scrutiny of the aid sector is unlikely to stop

0:08:25 > 0:08:29soon.

0:08:29 > 0:08:31UKIP members will vote for or against sacking their current

0:08:31 > 0:08:34leader at an emergency meeting in Birmingham today.

0:08:34 > 0:08:36The party's National Executive Committee backed a vote of no

0:08:36 > 0:08:40confidence in Henry Bolton last month, but he has refused to step

0:08:40 > 0:08:43down after it emerged his former girlfriend had sent a series

0:08:43 > 0:08:45of racist messages about Prince Harry's fiance,

0:08:45 > 0:08:49Meghan Markle.

0:08:49 > 0:08:54British soldiers

0:08:54 > 0:08:57British soldiers are to be deployed to Africa to boost the fight

0:08:57 > 0:08:58against illegal wildlife poaching.

0:08:58 > 0:09:02They will train rangers in Malawi to find and stop poachers,

0:09:02 > 0:09:04in an expansion of a successful pilot scheme that was

0:09:04 > 0:09:05trialled last year.

0:09:05 > 0:09:07The Defence Secretary, Gavin Williamson said poaching puts

0:09:07 > 0:09:08majestic animals at risk.

0:09:08 > 0:09:11Animals under threat include elephants, rhinos and lions.

0:09:11 > 0:09:17those are the main stories, it is nine minutes past six.

0:09:17 > 0:09:20President Trump has been meeting survivors of the Florida school

0:09:20 > 0:09:27shooting, in which seventeen people were killed this week.

0:09:27 > 0:09:29Lewis Mizen is a student at Marjory Stoneman Douglas

0:09:29 > 0:09:30High School.

0:09:30 > 0:09:32He's originally from Coventry, and moved to Florida in 2015

0:09:32 > 0:09:33with his family.

0:09:33 > 0:09:35He joins us now with his father David.

0:09:35 > 0:09:39Thank you for your time this morning. I know you have been

0:09:39 > 0:09:45through a real ordeal this week, I wonder if you could explain to

0:09:45 > 0:09:48people where you were when the attack happened, and what were the

0:09:48 > 0:09:54sequence of events?Thankfully I was on the other side of the school, it

0:09:54 > 0:09:58was towards the end of the day so they were maybe 15 minutes left

0:09:58 > 0:10:03before the end of school, and the fire drills had just been pulled, so

0:10:03 > 0:10:08I was with my friends, I grabbed my backpack and I was walking down the

0:10:08 > 0:10:14stairs when administrators began screaming" code red, code red,",

0:10:14 > 0:10:19which meant an active shooter, we thought it was a drill so when we

0:10:19 > 0:10:23went back to the classroom and we were hiding under our desks, texting

0:10:23 > 0:10:27our friends, asking what was going on, it seemed a bit strange to have

0:10:27 > 0:10:32two drills in one day. When we got confirmation from the police

0:10:32 > 0:10:38Department that there was a situation at the school, our teacher

0:10:38 > 0:10:42moved us into the closet so there were maybe 20 of us cramped in a

0:10:42 > 0:10:46closet and we were in their fur 90 minutes before the Army reserve came

0:10:46 > 0:10:49in to get us out.Those must have been very frightening moments to

0:10:49 > 0:10:59you, in that covered, not really knowing what is going on?

0:10:59 > 0:11:01knowing what is going on?Yeah and we did sort of know what was going

0:11:01 > 0:11:06on, because thanks to social media, we were getting information left

0:11:06 > 0:11:10right and centre, but because there is so much information coming in, we

0:11:10 > 0:11:13couldn't discern between what was actually true and what was just a

0:11:13 > 0:11:17rumour because we were getting varying reports between, there was

0:11:17 > 0:11:22someone who had walked onto campus and fired three shots in the air, to

0:11:22 > 0:11:26rumours that there were five shooters, so we didn't know what was

0:11:26 > 0:11:31real or fake.I know you have lost friends, and we saw images over the

0:11:31 > 0:11:36go of resident Donald Tropp going -- president Donald Trump going to

0:11:36 > 0:11:40visit people at the hospital. But we also heard some stories of the

0:11:40 > 0:11:44heroism of teachers and the things they did to protect some of the

0:11:44 > 0:11:52children.It's... My sister is a teacher in England, and I was

0:11:52 > 0:11:57speaking to her, and she said her job as a teacher in England is to

0:11:57 > 0:12:01make sure her kids get an education and to make sure they turn in their

0:12:01 > 0:12:04homework on time. And here, you have to make sure your kids get an

0:12:04 > 0:12:08education, you have to make sure they turn in their homework on time,

0:12:08 > 0:12:13you also have to put your life on the line and that is not in the job

0:12:13 > 0:12:16description.If I could have a quick chat with your dad David, those must

0:12:16 > 0:12:21have been agonising moments you, and we saw those pictures of those

0:12:21 > 0:12:25parents and family members waiting to their loved ones, and those who

0:12:25 > 0:12:29sadly lost their children as well. These must have been a very

0:12:29 > 0:12:33difficult time to you.Almost impossible to put into words, I

0:12:33 > 0:12:39can't describe the feeling, we were able to contact Lewis very early on

0:12:39 > 0:12:43into the shooting because we were in the area, and we saw the hundreds

0:12:43 > 0:12:47and hundreds of police vehicles heading towards the school, so we

0:12:47 > 0:12:53knew something had happened, we were able to contact Lewis, we knew they

0:12:53 > 0:12:58had gone back into the classroom. At that point that they realised it was

0:12:58 > 0:13:05real and the teacher had taken them to this huge cupboard, Lewis lost

0:13:05 > 0:13:10his mobile phone service. We now couldn't contact him. So we are now

0:13:10 > 0:13:16watching live TV and they are telling us that the shooter is still

0:13:16 > 0:13:20at large, he is on the campus, they haven't got him yet. And that period

0:13:20 > 0:13:25of time, it was just unbelievably terrifying.Not surprisingly David,

0:13:25 > 0:13:30this has prompted another discussion about gun control in the United

0:13:30 > 0:13:35States. I just wonder, with your British sensibilities, because you

0:13:35 > 0:13:39have not been there that long, what your thoughts are?I personally have

0:13:39 > 0:13:44a problem with guns anyway, I always have and I really don't like them,

0:13:44 > 0:13:48and moving to a place like America you do know they have their

0:13:48 > 0:13:53constitution, and it is very shocking to understand just how much

0:13:53 > 0:13:58they love their guns, and the right to bear arms. And I think our

0:13:58 > 0:14:04confusion here, which is shared by the majority of Americans, is that

0:14:04 > 0:14:09OK, if they need a hand gun to protect whatever, then OK. If that

0:14:09 > 0:14:12is in their constitution I understand. But I'm sure nobody

0:14:12 > 0:14:18would agree that anybody buying some kind of assault weapon, a weapon of

0:14:18 > 0:14:24war, let alone a disturbed 19-year-old, nobody can explain to

0:14:24 > 0:14:30me how that makes any sense at all. Lewis, can I ask you, I don't know

0:14:30 > 0:14:35when you are next due to go back to school, but it is hard to imagine

0:14:35 > 0:14:38what that is going to be like the students like yourself and others

0:14:38 > 0:14:42who are even closer to some of the dreadful things that happened. It is

0:14:42 > 0:14:47not going to be easy for you, is it? No, and we had the vigil yesterday,

0:14:47 > 0:14:56we had to 31 with students and -- 230, and a friend of me and sobbed

0:14:56 > 0:15:00into my just because she had lost her best friend. The one thing I

0:15:00 > 0:15:04will say is that the juniors and the seniors and the older kids who have

0:15:04 > 0:15:10been there alongside, this is -- a long time, this is our home, this is

0:15:10 > 0:15:14our school, this is our city. It is a personal attack for us, and the

0:15:14 > 0:15:18people I have been speaking to, as crazy as it might sound, we want to

0:15:18 > 0:15:22go back. We want to walk those balls, we want to bounce back, we

0:15:22 > 0:15:26want to say that we might be scarred but it hasn't beaten us, and I know

0:15:26 > 0:15:30it is going to be a lot harder for the freshman and sophomore is, it

0:15:30 > 0:15:35was the freshman building and they are much younger than us, and they

0:15:35 > 0:15:39are going to have to walk those holes for a lot longer than we are,

0:15:39 > 0:15:42but the community here has been phenomenal, and the recovery, it

0:15:42 > 0:15:49will take time, but I am 100% sure that we are going to bounce back

0:15:49 > 0:15:53from this.Your comments will make a lot of sense to a lot of people. I

0:15:53 > 0:15:58just wanted to ask you one of the things, Nikolas Cruz, who has been

0:15:58 > 0:16:03charged with 17 counts of premeditated murder, he was a former

0:16:03 > 0:16:08student at the school, and very recently. When that emerged that

0:16:08 > 0:16:15you, what will your thoughts then? When people began to realise that it

0:16:15 > 0:16:20was him, it was when we were finally out of the school, me and almost all

0:16:20 > 0:16:25the other students were kind of making our way towards a road that

0:16:25 > 0:16:29was maybe a mile to the east of the school. Because that is where our

0:16:29 > 0:16:34parents were picking us up. That is when his name and picture began

0:16:34 > 0:16:37circulating. I recognised the name, I recognise the picture, I had seen

0:16:37 > 0:16:43him before. And... There has been a lot of talk about him because he is

0:16:43 > 0:16:48the shooter, and I think that is the saddest part of all this, because

0:16:48 > 0:16:53out of all the things that have happened on Wednesday, his name is

0:16:53 > 0:16:59the one that is the most worthless. 17 people have lost their lives, 17

0:16:59 > 0:17:04Bright futures, but it's his name that is in all the papers, is his

0:17:04 > 0:17:07name that has everyone talking about, and that is the saddest part

0:17:07 > 0:17:11of all this, because he doesn't deserve any of it.Thank you for

0:17:11 > 0:17:14your time this morning, many people will be in awe of how composed you

0:17:14 > 0:17:18are and the words you have spoken this morning, thank you, and David

0:17:18 > 0:17:21thank you to you as well.

0:17:27 > 0:17:29Here's Sarah with a look at this morning's weather.

0:17:29 > 0:17:34Here's Sarah with a look at this morning's weather.

0:17:34 > 0:17:39Good morning. Things are looking mixed through the week. Today, a lot

0:17:39 > 0:17:44of dry weather on the cards and some of us will see sunshine. Tomorrow, a

0:17:44 > 0:17:48cloudier and milder day with a bit of rain working on from the west. We

0:17:48 > 0:17:51stop forecast by looking at the satellite image. The view from

0:17:51 > 0:17:57space, looking at the cloud. Quite a bit of cloud across much of the

0:17:57 > 0:18:01country. Clearer skies from the north-west. Clearer skies in the

0:18:01 > 0:18:06south-east as well. In between this system is draped through central

0:18:06 > 0:18:09parts, bringing cloud and patchy rain as it moves south-eastwards.

0:18:09 > 0:18:14The front pushes to the Midlands and towards the south-east by this

0:18:14 > 0:18:20afternoon. Most of the rain fizzling out. A largely dry day. Some showers

0:18:20 > 0:18:24pushing into the north-west, falling as snow over the hills in the west

0:18:24 > 0:18:30of Scotland. Temperatures today 7-8 in the north, 10-11 further south.

0:18:30 > 0:18:35This evening we have clear skies persisting in many parts of the

0:18:35 > 0:18:38country, as the weak front clears to the east. Eastern parts of Scotland

0:18:38 > 0:18:42and eastern England will have the lowest temperatures. A frost

0:18:42 > 0:18:46tonight. Further west, more cloud and patchy outbreaks of rain, so

0:18:46 > 0:18:53keeping things frost free. A warm front will move on from the west

0:18:53 > 0:18:56over the weekend, bringing in milder conditions through the second half

0:18:56 > 0:19:00of the weekend. The winds changed to a west or south-westerly direction.

0:19:00 > 0:19:04Chilly conditions in the east to start the day. Eastern England and

0:19:04 > 0:19:08eastern Scotland will have the best of the sunshine, but we are also

0:19:08 > 0:19:12likely to see mist and fog patches around through the day. Already

0:19:12 > 0:19:15cloudy towards the west. That cloud increases and we have are the

0:19:15 > 0:19:20raining Northern Ireland, the west of Scotland, where it falls as snow

0:19:20 > 0:19:24over the hills, and western parts of England and Wales will have a rival

0:19:24 > 0:19:32of rain. Monday is cloudy for most parts of the country and the front

0:19:32 > 0:19:35stalls towards these. We could have more outbreaks of rain for eastern

0:19:35 > 0:19:41Scotland, parts of eastern England. Again, reasonably mild on Monday,

0:19:41 > 0:19:497-11 degrees. Murky, cloudy and grey on Monday. The yellow colours are

0:19:49 > 0:19:53clearing towards the south and what we have as we fast forward through

0:19:53 > 0:19:59the week is colder air moving in on this easterly winds that are set to

0:19:59 > 0:20:03developed through the second half of the week. So things remain mild over

0:20:03 > 0:20:08the next few days, also murky and cloudy. But as we draw in easterly

0:20:08 > 0:20:12wind it will become colder with a return to something more wintry.

0:20:12 > 0:20:13wind it will become colder with a return to something more wintry.

0:20:13 > 0:20:15Thanks very much and see you later.

0:20:15 > 0:20:18We'll be back with a summary of this morning's news at 6:30.

0:20:18 > 0:20:26Now it's time for the Film Review.

0:20:33 > 0:20:39Hello and welcome to The Film Review on BBC News.

0:20:39 > 0:20:42To take us through this week's cinema releases is Jason Solomons.

0:20:42 > 0:20:44Good to have you with us, Jason.

0:20:44 > 0:20:45What have you been watching?

0:20:45 > 0:20:49This week we go to Sacramento, an ordinary town where Saoirse Ronan

0:20:49 > 0:20:51stars as Lady Bird, dreaming of romance and not

0:20:51 > 0:20:55serving coffee anymore.

0:20:55 > 0:20:59We go set sail on the oceans with Colin Firth single-handedly

0:20:59 > 0:21:02taking on the world in an around the world yacht race,

0:21:02 > 0:21:06starring as Donald Crowhurst in The Mercy.

0:21:06 > 0:21:10And there's more water, as Sally Hawkins stars in Guillermo

0:21:10 > 0:21:12del Toro's fishy fairy tale The Shape of Water,

0:21:12 > 0:21:15and an unlikely relationship with an aquatic alien.

0:21:15 > 0:21:18It is a very interesting week.

0:21:18 > 0:21:21Oh, I loved Lady Bird, I loved it!

0:21:21 > 0:21:28Well, I'm glad you did.

0:21:28 > 0:21:30Of all the films that are out this awards season,

0:21:30 > 0:21:33Lady Bird has given me more pause for thought than any

0:21:33 > 0:21:35of the other ones.

0:21:35 > 0:21:37I've seen it three times and it has taken that long

0:21:37 > 0:21:40for the subtleties and emotions to sweep over me.

0:21:40 > 0:21:46I think it's because it's a film told from Greta Gerwig's point

0:21:46 > 0:21:48of view, and it stars Saoirse Ronan.

0:21:48 > 0:21:49Women crew the film.

0:21:49 > 0:21:52I think it is a film told from a very fresh feminine perspective.

0:21:52 > 0:21:55It is a film we have seen hundreds of times before,

0:21:55 > 0:21:59a high school movie with cliques and drama and mothers and best

0:21:59 > 0:22:01friends and house parties and prom night.

0:22:01 > 0:22:04It is everything simple on the outside but inside it is

0:22:04 > 0:22:04sweet and beautiful.

0:22:04 > 0:22:07Really, it is about a mother and daughter relationship,

0:22:07 > 0:22:09between Lady Bird - that is her name, given

0:22:09 > 0:22:14to her by herself - her mum wants to call her Christine.

0:22:14 > 0:22:18The mum is played by Laurie Metcalf, who you remember from

0:22:18 > 0:22:20Roseanne all those years ago.

0:22:20 > 0:22:23She has not been on the big screen ever, really.

0:22:23 > 0:22:24She takes her opportunity brilliantly.

0:22:24 > 0:22:28Anyone who has been a daughter and had a mother, I think this film

0:22:28 > 0:22:30will resonate beautifully, movingly and hysterically.

0:22:30 > 0:22:33Here they are arguing, as they do throughout the entire

0:22:33 > 0:22:35film, about which college Christine - Lady Bird -

0:22:35 > 0:22:36should go to.

0:22:36 > 0:22:38I want to go where culture is.

0:22:38 > 0:22:40How did I raise such a snob?

0:22:40 > 0:22:42Or at least Connecticut or New Hampshire.

0:22:42 > 0:22:43You won't get into those schools anyway.

0:22:43 > 0:22:44Mom!

0:22:44 > 0:22:46You can't even pass your driver's test.

0:22:46 > 0:22:48Because you wouldn't let me practice enough!

0:22:48 > 0:22:51The way that you work, or the way that you don't work,

0:22:51 > 0:22:53you're not even worse state tuition, Christine.

0:22:53 > 0:22:56My name is Lady Bird!

0:22:56 > 0:22:58Well, actually, it's not and it's ridiculous.

0:22:58 > 0:23:01Call me Lady Bird, like you said you would.

0:23:01 > 0:23:04You should just go to City College, with your work ethic,

0:23:04 > 0:23:07go to City College, then to jail, and then back to City College.

0:23:07 > 0:23:10Then maybe you'll learn to pull yourself up.

0:23:10 > 0:23:12We both laughed at that line, "then go to jail!"

0:23:12 > 0:23:16It is for anyone.

0:23:16 > 0:23:19I don't want to say it's a female film in some stereotypical way.

0:23:19 > 0:23:22I think lots of people will love it.

0:23:22 > 0:23:24And there's an interesting twist on the male characters,

0:23:24 > 0:23:26which I won't give away.

0:23:26 > 0:23:28It is so well observed, the writing.

0:23:28 > 0:23:30That is the thing about this film.

0:23:30 > 0:23:31Its charm accrues through its details.

0:23:31 > 0:23:34Its observations of small-town life, though it's not that small town,

0:23:34 > 0:23:36Sacramento is the capital of California, actually,

0:23:36 > 0:23:38but for Lady Bird it represents a prison

0:23:38 > 0:23:40that she wants to break out of.

0:23:40 > 0:23:44Here she is with Timothee Chalamet, who's Oscar nominated for Call Me

0:23:44 > 0:23:48By Your Name, and plays a pretentious pseudo-indie band

0:23:48 > 0:23:51rocker in this, who she falls for, of course.

0:23:51 > 0:23:55It builds up all the stuff we have seen before and gives it this very

0:23:55 > 0:23:57fresh, gentle, subtle and clever take.

0:23:57 > 0:24:00It breaks your heart quite often.

0:24:00 > 0:24:03It's about stuff that's not said.

0:24:03 > 0:24:04It's a film of noncommunication.

0:24:04 > 0:24:07All the frustration that her and her mum have,

0:24:07 > 0:24:11where her mother passively aggressively nags her and says,

0:24:11 > 0:24:14"Mmm, is that dress maybe too pink?"

0:24:14 > 0:24:18It's all that stuff that is left unsaid and never talked about.

0:24:18 > 0:24:22People I know who have seen the film have written to their mums and said,

0:24:22 > 0:24:25mum, I actually really love you, I do not say it enough.

0:24:25 > 0:24:27There are many Hollywood films about fathers and sons,

0:24:27 > 0:24:30they always climax with the dad saying "son, I love you."

0:24:30 > 0:24:32Well, this is the opposite of that.

0:24:32 > 0:24:35It starts with the mum and daughter saying "I love you",

0:24:35 > 0:24:39and then not doing it for the rest of the film until it

0:24:39 > 0:24:41breaks your heart at the end.

0:24:41 > 0:24:43I think it's divine, this film, absolutely gorgeous.

0:24:43 > 0:24:45It is a delight and Greta Gerwig's first, astonishing.

0:24:45 > 0:24:47Her first on her own.

0:24:47 > 0:24:49She is the fifth to be nominated for the Oscar.

0:24:49 > 0:24:53If you are a betting person, I would have a discreet flutter

0:24:53 > 0:24:56on Lady Bird taking Best Picture.

0:24:56 > 0:25:01It is small but perfectly formed.

0:25:01 > 0:25:02I'm with you entirely on that.

0:25:02 > 0:25:04What did you make of The Mercy?

0:25:04 > 0:25:12The Mercy stars Colin Firth.

0:25:12 > 0:25:15You remember all those years ago him emerging from the lake

0:25:15 > 0:25:17in Pride And Prejudice.

0:25:17 > 0:25:19In this one he gets a right old soaking.

0:25:19 > 0:25:21He plays Donald Crowhurst, an eccentric from Devon.

0:25:21 > 0:25:24He invented his old boat and is about to enter

0:25:24 > 0:25:32a round the world yacht race.

0:25:33 > 0:25:37He decides to do it on his own, although he has a happy marriage

0:25:37 > 0:25:40with Rachel Weisz and kids and he decides to do this

0:25:40 > 0:25:42in an Ealing-esque spirit of the little man

0:25:42 > 0:25:44taking on the world.

0:25:44 > 0:25:47So he's inventing it and getting sponsorship from a local car dealer

0:25:47 > 0:25:49played by Ken Stott and getting sponsorship

0:25:49 > 0:25:53from tinned soup firms and rum firms, and then he sets sail up off

0:25:53 > 0:25:55on his race and it becomes a totally different movie.

0:25:55 > 0:25:58It becomes profound and moving and mystical and perplexing.

0:25:58 > 0:26:06Why is this man taking on this challenge?

0:26:07 > 0:26:13And then, I mean, it's a true life tale so I do not want to tell people

0:26:13 > 0:26:16what happens, even though they can look it up and find out,

0:26:16 > 0:26:18but what happens is extremely strange.

0:26:18 > 0:26:20The film struggles to take that on board.

0:26:20 > 0:26:23Meanwhile, Colin Firth does some of the best acting in years.

0:26:23 > 0:26:25He's really challenged by this.

0:26:25 > 0:26:27It might be something to do with the water.

0:26:27 > 0:26:29It brings the best out of Colin.

0:26:29 > 0:26:32Fascinating!

0:26:32 > 0:26:35I'm sensing it wasn't quite the film you expected it to be?

0:26:35 > 0:26:37It is a film of two halves.

0:26:37 > 0:26:38David Thewlis is good.

0:26:38 > 0:26:42Rachel Weisz does not have much to do apart from answer the phone

0:26:42 > 0:26:44and look worried a lot.

0:26:44 > 0:26:47But Colin Firth is tremendous, really, until he gets too wet

0:26:47 > 0:26:50and then the film gets bogged down in its own mysteries

0:26:50 > 0:26:52but they are true mysteries.

0:26:52 > 0:26:54No one knows what happened in this movie.

0:26:54 > 0:26:57It drifts rather to a climax, to use a nautical phrase.

0:26:57 > 0:27:01We won't give anything away.

0:27:01 > 0:27:04The Shape Of Water, now this is a curious film and I mean this

0:27:04 > 0:27:06in a good way.

0:27:06 > 0:27:09I really enjoyed it, but you do get to the end and think,

0:27:09 > 0:27:11I'm not sure what it is about.

0:27:11 > 0:27:13I'll try to tell you what it's about.

0:27:13 > 0:27:16It is about Sally Hawkins who plays a mute cleaner called Elisa

0:27:16 > 0:27:19and she has a job in an American underground nuclear facility

0:27:19 > 0:27:22which I think peppered the US in the Cold War

0:27:22 > 0:27:24in the '50s and '60s.

0:27:24 > 0:27:29We're set just on the cusp of then.

0:27:29 > 0:27:32Then this creature is brought in, rather like the Roswell incident.

0:27:32 > 0:27:35They bring it in in a tank to do experiments.

0:27:35 > 0:27:38They suspect it can help them defeat the Russians somehow and win

0:27:38 > 0:27:39the space race.

0:27:39 > 0:27:43It's never clear.

0:27:43 > 0:27:47We don't know what it is, really, and they mistrust this creature

0:27:47 > 0:27:49entirely, except for one mute outside cleaner

0:27:49 > 0:27:52played by Sally Hawkins who strikes up a strange relationship

0:27:52 > 0:27:54immediately with this creature in the tank.

0:27:54 > 0:27:56How was your trip?

0:27:56 > 0:28:01Fine.

0:28:01 > 0:28:04Just one moment, please.

0:28:04 > 0:28:07Security, who's security?

0:28:07 > 0:28:11I'm head of security.

0:28:11 > 0:28:19MOANING NOISE

0:28:37 > 0:28:45Get them out!

0:28:53 > 0:28:56There is Michael Shannon's agent Strickland glowering

0:28:56 > 0:28:58as only Michael Shannon can do.

0:28:58 > 0:29:04That clip gives the impression it is all foreboding and dangerous

0:29:04 > 0:29:06and scary, and actually a lot of it is not.

0:29:06 > 0:29:08It's an unbelievably beautiful film.

0:29:08 > 0:29:11The production design is extraordinary.

0:29:11 > 0:29:14Which is why it's got so many nominations at the Oscars

0:29:14 > 0:29:17and the BAFTAs, 12 and 13.

0:29:17 > 0:29:19Because it looks great - the design is good.

0:29:19 > 0:29:21The music is great and the cinematography.

0:29:21 > 0:29:23There is a lot of great stuff in it.

0:29:23 > 0:29:25I mean, there's a lot.

0:29:25 > 0:29:28I think there's too much in it.

0:29:28 > 0:29:29It is a busy film.

0:29:29 > 0:29:37It pastiches B-movies which the director Guillermo del

0:29:38 > 0:29:42Toro was watching as a kid and he thought, wouldn't it be nice

0:29:42 > 0:29:45if the girl and the creature get together, like they do

0:29:45 > 0:29:47in King Kong and Splash?

0:29:47 > 0:29:49And yet it is entirely unique of the director's vision.

0:29:49 > 0:29:54Any hint of cynicism will ruin the spell of the film.

0:29:54 > 0:29:56You have to watch it entirely spellbound,

0:29:56 > 0:29:57like Sally Hawkins does.

0:29:57 > 0:29:58And she's terrific in it.

0:29:58 > 0:30:06But if you enter with an outside thought you will say,

0:30:07 > 0:30:09this is a bit silly, I think someone is dancing

0:30:09 > 0:30:10with a fish.

0:30:10 > 0:30:13I know it will not be for some people.

0:30:13 > 0:30:15Very interesting.

0:30:15 > 0:30:19I think it's worth seeing in a curious way.

0:30:19 > 0:30:23We have not managed to see Black Panther yet,

0:30:23 > 0:30:26much to my other half's disgust, but we are trying to get there!

0:30:26 > 0:30:28It is such an important movie.

0:30:28 > 0:30:33I have to mention it as the best film out there.

0:30:33 > 0:30:35I think it'll be huge, it is brilliant.

0:30:35 > 0:30:38For a Marvel movie it packs so much thought into it.

0:30:38 > 0:30:42It is about Wakanda, this African country whose borders

0:30:42 > 0:30:44have to be protected by the new king.

0:30:44 > 0:30:47People have compared it to the Lion King.

0:30:47 > 0:30:49If that's cute, this is the cool version.

0:30:49 > 0:30:51Everyone in it is fantastic.

0:30:51 > 0:30:55Culturally, it has an all-black cast.

0:30:55 > 0:31:03So that's an important thing.

0:31:03 > 0:31:04It's a black blockbuster, which there's never been

0:31:04 > 0:31:06before.

0:31:06 > 0:31:09But watching it you forget connotations of race.

0:31:09 > 0:31:12You are just watching a movie which transcends race which I think

0:31:12 > 0:31:13is so important about it.

0:31:13 > 0:31:17And everyone in it is amazingly hot and sexy so Wakanda was the hottest

0:31:17 > 0:31:18place in the Marvel universe.

0:31:18 > 0:31:21Michael B Jordan takes his top off and everyone was swooning.

0:31:21 > 0:31:23Colin Firth has nothing on him!

0:31:23 > 0:31:24That's saying something!

0:31:24 > 0:31:26And a quick mention of a DVD?

0:31:26 > 0:31:28A strange film that went under the radar -

0:31:28 > 0:31:31Most Beautiful Island.

0:31:31 > 0:31:35It's a mystery set in New York and is about immigrant cleaners

0:31:35 > 0:31:42and au pairs who work in New York, the black economy.

0:31:42 > 0:31:44It's the nether world they can get sucked into it,

0:31:44 > 0:31:45the sex world.

0:31:45 > 0:31:49It is made by Ana Asensio who stars in it and directs it.

0:31:49 > 0:31:50I thought it was fantastic.

0:31:50 > 0:31:53The little details seeping in.

0:31:53 > 0:31:55A fresh new indie film that I can recommend,

0:31:55 > 0:31:57because you have never seen it before.

0:31:57 > 0:31:59Jason, thank you very much indeed.

0:31:59 > 0:32:00A really, really interesting week.

0:32:00 > 0:32:02Thanks for being with us.

0:32:02 > 0:32:04Enjoy your cinema going, whichever of those interesting films

0:32:04 > 0:32:06you decide to take on this weekend.

0:32:06 > 0:32:07Thanks for being with us, bye-bye.

0:32:20 > 0:32:22Hello, this is Breakfast, with Naga Munchetty

0:32:22 > 0:32:25and Charlie Stayt.

0:32:25 > 0:32:28Good Morning, here's a summary of today's main stories

0:32:28 > 0:32:29from BBC News.

0:32:29 > 0:32:32President Trump has met survivors of Wednesday's high school gun

0:32:32 > 0:32:34attack in Florida, in which seventeen people were killed.

0:32:34 > 0:32:37He praised emergency workers and medical staff for their response

0:32:37 > 0:32:40but has refused to discuss gun laws, despite strong calls from those

0:32:40 > 0:32:41affected by the shootings.

0:32:41 > 0:32:45Theresa May is expected to urge the European Union to put aside

0:32:45 > 0:32:47"political doctrine and ideology" and sign up to a post-Brexit

0:32:47 > 0:32:54security treaty with Britain.

0:32:54 > 0:32:56Speaking at a conference in Munich this morning,

0:32:56 > 0:33:00she'll say that nothing must get in the way of Britain and the EU

0:33:00 > 0:33:02helping each other to keep people safe.

0:33:02 > 0:33:07She'll also talk of the need for real political will to safeguard

0:33:07 > 0:33:09the level of co-operation which has developed over decades.

0:33:09 > 0:33:12The president of Haiti has called for an investigation

0:33:12 > 0:33:14into the activities of aid agencies working in his country,

0:33:14 > 0:33:18saying that the scandal involving some Oxfam workers was just the tip

0:33:18 > 0:33:19of the iceberg.

0:33:19 > 0:33:21He said the charity Doctors Without Borders had

0:33:21 > 0:33:24repatriated some of its staff from Haiti without any explanation.

0:33:24 > 0:33:27The charity said it takes any reports of staff misconduct

0:33:27 > 0:33:30seriously and are seeking to clarify the questions raised.

0:33:30 > 0:33:3313 Russians have been charged with interfering in the 2016 US

0:33:33 > 0:33:36election, in a major development in the FBI investigation.

0:33:36 > 0:33:38Among the allegations are that they promoted disparaging

0:33:38 > 0:33:41messages about the Democratic candidate, Hillary Clinton.

0:33:41 > 0:33:42The Russian Foreign Ministry has described the allegations

0:33:42 > 0:33:50as absurd.

0:33:50 > 0:33:52UKIP members will vote for, or against, sacking their current

0:33:52 > 0:33:57leader at an emergency meeting in Birmingham today.

0:33:57 > 0:34:00The party's National Executive Committee backed a vote of no

0:34:00 > 0:34:03confidence in Henry Bolton last month, but he has refused to step

0:34:03 > 0:34:06down after it emerged his former girlfriend had sent a series

0:34:06 > 0:34:08of racist messages about Prince Harry's fiance,

0:34:08 > 0:34:09Meghan Markle.

0:34:09 > 0:34:12British soldiers are to be deployed to Africa to boost the fight

0:34:12 > 0:34:13against illegal wildlife poaching.

0:34:13 > 0:34:16They will train rangers in Malawi to find and stop poachers,

0:34:16 > 0:34:20in an expansion of a successful pilot scheme that was

0:34:20 > 0:34:22trialled last year.

0:34:22 > 0:34:26The Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson said poaching puts

0:34:26 > 0:34:27majestic animals at risk.

0:34:27 > 0:34:34Animals under threat include elephants, rhinos and lions.

0:34:34 > 0:34:42Here's Mike with the sport.

0:34:42 > 0:34:54Another medal for Team GB? A special one, the first ever on skis.

0:34:55 > 0:34:58one, the first ever on skis. Thank goodness her father was from

0:34:58 > 0:35:12Birmingham, because Izzy Atkin has chosen to represent Team GB.

0:35:12 > 0:35:18Could this be the start of a Super Saturday

0:35:18 > 0:35:20on the slopes of Pyeongchang for Great Britain?

0:35:20 > 0:35:21Izzy Atkin has

0:35:21 > 0:35:23made history this morning with that first medal,

0:35:23 > 0:35:25on skis, in the ski slopestyle.

0:35:25 > 0:35:27It was a brilliant final run, full of spectacular rotations

0:35:27 > 0:35:30and clean landings and after she planted down after the final

0:35:30 > 0:35:33display of acrobatics, she put her hands on her head

0:35:33 > 0:35:34in disbelief.

0:35:34 > 0:35:36But she still had to wait for three other highly

0:35:36 > 0:35:39fancied athletes to come down, and when the final one fell,

0:35:39 > 0:35:42Atkins knew she had won a historic medal.

0:35:42 > 0:35:44Lets get some reaction, from Korea and speak to BBC

0:35:44 > 0:35:46Commentators Ed Leigh and Tim Warwood.

0:35:46 > 0:35:53Is a medal sweeter when it's less expected?

0:35:53 > 0:35:59I would say yes, it was a very close final, it is important to recognise

0:35:59 > 0:36:06that there was a gold-medallist in the Estonian, who broke a ACL two

0:36:06 > 0:36:10months ago, and with her out it was a wide-open field which meant there

0:36:10 > 0:36:15was no one you could predict. All 12 finalists had a chance here.What

0:36:15 > 0:36:27was so special about Izzy's fibro -- final run?

0:36:27 > 0:36:31She started outside of the medals?

0:36:31 > 0:36:37She did, and that final came down to consistency. It was stacked final,

0:36:37 > 0:36:43all the big guns in rare, and I think the top four or five -- in

0:36:43 > 0:36:48there. The top four or five were the only ones who could put down runs

0:36:48 > 0:36:52consistently, and for Izzy Atkin to do it on the third and final run, it

0:36:52 > 0:36:58was a big ask for her, and we were happy. She is only 19 years old. She

0:36:58 > 0:37:03has taken the silver two weeks ago at the X games, and that was a great

0:37:03 > 0:37:09precursor. She dealt with nerves so well here, she was icecold from

0:37:09 > 0:37:12start to finish and the difference was that she backed herself here.

0:37:12 > 0:37:18What will the impact be of a first medal on skis?

0:37:18 > 0:37:23It will have huge ramifications. Mainly because it is men's lifestyle

0:37:23 > 0:37:27tomorrow and it will have such a big knock-on effect. James Woods we have

0:37:27 > 0:37:32been speaking to, he loves this course, he will be chomping at the

0:37:32 > 0:37:37bit to get out this course.That is the short game, but long-term slope

0:37:37 > 0:37:42style is a discipline we can practice on dry slopes and in snow

0:37:42 > 0:37:45domes, so hopefully it will say that influx of talent, Moora more people

0:37:45 > 0:37:49getting into the sport and as participation levels go up, so do

0:37:49 > 0:37:54the chances of finding more ill it level athletes. -- as more and more

0:37:54 > 0:38:01people.

0:38:01 > 0:38:05people.This is not an event for the fainthearted. Those athletes really

0:38:05 > 0:38:11have to go for it, don't they, they have to take spectacular risks and

0:38:11 > 0:38:16pull them off?In qualification you have two runs, so that prioritises

0:38:16 > 0:38:21consistency but then in the final you have three runs. What we saw

0:38:21 > 0:38:25today, where you should have three runs and at least be able to land

0:38:25 > 0:38:29one of your best runs, that had not happened so it left it wide open.

0:38:29 > 0:38:33And the fact that Izzy Atkin was in third place and the three top seeds

0:38:33 > 0:38:36from qualification all failed to bank run tell you everything you

0:38:36 > 0:38:39need to know. They were really pushing hard. But potentially too

0:38:39 > 0:38:48hard.Can you tell us what the atmosphere is like, we had Jimmy

0:38:48 > 0:38:55Alcott here yesterday, -- we had someone here yesterday he was saying

0:38:55 > 0:39:00that the costumes and equipment that were being warned by the British

0:39:00 > 0:39:05team, particularly when it comes to the skeleton, what is the atmosphere

0:39:05 > 0:39:11like? Are they enjoy in the atmosphere and enjoying the games,

0:39:11 > 0:39:17or is it really quite serious in terms of competition?I think appear

0:39:17 > 0:39:22where we are we are a bit removed from the sliding Centre at here, but

0:39:22 > 0:39:27amongst the freestyle athletes, is nothing but love, and we saw at the

0:39:27 > 0:39:31end of the ladies final, it was hugs all round, just a celebration, the

0:39:31 > 0:39:36sport is winning almost, freestyle skiing and snowboarding is coming up

0:39:36 > 0:39:41trumps here. I think the general consensus is that everyone is

0:39:41 > 0:39:44enjoying themselves on having a good time.There is an important

0:39:44 > 0:39:47distinction to make, all the equipment the skiers and

0:39:47 > 0:39:52snowboarders are using, you can walk into a shop and buy. Whereas you

0:39:52 > 0:39:55look at skeleton and Bobsleigh where you have very highly engineered

0:39:55 > 0:39:59pieces of equipment, marginal gains come to the fore. Also they are

0:39:59 > 0:40:02racing against the clock, where there is that battle familiar

0:40:02 > 0:40:07seconds. They hear you are racing against yourself. -- title for

0:40:07 > 0:40:12merely seconds. You spend three or four years perfecting your run and

0:40:12 > 0:40:18it is whether you can lend it on the day. It is doing the best that you

0:40:18 > 0:40:22can, and allows for a good sense of camaraderie between the different

0:40:22 > 0:40:28nations.And also, the jumps are so big here that it is pretty

0:40:28 > 0:40:33dangerous, they all like to just put their arms around each other and

0:40:33 > 0:40:38say, you'll be all right!Thank you, we can watch from the comfort of our

0:40:38 > 0:40:42sofas, thank you for keeping us entertained and in touch with what

0:40:42 > 0:40:51is going on out there, we look forward to tomorrow.

0:40:51 > 0:40:53In Curling, Britain's women enjoyed a fairly routine

0:40:53 > 0:40:54victory against Denmark.

0:40:54 > 0:40:58They've now got three wins out of four and haven't got too long

0:40:58 > 0:40:59to feel too smug.

0:40:59 > 0:41:01They'll play South Korea later this morning.

0:41:01 > 0:41:06The men are in action now against South Korea -

0:41:06 > 0:41:10They need a win as well after that defeat to Sweden. It is currently

0:41:10 > 0:41:135-3 to Korea.

0:41:13 > 0:41:16you can follow that on the BBC Sport website.

0:41:16 > 0:41:22The men do need to turn this around. They were fourth going into this,

0:41:22 > 0:41:25only the top four go through to the semifinals.

0:41:25 > 0:41:26Following Dom Parsons' bronze medal yesterday,

0:41:26 > 0:41:30Great Britain could add two more medals in the Women's Skeleton.

0:41:30 > 0:41:33Laura Deas lies in fourth position at the halfway mark,

0:41:33 > 0:41:35while teamate Lizzy Yarnold is third.

0:41:35 > 0:41:37She's just one tenth behind the leader, with two more

0:41:37 > 0:41:41runs to go.

0:41:41 > 0:41:45She's aiming to become the first Briton to successfully defend

0:41:45 > 0:41:53a Winter Olympic title.

0:41:54 > 0:41:58I athlete that loves to compete at these big events, when everyone is

0:41:58 > 0:42:04digging their deaths -- bringing their best. I think I am and in the

0:42:04 > 0:42:09mist -- I am in the mix, and that was a big goal which is frightening

0:42:09 > 0:42:12to say sometimes, to be the first British winter Olympian to maintain

0:42:12 > 0:42:17my title, it has not been easy, it has been a hard few years but

0:42:17 > 0:42:22hopefully I can do it to everyone who has supported me.We will be

0:42:22 > 0:42:27glued to our seats later on. Just after 11 o'clock for those third and

0:42:27 > 0:42:32fourth runs.

0:42:37 > 0:42:39Four senior West Bromwich Albion players, Jonny Evans,

0:42:39 > 0:42:42Gareth Barry, Jake Livermore and Boaz Myhill, have apologised,

0:42:42 > 0:42:44after breaking a curfew, and allegedly stealing a taxi,

0:42:44 > 0:42:46from outside a fast-food restaurant in Barcelona.

0:42:46 > 0:42:48The team are bottom of the Premier League,

0:42:48 > 0:42:51and were on a mid season training break in Spain.

0:42:51 > 0:42:53The players have released a joint statement apologising

0:42:53 > 0:42:55for the incident.

0:42:55 > 0:42:57Catalonia police interviewed them but didn't arrest the four men

0:42:57 > 0:42:59in the early hours of Thursday morning.

0:42:59 > 0:43:02The club say the players will be "subject to the full rigours

0:43:02 > 0:43:05of internal, disciplinary procedures."

0:43:05 > 0:43:11It wasn't what we wanted, we have gone their to try and get ourselves

0:43:11 > 0:43:18up and ready for this run, and it was not ideal. They break curfew and

0:43:18 > 0:43:23that is unacceptable, I feel a bit let down by that. But we have still

0:43:23 > 0:43:29got training in, my focus now is on the game.But what he wanted, so

0:43:29 > 0:43:35there we are.And his focus is on the game.It is behind us now, the

0:43:35 > 0:43:43police aren't taking any action. It is like going back in time to say

0:43:43 > 0:43:50Roger Federer is the world number one.

0:43:50 > 0:43:53He has become the oldest player to become the world tennis

0:43:53 > 0:43:56number one - 14 years after he first topped the rankings.

0:43:56 > 0:43:59He beat Robin Haase, by two sets to one, at the

0:43:59 > 0:44:00Rotterdam Open.

0:44:00 > 0:44:03It was actually a double fault from Haase, that handed match point

0:44:03 > 0:44:04to the 36-year-old Federer.

0:44:04 > 0:44:07But a very popular quarterfinal victory, and Federer was presented

0:44:07 > 0:44:09with a special award to mark the occasion.

0:44:09 > 0:44:12When you're older, you know, you feel like you have to do

0:44:12 > 0:44:13double the work.

0:44:13 > 0:44:19This one maybe means the most of my career,

0:44:19 > 0:44:22getting to number one, and enjoying it at 36,

0:44:22 > 0:44:23almost 37 years old,

0:44:23 > 0:44:25it is an absolute dream come true.

0:44:25 > 0:44:26I can't believe it.

0:44:26 > 0:44:29APPLAUSE.

0:44:29 > 0:44:39In 2004 he took over from Andy wrote it, -- Andy Roddick. He had long

0:44:39 > 0:44:46hair and George Harrison was in the charts with my sweet lord. Let's

0:44:46 > 0:44:52talk to Sarah with the morning's weather. That is a beautiful view is

0:44:52 > 0:44:55that what most of us are going to the experiencing?

0:45:11 > 0:45:13Many of us today will have things like

0:45:13 > 0:45:14this.

0:45:14 > 0:45:15This was taken in Fife yesterday.

0:45:15 > 0:45:16Sunny skies there.

0:45:16 > 0:45:18Very sunshine in the forecast today as well.

0:45:18 > 0:45:21Tomorrow will be cloudy, some rain to the west.

0:45:21 > 0:45:22Tomorrow will be cloudy, some rain to the west. Looking at the rain,

0:45:22 > 0:45:25first off we have a satellite image which shows the cloud moving across

0:45:25 > 0:45:30the country. This is a weak weather front. Clearer skies heading in from

0:45:30 > 0:45:34the north-west and clearer skies in the south-east. In between this is

0:45:34 > 0:45:37the front draped through central parts of the country, bringing cloud

0:45:37 > 0:45:44and patchy rain. What it will peter out as the front shifts slowly south

0:45:44 > 0:45:48eastwards. In parts of northern England and the Midlands as well.

0:45:48 > 0:45:51From the north-west clearer skies for Scotland and Northern Ireland

0:45:51 > 0:45:55and northern England. A couple of showers moving in, especially for

0:45:55 > 0:46:00the west of Scotland. A couple of rogue showers for the Pennines and

0:46:00 > 0:46:05north Wales. The south-east of England will stay dry as the longest

0:46:05 > 0:46:11and into this evening the weak front cleaves to the east. The drier

0:46:11 > 0:46:14conditions especially for central and eastern parts of the country,

0:46:14 > 0:46:20where temperatures fall lower. From the west more cloud and the arrival

0:46:20 > 0:46:24of some patchy rain to start the day. On Sunday we have high pressure

0:46:24 > 0:46:28towards the near continent and this front moving on from the Atlantic.

0:46:28 > 0:46:33It's a warm front, so it is drawing on the milder air. You can see the

0:46:33 > 0:46:37return to warmer colours. A westerly influence to the wind. During the

0:46:37 > 0:46:41day tomorrow northern and eastern Scotland and central and eastern

0:46:41 > 0:46:44parts of England should keep it dry, bright and sunny day, after morning

0:46:44 > 0:46:49mist and fog clears away. Then the cloud moves in and later in the day

0:46:49 > 0:46:53we will see patchy rain the Northern Ireland, Wales and the west of

0:46:53 > 0:46:57England. Temperatures mainly up in double figures towards the south and

0:46:57 > 0:47:04west. Towards Monday we have another cloudy day. We still have the front

0:47:04 > 0:47:08with us, so perhaps outbreaks of rain in eastern parts of the

0:47:08 > 0:47:12country, perhaps eastern Scotland as well. Murky and cloudy wherever you

0:47:12 > 0:47:17were on Monday, but still reasonably mild, with temperatures in double

0:47:17 > 0:47:21figures. They're looking at the course of next week you can see

0:47:21 > 0:47:24what's going to happen. The yellow colours get cleared towards the

0:47:24 > 0:47:28south and we have this easterly breeze developing. The wind is

0:47:28 > 0:47:34coming in from northern parts of Russia, and Siberia, so that will

0:47:34 > 0:47:38mean a cold spell through next week. It will be quite a mild start, but

0:47:38 > 0:47:44as the easterly winds develop we could see something more wintry

0:47:44 > 0:47:44as the easterly winds develop we could see something more wintry next

0:47:44 > 0:47:52week. Tanks very much and see you later.

0:47:52 > 0:47:55We'll be back with the headlines at 7am.

0:47:55 > 0:48:01Now it's time for Click.

0:48:14 > 0:48:17Fashionably late, Apple has decided it wants a slice of the home speaker

0:48:17 > 0:48:20market, finally releasing its Home Pod, some two a half years

0:48:20 > 0:48:25after the first generation Amazon Echo hit the shelves.

0:48:25 > 0:48:28They have gone for the same cylindrical shape as the Google Home

0:48:28 > 0:48:32and the Amazon Echo, but it looks like a premium high end

0:48:32 > 0:48:34speaker than either of those systems.

0:48:34 > 0:48:36That is one of the key points.

0:48:36 > 0:48:40The amount of audio work that Apple have done on this device means

0:48:40 > 0:48:45that its key selling point is as a speaker.

0:48:45 > 0:48:48It is impressive with a four inch upward

0:48:48 > 0:48:49facing woofer and seven beam-forming tweeters,

0:48:49 > 0:48:54each with its own amplifier, meaning it can push

0:48:54 > 0:49:00sounds in different directions.

0:49:00 > 0:49:04It sounds exactly the same wherever you are in the room but what it

0:49:04 > 0:49:07doesn't do is give the opportunity to change the levels in any way.

0:49:07 > 0:49:11If I wanted to push the bass up right now there is no way

0:49:11 > 0:49:12of doing that.

0:49:12 > 0:49:15Even in a space this big the sound really carries.

0:49:15 > 0:49:17What is interesting, is even at 100% volume when I can't

0:49:17 > 0:49:20hear myself think, Siri will still recognise my voice.

0:49:20 > 0:49:22Hey Siri, pause.

0:49:22 > 0:49:22Just like that.

0:49:22 > 0:49:25Whereas Apple seems to be going all in for sound quality,

0:49:25 > 0:49:28Amazon seem to be focusing on different features.

0:49:28 > 0:49:30Their Echo Spot is all about one thing, this screen.

0:49:30 > 0:49:32The latest from Amazon now has the ability

0:49:32 > 0:49:37to make video calls as well as doing the usual like play music,

0:49:37 > 0:49:40tell you the weather and boil your kettle if you have

0:49:40 > 0:49:48got a smart home setup.

0:49:48 > 0:49:53But really, it comes into its own as a

0:49:53 > 0:49:54very nice alarm clock.

0:49:54 > 0:49:57It is not function which makes these two home assistants very different,

0:49:57 > 0:49:58the price is another factor.

0:49:58 > 0:50:02While the Echo Spot costs £119, the Home Pod will set you back

0:50:02 > 0:50:05£319.

0:50:05 > 0:50:08As is Apple's way, it ties you into Apple's walled garden,

0:50:08 > 0:50:11so instead of being able to access streaming services via voice

0:50:11 > 0:50:15activation, it will only let you use Apple Music in this way.

0:50:15 > 0:50:18So if you are what of the 70 million Spotify subscribers,

0:50:18 > 0:50:20you have to get into your phone and use

0:50:20 > 0:50:22Airplay as a workaround, essentially turning this Smart

0:50:22 > 0:50:30speaker into a well, speaker.

0:50:31 > 0:50:35As people have been discovering, one that might leave a nasty white

0:50:35 > 0:50:37mark on wooden top.

0:50:37 > 0:50:38Their response?

0:50:38 > 0:50:46Choose a different surface or get a cloth and some elbow grease.

0:50:46 > 0:50:50Over the next few weeks we are going to be talking to some

0:50:50 > 0:50:55of the gods of the visual effects world.

0:50:55 > 0:50:58Last week we went behind the scenes of Blade Runner 2049,

0:50:58 > 0:51:02this week is the turn of Guardians of the Galaxy volume two

0:51:02 > 0:51:05and we started by talking about its truly bonkers opening sequence.

0:51:12 > 0:51:14The beginning of the sequence features a title

0:51:14 > 0:51:16sequence where Groot is dancing in the foreground,

0:51:16 > 0:51:18and it doesn't cut.

0:51:18 > 0:51:22So it is on Groot the whole time he has got to hold the attention

0:51:22 > 0:51:25of viewers with his crazy little dance whilst what happens

0:51:25 > 0:51:32in the background never stops.

0:51:32 > 0:51:35So we have got something like 4000 frames of continuous action.

0:51:35 > 0:51:38We were faced with the fact that the environment was completely

0:51:38 > 0:51:43spectacular and had to be created entirely digitally.

0:51:43 > 0:51:46Everything that we were inserting had to be reflected and that's

0:51:46 > 0:51:48multiple times the computation to compute the life

0:51:48 > 0:51:51of what is going on then, also in the reflection

0:51:51 > 0:51:54and so everything ended up being done two or three times

0:51:54 > 0:51:57because of the surface of these worlds they were standing on.

0:51:57 > 0:51:59We were delighted to take on rocket the raccoon.

0:51:59 > 0:52:02The first shade that we have got here, the muscle systems,

0:52:02 > 0:52:05all of these things had updated in three years

0:52:05 > 0:52:07between the first Guardians and this one.

0:52:07 > 0:52:09So we wanted to bring all of that into Rocket,

0:52:09 > 0:52:17which meant rebuilding him from the ground up

0:52:34 > 0:52:36and yet, making sure that he is absolutely recognisable

0:52:36 > 0:52:38as the same character from the first movie.

0:52:38 > 0:52:42Every movie that we get involved in, we want to push the envelope,

0:52:42 > 0:52:44trying something new with expectation that we are going

0:52:44 > 0:52:52to get there.

0:53:00 > 0:53:03Old film stock is a treasure trove of historical information

0:53:03 > 0:53:06and in the case of old BBC programmes it can be

0:53:06 > 0:53:10a race against time to find any remaining copy and digitise it

0:53:10 > 0:53:12or risk losing it forever.

0:53:12 > 0:53:14But when Charles Lawson was given an old

0:53:14 > 0:53:22Morecambe and Wise episode, there was a problem.

0:53:23 > 0:53:26Archivists at both the BBC and the British film Institute had

0:53:26 > 0:53:30a look at the film and potentially judged it to be irrecoverable due

0:53:30 > 0:53:32to advanced decomposition and they were effectively,

0:53:32 > 0:53:34it was going to be thrown out.

0:53:34 > 0:53:37The pictures inside that film, they are still there are imprinted

0:53:37 > 0:53:39on the plastic, but they are all locked inside this

0:53:39 > 0:53:42permanently fused block of immobile gunk, which sooner or later

0:53:42 > 0:53:46will just rot away.

0:53:46 > 0:53:48So Charles brought the film to Queen Mary

0:53:48 > 0:53:51University's dental department to use their x-ray machine to see

0:53:51 > 0:53:54through the lump of decaying film the precious pictures within.

0:53:54 > 0:53:55Now they had another problem, the film

0:53:55 > 0:53:57was too big to be x-rayed.

0:53:57 > 0:54:05The only thing you could do would cut the film into little

0:54:13 > 0:54:18pieces and scan one piece at a time.

0:54:18 > 0:54:22I didn't expect him to say yes to cutting up the film,

0:54:22 > 0:54:24but given the alternative was watching this just rapidly

0:54:24 > 0:54:31disintegrate, he said yeah, let's do it.

0:54:31 > 0:54:35We were using an infrared laser which generates a lot of heat,

0:54:35 > 0:54:37occasionally there were flames, at the best we had a little

0:54:37 > 0:54:40bit of damage at the edge of the frame, at worst

0:54:40 > 0:54:45we lost whole frames.

0:54:45 > 0:54:49Graham took 5000 images of each chunk as it rotated 360 degrees

0:54:49 > 0:54:51to make a 3-D model and at that point

0:54:51 > 0:54:54they started to seep what was on the film

0:54:54 > 0:54:58for the first time.

0:54:58 > 0:55:00When you first start seeing those pictures of Eric

0:55:00 > 0:55:03Morecambe and his stereotypical pose, you can't help but smile

0:55:03 > 0:55:11and think yes, this is - yeah, this has to be done.

0:55:13 > 0:55:16Once the scans were finished they had loads of data but they

0:55:16 > 0:55:22also had a new problem.

0:55:22 > 0:55:25The next difficult part was finding a way of digitally flattening out

0:55:25 > 0:55:26this warped object and digitally prizing

0:55:26 > 0:55:29apart or the individual film layers within it.

0:55:29 > 0:55:33We initially had some manual software where I would physically go

0:55:33 > 0:55:36through each individual block and spend five or ten minutes

0:55:36 > 0:55:39flattening out one layer after the other but that was over

0:55:39 > 0:55:47several thousand frames, quite labour-intensive.

0:55:51 > 0:55:59At this point, Charles took the problem to a data scientist.

0:55:59 > 0:56:02What a human would do is, would try to see

0:56:02 > 0:56:06where the image was within a cross-section.

0:56:06 > 0:56:10The problem here is a computer algorithm cannot quite do that.

0:56:10 > 0:56:14What the algorithm does is it follows, predominantly,

0:56:14 > 0:56:16the layers of plastic were not the images,

0:56:16 > 0:56:20but the plastic.

0:56:20 > 0:56:25And then once we have the layer of plastic, we can move to the edge

0:56:25 > 0:56:31of that layer and read off the image.

0:56:31 > 0:56:34That process was repeated on all of the film, making short

0:56:34 > 0:56:38work of a task that would take a human thousands of hours of work.

0:56:38 > 0:56:41Now Charles is beginning the next phase, turning these scarred

0:56:41 > 0:56:46pictures back into video.

0:56:46 > 0:56:48That's the next problem.

0:56:48 > 0:56:51But for now, he's managed to put together a taster

0:56:51 > 0:56:54of what is on that film.

0:56:54 > 0:56:58And beautifully as well!

0:56:58 > 0:57:00Not a word out of sync!

0:57:00 > 0:57:01I am not miming now.

0:57:01 > 0:57:04You realise of course that the paper has

0:57:04 > 0:57:06stopped?

0:57:06 > 0:57:07Then start it again!

0:57:07 > 0:57:13How does he do it?

0:57:13 > 0:57:15That's an impressive sight, isn't it?

0:57:15 > 0:57:17That is the King's Library, assembled by King George

0:57:17 > 0:57:21III in the second half of the 18th century.

0:57:21 > 0:57:24Four floors below my feet here at the British library

0:57:24 > 0:57:27lie its vast basements, which you can imagine also contain

0:57:27 > 0:57:31a lot of books.

0:57:31 > 0:57:35But did you know they also contain six and a half million sound

0:57:35 > 0:57:37recordings which are now being digitised?

0:57:37 > 0:57:43These are stored on all sorts of physical formats from delicate

0:57:43 > 0:57:45wax cylinders to brass discs, to short lived formats

0:57:45 > 0:57:53like minidiscs, remember those?

0:57:53 > 0:57:55There is a big push to digitise them and make

0:57:55 > 0:57:56them available online.

0:57:56 > 0:57:59Each of the 40 different types of storage format

0:57:59 > 0:58:07have unique challenges, they all need their own playback

0:58:07 > 0:58:10devices and some need a little TLC to coax the best quality

0:58:10 > 0:58:12sound from them.

0:58:12 > 0:58:14Something reasonably robust like a vinyl disc,

0:58:14 > 0:58:16to shake its debris out of its hiding place.

0:58:16 > 0:58:21We also have a more traditional type of record

0:58:21 > 0:58:24cleaning machines, the brush and vacuum arrangements that can

0:58:24 > 0:58:27produce some quite startling results when you start to clean off

0:58:27 > 0:58:35otherwise invisible gunk.

0:58:37 > 0:58:40The team also have a workshop to keep their collection of machines

0:58:40 > 0:58:43in tiptop condition so staff can work on as many concurrent transfers

0:58:43 > 0:58:49as possible and chip away at the millions of recordings.

0:58:49 > 0:58:53If you are faced with a tape that is in a real state,

0:58:53 > 0:58:55you take it off the shelf and it may be

0:58:55 > 0:59:00mouldy, need treatment or some sort of repair,

0:59:00 > 0:59:03doing that process, the active process of caring for,

0:59:03 > 0:59:06conserving and repairing can be such that it can be replayed even just

0:59:06 > 0:59:07once, is hugely rewarding.

0:59:07 > 0:59:14Certainly challenging.

0:59:14 > 0:59:17But with only 2% of their collection digitised and only 15 years

0:59:17 > 0:59:18until some recordings become unsalvageable,

0:59:18 > 0:59:25it is a race against time to save as many as possible.

0:59:25 > 0:59:28Anyway, that is it for the short Click this week.

0:59:28 > 0:59:30The full version is up on iPlayer right now,

0:59:30 > 0:59:33we are on Facebook and Twitter @BBCClick is the address.

0:59:33 > 0:59:39Thanks for watching and we will see you soon.

1:00:00 > 1:00:01Hello, this is Breakfast,

1:00:01 > 1:00:03with Naga Munchetty and Charlie Stayt.

1:00:03 > 1:00:06Donald Trump visits survivors of the Florida High School shootings.

1:00:06 > 1:00:09The US President and the First Lady have been to the hospital

1:00:09 > 1:00:16where the injured were taken following the attack.

1:00:16 > 1:00:19The first funerals have been held amid an outpouring of grief

1:00:19 > 1:00:22and anger from the families of the victims.

1:00:37 > 1:00:39Good morning, it's Saturday 17th February.

1:00:39 > 1:00:40Also this morning:

1:00:40 > 1:00:43Theresa May will today warn EU leaders that public safety

1:00:43 > 1:00:49will suffer if they block a post-Brexit security deal.

1:00:49 > 1:00:51The President of Haiti says that the Oxfam scandal could be

1:00:51 > 1:00:54the "tip of the iceberg" as he accuses a second aid

1:00:54 > 1:01:02charity of misconduct.

1:01:02 > 1:01:06An emergency meeting will be held later to decide whether Henry Bolte

1:01:06 > 1:01:08and should remain as the UKIP leader.

1:01:08 > 1:01:10In sport, a famous second medal for Great Britain

1:01:10 > 1:01:12at the Winter Olympics.

1:01:12 > 1:01:15At just 19, Izzy Atkin has won a bronze after a brilliant aerial

1:01:15 > 1:01:18display in the women's slopestyle - a first ever medal for

1:01:18 > 1:01:19Britain on skis.

1:01:19 > 1:01:21And beehives, bobs and blowdries - our entertainment correspondent

1:01:21 > 1:01:23Colin Paterson takes a rather personal trip back

1:01:23 > 1:01:28through the history of hairdressing.

1:01:28 > 1:01:33And Sarah has the weather.

1:01:33 > 1:01:38Good morning, actually start of the day, a little bit of patchy rain in

1:01:38 > 1:01:42the forecast that the sunshine towards the east of England. I will

1:01:42 > 1:01:44bring you the full forecast in 15 minutes.

1:01:44 > 1:01:45Good morning.

1:01:45 > 1:01:46First, our main story.

1:01:46 > 1:01:49President Trump has met survivors of Wednesday's high school shooting

1:01:49 > 1:01:51in Florida at the hospital where they're being treated.

1:01:51 > 1:01:54He also thanked the emergency services and medical staff

1:01:54 > 1:01:57who treated those who were wounded when the suspect, Nikolas Cruz,

1:01:57 > 1:01:58opened fire, killing 17 people.

1:01:58 > 1:02:01Barbara Plett-Usher reports.

1:02:01 > 1:02:05The funerals have begun.

1:02:05 > 1:02:08These students were saying goodbye to a 14-year-old classmate.

1:02:08 > 1:02:13They and their parents have been calling to action

1:02:13 > 1:02:15-- They and their parents have been calling for action

1:02:15 > 1:02:18from President Trump so other teenagers won't die this way.

1:02:18 > 1:02:22He and the First Lady visited some of the injured still in hospital,

1:02:22 > 1:02:24including a woman who had been shot four times.

1:02:24 > 1:02:27He congratulated the medical staff...

1:02:27 > 1:02:30REPORTER:Do our gun laws need to be changed,

1:02:30 > 1:02:30Mr President?

1:02:30 > 1:02:33..but ignored a question about tougher gun control.

1:02:33 > 1:02:36This is where the President is in his element, meeting first

1:02:36 > 1:02:43responders who rescued the wounded and captured the killer.

1:02:43 > 1:02:45He piled on the praise for their speed and bravery.

1:02:45 > 1:02:48His wife thanked them for protecting the children.

1:02:48 > 1:02:54They are our future, and let's take care of them

1:02:54 > 1:02:57because they went through a lot and what they experienced,

1:02:57 > 1:03:00two days ago, we need to take care of them.

1:03:00 > 1:03:03The President is talking about making schools safer and has

1:03:03 > 1:03:06linked the violence to mental health issues rather than guns.

1:03:06 > 1:03:10The young man who carried out the attack, Nikolas Cruz,

1:03:10 > 1:03:14was a troubled youth who loved guns and found it easy to buy them.

1:03:14 > 1:03:17It has emerged that FBI ignored a tip-off about him last month.

1:03:17 > 1:03:20The caller warned he had the potential to carry out

1:03:20 > 1:03:26a school shooting.

1:03:26 > 1:03:33So, mistakes by law enforcement add a new twist

1:03:33 > 1:03:34to a grimly familiar arguments.

1:03:34 > 1:03:38Mass shootings in America revived debate about gun control.

1:03:38 > 1:03:41But a school shooting like this one boils the issue down

1:03:41 > 1:03:44to our question - how can we keep our children safe?

1:03:44 > 1:03:47And the people he will judge their President on how

1:03:47 > 1:03:51he responds to that.

1:03:51 > 1:03:55Earlier we spoke to one of the students who moved from Coventry to

1:03:55 > 1:03:59Parkland three years ago and told us why he would be returning to the

1:03:59 > 1:04:04school when the gunmen opened fire. This is our home, this is our high

1:04:04 > 1:04:09school, this is our city and it is a personal attack for us and I know

1:04:09 > 1:04:14the people I have been speaking to, as crazy as it may sound, we want to

1:04:14 > 1:04:18go back, you know? We want to walk the halls, we want to bounce back,

1:04:18 > 1:04:22we want to say that we might be scarred but it hasn't beaten us. I

1:04:22 > 1:04:26know what will be a lot harder for the freshman and soft Moz and most

1:04:26 > 1:04:29of them were obviously much closer because it was the freshman building

1:04:29 > 1:04:34and they are much younger than us and they are going to have to walk

1:04:34 > 1:04:38those halls for a lot longer than we are. But the community here has been

1:04:38 > 1:04:43phenomenal. And the recovery, it will take time but I am 100% sure

1:04:43 > 1:04:50that we are going to bounce back from this.

1:04:52 > 1:04:55from this.But the Russians have been charged with interfering in the

1:04:55 > 1:05:00US election in a major development in an FBI investigation. Among the

1:05:00 > 1:05:03allegations are they promoted disparaging messages about the

1:05:03 > 1:05:07democratic candidate Hillary Clinton. The Russian Foreign

1:05:07 > 1:05:09Ministry has described the allegations as absurd.

1:05:09 > 1:05:12Theresa May will today urge the European Union to put aside

1:05:12 > 1:05:15political doctrine and ideology and sign up to a post-Brexit

1:05:15 > 1:05:16security treaty with Britain.

1:05:16 > 1:05:19At a conference in Munich, she is expected to say that nothing

1:05:19 > 1:05:23must get in the way of Britain and the EU helping each other

1:05:23 > 1:05:24to keep people safe.

1:05:24 > 1:05:28Our chief political correspondent Vicki Young reports.

1:05:28 > 1:05:31In Berlin, with Angela Merkel, the Prime Minister called for a deep

1:05:31 > 1:05:33and special trading relationship with the EU after Brexit.

1:05:33 > 1:05:39But she is also asking for a unique arrangement on security.

1:05:39 > 1:05:42I will reiterate that the UK remains unconditionally committed

1:05:42 > 1:05:45to European security and set out my vision for a unique

1:05:45 > 1:05:50new partnership between the EU and the UK.

1:05:50 > 1:05:55On defence, information sharing, security and law enforcement.

1:05:55 > 1:06:00We must work together and use all levers at our disposal to keep

1:06:00 > 1:06:01people across Europe safe.

1:06:01 > 1:06:03The thrust of her argument

1:06:03 > 1:06:06is that the UK is a special case, offering substantial defence

1:06:06 > 1:06:09resources and expertise in counter-terrorism.

1:06:09 > 1:06:13The Prime Minister will say that failure to sign up to a new security

1:06:13 > 1:06:15treaty would have damaging consequences, playing into the hands

1:06:15 > 1:06:19of our enemies, who would like nothing more than to see Europe

1:06:19 > 1:06:21divided.

1:06:21 > 1:06:24It comes after the head of MI6 joined with his French

1:06:24 > 1:06:26and German counterpart to appeal to continued intelligence

1:06:26 > 1:06:29sharing after Brexit.

1:06:29 > 1:06:32Mrs May will tell EU leaders not to let their deep-seated ideology

1:06:32 > 1:06:36put Europe's citizens in danger.

1:06:36 > 1:06:40The hope is that the EU will take a practical approach,

1:06:40 > 1:06:42because they accept that continuing to work together

1:06:42 > 1:06:50is mutually beneficial.

1:06:50 > 1:06:54Theresa May will make her speech just after 8:30 AM and we will bring

1:06:54 > 1:06:56you some of that as it happens.

1:06:56 > 1:06:58The President of Haiti has called for an investigation

1:06:58 > 1:07:01into the activities of aid agencies working in his country,

1:07:01 > 1:07:04saying that the sex scandal involving some Oxfam workers

1:07:04 > 1:07:07after the 2010 earthquake was just the tip of the iceberg.

1:07:07 > 1:07:09He told the Reuters news agency that one charity,

1:07:09 > 1:07:11Medecins Sans Frontiers, had repatriated some its staff

1:07:11 > 1:07:12from Haiti without any explanation.

1:07:12 > 1:07:14John McManus reports.

1:07:14 > 1:07:22Haiti in the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake.

1:07:22 > 1:07:25Oxfam has been on the defensive over allegations that some of its staff

1:07:25 > 1:07:28paid prostitutes here.

1:07:28 > 1:07:33I always dreamed of working for them.

1:07:33 > 1:07:35This woman, who spoke anonymously to the BBC,

1:07:35 > 1:07:39says she was attacked by a colleague.

1:07:39 > 1:07:42He pinned me up against the wall, he was groping me, grabbing me,

1:07:42 > 1:07:45kissing me and I was just trying to shove him off.

1:07:45 > 1:07:49And got him off eventually and he got mad and he threw his

1:07:49 > 1:07:50class at me.

1:07:50 > 1:07:53-- glass at me.

1:07:53 > 1:07:56Now, Haiti's president Jovenel Moise has said other charities also have

1:07:56 > 1:07:59questions to answer and he has made a specific allegation

1:07:59 > 1:08:01against Medecins Sans Frontiers, also known as Doctors

1:08:01 > 1:08:08without Borders, who sends medical staff around the world.

1:08:08 > 1:08:11The President said MSF had to repatriate about 17 people

1:08:11 > 1:08:13for misconduct, without any explanation why.

1:08:13 > 1:08:16In response, MSF said:

1:08:28 > 1:08:30MSF has already admitted that it fired 19

1:08:30 > 1:08:32staff members last year after allegations of harassment

1:08:32 > 1:08:33or sexual assault.

1:08:33 > 1:08:41So how widespread is the problem?

1:08:41 > 1:08:43Oxfam are not alone in this.

1:08:43 > 1:08:47Every agency in the sector has the problem.

1:08:47 > 1:08:51We work in a sector that attracts the vulnerable -

1:08:51 > 1:08:56that, works, sorry supports honourable people.

1:08:56 > 1:08:59Therefore, attracts predators.

1:08:59 > 1:09:02Meanwhile Oxfam's UK head says the evidence in Haiti

1:09:02 > 1:09:09were a disgrace but also told the Guardian newspaper that:

1:09:13 > 1:09:15Certainly, the intense scrutiny of the aid sector is unlikely

1:09:15 > 1:09:18to stop soon.

1:09:20 > 1:09:23The fate of UKIP's current leader, the party's fourth in 18 months,

1:09:23 > 1:09:26will be decided at an emergency general meeting today.

1:09:26 > 1:09:28UKIP members will vote whether Henry Bolton should stay

1:09:28 > 1:09:31or go following revelations his former girlfriend sent racist

1:09:31 > 1:09:36messages about Prince Harry's fiancee Meghan Markle.

1:09:36 > 1:09:38Let's speak to our political correspondent Matt Cole,

1:09:38 > 1:09:44who is in our London newsroom for us this morning.

1:09:44 > 1:09:48Good morning. This feels like a pretty important daily for UKIP,

1:09:48 > 1:09:51given the headlines that have followed their leader around

1:09:51 > 1:09:56recently.Absolutely, good morning, this is the big decision day for

1:09:56 > 1:10:00UKIP, we believe at least 1000 members are going to gather in

1:10:00 > 1:10:04Birmingham and it will be a very simple process, really- Henry Bolton

1:10:04 > 1:10:09will get to put his case to the members who have gathered there are

1:10:09 > 1:10:13why he should be allowed to stay on as leader. He will speak after

1:10:13 > 1:10:17members of the national executive, who voted one month ago that he

1:10:17 > 1:10:21should leave. They will get to put their case was two sides of the

1:10:21 > 1:10:24argument have been put. Those thousand members also do turn up

1:10:24 > 1:10:27will face a simple ballot, although within a couple of hours whether

1:10:27 > 1:10:31Henry Bolton stays or goes and if he loses, it has promised that he will

1:10:31 > 1:10:37stand aside. UKIP will be looking for what it is is fifth leader in a

1:10:37 > 1:10:40little over 18 months or so, a previous incumbent might -- Nigel

1:10:40 > 1:10:44Farage has suggested that the Henry Bolton should stay on because the

1:10:44 > 1:10:47party is somewhat imploding but whatever happens, whichever way the

1:10:47 > 1:10:50result goes, UKIP will have rather a lot of trouble keeping itself

1:10:50 > 1:10:52together.Thank you.

1:10:52 > 1:10:55British soldiers are to be deployed to Africa to boost the fight

1:10:55 > 1:10:58against illegal wildlife poaching.

1:10:58 > 1:11:01They will train rangers in Malawi to find and stop poachers,

1:11:01 > 1:11:04in an expansion of a successful pilot scheme that was

1:11:04 > 1:11:04trialled last year.

1:11:04 > 1:11:07The Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson said poaching puts

1:11:07 > 1:11:08majestic animals at risk.

1:11:08 > 1:11:16Animals under threat include elephants, rhinos and lions.

1:11:20 > 1:11:29The sport coming up shortly, and news of another medal the Team GB.

1:11:29 > 1:11:30-- for Team GB.

1:11:30 > 1:11:32Police are investigating hundreds of accusations of historic abuse

1:11:32 > 1:11:34within football following the conviction of former football

1:11:34 > 1:11:35scout Barry Bennell.

1:11:35 > 1:11:38Questions have been raised about the safety of young players

1:11:38 > 1:11:40at grassroots level.

1:11:40 > 1:11:43Before the scale of the problem became known, football clubs had

1:11:43 > 1:11:45safeguarding procedures in place like designated safety

1:11:45 > 1:11:53officers.

1:11:53 > 1:11:56It now says the Football Associations says it has made

1:11:56 > 1:11:57changes to its safeguarding procedures.

1:11:57 > 1:12:00It now offers counselling for anyone affected by abuse,

1:12:00 > 1:12:03as well as monitoring all youth football clubs in England to make

1:12:03 > 1:12:04sure they follow their rules.

1:12:04 > 1:12:06Last November, the government announced plans

1:12:06 > 1:12:08to change the law so that coaches

1:12:08 > 1:12:10would be placed legally in positions of trust,

1:12:10 > 1:12:12making sexual relationships between sports coaches and players

1:12:12 > 1:12:18aged 16 and 17 illegal.

1:12:18 > 1:12:21Chantel Scherer is from the Sport and Recreation Alliance,

1:12:21 > 1:12:23a body that represents national sports organisations,

1:12:23 > 1:12:29including the FA.

1:12:29 > 1:12:37Thanks for joining us. The safeguarding measures that are in

1:12:37 > 1:12:40place, do you think they are adequate and will be effective?Good

1:12:40 > 1:12:45morning. Yes, I think we can't become complacent but I think the

1:12:45 > 1:12:49sport and recreation sector is making strong strides and is

1:12:49 > 1:12:52committed to making sure that people who play sport and watch sport and

1:12:52 > 1:12:56volunteer in sport and work in sport can do so safely and in an

1:12:56 > 1:12:59environment where a protect it, particularly young children and

1:12:59 > 1:13:05adults at risk.I imagine now that as the E Barry Bennell cases come to

1:13:05 > 1:13:09light, we were talking to two of his victims is not very eloquently and

1:13:09 > 1:13:12passionately about what they want to see in the future of sport in the

1:13:12 > 1:13:15future of safeguarding young people in the future are very concerned

1:13:15 > 1:13:20about this. -- Barry Bennell. You think parents watching this now can

1:13:20 > 1:13:23feel that their children will be safe, that the measures they should

1:13:23 > 1:13:28be put in place are put in place? Absolutely. Having strong policies

1:13:28 > 1:13:32and procedures in place is an absolute must but I think what must

1:13:32 > 1:13:36go a long side that is a culture of round safeguarding which is all of

1:13:36 > 1:13:39us that are involved in sport, including the parents. As parents

1:13:39 > 1:13:42get ready to drop their children off the sports activities this morning

1:13:42 > 1:13:46it is important they know what kind of policies and procedures are in

1:13:46 > 1:13:50place and let the environment is in their club as well as the young

1:13:50 > 1:13:53people knowing that there are policies and procedures and they can

1:13:53 > 1:13:57talk to someone and when they do they will be listened to and acted

1:13:57 > 1:14:01upon swiftly.How shocking do you find it that only now the government

1:14:01 > 1:14:05has said that relationships between 16 and 17 -year-olds and their

1:14:05 > 1:14:12courage should be illegal? -- coach. You would assume that would just be

1:14:12 > 1:14:20automatic on you?I think the thing to focus on is the agreement has now

1:14:20 > 1:14:22been made and that is really important. I think sports coaches

1:14:22 > 1:14:26have always been a slightly great position mainly because sometimes

1:14:26 > 1:14:30baleful employees of a club that often times they are volunteers and

1:14:30 > 1:14:34so I think the commitment from the government on this cross

1:14:34 > 1:14:37departmental policy is surely important but now we just need to

1:14:37 > 1:14:40make sure that comes into place and alongside of a culture of

1:14:40 > 1:14:43safeguarding that we can really start to protect everyone involved

1:14:43 > 1:14:46in sport because the benefits of sport far outweigh sometimes some of

1:14:46 > 1:14:50these risks and it is really important that as a society we can

1:14:50 > 1:14:54participate and reap these benefits. You will forgive me I'm sure but

1:14:54 > 1:14:58actually people are saying I don't need to focus on the agreement, only

1:14:58 > 1:15:01to focus on the idea that there is now prevalent acceptance that

1:15:01 > 1:15:05relationships between 16 and 17 -year-olds and their coaches was

1:15:05 > 1:15:10never accepted. But there is actually a sea change in attitudes

1:15:10 > 1:15:15and it has been fed through, it isn't accepted that this is a great

1:15:15 > 1:15:18area, it is not accepted that the agreement is now in place and

1:15:18 > 1:15:22therefore things will change, it should just be that coach is no it

1:15:22 > 1:15:30is wrong to have a relationship with a child.

1:15:30 > 1:15:34a child.Absolutely, that goes without saying and what is important

1:15:34 > 1:15:37now is coaches are subject to the same restrictions... You are quite

1:15:37 > 1:15:41right, they should have always been subjected to those. But now with a

1:15:41 > 1:15:46profile raised around this issue it is more difficult and that's what

1:15:46 > 1:15:49safeguarding is about, venting things from happening and making

1:15:49 > 1:15:53sure there are systems in place and everyone is aware that they are

1:15:53 > 1:15:56there. Children need to be protected and this is just one step towards

1:15:56 > 1:16:04doing that.Thank you very much for talking to us this morning.

1:16:04 > 1:16:09Here's Sarah with a look at this morning's weather.

1:16:09 > 1:16:15Good morning. Thing is not looking bad out there. Any of us will have a

1:16:15 > 1:16:22dry day, a bit like this scene taken yesterday in Fife. Today is the

1:16:22 > 1:16:26better day of the weekend in terms of sunshine. More cloud tomorrow and

1:16:26 > 1:16:31things turning milder. Some rain towards the west. A bit of rain this

1:16:31 > 1:16:36morning, but many are dry. The satellite image shows a lot of

1:16:36 > 1:16:40cloud. A weak front is pushing south-eastwards. Towards the

1:16:40 > 1:16:47north-west and south-east you should see some relatively clear skies

1:16:47 > 1:16:50today, but the front brings cloud across central parts of the country

1:16:50 > 1:16:54and some outbreaks of rain. Parts of northern England, the Midlands,

1:16:54 > 1:16:59southern Wales, a bit of rain and maybe a touch of hill snow before it

1:16:59 > 1:17:03clears to the south and east. Scotland and Northern Ireland

1:17:03 > 1:17:07already in the clear. Showers into the west of Scotland. Perhaps a

1:17:07 > 1:17:11couple of Northern Ireland and the north-west of England, falling as

1:17:11 > 1:17:15snow here. To the south-east you are likely to have clear skies for much

1:17:15 > 1:17:20of the day. As the weak front cleaves to the east and many will

1:17:20 > 1:17:23see clear and dry conditions tonight. In eastern side of the

1:17:23 > 1:17:26country we keep the clear conditions tomorrow morning. A frost likely

1:17:26 > 1:17:32here and mist and fog patches. Further west with cotton as front

1:17:32 > 1:17:38arriving. -- the next front. It is a warm front so it will bring mild

1:17:38 > 1:17:41air. You can see the yellow colours indicating the milder air mass

1:17:41 > 1:17:44coming from the west or south-westerly direction through

1:17:44 > 1:17:51Sunday. A chilly start to the east, with the mist, fog and frost. In

1:17:51 > 1:17:54eastern Scotland and eastern England we keep the sunshine for a good part

1:17:54 > 1:17:58of the day. Further west we've already got the cloud and we will

1:17:58 > 1:18:01have patchy outbreaks of rain, especially the Northern Ireland,

1:18:01 > 1:18:04western Scotland and western parts of England and Wales. The bridge is

1:18:04 > 1:18:09similar to today, 7-11 degrees tomorrow -- temperatures. Monday

1:18:09 > 1:18:16will be cloudy. The weather front still hanging around, so we could

1:18:16 > 1:18:19see outbreaks of rain, especially in eastern parts of the country.

1:18:19 > 1:18:25Turning cooler from the east later on Monday, but temperatures in

1:18:25 > 1:18:27double figures across Northern Ireland and the south-west of

1:18:27 > 1:18:35England. Next week the yellow colours clear to the south and they

1:18:35 > 1:18:39are replaced by the blue colours, indicating that cold air will come

1:18:39 > 1:18:44from an easterly direction through next week. So although it will be a

1:18:44 > 1:18:49mild start the next few days will be quiet and cloudy and things could

1:18:49 > 1:18:54turn more wintry through the course of next week.

1:19:03 > 1:19:06If you are a fan of the mullet, the hairstyle, or the ponytail

1:19:06 > 1:19:10or the beehive.

1:19:10 > 1:19:14Notice they all have links!

1:19:14 > 1:19:16Then a new exhibition that celebrates the history

1:19:16 > 1:19:21of hairdressing may well interest you.

1:19:21 > 1:19:24Another person who may be interested is our entertainment correspondent

1:19:24 > 1:19:31Colin Paterson.

1:19:31 > 1:19:35Sometimes the way stories are signed at the BBC can lead to the cruel

1:19:35 > 1:19:39hand of fate being dealt. Despite being one of the very boldest

1:19:39 > 1:19:43correspondence, here I was dispatched to Barnsley to cover the

1:19:43 > 1:19:49opening of a new exhibition dedicated to head dressing.

1:19:49 > 1:19:54Beehives, bobs and blowdried explores the history of hair from

1:19:54 > 1:19:58the 1950s until the present day and former hairdresser of the year

1:19:58 > 1:20:04Andrew Barton was back in his home time curating the wigs.-- hometown.

1:20:04 > 1:20:07Hairdressing is one of those careers that can be incredibly exciting for

1:20:07 > 1:20:13young people to get into. We employ about 1% of the total UK workforce.

1:20:13 > 1:20:17It is true profession. What is it about a new hairstyle that gives you

1:20:17 > 1:20:22a new outlook?Hair is that one outfit that she never takes off, so

1:20:22 > 1:20:26it means so much to her and what we want to do in the exhibition is

1:20:26 > 1:20:30really kind of showcase all the cultural aspects, why things have

1:20:30 > 1:20:34happened in hair fashion over and throughout history.What could be

1:20:34 > 1:20:37more flattering than a style that can be adapted simply by the

1:20:37 > 1:20:40addition of a matching week?Despite hairdressing having been a

1:20:40 > 1:20:44multibillion pound industry for decades, this exhibition claims to

1:20:44 > 1:20:48be the first ever in Britain to fully examine the subject.Everyone

1:20:48 > 1:20:53has got ahead of story. Some experience of being in a salad and

1:20:53 > 1:20:57that transformation -- salon. Do we really wanted to show that side of

1:20:57 > 1:21:01it and to think about the links. How does hairdressing evolve? How does

1:21:01 > 1:21:04technology come into this?

1:21:08 > 1:21:12Deborah and Denise have worked together for almost 40 years in the

1:21:12 > 1:21:18same Barnsley salon.That's me and that one is me.Then a trip to the

1:21:18 > 1:21:23exhibition was a snip down memory lane.People used to have rollers in

1:21:23 > 1:21:27their hair and that was the only way to get movement and curl in their

1:21:27 > 1:21:33pants to do it at home would have been a great timesaver.Pop music

1:21:33 > 1:21:41had a real influence on head. There were local bands from Sheffield.I

1:21:41 > 1:21:46was working as a waitress in a cocktail bar...People wanted that

1:21:46 > 1:21:51to be recreated. I want that haircut, the girl from human league.

1:21:51 > 1:21:56Before I left I want to show -- share my own peace of hair history.

1:21:56 > 1:22:05This was me at my school prom.OK, wow! Rockabilly quiff inspired.Not

1:22:05 > 1:22:09many people coming to shops asking for that, I bet.It's very on trend

1:22:09 > 1:22:19at the moment!Colin Paterson, BBC News, bold in Barnsley.

1:22:19 > 1:22:22Beehives, bobs and blow-dries is at Barnsley Civic

1:22:22 > 1:22:27until the 7th of April.

1:22:27 > 1:22:34Who would have ever recognised Colin with that quiff? An impressive

1:22:34 > 1:22:40haircut. A lot of hairspray involved in that we are reliably told and

1:22:40 > 1:22:46Colin says he was trying to play homage to the Smiths front man

1:22:46 > 1:22:50Morrisey. I don't think he looks much

1:22:50 > 1:22:55different now. He doesn't have hair any more.

1:22:55 > 1:22:59That's what he was doing, emulating Jedward.

1:22:59 > 1:23:03I quite like that. I think it's a good look.

1:23:03 > 1:23:10They asked a personal question? No. We will have the sport and the

1:23:10 > 1:23:14weather coming up later. Perhaps you have some pictures you

1:23:14 > 1:23:21would like to share of hair gone by. Send them to us and we will try to

1:23:21 > 1:23:24show them later in the programme.

1:23:24 > 1:23:27Theresa May has spent months calling for a special economic partnership

1:23:27 > 1:23:30with the European Union after Brexit, but today her focus

1:23:30 > 1:23:36turns to security.

1:23:36 > 1:23:39In around an hour, at a conference in Munich,

1:23:39 > 1:23:41she is expected to ask for a unique arrangement to enshrine

1:23:41 > 1:23:41benefits of cooperation".

1:23:41 > 1:23:46So how safe will we be after we leave the EU?

1:23:46 > 1:23:48Let's talk to the security expert Ciaran Martin,

1:23:48 > 1:23:50who joins us from Westminster.

1:23:50 > 1:23:58Good morning. This message, we have been told she will make a speech in

1:23:58 > 1:24:02about one hour. What do you think the focus is right now in terms of

1:24:02 > 1:24:07how we address security and the relationship between nations?Well,

1:24:07 > 1:24:12I'm just back from unique myself because I run the government's

1:24:12 > 1:24:15National Cyber Security Centre and there was a meeting on Thursday of a

1:24:15 > 1:24:18similar group of experts ahead of the main conference on cyber

1:24:18 > 1:24:22security and what I think from the UK point of view the Prime Minister

1:24:22 > 1:24:25is seeking to achieve is how the unconditional offer of support to

1:24:25 > 1:24:29our European partners in cyber security after the departure from

1:24:29 > 1:24:36the European Union can work. In my field of cyber security, we are

1:24:36 > 1:24:40seeing as a leader in European cyber security. We are given threat data

1:24:40 > 1:24:44to more than half of the EU countries, we are leading the way in

1:24:44 > 1:24:48European electoral security as we face up to the threats from Russia

1:24:48 > 1:24:52and the threats from cyber criminals. So I think some of those

1:24:52 > 1:25:01arrangements will need further refinement after

1:25:01 > 1:25:04refinement after Brexit. I think what the UK delegation will be

1:25:04 > 1:25:08looking to do is to cement that deep and enduring partnership in the face

1:25:08 > 1:25:14of common threats, including in the field of cyber security.You are not

1:25:14 > 1:25:18a politician. You are in the business of security, if you like,

1:25:18 > 1:25:22and you said what your role is. Politics has a big part to play,

1:25:22 > 1:25:27doesn't it? There have to be agreement so you can share

1:25:27 > 1:25:30information and we know now from many occasions internationally that

1:25:30 > 1:25:35the sharing of information is so crucial.The sharing of information

1:25:35 > 1:25:39is crucial and so on Thursday I was discussing greater sharing of cyber

1:25:39 > 1:25:45security information with German and other European partners. On Friday,

1:25:45 > 1:25:48the head of MI6 was there with his partners from France, Germany and

1:25:48 > 1:25:53other countries, calling for greater sharing and the Prime Minister will

1:25:53 > 1:25:56be taking up forward today. And there's a range of issues here. If

1:25:56 > 1:26:00you take for example the agreement that the Prime Minister signed with

1:26:00 > 1:26:05President Macron of France in January, that sort of cooperation

1:26:05 > 1:26:10can go on regardless of the form the future relationship with the EU

1:26:10 > 1:26:15takes. There are other more specific things such as for example in

1:26:15 > 1:26:19minefield sharing of cyber threat gratified information with the EU

1:26:19 > 1:26:23institutions, where as a non- member state will have to come to a new

1:26:23 > 1:26:26arrangement for sharing that date. But that standard tractors in

1:26:26 > 1:26:30intelligence sharing should be possible if the sort of pragmatism

1:26:30 > 1:26:35and commonsense of the Prime Minister is for prevails, because

1:26:35 > 1:26:39the commitment to common European security is unconditional and so

1:26:39 > 1:26:43important to our values, prosperity and way of life and that's what

1:26:43 > 1:26:47we're working with European partners on every day.It can't have a

1:26:47 > 1:26:50conversation on why it is all important without asking what that

1:26:50 > 1:26:54risk. What is at risk if there isn't a clear pathway and there are

1:26:54 > 1:27:00hurdles and problems along the way? What's the risk?Our commitment to

1:27:00 > 1:27:03European security is unconditional. What we don't want is unnecessary

1:27:03 > 1:27:08impediments to that sort of corporate... Cooperation. We will

1:27:08 > 1:27:13work around whatever impediments they may be in the future. But what

1:27:13 > 1:27:18I am saying and what the head of MI6 and the PM is saying is there is no

1:27:18 > 1:27:22need for this and we want to work through those new arrangements and

1:27:22 > 1:27:29enshrine them in a treaty and we face a range of national security

1:27:29 > 1:27:34threats, including cyber security, and disruption of services, which

1:27:34 > 1:27:39can put people at harm, all the way through to the risk of large-scale

1:27:39 > 1:27:43economic damage. This is a common problem across the whole of the west

1:27:43 > 1:27:47that we need to work together in the most effective way to combat that

1:27:47 > 1:27:51threat.Everyone presumably is on-board the principles of what you

1:27:51 > 1:27:56are saying, but I and interested in your phraseology. You use the word

1:27:56 > 1:28:01impediments. That could mean a lot of things to a lot of people. In

1:28:01 > 1:28:06practical terms, an impediment could have disastrous consequences,

1:28:06 > 1:28:09especially in the fast moving world of cyber security that you are

1:28:09 > 1:28:13talking about. One of the real risks, and these risks are changing,

1:28:13 > 1:28:17is that in cyber security you don't have time to arrange things as it

1:28:17 > 1:28:22happening. This will unfold beneath you and an impediment could have

1:28:22 > 1:28:27disastrous consequences in a very short space of time?We are leaders

1:28:27 > 1:28:30in European cyber security and we are sharing that information all the

1:28:30 > 1:28:33time with other countries. We will continue to share that information

1:28:33 > 1:28:37with other countries regardless because our ability to share

1:28:37 > 1:28:39information with other European Union member states isn't contingent

1:28:39 > 1:28:44on membership of the European Union. There are things in terms of date

1:28:44 > 1:28:50flows in Europe as a whole and sharing pieces of information where

1:28:50 > 1:28:53we need to negotiate new arrangements with the EU as a whole.

1:28:53 > 1:28:56Those should and can be straightforward. We should be

1:28:56 > 1:29:00wrapped up into the sort of arrangements the PM is proposing.

1:29:00 > 1:29:03They are vital. The is there is there. There are no known

1:29:03 > 1:29:07impediments at the moment and there's no need for any in the

1:29:07 > 1:29:11future the European cyber security Corporation. The is there as a

1:29:11 > 1:29:14leader, passionately committed to European and global cyber security,

1:29:14 > 1:29:19so let's get on with the job in the most effective way we can.Thank you

1:29:19 > 1:29:24very much for your time this morning. Just a reminder that the

1:29:24 > 1:29:27speech from the PM is taking place little later this morning, just

1:29:27 > 1:29:31around eight 30 a.m. , so we will try to listen to some of that.

1:29:31 > 1:29:39The headlines are coming up. We will be back with

1:30:19 > 1:30:20Hello, this is Breakfast

1:30:20 > 1:30:21with Naga Munchetty and Charlie Stayt.

1:30:21 > 1:30:22Good morning.

1:30:22 > 1:30:25Here's a summary of today's main stories from BBC News.

1:30:25 > 1:30:28President Trump has met survivors of Wednesday's high school gun

1:30:28 > 1:30:32attack in Florida in which 17 people were killed.

1:30:32 > 1:30:35He praised emergency workers and medical staff for their response

1:30:35 > 1:30:38but has refused to discuss gun laws, despite strong calls from those

1:30:38 > 1:30:42affected by the shootings.

1:30:42 > 1:30:45Theresa May is expected to urge the European Union to put aside

1:30:45 > 1:30:47political doctrine and ideology and sign up to a post-Brexit

1:30:47 > 1:30:50security treaty with Britain.

1:30:50 > 1:30:52Speaking at a conference in Munich this morning,

1:30:52 > 1:30:56she'll say that nothing must get in the way of Britain and the EU

1:30:56 > 1:30:59helping each other to keep people safe.

1:30:59 > 1:31:02She'll also talk of the need for real political will to safeguard

1:31:02 > 1:31:06the level of co-operation which has developed over decades.

1:31:06 > 1:31:08The president of Haiti has called for an investigation

1:31:08 > 1:31:11into the activities of aid agencies working in his country,

1:31:11 > 1:31:14saying that the scandal involving some Oxfam workers was just the tip

1:31:14 > 1:31:15of the iceberg.

1:31:15 > 1:31:17He said the charity Doctors Without Borders had

1:31:17 > 1:31:20repatriated some of its staff from Haiti without any explanation.

1:31:20 > 1:31:22The charity said it takes any reports of staff misconduct

1:31:22 > 1:31:30seriously and are seeking to clarify the questions raised.

1:31:30 > 1:31:3313 Russians have been charged with interfering in the 2016 US

1:31:33 > 1:31:36election in a major development in the FBI investigation.

1:31:36 > 1:31:38Among the allegations are that they promoted disparaging

1:31:38 > 1:31:40messages about the Democratic candidate, Hillary Clinton.

1:31:40 > 1:31:48The Russian Foreign Ministry has described the allegations as absurd.

1:31:49 > 1:31:52UKIP members will vote for or against sacking their current

1:31:52 > 1:31:54leader at an emergency meeting in Birmingham today.

1:31:54 > 1:31:57The party's National Executive Committee backed a vote of no

1:31:57 > 1:32:00confidence in Henry Bolton last month, but he has refused to step

1:32:00 > 1:32:03down after it emerged his former girlfriend had sent a series

1:32:03 > 1:32:05of racist messages about Prince Harry's fiancee,

1:32:05 > 1:32:08Meghan Markle.

1:32:08 > 1:32:11Police in Manchester have charged a man with murder after the body

1:32:11 > 1:32:16of a 24-year-old woman was found in the Ancoats area of the city.

1:32:16 > 1:32:18Danielle Richardson's body was discovered after police

1:32:18 > 1:32:21were called after a man was seen jumping from

1:32:21 > 1:32:22a second-storey flat window.

1:32:22 > 1:32:27He will appear at Manchester City Magistrates' Court later today.

1:32:27 > 1:32:30British soldiers are to be deployed to Africa to boost the fight

1:32:30 > 1:32:32against illegal wildlife poaching.

1:32:32 > 1:32:34They will train rangers in Malawi to find and stop poachers

1:32:34 > 1:32:37in an expansion of a successful pilot scheme that was

1:32:37 > 1:32:38trialled last year.

1:32:38 > 1:32:40The Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson said poaching puts

1:32:40 > 1:32:41majestic animals at risk.

1:32:41 > 1:32:49Animals under threat include elephants, rhinos and lions.

1:32:55 > 1:33:00It is 732 and let's talk to Mike. Slowly but steady, the medal tally

1:33:00 > 1:33:05is growing. An all-important second battle to follow Dom Parsons's one.

1:33:05 > 1:33:11A first ever medal for Britain on skis this is ski slopestyle and

1:33:11 > 1:33:15perhaps we didn't see this coming because Izzy Atkin is only 19. She

1:33:15 > 1:33:19is English, lives in America but luckily for us, her father is from

1:33:19 > 1:33:24Birmingham city chose to represent Britain. Ochi she chose us! We are

1:33:24 > 1:33:26honoured, aren't we?

1:33:26 > 1:33:30Could this be the start of a super Saturday on the slopes

1:33:30 > 1:33:31of Pyeongchang for Great Britain?

1:33:31 > 1:33:34Izzy Atkin has become Britain's second medallist of the Games,

1:33:34 > 1:33:36adding to Dom Parsons' bronze in the skeleton,

1:33:36 > 1:33:39with a bronze of her own in the ski slopestyle.

1:33:39 > 1:33:42Ben Croucher reports.

1:33:42 > 1:33:47This is the face of history, Great Britain's first silverware on skis.

1:33:47 > 1:33:50Slopestyle is about nailing the Ralph and avoiding the bumps on the

1:33:50 > 1:33:55jumps, this teenager adds substance with some style. Born and raised in

1:33:55 > 1:33:58the USA to a British father and Malaysia and mother she honed his

1:33:58 > 1:34:02skills on the slopes of main she was three. Trips like this have taken 16

1:34:02 > 1:34:06years in the planning. For the final of three runs Atkin was pushed from

1:34:06 > 1:34:12the podium, this had to be flawless. The biggest one of her life.Starts

1:34:12 > 1:34:18now. Every bride, twist, jump, driving with jeopardy. She lay down

1:34:18 > 1:34:21the score good enough or third but could anybody deny her some

1:34:21 > 1:34:28slopestyle silverware?No! She is down! Reach Britain's Izzy Atkin

1:34:28 > 1:34:34takes a bronze!There were tons of big names in the field, dinner,

1:34:34 > 1:34:37anyone, it could have been anyone and I was standing at the bottom

1:34:37 > 1:34:41after my third and final run and knew I had skied the best I could

1:34:41 > 1:34:46and was waiting for those last three or four girls to drop and is just my

1:34:46 > 1:34:51heart was racing but yeah, I cannot believe it.Believe it, you are an

1:34:51 > 1:34:55Olympic gold-medallist -- bronze Villis. Brilliant, well done.

1:34:55 > 1:34:57In curling, Britain's women enjoyed a fairly routine

1:34:57 > 1:34:58victory against Denmark.

1:34:58 > 1:35:01They've now got three wins out of four and haven't got too long

1:35:01 > 1:35:04to feel too smug - they'll play South Korea

1:35:04 > 1:35:05later this morning.

1:35:05 > 1:35:08The men are facing a shock defeat to South Korea,

1:35:08 > 1:35:16who came into this match bottom of the group and without a win,

1:35:16 > 1:35:23It looks as though South Korea have won it. They were bottom of the

1:35:23 > 1:35:27table but have just beaten reach Britain 10-5 it was the last time I

1:35:27 > 1:35:30looked the Great Britain now face Italy tomorrow which will be a

1:35:30 > 1:35:34crucial match because they could buy then be out of the top four. Still a

1:35:34 > 1:35:39long way to go, we have to say that. Many more matches for Great Britain

1:35:39 > 1:35:44to recover. It isn't a knockout? No, it is a round-robin against the

1:35:44 > 1:35:48other teams. We were third but they may drop now out of the top four

1:35:48 > 1:35:53temporarily. We will follow their progress. That was a shock because

1:35:53 > 1:35:55South Korea have been doing so badly.

1:35:55 > 1:35:57Following the bronze medal for Dom Parsons yesterday,

1:35:57 > 1:36:00Great Britain could add two more medals in the women's skeleton.

1:36:00 > 1:36:03Laura Deas lies in fourth position at the halfway mark whilst team-mate

1:36:03 > 1:36:06Lizzy Yarnold is third.

1:36:06 > 1:36:10She's just one tenth behind the leader with two more runs to go.

1:36:10 > 1:36:12She's aiming to become the first Briton to successfully defend

1:36:12 > 1:36:15a Winter Olympic title.

1:36:15 > 1:36:19I am an athlete that loves to compete at these big events

1:36:19 > 1:36:22when everyone is bringing their best, so I think I am

1:36:22 > 1:36:30still well in the mix, so, I mean, that was the big goal.

1:36:34 > 1:36:38It is frightening to say, but to be the first British Winter Olympian

1:36:38 > 1:36:39to maintain my title.

1:36:39 > 1:36:42It has not been easy, it has been a hard few years

1:36:42 > 1:36:45but hopefully I can do it for everyone who has supported me.

1:36:45 > 1:36:47Indeed, remember,

1:36:47 > 1:36:50Britain has won a skeleton medal at every Games since the sport

1:36:50 > 1:36:53was re-introduced at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City

1:36:53 > 1:36:55when a bronze medal was brought home by Alex Coomber,

1:36:55 > 1:36:57who joins us now.

1:36:57 > 1:36:57Morning, Alex.

1:36:57 > 1:36:59warning.

1:36:59 > 1:37:00-- morning!

1:37:00 > 1:37:04So you know what it takes to hold your nerves on the final run

1:37:04 > 1:37:06- you did it with a broken wrist.

1:37:06 > 1:37:10We went to the holding camp in Calgary and the Calgary track of the

1:37:10 > 1:37:15notorious bend known as a prize or when you go 360 and come out pretty

1:37:15 > 1:37:19much under way you went in and it is a tricky exit, and I came from one

1:37:19 > 1:37:23of the runs, smashed into the side, thought for a few days that my arm

1:37:23 > 1:37:27hurts a bit, but didn't find out until I got home actually around

1:37:27 > 1:37:32three weeks later when it was still in quite a lot of pain.What is it

1:37:32 > 1:37:35in your training that happens when you are almost told to ignore

1:37:35 > 1:37:41injuries because we saw Katy, she injured her wrist and she was on

1:37:41 > 1:37:46Instagram and post picture of her wrist, I am still competing, this is

1:37:46 > 1:37:50a woman who is going to snowboard and flick in the air, and only when

1:37:50 > 1:37:55she damaged her heel and had two pins put in that she said OK, fine,

1:37:55 > 1:37:59I will back off, that you see these injuries but you Winter Olympians

1:37:59 > 1:38:04are tough as nails!It is the nature of the games as a whole, they are

1:38:04 > 1:38:08high adrenaline sports, we are all wanted to go out and do some

1:38:08 > 1:38:11indifferent which is why we do these sports. People call us in saying

1:38:11 > 1:38:16which is probably true but we love it. It is part of the fun. You will

1:38:16 > 1:38:20pretty much take knocks and hits along the way every day you are

1:38:20 > 1:38:24training so in a way it almost becomes just part and parcel of what

1:38:24 > 1:38:28you are doing.As you go down the skeleton track you see those

1:38:28 > 1:38:33collisions with the side so the whole body, and occasionally when

1:38:33 > 1:38:37you see the slow motion you almost to the present's body kind of come

1:38:37 > 1:38:43off the skeleton itself. How hard of those impacts as you are going down?

1:38:43 > 1:38:48To be honest, they look worse than they are. Unless you are quite big,

1:38:48 > 1:38:52I would say. For someone small like me I was inside the outside diameter

1:38:52 > 1:38:58of my sled.How wide is that? Probably 1.5 feet and you have

1:38:58 > 1:39:03bombers at the side.18 inches or so. You see people literally their

1:39:03 > 1:39:08shoulders and hips collide, don't they?Sometimes people would come

1:39:08 > 1:39:12back up into the start of the top and they had shredded their sleeves

1:39:12 > 1:39:19and arms and most of the skin and I would be no, I don't fancy that. But

1:39:19 > 1:39:23the hits you can take, quite a lot of them down the track and they

1:39:23 > 1:39:27carry on. I have come off my sled completely, flip it, flip back on

1:39:27 > 1:39:33again, so I think the drama looks great but it isn't actually as bad

1:39:33 > 1:39:37when you are on the thing.Can I ask a real layperson question, if you're

1:39:37 > 1:39:45sled fitted ergonomically to you? This led today, yes. This led the

1:39:45 > 1:39:49bow riding, they are components led so they can be altered to be very,

1:39:49 > 1:39:54very specific. Going back to salt lake 16 years ago we had pretty much

1:39:54 > 1:39:57a standard sled that the only thing you could modify was the subtle

1:39:57 > 1:40:03which is the bit that you buy in, that can move in and out on the

1:40:03 > 1:40:06angle can change and the weight of the sled -- saddle.That was all we

1:40:06 > 1:40:11can change. Silly question, it is quite high-tech, but at the end you

1:40:11 > 1:40:19kind of running to a piece of foreign? That seems rather low-tech.

1:40:20 > 1:40:24-- secretary of there is no break. The break is people, you will see

1:40:24 > 1:40:29them coming up, they create wind, their feet is going down and it is

1:40:29 > 1:40:32uphill, but because the kind of speeds that we generate, you have to

1:40:32 > 1:40:37have something to complete little you down and that is why you get the

1:40:37 > 1:40:42foam.On the today, the margins are so fine but you have to think that

1:40:42 > 1:40:46Lizzy Yarnold knows what she is doing, how to nail the third and

1:40:46 > 1:40:52final run.Yeah, this race will be amazing, I love this track, you

1:40:52 > 1:40:56know, for a spectator you don't want to know from the first run who is

1:40:56 > 1:41:00going to win and it is probably great for the person at the front of

1:41:00 > 1:41:05the field but to watch the race, we have seen it in the loos, the man's

1:41:05 > 1:41:09skeleton, and we will see it in the Lady's rates as well that it will

1:41:09 > 1:41:13come down to those 100 of a second -- luge. This is a four mile race,

1:41:13 > 1:41:17it is what you have to remember. You will not win that in the first 100

1:41:17 > 1:41:22metres, even in the first half mile, it will come down to very last few

1:41:22 > 1:41:26runs.Alex, you talked about 16 years ago in terms of the technology

1:41:26 > 1:41:33and equipment, how much better are we in terms of global prospects at

1:41:33 > 1:41:39an old BT now? How much better is Team GB than perhaps 16 years ago?

1:41:39 > 1:41:44When I started, it was a bit, to be honest, quite gung ho, not very

1:41:44 > 1:41:48professional, we didn't have support staff, my team before we came back

1:41:48 > 1:41:52into the Olympics, there where the athletes and one coach and that was

1:41:52 > 1:41:57the team and is now the support staff, it is incredible, they have

1:41:57 > 1:42:03nutritionists, physios, a number of coaches so it has all become very

1:42:03 > 1:42:06professional and with that professionalism comes confidence and

1:42:06 > 1:42:11going out again and again repeatedly, beating an international

1:42:11 > 1:42:14field, just inspires everybody else declined to follow in their

1:42:14 > 1:42:26footsteps.Here is hoping it works. And he started it all off! -- you.

1:42:26 > 1:42:28Right away from the Olympics now.

1:42:28 > 1:42:31Four senior West Bromwich Albion players - Jonny Evans,

1:42:31 > 1:42:33Gareth Barry, Jake Livermore and Boaz Myhill - have apologised

1:42:33 > 1:42:36after breaking a curfew and allegedly stealing a taxi,

1:42:36 > 1:42:38from outside a fast-food restaurant in Barcelona.

1:42:38 > 1:42:40The team are bottom of the Premier League

1:42:40 > 1:42:42and were on a mid-season training break in Spain.

1:42:42 > 1:42:45The players have released a joint statement apologising

1:42:45 > 1:42:45for the incident.

1:42:45 > 1:42:48Catalonia police interviewed them but didn't arrest the four men

1:42:48 > 1:42:50in the early hours of Thursday morning.

1:42:50 > 1:42:53The club say the players will be subject to the full rigours

1:42:53 > 1:42:58of internal, disciplinary procedures.

1:42:58 > 1:43:01It was not what we wanted.

1:43:01 > 1:43:05You know, we have gone there to try and get ourselves up and ready

1:43:05 > 1:43:08for these running and this is obviously not ideal.

1:43:08 > 1:43:11They break curfew and that is unacceptable and I feel a bit let

1:43:11 > 1:43:15down by that but we still got a training in and my focus is now

1:43:15 > 1:43:20on the game.

1:43:20 > 1:43:22Remember, it's FA cup 5th round weekend.

1:43:22 > 1:43:25With Leicester and Chelsea, already through, you can watch

1:43:25 > 1:43:28the goals from their wins over Sheffield United and Hull on the BBC

1:43:28 > 1:43:30Sport website.

1:43:30 > 1:43:33But finally, for now, Roger Federer has become the oldest

1:43:33 > 1:43:36player to become the world tennis number one 14 years after he first

1:43:36 > 1:43:37topped the rankings.

1:43:37 > 1:43:45He beat Robin Haase by two sets to one at the Rotterdam Open.

1:43:45 > 1:43:48It was actually a double fault from Haase that handed match point

1:43:48 > 1:43:49to the 36-year-old Federer.

1:43:49 > 1:43:52But a very popular quarterfinal victory, and Federer was presented

1:43:52 > 1:44:00with a special award to mark the occasion.

1:44:00 > 1:44:03I don't think there is anything in that.

1:44:03 > 1:44:05Federer took to social media after the event,

1:44:05 > 1:44:09joking that it's the first he has heard of the record as he struggles

1:44:09 > 1:44:13with his hearing in his old age.

1:44:13 > 1:44:20He is only 36! Though for a tennis player, yes, it is getting on a bit.

1:44:20 > 1:44:25No! It is young, youthful, wonderful, sprightly. An amazing

1:44:25 > 1:44:26career.

1:44:27 > 1:44:32Here's Sarah with a look at this morning's weather.

1:44:32 > 1:44:3736 is really young, isn't it? UI yet to get there, of course!

1:44:37 > 1:44:40Of course! Spring chickens.

1:44:40 > 1:44:44to get there, of course! Of course! Spring chickens.

1:44:44 > 1:44:47Through the course of the weekend the weather World feel that

1:44:47 > 1:44:51springlike. Quite a bit of cloud around today, but some breaks as

1:44:51 > 1:44:58well and sunshine on offer. This is how the sun was rising in Kent and

1:44:58 > 1:45:02today probably the better day of the weekend in terms of staying dry with

1:45:02 > 1:45:06some brightness around. By tomorrow we will have more cloud and things

1:45:06 > 1:45:11will turn milder, with rain arriving in the west. This is the satellite

1:45:11 > 1:45:17image showing the cloud that's been spreading on. Clearer skies behind,

1:45:17 > 1:45:20so they are pushing on across Scotland and Northern Ireland.

1:45:20 > 1:45:24Further south and east we have the weather front which is Lyn moving

1:45:24 > 1:45:26and drifting southwards and eastwards, winning cloud patchy

1:45:26 > 1:45:33rain. It is vital that we should have some sunny spells. A chilly

1:45:33 > 1:45:38start in the south-east of England. A touch of frost and a few misty

1:45:38 > 1:45:42patch is around. Then the band of cloud and patchy rain peters out as

1:45:42 > 1:45:45it moves southwards and eastwards. Clearer skies heading in from the

1:45:45 > 1:45:49north-west. Still a few scattered showers for western Scotland,

1:45:49 > 1:45:55Northern Ireland. Double figures in the south should feel pleasant. This

1:45:55 > 1:45:58evening the weak weather front klister the east and then we have

1:45:58 > 1:46:02clear skies across the eastern side of the country. Further west, more

1:46:02 > 1:46:06cloud moves on from the Atlantic with patchy outbreaks of rain for

1:46:06 > 1:46:10Northern Ireland, Wales and the south-west. A cold and frosty start

1:46:10 > 1:46:14in the east. Through the day tomorrow we have high-pressure

1:46:14 > 1:46:19holding on around the near continent and then this front comes from the

1:46:19 > 1:46:23Atlantic, bringing a mild thing to the weather on Sunday. You can see

1:46:23 > 1:46:27the yellow colours indicating the westerly airflow. Clear skies in

1:46:27 > 1:46:32east. Fob patches on Sunday morning. From the west of the cloud continues

1:46:32 > 1:46:36to build. Outbreaks of rain to Northern Ireland and western

1:46:36 > 1:46:40Scotland, pushing into Western England and Wales as well. Further

1:46:40 > 1:46:45east we are more likely to stay dry. Temperatures 7-8 in the north-east

1:46:45 > 1:46:53of Scotland. 10-11 further south and west. Into Monday, a cloudy day. The

1:46:53 > 1:46:57remnants of the front still hanging around. Outbreaks of rain in

1:46:57 > 1:47:00Scotland and perhaps the east of England and temperature rise highs

1:47:00 > 1:47:06around 10-11. We will start to see colder conditions moving on from the

1:47:06 > 1:47:09east later on Monday. Looking at what's happening through next week,

1:47:09 > 1:47:14the yellow colours we had gets cleared to the south and then what

1:47:14 > 1:47:19we will see is the blue colour is returning to the map. Things will

1:47:19 > 1:47:25turn colder, with an easterly wind

1:47:25 > 1:47:27-- wind developing through next week.

1:47:29 > 1:47:32Now it's time for Newswatch.

1:47:32 > 1:47:36Hello and welcome to Newswatch, with me, Samira Ahmed.

1:47:36 > 1:47:39Coming up: Did BBC News make too much of the allegations

1:47:39 > 1:47:40against Oxfam staff,

1:47:40 > 1:47:48damaging public confidence in the whole charity sector?

1:47:48 > 1:47:54And we know the BBC has new graphics for its weather service,

1:47:54 > 1:47:56so why did viewers get this retro look last Saturday?

1:47:56 > 1:47:59First, Wednesday brought a sense of sickening familiarity

1:47:59 > 1:48:02with the news of a mass shooting at a high school

1:48:02 > 1:48:06in Florida.

1:48:06 > 1:48:09A couple of hours later, Jon Sopel described the scene

1:48:09 > 1:48:10for the News at Ten.

1:48:10 > 1:48:14Yet again those terrifying pictures of children

1:48:14 > 1:48:18running for their lives as an active shooter is on the school premises,

1:48:18 > 1:48:21and running as fast as they can to try to get to safety.

1:48:21 > 1:48:24We understand that the shooter himself is now in custody,

1:48:24 > 1:48:28he's believed to be an 18-year-old former student of the school

1:48:28 > 1:48:29in Broward County.

1:48:29 > 1:48:34He is now under arrest.

1:48:34 > 1:48:38Over the next few hours it emerged that 17 people had been killed

1:48:38 > 1:48:40and BBC News provided plenty more detail and reaction,

1:48:40 > 1:48:43too much for some viewers.

1:49:10 > 1:49:13There had also been harrowing news leading the six o'clock bulletin

1:49:13 > 1:49:15earlier that evening,

1:49:15 > 1:49:20after a man had been found guilty of murdering his niece last summer.

1:49:20 > 1:49:23And the attempted murder of a second woman.

1:49:23 > 1:49:25Denise thought some of the description provided

1:49:25 > 1:49:32was inappropriate for an early evening broadcast.

1:49:45 > 1:49:50Also on Wednesday, the BBC's economics editor wrote online

1:49:50 > 1:49:53about the economic performance of the European Union,

1:49:53 > 1:49:55pointing out that growth in the region was at levels

1:49:55 > 1:50:01not seen since 2007.

1:50:01 > 1:50:03Initially, the article had the headline 'UK no

1:50:03 > 1:50:08longer shackled to a corpse',

1:50:08 > 1:50:11a reference to a comment once made by the Eurosceptic MP

1:50:11 > 1:50:14Douglas Carswell, that Britain's membership of the EU

1:50:14 > 1:50:18came at a significant financial cost.

1:50:18 > 1:50:21The headline was later changed, but not before several readers had

1:50:21 > 1:50:24tweeted their objections.

1:50:36 > 1:50:40And others wondered why the phrase didn't have quotation marks around

1:50:40 > 1:50:45it.

1:50:52 > 1:50:55We put these points to BBC News, and they told us:

1:51:33 > 1:51:35A couple of weeks ago, viewer Russell Moore contacted us

1:51:35 > 1:51:37with his thoughts on a practice that others

1:51:37 > 1:51:39have observed on BBC News.

1:51:39 > 1:51:41I would like to share my frustration at what

1:51:41 > 1:51:49I call suggestive reporting.

1:51:52 > 1:51:55The increasingly used BBC technique of shouting questions

1:51:55 > 1:51:58at politicians as they walk in and out of meetings.

1:51:58 > 1:52:00Are you still in control of your party, Prime

1:52:00 > 1:52:01Minister?

1:52:01 > 1:52:04Of course the person has no intention of answering or maybe

1:52:04 > 1:52:06hasn't even had the question, but that doesn't matter.

1:52:06 > 1:52:09We see the pictures, we hear the accusation and of course

1:52:09 > 1:52:10that is what sticks.

1:52:10 > 1:52:14It in itself that becomes the news and a new truth to be repeated.

1:52:14 > 1:52:17Do you want to be the Chancellor, Foreign Secretary?

1:52:17 > 1:52:19At best it is cheap, lazy, sensationalist and only worthy

1:52:19 > 1:52:27of tabloids, but at worst it can feel like a deliberate technique,

1:52:28 > 1:52:31using the suggestive technique to plant ideas in our subconscious

1:52:31 > 1:52:34and in short to get the public to think

1:52:34 > 1:52:35and believe in a particular way.

1:52:35 > 1:52:38It is the BBC's job to report news, not created,

1:52:38 > 1:52:39and deliberately manipulated.

1:52:39 > 1:52:46So please, BBC News, stop doing this.

1:52:46 > 1:52:52At the end of last week it emerged that two

1:52:52 > 1:52:56British men believed to be members of an Islamic State groups cells had

1:52:56 > 1:52:57been captured by Syrian Kurdish fighters.

1:52:57 > 1:53:00Andy Moore reported on the story for BBC News.

1:53:00 > 1:53:02The two Britons captured by Kurdish forces last

1:53:02 > 1:53:05month and questioned by the Americans.

1:53:05 > 1:53:09Together with another two men, they formed the kidnap gang known

1:53:09 > 1:53:12as The Beatles, because they were usually masked and their captors

1:53:12 > 1:53:17could hear only their British accents.

1:53:17 > 1:53:24But the reference there and on the BBC News website

1:53:24 > 1:53:27to the gang's nickname, The Beatles, annoyed some viewers:

1:53:52 > 1:53:57Over the past few years, reports of sexual exploitation

1:53:57 > 1:53:59and abuse by those in powerful positions have hit

1:53:59 > 1:54:02institutions such as Parliament, the church, the film industry,

1:54:02 > 1:54:04the world of sport and the BBC.

1:54:04 > 1:54:06And on Saturday the headlines in the Times newspaper focused

1:54:06 > 1:54:08on the charity sector.

1:54:08 > 1:54:13Their investigation found that in 2011 four members of staff

1:54:13 > 1:54:16at Oxfam had been sacked and three others resigned over charges

1:54:16 > 1:54:18of using local women, some under age,

1:54:18 > 1:54:20sex after the earthquake in Haiti.

1:54:20 > 1:54:24Further revelations followed and the BBC has been following up

1:54:24 > 1:54:31the story with Angus Crawford reporting on Sunday evening.

1:54:31 > 1:54:36The government's now demanding every charity receiving taxpayers' money

1:54:36 > 1:54:41disclose all past and present cases of sexual misconduct.

1:54:41 > 1:54:43A scandal affecting one charity is now threatening to engulf

1:54:43 > 1:54:44the entire sector.

1:54:44 > 1:54:47The government has always defended this budget by saying,

1:54:47 > 1:54:54look, we are spending it better,

1:54:54 > 1:54:57we are making it less waste, all those kinds of things.

1:54:57 > 1:55:01I think it is a little harder for the government to make that

1:55:01 > 1:55:04argument when you have some Oxfam workers spending taxpayers money

1:55:04 > 1:55:05on orgies with young prostitutes.

1:55:05 > 1:55:06James Langdale in the studio there.

1:55:06 > 1:55:10But some members of the audience took exception to the way the story

1:55:10 > 1:55:13was covered, with one viewer who preferred to remain

1:56:00 > 1:56:04And Grace Dalton echoed that in this telephone message she left us.

1:56:04 > 1:56:08I really feel that the BBC is not anywhere near careful enough to make

1:56:08 > 1:56:11clear that this scandal relates to a small number of people who no

1:56:11 > 1:56:18longer work for Oxfam.

1:56:18 > 1:56:21I mean the report that was aired last night said that this one

1:56:21 > 1:56:26scandal was threatening to engulf the whole sector.

1:56:26 > 1:56:29It's only threatening to engulf the whole sector because of the way

1:56:29 > 1:56:31that media outlets like yourself are reporting it.

1:56:31 > 1:56:34I would not mind at all if the government were to stop

1:56:34 > 1:56:37giving money to Oxfam, but if people give less

1:56:37 > 1:56:41to all foreign aid charities because the BBC makes it seem

1:56:41 > 1:56:49as though foreign aid is now to be associated with sex scandals

1:56:52 > 1:56:55like this, people will die, less aid money will be given,

1:56:55 > 1:56:56and people will die.

1:56:56 > 1:57:00There was no one available from BBC News to discuss those concerns,

1:57:00 > 1:57:02but instead they gave us this statement in response.

1:57:25 > 1:57:32Finally, we discussed on last week's programme the changes introduced

1:57:32 > 1:57:38to the BBC's television weather forecasts, with the head

1:57:38 > 1:57:40of BBC weather describing the sophisticated new graphics

1:57:40 > 1:57:41now in operation.

1:57:41 > 1:57:44So it was something of surprise to those watching BBC One

1:57:44 > 1:57:47on Saturday evening see this following the end of the news

1:57:47 > 1:57:55bulletin.

1:57:56 > 1:58:02Now we are going to take a look at the weekend's weather.

1:58:02 > 1:58:05There will be some heavy rain which will move

1:58:05 > 1:58:10eastward this evening, bringing snow to northern hills.

1:58:10 > 1:58:15After the rain clears, there will be strong

1:58:15 > 1:58:17winds that will be sweeping in from the west,

1:58:17 > 1:58:18bringing wintry showers.

1:58:18 > 1:58:20And so it continued, leaving Julie to ask:

1:58:36 > 1:58:40So, was this decidedly low-tech approach a deliberate reversion

1:58:40 > 1:58:42to presentation styles of 50 years ago?

1:58:42 > 1:58:45No, as it turned out.

1:58:45 > 1:58:48The BBC News press team tweeted this explanation.

1:58:59 > 1:59:02Thank you for your comments this week, we always

1:59:02 > 1:59:06welcome your opinions on BBC News and current

1:59:06 > 1:59:12affairs.

1:59:12 > 1:59:16If you would like them to be heard on the programme or even to appear

1:59:16 > 1:59:19yourself, you can contact us:

1:59:24 > 1:59:27Do have a look at our website, where ou can watch previous

1:59:27 > 1:59:29interviews and discussions we have recorded.

1:59:29 > 1:59:33That's all from us.

1:59:33 > 1:59:35We'll be back to hear your thoughts about BBC News

1:59:35 > 1:59:39coverage again next week.

2:00:22 > 2:00:24Hello this is Breakfast, with Naga Munchetty and Charlie Stayt.

2:00:24 > 2:00:27Donald Trump visits survivors of the Florida High School shootings.

2:00:27 > 2:00:30The US President and the First Lady have been to the hospital

2:00:30 > 2:00:31where the injured were taken following the attack.

2:00:31 > 2:00:34The first funerals have been held amid an outpouring of grief

2:00:34 > 2:00:36and anger from the families of the victims.

2:00:36 > 2:00:38One British family caught up in the horror tell Breakfast

2:00:38 > 2:00:46that they refuse to live in fear.

2:00:47 > 2:00:53As crazy as it might sound, we want to go back.We want on what those

2:00:53 > 2:00:57halls, we want to bounce back and we want to say that we might be

2:00:57 > 2:01:02scarred, but it has not beaten us.

2:01:13 > 2:01:14Good morning it's Saturday 17th February.

2:01:14 > 2:01:15Also this morning:

2:01:15 > 2:01:18Theresa May will today warn EU leaders that public safety

2:01:18 > 2:01:23will suffer if they block a post-Brexit security deal.

2:01:23 > 2:01:26The President of Haiti says that the Oxfam scandal could be

2:01:26 > 2:01:28the "tip of the iceberg" as he accuses a second aid

2:01:28 > 2:01:34charity of misconduct.

2:01:34 > 2:01:36In sport, a famous, second medal for Great Britain

2:01:36 > 2:01:38at the Winter Olympics.

2:01:38 > 2:01:41At just 19, Izzy Atkin has won a bronze, after a brilliant aeriel

2:01:41 > 2:01:42display in the women's slope style.

2:01:42 > 2:01:47A first ever medal for Britain on skis.

2:01:47 > 2:01:49And beehives, bobs and blow dries.

2:01:49 > 2:01:50Our entertainment correspondent Colin Paterson takes

2:01:50 > 2:01:54a rather personal trip back through the history of hairdressing.

2:01:54 > 2:02:00And Sarah has the weather.

2:02:00 > 2:02:05Good morning. A chilly start to the day. Patchy rain in the forecasts.

2:02:05 > 2:02:10The best of the sunshine towards the south and east of England. I will

2:02:10 > 2:02:15have the forecast for you in about 15 minutes.

2:02:15 > 2:02:16Good morning.

2:02:16 > 2:02:17First, our main story.

2:02:17 > 2:02:19President Trump has met survivors of Wednesday's high school shooting

2:02:19 > 2:02:21in Florida at the hospital where they're being treated.

2:02:21 > 2:02:23He also thanked the emergency services and medical staff

2:02:23 > 2:02:26who treated those who were wounded when the suspect, Nikolas Cruz,

2:02:26 > 2:02:27opened fire, killing 17 people.

2:02:27 > 2:02:35Barbara Plett-Usher reports.

2:02:37 > 2:02:38The funerals have begun.

2:02:38 > 2:02:40These students were saying goodbye to a 14-year-old classmate.

2:02:40 > 2:02:46They and their parents have been calling to action

2:02:46 > 2:02:49so they and their parents have been calling for action

2:02:49 > 2:02:51from President Trump so other teenagers won't die this way.

2:02:51 > 2:02:54He and the First Lady visited some of the injured still in hospital,

2:02:54 > 2:02:56including a woman who had been shot four times.

2:02:56 > 2:02:57He congratulated the medical staff...

2:02:57 > 2:03:00REPORTER: Do our gun laws need to be changed,

2:03:00 > 2:03:01Mr President?

2:03:01 > 2:03:03..But ignored a question about tougher gun control.

2:03:03 > 2:03:05This is where the President is in his element, meeting first

2:03:05 > 2:03:07responders who rescued the wounded and captured the killer.

2:03:07 > 2:03:10He piled on the praise for their speed and bravery.

2:03:10 > 2:03:12His wife thanked them for protecting the children.

2:03:12 > 2:03:17They are our future, and let's take care of them

2:03:17 > 2:03:21because they went through a lot and what they experienced,

2:03:21 > 2:03:24two days ago, we need to take care of them.

2:03:24 > 2:03:27The President is talking about making schools safer and has

2:03:27 > 2:03:32linked the violence to mental health issues rather than guns.

2:03:32 > 2:03:34The young man who carried out the attack, Nikolas Cruz,

2:03:34 > 2:03:39was a troubled youth who loved guns and found it easy to buy them.

2:03:39 > 2:03:42It has emerged that FBI ignored a tip-off about him last month.

2:03:42 > 2:03:45The caller warned he had the potential to carry out

2:03:45 > 2:03:49a school shooting.

2:03:49 > 2:03:51So, mistakes by law enforcement add a new twist

2:03:51 > 2:03:54to a grimly familiar arguments.

2:03:54 > 2:03:59Mass shootings in America revived debate about gun control.

2:03:59 > 2:04:07But a school shooting like this one boils the issue down

2:04:08 > 2:04:14to a stark question - how can we keep our children safe?

2:04:14 > 2:04:16And the people here will judge their President on how

2:04:16 > 2:04:20he responds to that.

2:04:20 > 2:04:22The President of Haiti has called for an investigation

2:04:22 > 2:04:25into the activities of aid agencies working in his country,

2:04:25 > 2:04:27saying that the sex scandal involving some Oxfam workers

2:04:27 > 2:04:30after the 2010 earthquake was just the tip of the iceberg.

2:04:30 > 2:04:32He told the Reuters news agency that one charity,

2:04:32 > 2:04:34Medecins Sans Frontiers, had repatriated some its staff

2:04:34 > 2:04:35from Haiti without any explanation.

2:04:35 > 2:04:41John McManus reports.

2:04:41 > 2:04:43Haiti in the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake.

2:04:43 > 2:04:46Oxfam has been on the defensive over allegations that some of its staff

2:04:46 > 2:04:48paid prostitutes here.

2:04:48 > 2:04:50I always dreamed of working for them.

2:04:50 > 2:04:55This woman, who spoke anonymously to the BBC,

2:04:55 > 2:04:58says she was attacked by a colleague.

2:04:58 > 2:05:01He pinned me up against the wall, he was groping me, grabbing me,

2:05:01 > 2:05:09kissing me and I was just trying to shove him off.

2:05:10 > 2:05:15And got him off eventually and he got mad and he threw his

2:05:15 > 2:05:16glass at me.

2:05:16 > 2:05:18Now, Haiti's president Jovenel Moise has said

2:05:18 > 2:05:20other charities also have

2:05:20 > 2:05:22questions to answer and he has made a specific allegation

2:05:22 > 2:05:26against Medecins Sans Frontiers, also known as Doctors

2:05:26 > 2:05:29Without Borders, who sends medical staff around the world.

2:05:29 > 2:05:32The President said MSF had to repatriate about 17 people

2:05:32 > 2:05:40for misconduct, without any explanation why.

2:05:40 > 2:05:41In response, MSF said:

2:05:41 > 2:05:51MSF has already admitted

2:05:51 > 2:05:53that it fired 19 staff members last year

2:05:53 > 2:05:56after allegations of harassment or sexual assault.

2:05:56 > 2:06:00So how widespread is the problem?

2:06:00 > 2:06:01Oxfam are not alone in this.

2:06:01 > 2:06:08Every agency in the sector has the problem.

2:06:08 > 2:06:14We work in a sector that attracts the vulnerable -

2:06:14 > 2:06:16that, works, sorry supports honourable people.

2:06:16 > 2:06:17Therefore, attracts predators.

2:06:17 > 2:06:21Meanwhile Oxfam's UK head says the evidence in Haiti

2:06:21 > 2:06:29were a disgrace but also told the Guardian newspaper that:

2:06:35 > 2:06:37Certainly, the intense scrutiny of the aid sector is unlikely

2:06:37 > 2:06:44to stop soon.

2:06:44 > 2:06:49John McManus, BBC News.

2:06:49 > 2:06:5013 Russians have been charged with interfering

2:06:50 > 2:06:52in the 2016 US election, in a major development

2:06:52 > 2:06:53in the FBI investigation.

2:06:53 > 2:06:55Among the allegations are that they promoted disparaging

2:06:55 > 2:06:57messages about the Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.

2:06:57 > 2:07:02The Russian Foreign Ministry has described the allegations as absurd.

2:07:02 > 2:07:05The fate of UKIP's current leader, the party's fourth in 18 months,

2:07:05 > 2:07:07will be decided at an emergency general meeting today.

2:07:07 > 2:07:09UKIP members will vote whether Henry Bolton should stay

2:07:09 > 2:07:11or go following revelations his former girlfriend sent racist

2:07:11 > 2:07:13messages about Prince Harry's fiance Meghan Markle.

2:07:13 > 2:07:15Let's speak to our political correspondent Matt Cole

2:07:15 > 2:07:23who is in our London newsroom for us this morning.

2:07:25 > 2:07:30This is an important day for Ukip after so many headlines surrounding

2:07:30 > 2:07:36its leader?That's right. Good morning. Ukip very much a party in

2:07:36 > 2:07:42turmoil. Henry Bolton, the fourth leader in 18 months or so, they may

2:07:42 > 2:07:47be looking for a fifth by the end of the day. Henry Bolton has said if

2:07:47 > 2:07:51the vote goes against him he will stand down. He is head-to-head with

2:07:51 > 2:07:56the national Executive who passed a vote of no confidence in him after

2:07:56 > 2:08:00revelations came out that his girlfriend had sent racist tweets

2:08:00 > 2:08:07about Prince Harry's Beyonce. Henry Bolton said he was leaving his

2:08:07 > 2:08:10girlfriend, only to then make it not so clear if that was the case. He

2:08:10 > 2:08:18says that the party's Executive is against him. He wants to change the

2:08:18 > 2:08:23structure of the party if he stays on, but it is a big if. It comes

2:08:23 > 2:08:33down to how many Ukip members turn up to vote. If the vote goes against

2:08:33 > 2:08:40him, he says he will stand down and another Ukip leadership campaign

2:08:40 > 2:08:50will begin.Thank you.

2:08:50 > 2:08:53Theresa May is expected to urge the EU to put aside 'political

2:08:53 > 2:08:56doctrine and ideology' and sign up to a post-Brexit security

2:08:56 > 2:08:57treaty with Britain.

2:08:57 > 2:08:58Speaking at a conference in Munich this morning,

2:08:58 > 2:09:01she'll say that nothing must get in the way of Britain

2:09:01 > 2:09:04and the EU helping each other to keep people safe.

2:09:04 > 2:09:05Our Chief International Correspondent Lyse Doucet

2:09:05 > 2:09:07joins us now from Munich, what can we expect from

2:09:07 > 2:09:08the Prime Minister today?

2:09:08 > 2:09:11What should we expect? This speech is happening in, what, 20 minutes?

2:09:11 > 2:09:14Yes, I think we are going to get a message from Theresa May in this

2:09:14 > 2:09:17grand hotel behind me that Britain is not going anywhere. Even though

2:09:17 > 2:09:22Brexit is about leaving the structures of the European Union,

2:09:22 > 2:09:25Britain believes it should play a role at all of the world's May in

2:09:25 > 2:09:30tables and the rest of the world should recognise what the world

2:09:30 > 2:09:34brings. Security, intelligence cooperation, defence matters, these

2:09:34 > 2:09:43are the things that Theresa May will emphasise.

2:09:51 > 2:09:54Other intelligence officials have said Brexit or no Brexit, we need to

2:09:54 > 2:10:06work together. There are common threats and they need modern way.We

2:10:06 > 2:10:10will get analysis from you in the next hour. Theresa May will be

2:10:10 > 2:10:16speaking in 20 minutes and we know you will be across that.

2:10:16 > 2:10:19British soldiers are to be deployed to Africa to boost the fight

2:10:19 > 2:10:20against illegal wildlife poaching.

2:10:20 > 2:10:23They will train rangers in Malawi to find and stop poachers,

2:10:23 > 2:10:25in an expansion of a successful pilot scheme that was

2:10:25 > 2:10:26trialled last year.

2:10:26 > 2:10:28The Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson said poaching puts

2:10:28 > 2:10:29'majestic' animals at risk.

2:10:29 > 2:10:37Animals under threat include elephants, rhinos and lions.

2:10:40 > 2:10:44It's 8:10am.

2:10:44 > 2:10:47Let's return to our main story this morning and the news that

2:10:47 > 2:10:49President Trump has been talking to the survivors of Wednesday's

2:10:49 > 2:10:51Florida school shooting in which 17 people were killed.

2:10:51 > 2:10:54Earlier, we spoke to Lewis Mizen who moved from Coventry

2:10:54 > 2:10:55to Parkland three years ago.

2:10:55 > 2:11:02He told us where he was when the first shots were fired.

2:11:02 > 2:11:06I was on the other side of the school. It was towards the end of

2:11:06 > 2:11:13the day, so maybe there were 15 minutes left before the end of

2:11:13 > 2:11:17school. The fire drill had just been called, so I was with my friends. I

2:11:17 > 2:11:24grab my backpack and I was walking down the stairs and someone started

2:11:24 > 2:11:30screaming code red, code red, which means there is an active shooter. We

2:11:30 > 2:11:34thought it was a drill. We got back into the classroom and checked

2:11:34 > 2:11:39iPhones and text our friends to ask them what was going on because it

2:11:39 > 2:11:43was strange having two drills in one day. Then we got confirmation from

2:11:43 > 2:11:49the police department that there was a situation at Douglas. Our teacher

2:11:49 > 2:11:55moved us into the closet. There were maybe 20 of us crammed in a was it

2:11:55 > 2:11:59for about an hour and a half before the Army reserves came and got us

2:11:59 > 2:12:05out. We had an idea of what was going on. We thank social media. But

2:12:05 > 2:12:08because they were so much information coming in, we couldn't

2:12:08 > 2:12:15discern between what was true and what was a rumour because we we work

2:12:15 > 2:12:23-- we were being told that there was one shooter and then there were more

2:12:23 > 2:12:28than one shooter -- there were very shooters and 50 people have been

2:12:28 > 2:12:33killed.We were in the area and we saw the hundreds of police vehicles

2:12:33 > 2:12:37heading towards the school so we knew something had happened and it

2:12:37 > 2:12:42was serious. We were able to contact him. We knew he had gone back into

2:12:42 > 2:12:48the classroom. At the point that they realised it was real and the

2:12:48 > 2:12:52teacher had taken them into this huge cupboards, Lewis lost his

2:12:52 > 2:12:59mobile phone service. So we now could not contact him. We are now

2:12:59 > 2:13:03watching live TV when they are telling us the shooter is still at

2:13:03 > 2:13:08large, he is on the campers, they have not got him yet. For that

2:13:08 > 2:13:13period of time it was just unbelievably terrifying.We had

2:13:13 > 2:13:19vigils yesterday. We had to 30 PM one which was for students. A friend

2:13:19 > 2:13:24of mine came up and sobbed in my chest because she lost her best

2:13:24 > 2:13:28friend. The one thing I will say is that the juniors and the seniors,

2:13:28 > 2:13:36the older kids, this is our home, our high school, our city and it is

2:13:36 > 2:13:41a personal attack for us. The people I have been talking to, as crazy as

2:13:41 > 2:13:46it might sound, we want to go back. We want to walk the halls. We want

2:13:46 > 2:13:51to bounce back and say that we might be scarred, but it has not beaten

2:13:51 > 2:13:58cars. I know it will be harder for the freshman 's and sophomores

2:13:58 > 2:14:03because they are younger than ours and it was the building. But the

2:14:03 > 2:14:10community here has been phenomenal and the recovery, it will take time,

2:14:10 > 2:14:15but I am 100% sure that we are going to bounce back from this. I think

2:14:15 > 2:14:18when people began to realise it was him it was one we will finally be

2:14:18 > 2:14:23out of the school and me and almost all the other students were making

2:14:23 > 2:14:28our way towards a road that was maybe a mile to the east of the

2:14:28 > 2:14:31school because that is where our parents were picking us up and that

2:14:31 > 2:14:38is when his men started to circulate, and his picture. I

2:14:38 > 2:14:42recognise the name in the picture, I had seen him before and there has

2:14:42 > 2:14:47been a lot of talk about him because he is the shooter and that is the

2:14:47 > 2:14:53saddest part of all this because out of all the things that have happened

2:14:53 > 2:14:58on Wednesday, his name is the one that is the most worthless. 17

2:14:58 > 2:15:04people have lost their lives, 17 bright futures, but it is his name

2:15:04 > 2:15:08that is in the papers and that's the name everyone is talking about and

2:15:08 > 2:15:15that's the saddest part because he doesn't deserve any of it.Lewis and

2:15:15 > 2:15:20his father the speaking to us from Florida recounting some of their

2:15:20 > 2:15:24thoughts as they reflect on what happened on Wednesday.

2:15:24 > 2:15:27Here's Sarah with a look at this morning's weather.

2:15:33 > 2:15:37Good morning. Quite a chilly start to the day, particularly to the

2:15:37 > 2:15:44south and east. This was captured at Hampton Court. Not a bad day, there

2:15:44 > 2:15:50should be some spells of sunshine. A dry story for most of us, but by

2:15:50 > 2:15:54tomorrow more clout and although things are turning milder, rain will

2:15:54 > 2:16:00arrive in the West. Overnight we have had a lot of cloud streaming

2:16:00 > 2:16:05its way in. Clearer skies pushing in from the North West and clearer

2:16:05 > 2:16:10skies across the South East, but this were the front is sitting

2:16:10 > 2:16:15through the central slice of the country, bringing patchy outbreaks

2:16:15 > 2:16:20of rain that will push slowly southwards and eastwards before it

2:16:20 > 2:16:28peters out. Clearer skies further north west across the country. For

2:16:28 > 2:16:35Scotland and Northern Ireland one or two showers, falling snow over the

2:16:35 > 2:16:39hills. This evening, this week whether front clears away towards

2:16:39 > 2:16:44the east and then we have clear and dry conditions for central and

2:16:44 > 2:16:50eastern parts. Clad patchy rain for the West. Frost free in the West,

2:16:50 > 2:16:56further ease the subzero temperatures. Likely to be mist and

2:16:56 > 2:17:00fog to start Sunday morning. High-pressure sitting across the

2:17:00 > 2:17:05near continent, but this warm front is coming in from the Atlantic.

2:17:05 > 2:17:10Yellow colour is returning to the map with westerly or south-westerly

2:17:10 > 2:17:16winds. A chilly start with the frost and fog. Further west, the cloud

2:17:16 > 2:17:22will bring patchy outbreaks of rain to Northern Ireland. Western parts

2:17:22 > 2:17:26of England and Wales also seeing rain. Further east it will be dry

2:17:26 > 2:17:33and brighter with temperatures as high as ten or 11 in the South. If

2:17:33 > 2:17:38we had into Monday, a fairly cloudy and murky day. We have the remnants

2:17:38 > 2:17:48of Sunday's front. A great day with temperatures between seven and 11

2:17:48 > 2:17:54degrees, but then things will change after Monday as we draw in the winds

2:17:54 > 2:17:58from a different direction. The milder air moves away towards the

2:17:58 > 2:18:02south-west and this easterly flow of air will develop into next week, so

2:18:02 > 2:18:06a real drop in temperatures with that breeze developing. Although it

2:18:06 > 2:18:11will be a mild start to the new week, things are going to change and

2:18:11 > 2:18:16it will become colder during the second of next week.

2:18:23 > 2:18:25It's exactly a week since 29 -year-old Liam Colgan

2:18:25 > 2:18:27vanished in the early hours while on his brother's

2:18:27 > 2:18:28stag weekend in Hamburg.

2:18:28 > 2:18:31Liam Colgan who is 29 and from Inverness, vanished

2:18:31 > 2:18:32in the early hours of last Saturday.

2:18:32 > 2:18:35In a moment, we'll speak to Alan Pearson a friend

2:18:35 > 2:18:37of the family but first, let's speak to Liam's brother Eamonn,

2:18:37 > 2:18:44who is in Hamburg this morning.

2:18:44 > 2:18:50Thank you for talking to us. You are still in Hamburg because after this

2:18:50 > 2:18:56night out, Liam went missing. Can you tell us what happened?We

2:18:56 > 2:19:06arrived on the Friday

2:19:08 > 2:19:18morning...We are struggling with hearing you properly at the moment.

2:19:18 > 2:19:23Hold on for a moment and we will sort it out and come back to you.

2:19:23 > 2:19:28Alan, you were part of the group. 18 a few together celebrating, it was a

2:19:28 > 2:19:36stag night.18 of us joining a man and Liam for what should have been

2:19:36 > 2:19:45one of the best weekends of their lives. We were staying in a hostel a

2:19:45 > 2:19:49few miles away from the nightlife in Hamburg. We arrived on the Friday

2:19:49 > 2:19:55morning and got lunch. Some of us went back to the hostel to rest and

2:19:55 > 2:20:03then we were meeting to dinner at a brewery at 6pm. Liam led the way to

2:20:03 > 2:20:07the brewery. He had researched the city inside out and knew where he

2:20:07 > 2:20:15was going. We had dinner at the Brewery and then we headed

2:20:15 > 2:20:17Brewery and then we headed towards a street in Hamburg with a lot of

2:20:17 > 2:20:24bars.It's the place was that trips to go. There was nothing unusual

2:20:24 > 2:20:30about this night. It was a group of guys celebrating.No unusual

2:20:30 > 2:20:35behaviour? Absolutely no unusual behaviour. I would go as far as to

2:20:35 > 2:20:39say that Liam was having a great time. He was probably a bit

2:20:39 > 2:20:43reluctant to do this type of thing. He is quite shy in his nature, but

2:20:43 > 2:20:50he stepped up to it and I think he enjoyed it.Pick up the point when

2:20:50 > 2:20:55it became apparent to the rest of the group that he was missing.It

2:20:55 > 2:21:04was towards the end of the night out. The group became dispersed

2:21:04 > 2:21:08around several bars. The group of 18 people that were going home, people

2:21:08 > 2:21:17at different bars and I believe amen realise Liam wasn't there when they

2:21:17 > 2:21:24left.

2:21:24 > 2:21:29left. -- Eamon. The assumption was that he had gone home was in another

2:21:29 > 2:21:33bar.And at what point did you realise there was no accounting for

2:21:33 > 2:21:39him?I can speak personally and say it was eight o'clock the next

2:21:39 > 2:21:46morning. Some of the people came in and mention that Liam was not there.

2:21:46 > 2:21:53He's not the kind of guy to stay out all night partying.Let's give

2:21:53 > 2:21:59technology and mother go and we will try to speak to Liam's.Can you hear

2:21:59 > 2:22:07us now? Yes, I can hear you.You are still in Hamburg. What information,

2:22:07 > 2:22:13what evidence, what efforts are you being told about regarding font your

2:22:13 > 2:22:19brother?

2:22:19 > 2:22:26brother? We are still struggling to hear. Can you bring us up-to-date

2:22:26 > 2:22:38with what is happening?Liam's product is there.

2:22:38 > 2:22:44product is there. Liam's fiance's there.

2:22:44 > 2:22:58there.In practical terms how are things working?

2:22:58 > 2:23:01things working?All of us have a fair idea of what we think should be

2:23:01 > 2:23:09going on and the guys out there will no more, but I can say that as an

2:23:09 > 2:23:18outsider looking in, we are surprised at what has gone on. The

2:23:18 > 2:23:26initial reaction to Liam's disappearance was not great. The

2:23:26 > 2:23:29family received almost mocking replies from one of the police

2:23:29 > 2:23:34officers.Was it because it was a stag party and the assumption being,

2:23:34 > 2:23:40and correct me if I am wrong, drunken guys together, someone may

2:23:40 > 2:23:45have fallen asleep, it happens often?The natural assumption was

2:23:45 > 2:23:49that he had too much to drink and got lifted by the police, but this

2:23:49 > 2:23:59was midnight on a Saturday night and Liam have not turned up for things

2:23:59 > 2:24:03he had organised. For one of the police officers to say, I'll just

2:24:03 > 2:24:10jump in a helicopter and other look was not helpful.It must be

2:24:10 > 2:24:14difficult for those members of the family who aren't there, who are

2:24:14 > 2:24:20just waiting.That's right. Eamon is living and breathing this 24 hours a

2:24:20 > 2:24:25day. With his knowledge as a police officer he is asking the right

2:24:25 > 2:24:30questions. He's asking why some of the CCTV was not reviewed until

2:24:30 > 2:24:36Thursday this week. We understand that the CCTV from the bark, be

2:24:36 > 2:24:42reviewed because the manager can't remember the password. He is trying

2:24:42 > 2:24:49to force the issue on some of these things.

2:24:49 > 2:24:55things.What plans are being made is regarding the wedding. Is it not a

2:24:55 > 2:25:03consideration?It's not. The main issue is defiant Liam and bring him

2:25:03 > 2:25:10home safely and hopefully it will be before the wedding in two weeks.

2:25:10 > 2:25:14Thank you for being with us and apologies that we could not get to

2:25:14 > 2:25:23Eamon in any more detail. Thank you very much. And good luck.

2:25:23 > 2:25:24You're watching Breakfast from BBC News.

2:25:24 > 2:25:32Time now for a look at the newspapers.

2:25:34 > 2:25:45Good morning. You were deep in your newspaper there. I was morning, not

2:25:45 > 2:25:54the death of Facebook, but the fact that young people are upset that

2:25:54 > 2:26:00older people are using Facebook.

2:26:04 > 2:26:09older people are using Facebook. You are looking directly at Charlie!

2:26:09 > 2:26:17It's anybody really over the age of 25. Another the lead back on the

2:26:17 > 2:26:24sofa, so I'll make the most of it. One young guy has said that once

2:26:24 > 2:26:31parents got involved that was it. Facebook is due to lose 3 million

2:26:31 > 2:26:35young people just this year and that's from the UK and the US very

2:26:35 > 2:26:41reason. They are migrating to different platforms. Snapchat,

2:26:41 > 2:26:51Instagram, which is owned by Facebook. It's because of the

2:26:51 > 2:26:58digital platforms that respond to different demographics and trends.

2:26:58 > 2:27:04Facebook took in $41 billion in revenue.It's huge star. They were

2:27:04 > 2:27:12so successful because they were new and exciting and the

2:27:12 > 2:27:14and exciting and the reality is that that can't continue because someone

2:27:14 > 2:27:19else comes along.That's right. People started using it for

2:27:19 > 2:27:24different reasons. It's good for fundraising, health groups, you hear

2:27:24 > 2:27:39people now talking about the grandmothers being on Facebook.

2:27:49 > 2:27:52What's the neck story? I'm quite interested in this story you have

2:27:52 > 2:27:59picked up because we have been talking about it all week. Young

2:27:59 > 2:28:05people getting on the housing ladder. At the end of the week Ben

2:28:05 > 2:28:09was saying people could not get onto the housing ladder because they are

2:28:09 > 2:28:18not earning enough.What is the story? Something has gone wrong. You

2:28:18 > 2:28:22speak to everyone involved in the housing conundrum, ministers, estate

2:28:22 > 2:28:30agents, buyers. We can send the car into space, but no one can work out

2:28:30 > 2:28:42how to make living affordable. Renting costs £1000 a year more than

2:28:42 > 2:28:49cover the mortgage on one. Renting was the option if you could not

2:28:49 > 2:28:54afford to buy a home, but buying is almost impossible. Someone was

2:28:54 > 2:28:57telling me about a council estate where I grew up where it is £1000 a

2:28:57 > 2:29:06month to rent a basic council flat. And a lot of people out of necessity

2:29:06 > 2:29:12are putting the decision back.

2:29:15 > 2:29:17are putting the decision back.With renting, you are looking at this

2:29:17 > 2:29:25criterion out of two months rent upfront, one month's deposit. Three

2:29:25 > 2:29:29months worth of rent just to rent. It's stopping people from renting

2:29:29 > 2:29:36and buying. You are stuck between a rock and a hard place.There is a

2:29:36 > 2:29:40fair amount of Mr Roger in the programme today. We are talking

2:29:40 > 2:29:46about hairstyles from the past.

2:29:52 > 2:30:00Did you ever have a mullet?I did. If you go on social media, you will

2:30:00 > 2:30:07see that Mike's hairstyle is interesting. Our correspondent has

2:30:07 > 2:30:13been looking at this hairstyle exhibition. The reason I say it's a

2:30:13 > 2:30:15period of nostalgia because you think about when you were younger

2:30:15 > 2:30:25and had lots of the.Now you could be fined £500 for climbing a tree.

2:30:25 > 2:30:30This is Wandsworth Council in London. They have rules and

2:30:30 > 2:30:34stipulations about what you can and can't do in the park, like flying

2:30:34 > 2:30:42kites. Metal detectors, you could have your equipment taken away, but

2:30:42 > 2:30:48climbing trees, is that not about being a kid?Enid Blyton, Harry

2:30:48 > 2:30:54Potter. It says anyone clambering up a tree without reasonable excuse.

2:30:54 > 2:31:00Just having fun is a reasonable excuse.You might see a squirrel and

2:31:00 > 2:31:16want to go up a tree.

2:31:16 > 2:31:29Trees are synonymous with high jinks and Joe Perry.

2:31:29 > 2:31:32Stay with us, headlines coming up.

2:31:48 > 2:31:52Hello, this is Breakfast, with Naga Munchetty and Charlie Stayt.

2:31:52 > 2:31:53Good morning, here's a summary of today's

2:31:53 > 2:31:55main stories from BBC News.

2:31:55 > 2:31:58President Trump has met survivors of Wednesday's high school

2:31:58 > 2:32:01gun attack in Florida, in which 17 people were killed.

2:32:01 > 2:32:03He praised emergency workers and medical staff

2:32:03 > 2:32:06for their response, but has refused to discuss gun laws,

2:32:06 > 2:32:11despite strong calls from those affected by the shootings.

2:32:11 > 2:32:14Theresa May is expected to urge the European Union to put aside

2:32:14 > 2:32:17"political doctrine and ideology" and sign up to a post-Brexit

2:32:17 > 2:32:20security treaty with Britain.

2:32:20 > 2:32:22Speaking at a conference in Munich this morning,

2:32:22 > 2:32:25she'll say that nothing must get in the way of Britain

2:32:25 > 2:32:28and the EU helping each other to keep people safe.

2:32:28 > 2:32:32She'll also talk of the need for real political will to safeguard

2:32:32 > 2:32:39the level of cooperation which has developed over decades.

2:32:39 > 2:32:41The President of Haiti has called for an investigation

2:32:41 > 2:32:43into the activities of aid agencies working in his country,

2:32:43 > 2:32:46saying that the scandal involving some Oxfam workers was just

2:32:46 > 2:32:47the tip of the iceberg.

2:32:47 > 2:32:49He said the charity Doctors Without Borders had

2:32:49 > 2:32:52repatriated some of its staff from Haiti without any explanation.

2:32:52 > 2:32:54The charity said it takes any reports of staff misconduct

2:32:54 > 2:32:58seriously and are seeking to clarify the questions raised.

2:32:58 > 2:33:0013 Russians have been charged with interfering

2:33:00 > 2:33:02in the 2016 US election, in a major development

2:33:02 > 2:33:06in the FBI investigation.

2:33:06 > 2:33:08Among the allegations are that they promoted disparaging

2:33:08 > 2:33:12messages about the Democratic candidate, Hillary Clinton.

2:33:12 > 2:33:16The Russian Foreign Ministry has described the allegations as absurd.

2:33:16 > 2:33:18Ukip members will vote for or against sacking their current

2:33:18 > 2:33:22leader at an emergency meeting in Birmingham today.

2:33:22 > 2:33:24The party's National Executive Committee backed a vote of no

2:33:24 > 2:33:28confidence in Henry Bolton last month, but he has refused to step

2:33:28 > 2:33:31down after it emerged his former girlfriend had sent a series of

2:33:31 > 2:33:38racist messages about Prince Harry's fiancee, Meghan Markle.

2:33:38 > 2:33:41British soldiers are to be deployed to Africa to boost the fight

2:33:41 > 2:33:42against illegal wildlife poaching.

2:33:42 > 2:33:45They will train rangers in Malawi to find and stop poachers,

2:33:45 > 2:33:47in an expansion of a successful pilot scheme that was

2:33:47 > 2:33:49trialled last year.

2:33:49 > 2:33:51The Defence Secretary, Gavin Williamson, said poaching puts

2:33:51 > 2:33:54"majestic" animals at risk.

2:33:54 > 2:33:58Animals under threat include elephants, rhinos and lions.

2:33:58 > 2:34:05Those are the main stories this morning.

2:34:05 > 2:34:09Mike is here now. One of the joys of the timing of the Winter Olympics is

2:34:09 > 2:34:14in the morning, we can bring people use of medals.

2:34:14 > 2:34:18Already we have had a medal, but's second, and looking ahead to the

2:34:18 > 2:34:24rest of the day, it could be Britain's best ever day. But our

2:34:24 > 2:34:28chances hopefully for a lease Christie this time, then you've got

2:34:28 > 2:34:33two chances with Laura Deas and Lizzy Yarnold in the skeleton later

2:34:33 > 2:34:37on. We need two more to make it Britain's best ever day.

2:34:37 > 2:34:41Would it be presumptuous to say it is Super Saturday?

2:34:41 > 2:34:46People are already saying that yes. The thing I found most fascinating

2:34:46 > 2:34:49about the Winter Olympics is the psychology behind it. Elise Christie

2:34:49 > 2:34:53was in tears a few days ago when she failed...

2:34:53 > 2:34:59We'll talk about that anemometer. -- in a moment.

2:34:59 > 2:35:01Izzy Atkin has become Britain's second medallist of the Games,

2:35:01 > 2:35:05adding to Dom Parsons' bronze in the skeleton with a bronze

2:35:05 > 2:35:11of her own in the ski slopestyle.

2:35:11 > 2:35:17Ben Croucher reports.

2:35:17 > 2:35:22This is the face of history, Great Britain's first silverware on skis.

2:35:22 > 2:35:27Slopestyle is about nailing the rails and avoiding the bumps on the

2:35:27 > 2:35:31jumps. This teenager adds substance with some style. Born and raised in

2:35:31 > 2:35:35the USA to a British father and mother to mother, Askin honed her

2:35:35 > 2:35:41skills on the slopes of Maine when she was just three. Before the final

2:35:41 > 2:35:44over three runs, Askin was pushed from the podium. This had to be

2:35:44 > 2:35:50flawless.Biggest run of her life starts now.Every grind, every twist

2:35:50 > 2:35:56and jump jiving with jeopardy. She telescope good enough for third, but

2:35:56 > 2:36:03could anyone deny her some slopestyle silverware?Oh, no, she's

2:36:03 > 2:36:07down! Great Britain's Izzy Atkin takes the bronze stop blue there

2:36:07 > 2:36:12were tonnes of big names in the field.I was standing at the bottom

2:36:12 > 2:36:16after my third and final run, I had skied the best I could. I was just

2:36:16 > 2:36:20waiting for those last three or four goals to drop, and my heart was

2:36:20 > 2:36:27racing. But I can't believe it. Well, believe it, you are an Olympic

2:36:27 > 2:36:29bronze medallist.

2:36:29 > 2:36:31In curling, Britain's women enjoyed a fairly routine

2:36:31 > 2:36:32victory against Denmark.

2:36:32 > 2:36:35They've now got three wins out of four and haven't got

2:36:35 > 2:36:36too long to feel too smug.

2:36:36 > 2:36:40They'll play South Korea later this morning.

2:36:40 > 2:36:44The men are facing a shock defeat to South Korea,

2:36:44 > 2:36:49who came into this match bottom of the group and without a win.

2:36:50 > 2:36:57They beat Great Britain 11-5. It means Britain are now out of the top

2:36:57 > 2:37:00four places so as thing stands they wouldn't make the semifinals but

2:37:00 > 2:37:07they have four matches to make the cut and turn it all around.

2:37:07 > 2:37:09Elise Christie returns to action later this morning after falling

2:37:09 > 2:37:12in the 500m short track speed skating final.

2:37:13 > 2:37:15Following the bronze medal for Dom Parsons yesterday,

2:37:15 > 2:37:17Great Britain could add two more medals in the women's skeleton.

2:37:17 > 2:37:20Laura Deas lies in fourth position at the halfway mark,

2:37:20 > 2:37:21whilst teamate Lizzy Yarnold is third.

2:37:21 > 2:37:23She's just one tenth behind the leader,

2:37:23 > 2:37:24with two more runs to go.

2:37:24 > 2:37:27She's aiming to become the first Briton to successfully defend

2:37:27 > 2:37:28a Winter Olympic title.

2:37:28 > 2:37:30Elise Christie returns to action later this morning after falling

2:37:30 > 2:37:34in the 500m short track speed skating final.

2:37:34 > 2:37:36She goes in the 1500 metres.

2:37:36 > 2:37:39We can cross to South Korea now and speak to former short track

2:37:39 > 2:37:40speed skate world champion Wilf O'Reilly.

2:37:40 > 2:37:45Hi, Wilf.

2:37:45 > 2:37:48We all saw the tears and felt Christie's pain the other day.

2:37:48 > 2:37:53How is she feeling now ahead of this much longer either end?

2:37:53 > 2:37:58-- this much along the event? Well, I think what's really supposing

2:37:58 > 2:38:01compared to four years ago for the people that will have seen what

2:38:01 > 2:38:06happened then, she fell and it was basically a snowball effect, just

2:38:06 > 2:38:13got worse and worse and worse, unfortunately now, she went down in

2:38:13 > 2:38:17the first distance, the 1500 metres this evening, but in the period

2:38:17 > 2:38:21between the races, she's actually doing very, very well. She was very

2:38:21 > 2:38:25positive the day afterwards, she's been doing interviews, she was

2:38:25 > 2:38:29bubbly and chatty in training, and I would say she's back up where she

2:38:29 > 2:38:33would need to be to be in contention for a medal this evening.That's

2:38:33 > 2:38:40brilliant to hear. And yet, this sport shows no mercy. So often

2:38:40 > 2:38:45anything can happen. What does she have to do, and she do anything to

2:38:45 > 2:38:49prevent a repeat?Well, I think to take every race as it comes. She's

2:38:49 > 2:38:57in the fifth heat, the three fastest skaters from her heat will qualify

2:38:57 > 2:39:02for the semifinal, then the two fastest skaters or first and second

2:39:02 > 2:39:05skaters in the semifinal will qualify for the final. So I'm quite

2:39:05 > 2:39:10confident she will get into the final, then of course it's anyone's

2:39:10 > 2:39:16race. She is in fact the World Champion at this, even though she

2:39:16 > 2:39:18says it's not her best distance. I think she has a good chance of

2:39:18 > 2:39:25winning a medal and what is quite nice as well is now Team GB have in

2:39:25 > 2:39:30fact two bronze medals, it's making the pressure for her that Team GB

2:39:30 > 2:39:37may be subconsciously putting on her, it's been taken away as well.

2:39:37 > 2:39:41Good morning, what's so fascinating is the psychology, and how these

2:39:41 > 2:39:45athletes deal with this, and of course Elise Christie dealing with

2:39:45 > 2:39:48disappointment, now having to step up to the plate, but also this

2:39:48 > 2:39:55controversy about the skeleton team's costumes, their uniforms, and

2:39:55 > 2:40:00kind of sniping amongst other teams. You're dough-mac, you hear the

2:40:00 > 2:40:05whispers amongst the teams, can you give us any insight?I haven't been

2:40:05 > 2:40:09following the story in any detail. Of course, you're always trying to

2:40:09 > 2:40:14get a little advantage, whether it's your racing suit, and our wills and

2:40:14 > 2:40:18regulations which all sports have to adhere to, presumably the rules and

2:40:18 > 2:40:21regulations are allowing this to happen. So therefore there is no

2:40:21 > 2:40:25reason, maybe we are just making a mountain out of a mole hill, if you

2:40:25 > 2:40:30like. I don't think there is any reason, from what I'm hearing, the

2:40:30 > 2:40:32whispers as you put it, I don't think there is any reason we should

2:40:32 > 2:40:39make a big thing out of it.We will have to leave it there. Fingers

2:40:39 > 2:40:43crossed this time for Elise Christie.

2:40:43 > 2:40:45Elise Christie trains at the National Ice Centre

2:40:45 > 2:40:47in Nottingham, which is where the BBC's Colin Hazelden is

2:40:47 > 2:40:52this morning, getting the thoughts of those who know Elise well.

2:40:52 > 2:40:59Hello, Colin.How are you doing? We are standing here in the middle of

2:40:59 > 2:41:04the ice, this is the training ice pad at the Nottingham ice Centre.

2:41:04 > 2:41:08Surrounded by the Nottingham ice Racing Club. This is what happens

2:41:08 > 2:41:12when Elise does well, people respond, want to come out and do

2:41:12 > 2:41:18short track speed skating. So there are youngsters out here, maybe there

2:41:18 > 2:41:21is the next Elise summer in the middle of all of this. Richard is

2:41:21 > 2:41:24here, and Olympian in his own right with Team GB, one of the Academy

2:41:24 > 2:41:28coaches here, so one dealt with some of your young stars are here, what

2:41:28 > 2:41:35does it mean when Elise does well?I think speaking this morning to the

2:41:35 > 2:41:38Nottingham club, they said they had five new people come down last

2:41:38 > 2:41:44session already. She would like to Mena medal but already she is

2:41:44 > 2:41:48inspired to many people to come down and try the sport.It's remarkable,

2:41:48 > 2:41:53it's not just her, there is a whole group of people rating in the 15 --

2:41:53 > 2:41:57the 1500 and in the men's 1000. How will you feel watching that, having

2:41:57 > 2:42:02been there four years ago?It's less exciting than the Olympics comes on.

2:42:02 > 2:42:11Being an Olympian myself, it's a bit of mixed feelings. -- it's always

2:42:11 > 2:42:15exciting when the Olympics comes on. I'm really happy with my role now,

2:42:15 > 2:42:19coaching the next generation. Seeing my old team-mates competing and

2:42:19 > 2:42:24trying to win a medal.Seen this next generation out on the ice, are

2:42:24 > 2:42:28you confident we have the stars of the future coming through?We

2:42:28 > 2:42:31definitely put things in place, we have a great pathway programme set

2:42:31 > 2:42:37up with the launch of the academy last year, it's putting things in

2:42:37 > 2:42:41place and hopefully, just by increasing the base of the athletes,

2:42:41 > 2:42:45eventually we will get a couple more top stars.Thank you very much

2:42:45 > 2:42:48indeed for joining us. So, they are gathering here in Nottingham to

2:42:48 > 2:42:53watch Elise Christie and the other skaters go in the short track speed

2:42:53 > 2:42:59skating event so I dare say they will lodge -- they will be watching

2:42:59 > 2:43:04on the big screen here as well. If you fancy joining us in Nottingham,

2:43:04 > 2:43:08they have public skate going on from 11 till five so he can get yourself

2:43:08 > 2:43:14onto the ice and see how fast you are as well.Thanks, Colin. That's

2:43:14 > 2:43:22all from the sport for now. Let's take you straight to Munich,

2:43:22 > 2:43:27Theresa May making a speech...

2:43:28 > 2:43:32Taking this opportunity to establish a new security partnership that can

2:43:32 > 2:43:36keep our people safe now and in the years ahead. So, let me start with

2:43:36 > 2:43:42how we ensure security within Europe. The threat we face do not

2:43:42 > 2:43:45recognise the borders of individual nations or discriminate between

2:43:45 > 2:43:51them. We all in this room have shared the pain and heartbreak of

2:43:51 > 2:43:56terrorist atrocities at home. Its mistake years since the despicable

2:43:56 > 2:44:01attack on Westminster, followed by further attacks in Manchester and

2:44:01 > 2:44:06London. These people don't care if they kill and maim or is in some

2:44:06 > 2:44:10Berliners, Londoners or Mancunians, because it's the common values that

2:44:10 > 2:44:15we all share which they seek to attack and defeat. But I say we will

2:44:15 > 2:44:21not let them. When these atrocities occurred, people look to us as

2:44:21 > 2:44:25leaders to provide the response. We must ensure that nothing prevents us

2:44:25 > 2:44:32from fulfilling our first duty as leaders to protect our citizens. And

2:44:32 > 2:44:36we must find the practical ways to ensure the cooperation to do so. We

2:44:36 > 2:44:43have done so before. When justice and home affairs ceased to be

2:44:43 > 2:44:46intergovernmental and Bob -- and become a shared EU competence, there

2:44:46 > 2:44:50were some in the UK who would have had us adopt the EU approach

2:44:50 > 2:44:54wholesale, just as there were some who would have had asked rejected

2:44:54 > 2:44:58outright. As Home Secretary I was determined to find a practical and

2:44:58 > 2:45:03pragmatic way in which the UK and EU could continue to cooperate on our

2:45:03 > 2:45:06common security. And that's why I reviewed each provision in Terran

2:45:06 > 2:45:12and successfully made the case for the UK to back into those that were

2:45:12 > 2:45:16clearly in our national interests. Through the relationship we've

2:45:16 > 2:45:20developed, the UK has been at the forefront of shipping the practical

2:45:20 > 2:45:24and legal arrangements that underpin our internal security cooperation.

2:45:24 > 2:45:28And our contribution to those arrangements is vital in protecting

2:45:28 > 2:45:34European citizens in cities right across our continent. First, our

2:45:34 > 2:45:38practical cooperation. Including our expedited extradition and mutual

2:45:38 > 2:45:43assistance budget, it means wanted a convicted serious criminals and the

2:45:43 > 2:45:46evidence to support their convictions moves seamlessly between

2:45:46 > 2:45:54the UK and EU member states. So when a serious terrorists there were

2:45:54 > 2:45:57terrorist was found living in the UK, a young man believed to have

2:45:57 > 2:46:01been radicalised in Syria and was wanted for terrorism offences in

2:46:01 > 2:46:04France, there was no delay in ensuring he was extradited back to

2:46:04 > 2:46:10France and brought to justice. He has one of 10,000 people the UK has

2:46:10 > 2:46:14extradited to the European Arrest Warrant. In fact for every person

2:46:14 > 2:46:19arrested on a European Arrest Warrant issued by the UK, the UK

2:46:19 > 2:46:22arrests eight on European Arrest Warrants issued by other member

2:46:22 > 2:46:29states. The European Arrest Warrant has also played a crucial role in

2:46:29 > 2:46:32supporting police co-operation between Northern Ireland and the

2:46:32 > 2:46:36Republic of Ireland, which has been a fundamental part of the political

2:46:36 > 2:46:39settlement there. Second, cooperation between our law

2:46:39 > 2:46:44enforcement agencies...Theresa May making her speech at the Munich

2:46:44 > 2:46:49Security confidence dubbed conference. The thing she is

2:46:49 > 2:46:53focusing on is the EU's relationship with countries once they leave the

2:46:53 > 2:46:57key. Of course in light of the UK, she's saying political doctrine and

2:46:57 > 2:47:01ideology would hamper post-Brexit security. She's very much concerned

2:47:01 > 2:47:06that the relationship the EU has with any country that leaves the EU

2:47:06 > 2:47:10will still maintain a good, tight security relationship.

2:47:10 > 2:47:14You may have noticed at the beginning, she made reference to

2:47:14 > 2:47:18terrorist attacks throughout Europe. We will pick up on some of the

2:47:18 > 2:47:23analysis of what she said and try and pick through what's new, as she

2:47:23 > 2:47:27tries to forge that changed relationship between how things work

2:47:27 > 2:47:34after Brexit. We will look at that in the next hour.

2:47:34 > 2:47:36Good morning, lets Doctor Sarah and find out what's happening with the

2:47:36 > 2:47:43weather. -- lets talk to Sarah. I thought the temperatures would

2:47:43 > 2:47:44weather. -- lets talk to Sarah. I thought the temperatures would be

2:47:44 > 2:47:46bumped up a little over the coming days?

2:47:46 > 2:47:51Quite chilly start of the morning. We have got some scenes like this,

2:47:51 > 2:47:55frost and fog around, but things are fairly mild through the weekend. But

2:47:55 > 2:47:59we could see a return to something more wintry as we head through next

2:47:59 > 2:48:03week. We will start with this morning, this is the scene in

2:48:03 > 2:48:07Hampton Court. We have some fault and frost arrived, a chilly start

2:48:07 > 2:48:14particularly in the South East. Many parts of the country sing a bit of

2:48:14 > 2:48:18sunshine before and rain arrived. Here is a satellite image. You can

2:48:18 > 2:48:21see the cloud that has been working its way in overnight through the

2:48:21 > 2:48:27early hours of this morning too. On either side, we clearer skies but

2:48:27 > 2:48:30this frontal system is bringing the band of cloud and outbreaks of

2:48:30 > 2:48:37patchy rain. So we had the band of cloud, sunlight patchy rain first,

2:48:37 > 2:48:40arriving through the Midlands, perhaps into parts of East Anglia.

2:48:40 > 2:48:46But much of the South East staying fine and sunny. For the rest of the

2:48:46 > 2:48:48country, clearer conditions, a few showers moving in for the West of

2:48:48 > 2:48:54Scotland. Falling as snow over the higher ground but many places

2:48:54 > 2:48:58staying dry. Double figures in the South today. This evening and

2:48:58 > 2:49:03tonight, the cloud clears away to the east. For the Eastern half of

2:49:03 > 2:49:07the country, keeping clearer skies. Quite a shock frost and some fog

2:49:07 > 2:49:13patches as well. Further west, not as cold under the client. Sunday's

2:49:13 > 2:49:16weather dominated by two things. High-pressure keeping dry unsettled

2:49:16 > 2:49:21weather towards from the West, this front moving in, it is going to be

2:49:21 > 2:49:26bringing with it milder air, the winds coming in from a westerly or

2:49:26 > 2:49:29south-westerly direction. It is towards the least we have the chilly

2:49:29 > 2:49:32start to the day with some frost and fog, but there should be some

2:49:32 > 2:49:37sunshine across eastern England, eastern Scotland too. Workload for

2:49:37 > 2:49:40the rest of the country with outbreaks of rain. Western Scotland

2:49:40 > 2:49:45Anne Western preserving them and Wales, particularly during the

2:49:45 > 2:49:49afternoon. Further research are more likely to stay dry. Temperatures in

2:49:49 > 2:49:55double figures towards the South and West. Fast forward into Monday,

2:49:55 > 2:49:57another fairly cloudy day with some patchy outbreaks of rain,

2:49:57 > 2:50:02particularly in the east by the time we get to Monday. Further west, a

2:50:02 > 2:50:06drier story compared to Sunday. Temperatures around 11 or 12 with

2:50:06 > 2:50:12that milder air, cooler across the East. Then we will see the winds

2:50:12 > 2:50:16change direction, so the mild air gets squeezed away towards the South

2:50:16 > 2:50:19West. The winds start to come in from the east. That will be bringing

2:50:19 > 2:50:23a different feel to the weather as we head through the course of next

2:50:23 > 2:50:28week. Although it will be starting off on a mild note, the easterly

2:50:28 > 2:50:30wind develops, be prepared for something more wintry through the

2:50:30 > 2:50:32week.

2:50:32 > 2:50:33something more wintry through the week. Always stay prepared, never

2:50:33 > 2:50:40put those layers away! Thanks very much, we will see you later.

2:50:40 > 2:50:42If you are a working parent with children aged

2:50:42 > 2:50:45between nine and 11, from this week, you can get

2:50:45 > 2:50:48up to £2000 a year to help cover the cost of childcare.

2:50:48 > 2:50:50There is already provision for those with younger children.

2:50:50 > 2:50:53Sounds good, but there are warnings that some parents could be

2:50:53 > 2:50:54worse off if they claim.

2:50:54 > 2:50:56Let's get more detail now from Paul Lewis from

2:50:56 > 2:51:01Radio 4's Moneybox programme.

2:51:01 > 2:51:07This is a little comfort, isn't it? It can seem it, but let's extend the

2:51:07 > 2:51:11scheme because at its simplest it is quite simple. If you are working

2:51:11 > 2:51:15parent or if there are too matter of view, if you're a working couple,

2:51:15 > 2:51:19for every eight and you spend on childcare, the Government will top

2:51:19 > 2:51:29it up by £2. There is a maximum Government subsidy of £2000, and

2:51:29 > 2:51:34people had been talking to have said that they will pretty soon hit that

2:51:34 > 2:51:37because that means it is costing them £1000. But you both have to be

2:51:37 > 2:51:40working or if you're a single parent, you have to work at least 16

2:51:40 > 2:51:46hours. And you mustn't earn more than £100,000 a year. That's not

2:51:46 > 2:51:49going to affect very many people but that is the upper limit. But it

2:51:49 > 2:51:56should be straightforward, you go online, you get a subsidy.Are there

2:51:56 > 2:52:02problems attached? Who will it not suit?There can be problems. The

2:52:02 > 2:52:05probability is that I counted seven different childcare schemes and they

2:52:05 > 2:52:09are different in different parts of the UK. This one is UK wide. The

2:52:09 > 2:52:13problem really is, if you already get childcare vouchers, you will

2:52:13 > 2:52:18find that you can't get those. More important, if you get child tax

2:52:18 > 2:52:24credits or you get Universal Credit, those benefits for people in lower

2:52:24 > 2:52:29paid work, those benefits will just stop the moment you claim this

2:52:29 > 2:52:33tax-free childcare. And with Universal Credit, I'm told it can be

2:52:33 > 2:52:38very hard if not impossible then to get it back. So it is important that

2:52:38 > 2:52:43parents check carefully which is better for them.But where do people

2:52:43 > 2:52:48go for advice on this stuff?Again, that's a subject of some

2:52:48 > 2:52:56controversy. The Government has a very good website called Childcare

2:52:56 > 2:53:01Choices A Couple On Its Website, And That Does Lead You Through This, But

2:53:01 > 2:53:05I've Been Taking To A Reform Group Who Have Said It Does Deep -- It

2:53:05 > 2:53:10Does Give You A Calculator To Bracket Which Is Best, But It

2:53:10 > 2:53:14Excludes Universal Credit, And It Really Is Those People Have To Be

2:53:14 > 2:53:17Careful. The Reform Group Says Really The Only Place To Get Good

2:53:17 > 2:53:21Advice On This Is Your Local Citizens' Advice Bureau, And We Know

2:53:21 > 2:53:25How Busy They Are. So It Is Possible That Some People Will Make A Claim,

2:53:25 > 2:53:30Then Find They Are Worse Off. But I Don't Want To Put Anybody Off. I

2:53:30 > 2:53:34Think For Most People, It Is A Good Thing, It Is A Great Help With

2:53:34 > 2:53:39Childcare Costs. But If You're On Universal Credit Particularly, Take

2:53:39 > 2:53:44Care Before Applying, Because You Probably Won't Be Any Better Off

2:53:44 > 2:53:49With It.What is the Government saying?The Government say that if

2:53:49 > 2:53:55they inadvertently claim it, they say the tax calculator on the

2:53:55 > 2:53:59website will actually work out which is best for you. But again, there is

2:53:59 > 2:54:03some controversy about whether that includes Universal Credit or not.

2:54:03 > 2:54:06But I would go on the Government website, look at it, think about it,

2:54:06 > 2:54:11if you get Universal Credit, be very careful because you will lose that

2:54:11 > 2:54:17and it might leave you were soft. Thank you very much for that. More

2:54:17 > 2:54:22MoneyBox at midday on BBC Radio 2 for. -- Radio 4.

2:54:22 > 2:54:24More than 100,000 critically endangered orangutans have been

2:54:24 > 2:54:25killed in Borneo since 1999.

2:54:25 > 2:54:28The island is one of the endangered apes' main habitats.

2:54:28 > 2:54:30Researchers say while deforestation is partly to blame, a large number

2:54:30 > 2:54:32have been killed as punishment for raiding crops.

2:54:32 > 2:54:34Let's discuss this now with Catherine Barton,

2:54:34 > 2:54:39a field conservation manager.

2:54:39 > 2:54:45Good morning. I say good morning, this is awful. These numbers,

2:54:45 > 2:54:52100,000 killed since 1999. We understand how precious these annals

2:54:52 > 2:54:57are, what is happening on the ground in Borneo that isn't understood? Why

2:54:57 > 2:55:05this retaliation, so to speak? Just for being.This number that has, it

2:55:05 > 2:55:09is such an alarming number. We knew that this was happening and we knew

2:55:09 > 2:55:14the decline of the orangutans was happening, but these numbers, it has

2:55:14 > 2:55:22been quite shocking. What's happening on the ground is, two big

2:55:22 > 2:55:24threats, one of these is deforestation and defragmentation of

2:55:24 > 2:55:28habitat, something that has been known to conservationists for a

2:55:28 > 2:55:32number of years.And the deforestation is because they need

2:55:32 > 2:55:38to use the land for what?A lot of the time it is agriculture. So oil

2:55:38 > 2:55:44palm plantation. Palm oil is found in about 50% of supermarket products

2:55:44 > 2:55:55in the UK. So, oil palm plantations. And another big part of it is just

2:55:55 > 2:56:00changing the land at the Macca. But we also found that the killing is a

2:56:00 > 2:56:06much bigger risk than we originally anticipated. Hunting of orangutans.

2:56:06 > 2:56:09It's thought that over 100,000 orangutans have been killed over the

2:56:09 > 2:56:16last 15 years.What is the motivation for hunting orangutans?A

2:56:16 > 2:56:21couple of different reasons. It can be for food, hunters can go into the

2:56:21 > 2:56:28forest, they may be looking for deer or pigs, but they can also take

2:56:28 > 2:56:36orangutans as food... But a large part of it is this conflict with

2:56:36 > 2:56:41orangutans, so can of human wildlife conflict. Orangutans come into

2:56:41 > 2:56:46plantations and often, people will retaliate, it could be anger, could

2:56:46 > 2:56:53be because they are scared, but they will retaliate and there were -- and

2:56:53 > 2:56:57the orangutans are killed in that way.So, what's the answer? We see

2:56:57 > 2:57:00wildlife programmes you, we don't have access to beautiful animals

2:57:00 > 2:57:04such as this but we equally don't have the problems these animals pose

2:57:04 > 2:57:09when they infringe on our lifestyles. So what is the answer to

2:57:09 > 2:57:14this? Is it education, or investment? Thomas segregate or to

2:57:14 > 2:57:20manage the living of these two societies so to speak? Dough-mac

2:57:20 > 2:57:23there are different solutions and I think it's come to the point as

2:57:23 > 2:57:26well, especially with the new research, we need to start thinking

2:57:26 > 2:57:31about those really more innovative solutions. There are solutions that

2:57:31 > 2:57:38will work. For example, sustainable Palm oil.Industry and

2:57:38 > 2:57:43conservationists all come together and the aim of that is to make sure

2:57:43 > 2:57:48the oil palm is grown on the ground in a sustainable way, with less

2:57:48 > 2:57:54detriment to the wildlife in the environment.Borneo, orangutans are

2:57:54 > 2:57:58synonymous with that country, something people are familiar with.

2:57:58 > 2:58:02Why is the country not doing more? Are there rules, is it illegal to

2:58:02 > 2:58:13hunt orangutans?It's such a hard situation. In Malaysia and

2:58:13 > 2:58:16Indonesia, for example, oil palm and agriculture is such a big part of

2:58:16 > 2:58:22the economy. Now, they shouldn't be killing orangutans, and those

2:58:22 > 2:58:28companies who are satisfied should not be killing them.Privatising the

2:58:28 > 2:58:32benefits of that of protecting... Exactly, and there is a lot more

2:58:32 > 2:58:39work that needs to be done to actually educate. So, education is

2:58:39 > 2:58:42the solution in a lot of circumstances like this, to actually

2:58:42 > 2:58:47work with communities and work on this human wildlife conflict issue

2:58:47 > 2:58:50to make sure these killings are not actually happening any more.

2:58:50 > 2:58:58Catherine, thank you very much. Still to come this morning...

2:58:58 > 2:59:00Ahead of their World Boxing Super Series semifinal clash,

2:59:00 > 2:59:02Chris Eubank Junior has vowed to send his opponent

2:59:02 > 2:59:03George Groves into retirement.

2:59:03 > 2:59:06We'll ask if his fighting talk punches any weight, when former

2:59:06 > 2:59:11World Champion Barry McGuigan joins us on the sofa.

2:59:11 > 2:59:17Stay with us, headlines coming up.

3:00:08 > 3:00:10Hello this is Breakfast, with Naga Munchetty and Charlie Stayt.

3:00:10 > 3:00:13Donald Trump visits survivors of the Florida High School shootings.

3:00:13 > 3:00:16The US President and the First Lady have been to the hospital

3:00:16 > 3:00:18where the injured were taken following the attack.

3:00:18 > 3:00:20The first funerals have been held amid an outpouring of grief

3:00:20 > 3:00:25and anger from the families of the victims.

3:00:25 > 3:00:27One British family caught up in the horror tell Breakfast

3:00:27 > 3:00:32that they refuse to live in fear.

3:00:32 > 3:00:40As crazy as it might sound, we want to go back.

3:00:41 > 3:00:45We want to walk those halls, we want to bounce back and we

3:00:45 > 3:00:53want to say that we might be scarred, but it has not beaten us.

3:00:57 > 3:00:59Good morning it's Saturday 17th February.

3:00:59 > 3:01:03Also this morning:

3:01:03 > 3:01:06In the past half hour Theresa May has EU leaders that public safety

3:01:06 > 3:01:14will suffer if they block a post-Brexit security deal.

3:01:20 > 3:01:25Weber be in Munich getting reaction to that speech in a few moments. --

3:01:25 > 3:01:28Reeva B.

3:01:28 > 3:01:31The President of Haiti says that the Oxfam scandal could be

3:01:31 > 3:01:33the "tip of the iceberg" as he accuses a second aid

3:01:33 > 3:01:34charity of misconduct.

3:01:34 > 3:01:36In sport, a famous, second medal for Great Britain

3:01:36 > 3:01:37at the Winter Olympics.

3:01:37 > 3:01:41At just 19, Izzy Atkin has won a bronze, after a brilliant aeriel

3:01:41 > 3:01:42display in the women's slope style.

3:01:42 > 3:01:44A first ever medal for Britain on skis.

3:01:44 > 3:01:45And beehives, bobs and blow dries.

3:01:45 > 3:01:47Our entertainment correspondent Colin Paterson takes

3:01:47 > 3:01:49a rather personal trip back through the history of hairdressing.

3:01:49 > 3:01:50And Sarah has the weather.

3:01:50 > 3:01:54Good morning.

3:01:54 > 3:02:00A chilly start to the day with some patchy rain in the forecast. The

3:02:00 > 3:02:03best of the Sunshine towards the south and east of England. I will

3:02:03 > 3:02:07have a forecast for you in about 15 minutes.

3:02:07 > 3:02:08Good morning.

3:02:08 > 3:02:09First, our main story.

3:02:09 > 3:02:12President Trump has met survivors of Wednesday's high school shooting

3:02:12 > 3:02:14in Florida at the hospital where they're being treated.

3:02:14 > 3:02:16He also thanked the emergency services and medical staff

3:02:16 > 3:02:19who treated those who were wounded when the suspect, Nikolas Cruz,

3:02:19 > 3:02:20opened fire, killing 17 people.

3:02:20 > 3:02:21Barbara Plett-Usher reports.

3:02:21 > 3:02:24The funerals have begun.

3:02:24 > 3:02:26These students were saying goodbye to a 14-year-old classmate.

3:02:26 > 3:02:29They and their parents have been calling to action

3:02:29 > 3:02:37so they and their parents have been calling for action

3:02:40 > 3:02:42from President Trump so other teenagers won't die this way.

3:02:42 > 3:02:45He and the First Lady visited some of the injured still in hospital,

3:02:45 > 3:02:47including a woman who had been shot four times.

3:02:47 > 3:02:49He congratulated the medical staff...

3:02:49 > 3:02:51REPORTER: Do our gun laws need to be changed,

3:02:51 > 3:02:52Mr President?

3:02:52 > 3:02:54..But ignored a question about tougher gun control.

3:02:54 > 3:02:56This is where the President is in his element, meeting first

3:02:56 > 3:03:00responders who rescued the wounded and captured the killer.

3:03:00 > 3:03:03He piled on the praise for their speed and bravery.

3:03:03 > 3:03:05His wife thanked them for protecting the children.

3:03:05 > 3:03:07They are our future, and let's take care of them

3:03:07 > 3:03:09because they went through a lot and what they experienced,

3:03:09 > 3:03:12two days ago, we need to take care of them.

3:03:12 > 3:03:14The President is talking about making schools safer and has

3:03:14 > 3:03:17linked the violence to mental health issues rather than guns.

3:03:17 > 3:03:20The young man who carried out the attack, Nikolas Cruz,

3:03:20 > 3:03:27was a troubled youth who loved guns and found it easy to buy them.

3:03:27 > 3:03:30It has emerged that FBI ignored a tip-off about him last month.

3:03:30 > 3:03:32The caller warned he had the potential to carry out

3:03:32 > 3:03:37a school shooting.

3:03:37 > 3:03:41So, mistakes by law enforcement add a new twist

3:03:41 > 3:03:43to a grimly familiar arguments.

3:03:43 > 3:03:49Mass shootings in America revived debate about gun control.

3:03:49 > 3:03:57But a school shooting like this one boils the issue down

3:03:59 > 3:04:02to a stark question - how can we keep our children safe?

3:04:02 > 3:04:04And the people here will judge their President on how

3:04:04 > 3:04:12he responds to that.

3:04:26 > 3:04:33Earlier we spoke to a student to was at the school.As crazy as it might

3:04:33 > 3:04:39sound, we want to go back. We want to walk the halls. We want to bounce

3:04:39 > 3:04:46back, we want to say, we might be scored, but it has not beaten us. It

3:04:46 > 3:04:50will be harder for the freshmans and the sophomores. They are younger

3:04:50 > 3:04:58than us and they will have to walk the halls for longer than we have

3:04:58 > 3:05:02two, but the community here it is phenomenal. The recovery will take

3:05:02 > 3:05:13time, but I am 100% sure we will bounce back from this.

3:05:13 > 3:05:16In the last half an hour Theresa May has urged the European Union to put

3:05:16 > 3:05:18aside 'political doctrine and ideology' and sign up

3:05:18 > 3:05:20to a post-Brexit security treaty with Britain.

3:05:20 > 3:05:23Speaking at a conference in Munich she said that nothing must get

3:05:23 > 3:05:26in the way of Britain and the EU helping each other

3:05:26 > 3:05:27to keep people safe.

3:05:27 > 3:05:29She'll also spoke about the need for real political will to safeguard

3:05:29 > 3:05:37the level of co-operation which has developed over decades.

3:05:42 > 3:05:52This cannot be a time when any of us allow competition between partners,

3:05:52 > 3:05:56deep-seated ideology to inhibit our cooperation and jeopardise the

3:05:56 > 3:06:01security of our citizens. We must do whatever is most practical and

3:06:01 > 3:06:07pragmatic in ensuring our collective security.

3:06:08 > 3:06:13security.The live features you saw before Theresa May's speech, the

3:06:13 > 3:06:21Prime Minister is still taking questions.

3:06:21 > 3:06:24questions. We'll talk more about the implications of what she said in a

3:06:24 > 3:06:26moment.

3:06:26 > 3:06:28The President of Haiti has called for an investigation

3:06:28 > 3:06:30into the activities of aid agencies working in his country,

3:06:30 > 3:06:33saying that the sex scandal involving some Oxfam workers

3:06:33 > 3:06:35after the 2010 earthquake was just the tip of the iceberg.

3:06:35 > 3:06:37He told the Reuters news agency that one charity,

3:06:37 > 3:06:39Medecins Sans Frontiers, had repatriated some its staff

3:06:39 > 3:06:40from Haiti without any explanation.

3:06:40 > 3:06:45John McManus reports.

3:06:45 > 3:06:49Haiti in the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake.

3:06:49 > 3:06:53Oxfam has been on the defensive over allegations that some of its staff

3:06:53 > 3:06:56paid prostitutes here.

3:06:56 > 3:06:57I always dreamed of working for them.

3:06:57 > 3:06:59This woman, who spoke anonymously to the BBC,

3:06:59 > 3:07:07says she was attacked by a colleague.

3:07:19 > 3:07:22He pinned me up against the wall, he was groping me, grabbing me,

3:07:22 > 3:07:24kissing me and I was just trying to shove him off.

3:07:24 > 3:07:28And got him off eventually and he got mad and he threw his

3:07:28 > 3:07:29glass at me.

3:07:29 > 3:07:30Now, Haiti's president Jovenel Moise has said

3:07:30 > 3:07:31other charities also have

3:07:31 > 3:07:34questions to answer and he has made a specific allegation

3:07:34 > 3:07:36against Medecins Sans Frontiers, also known as Doctors

3:07:36 > 3:07:40Without Borders, who sends medical staff around the world.

3:07:40 > 3:07:42The President said MSF had to repatriate about 17 people

3:07:42 > 3:07:44for misconduct, without any explanation why.

3:07:44 > 3:07:47In response, MSF said:

3:07:58 > 3:07:59MSF has already admitted

3:07:59 > 3:08:01that it fired 19 staff members last year

3:08:01 > 3:08:02after allegations of harassment or sexual assault.

3:08:02 > 3:08:08So how widespread is the problem?

3:08:08 > 3:08:10Oxfam are not alone in this.

3:08:10 > 3:08:17Every agency in the aid sector has the problem.

3:08:17 > 3:08:25We work in a sector that attracts the vulnerable -

3:08:26 > 3:08:27that, works, sorry supports vulnerable people.

3:08:27 > 3:08:29Therefore, attracts predators.

3:08:29 > 3:08:30Meanwhile Oxfam's UK head says the evidence in Haiti

3:08:30 > 3:08:33were a disgrace but also told the Guardian newspaper that:

3:08:33 > 3:08:35Certainly, the intense scrutiny of the aid sector is unlikely

3:08:35 > 3:08:36to stop soon.

3:08:36 > 3:08:44John McManus, BBC News.

3:08:49 > 3:08:5113 Russians have been charged with interfering

3:08:51 > 3:08:54in the 2016 US election, in a major development

3:08:54 > 3:09:02in the FBI investigation.

3:09:06 > 3:09:12Here is our North American correspondent.

3:09:21 > 3:09:23The result of the 2016 presidential election

3:09:23 > 3:09:25is still the subject of much debate and rancorous dispute.

3:09:25 > 3:09:27Now a finger is firmly pointed out outside interference,

3:09:27 > 3:09:30with 13 Russian citizens accused of trying to affect the outcome.

3:09:30 > 3:09:32The defendants allegedly conducted what they called information warfare

3:09:32 > 3:09:34against the United States, with the stated goal of spreading

3:09:34 > 3:09:38mistrust towards the candidates and the political system in general.

3:09:38 > 3:09:41The indictments said the defendants used fictitious online personal

3:09:41 > 3:09:44accounts and posted political messages in social media that

3:09:44 > 3:09:48impersonated real US citizens.

3:09:48 > 3:09:52They had fraudulent bank accounts and false identification documents.

3:09:52 > 3:09:54The operation supported the campaign of candidate Donald Trump,

3:09:54 > 3:10:01and disparaged Hillary Clinton.

3:10:01 > 3:10:04Mr Trump has always strongly denied that his campaign had anything to do

3:10:04 > 3:10:06with Russian interference in the election and the words

3:10:06 > 3:10:14of the deputy Attorney General added credibility to the President's view.

3:10:15 > 3:10:17There is no allegation in this indictment that any American

3:10:17 > 3:10:24was a knowing participant in this illegal activity.

3:10:24 > 3:10:28In a statement, the White House said the President was:

3:10:28 > 3:10:36Mr Trump added:

3:10:47 > 3:10:49This is the most significant development

3:10:49 > 3:10:51in the Russia investigation, but it isn't over yet.

3:10:51 > 3:10:53Peter Bowes, BBC News.

3:10:53 > 3:10:56British soldiers are to be deployed to Africa to boost the fight

3:10:56 > 3:10:57against illegal wildlife poaching.

3:10:57 > 3:10:59They will train rangers in Malawi to find and stop poachers,

3:10:59 > 3:11:02in an expansion of a successful pilot scheme that was

3:11:02 > 3:11:03trialed last year.

3:11:03 > 3:11:05The Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson said poaching puts

3:11:05 > 3:11:06'majestic' animals at risk.

3:11:06 > 3:11:13Animals under threat include elephants, rhinos and lions.

3:11:13 > 3:11:21The time now is 9:11am. Theresa May has just made a speech in Munich

3:11:21 > 3:11:25regarding security cooperation, specifically after Britain leaves

3:11:25 > 3:11:30the European Union. The images you can see at the moment are a question

3:11:30 > 3:11:35and answer session.Let us listen in. Because of our justice and home

3:11:35 > 3:11:40affairs opt out, we have that relationship already, but let's be

3:11:40 > 3:11:44ambitious about a security treaty for the future and the one goal we

3:11:44 > 3:11:48will all have is not about institutional structures of

3:11:48 > 3:11:53mechanisms, but is about the security of our people.As we

3:11:53 > 3:11:59conclude this session, let me remind you that we need to be back here at

3:11:59 > 3:12:0210:30am sharp to continue the discussion with Jean-Claude Juncker

3:12:02 > 3:12:12and other speakers.That question and answer session has just taken

3:12:12 > 3:12:24place after the Prime Minister's speech. We can speak more on this.

3:12:24 > 3:12:31Good morning, Catherine. What is the gist of the speech?This is Theresa

3:12:31 > 3:12:37May's comfort zone. She is used to talking about security and home

3:12:37 > 3:12:44affairs issues. The message she really wants to get across is really

3:12:44 > 3:12:49the main point that they want to establish a treaty that will replace

3:12:49 > 3:12:57the current policy the UK is part of under the EU framework.In an ideal

3:12:57 > 3:13:04world it will be the same as it is now?Yes, the emphasis is on the

3:13:04 > 3:13:12status quo. Cooperation, political will and ideology. The political

3:13:12 > 3:13:18will and ideology, she does not want us to get bogged down as we move

3:13:18 > 3:13:22into phase two of negotiations. She wants to emphasise cooperation and

3:13:22 > 3:13:30that word is important because it went -- in phase two of the

3:13:30 > 3:13:37negotiations there is an annex that says the EU 27 recognise the

3:13:37 > 3:13:42importance of cooperation in terms of security and foreign policy. She

3:13:42 > 3:13:47is echoing the language of the EU in this to get her point across.It is

3:13:47 > 3:13:51a technical and political argument. She started a speech on an emotional

3:13:51 > 3:14:00note. Talking about people affected by terrorism.It is personalising

3:14:00 > 3:14:03and really trying to emphasise the importance of really having this

3:14:03 > 3:14:10cooperation between the UK and the EU 27. This is something that

3:14:10 > 3:14:15affects everybody. It's not just at state level either, it impacts

3:14:15 > 3:14:18individuals and that's probably one of the reasons she started with this

3:14:18 > 3:14:22emotive stance at the beginning of the speech, moving progressively

3:14:22 > 3:14:30about what the -- to what the transition period will look like.

3:14:30 > 3:14:37You have been following this since the referendum and will be following

3:14:37 > 3:14:45it afterwards, whether you like it or not. What is her place now on the

3:14:45 > 3:14:49stage of EU leaders in terms of respect, communication and how much

3:14:49 > 3:14:55she is being listened to?The meeting she had with Angela Merkel

3:14:55 > 3:15:03yesterday was interesting. Angela Merkel said it was ambitious, the

3:15:03 > 3:15:10plan moving forward.That is positive. It has appeared hostile

3:15:10 > 3:15:17recently.It has. This is a critical moment because we are moving into

3:15:17 > 3:15:31phase two of negotiations. The past we in December has gone. We need to

3:15:32 > 3:15:37know more about what the future relationship will look like

3:15:37 > 3:15:42specifically on issues like defence, security and trade.We are looking

3:15:42 > 3:15:46at the wires. I think it is coming from the question and answer

3:15:46 > 3:15:54session. The answer from Theresa May to the question is there is no

3:15:54 > 3:15:59question of a second referendum, Brexit referendum. I'm not sure who

3:15:59 > 3:16:05asked that question, but it's interesting, given where she is.She

3:16:05 > 3:16:10eluded to

3:16:10 > 3:16:16eluded to this dash-macro she alluded the the speech.

3:16:21 > 3:16:23alluded the the speech. There has been discussion about whether there

3:16:23 > 3:16:28will be a second referendum on the deal that is being done. That would

3:16:28 > 3:16:33be a different referendum to the one in 2016.What is her response to

3:16:33 > 3:16:45that question, say, to her party here?There has been a lot of

3:16:45 > 3:16:51discussion about how divided the Cabinet is. This is Theresa May's

3:16:51 > 3:17:01comfort zone. This is what she is hammering home. She is saying, I am

3:17:01 > 3:17:03the Prime Minister and the leader of the Conservative Party and this is

3:17:03 > 3:17:16how it is going to be.Thank you very much indeed.

3:17:16 > 3:17:22Now, it is going to get a little warmer, but we shouldn't put away

3:17:22 > 3:17:25the extra layers just yet?

3:17:31 > 3:17:39That's right, temperatures will get colder. We started off with some

3:17:39 > 3:17:44mist and fog, but many of us will see some sunshine. Tomorrow there

3:17:44 > 3:17:49will be more clout across the western parts of the country.

3:17:55 > 3:18:01There are clear skies pushing in across Scotland and Northern Ireland

3:18:01 > 3:18:05as well, but this weather front will bring clout and some outbreaks of

3:18:05 > 3:18:10rain.

3:18:10 > 3:18:14rain. Rain across parts of northern England and the Midlands. Further

3:18:14 > 3:18:17north west of the rest of the country's sunny skies with one or

3:18:17 > 3:18:22two Coventry

3:18:23 > 3:18:29two Coventry showers -- wintry showers. This evening and the night

3:18:29 > 3:18:33we will lose that band of clout and clear scars for much of the country

3:18:33 > 3:18:41before the next area of clout moves into the West. Quite a sharp frost

3:18:41 > 3:18:45as well as some stubborn patches of Falkirk tomorrow. Sunday's weather

3:18:45 > 3:18:53dominated by high pressure and this front working in from the Atlantic.

3:18:53 > 3:19:01It is a warm fronts, so it is important warmer air. We will see

3:19:01 > 3:19:13temperatures reached double figures. Further west it is a cloudier scene.

3:19:15 > 3:19:18Temperatures around ten or 11 degrees for southern and western

3:19:18 > 3:19:25parts. Slightly chilly in the north-east. Monday, we still have

3:19:25 > 3:19:31the remnants of that from hanging around. Still a lot of cloud. The

3:19:31 > 3:19:40rain will be across eastern parts, try in the West. Things will bend

3:19:40 > 3:19:44change, so don't get used to this milder weather because heading

3:19:44 > 3:19:48through next week we will push the mild air away towards the south-west

3:19:48 > 3:19:53and we will draw in this cold easterly wind. A dip in the

3:19:53 > 3:20:02temperature as we head through the course of next week.

3:20:02 > 3:20:04The ride-hailing app company, Uber has announced a series

3:20:04 > 3:20:06of new safety measures as it attempts to address concerns raised

3:20:06 > 3:20:09by Transport For London who refused to renew their operating licence

3:20:09 > 3:20:12last year over claims that the service was not a fit

3:20:12 > 3:20:13and proper operator.

3:20:13 > 3:20:15The introduction of a 24-hour customer support line and providing

3:20:15 > 3:20:17passengers more information about their drivers are among

3:20:17 > 3:20:18a raft of proposals.

3:20:18 > 3:20:25Fred Jones is Uber's head of UK cities and he joins us now.

3:20:25 > 3:20:30Thank you for talking to us this morning.So what is going to change?

3:20:30 > 3:20:35Yesterday we have announced a raft of changes that put safety front and

3:20:35 > 3:20:40centre of our service, not just in London, but across the UK. As you

3:20:40 > 3:20:45said, a few of the things we are changing, there will be a 24-hour

3:20:45 > 3:20:50customer support line for drivers and passengers. We have been told

3:20:50 > 3:20:56over the last couple of months they love our normal customer service

3:20:56 > 3:21:01app, but if there is a more serious issue, they want to speak to a

3:21:01 > 3:21:09person. That is why we are going to launch that later this year.I

3:21:09 > 3:21:15apologise for being a cynic, but you were

3:21:19 > 3:21:21were refused a licence renewal. It seems you're bringing in these

3:21:21 > 3:21:26changes because you want your license to be renewed. Why didn't

3:21:26 > 3:21:32you do this before? If you care about your customers, why wasn't

3:21:32 > 3:21:36this in place before?We've always value safety and the importance of

3:21:36 > 3:21:41good customer service, but you are right. We have made mistakes in the

3:21:41 > 3:21:47past. Over the past few months we have listened to drivers,

3:21:47 > 3:21:50passengers, working closely with transport for London and the Met

3:21:50 > 3:21:55police to understand the mistakes and work out how we can change as a

3:21:55 > 3:22:02company and improve. The changes we are announcing or in part in

3:22:02 > 3:22:09response to those criticisms. We need to do more in terms of customer

3:22:09 > 3:22:20service and save it -- safety.Is it just in the UK that you will be

3:22:20 > 3:22:27doing this because you are a global company.The announcement we made

3:22:27 > 3:22:31yesterday is just focused on the UK. It's part of the business that I am

3:22:31 > 3:22:45responsible for. The 24-7 phone line will only be in the UK.

3:22:45 > 3:22:48will only be in the UK.What about the rest of the world? If these

3:22:48 > 3:22:52standards are good enough for the UK, surely they are good enough for

3:22:52 > 3:22:57the rest of the world?

3:22:58 > 3:23:00the rest of the world? Every country is different... But standards aren't

3:23:00 > 3:23:06different, it is what is expected from you.Yes, but there are

3:23:06 > 3:23:10different needs from regulators and police will scissor across the

3:23:10 > 3:23:17world. We spent the last few months really listening to those in the UK

3:23:17 > 3:23:25and we really want to respond to that feedback and improve the

3:23:25 > 3:23:32service and safety we provided the UK.Thank you for talking to us.

3:23:32 > 3:23:33You're watching Breakfast from BBC News.

3:23:33 > 3:23:36Time now for a look at the newspapers.

3:23:36 > 3:23:39Journalist and broadcaster Ian Collins is here to tell us

3:23:39 > 3:23:47what's caught his eye.

3:23:49 > 3:23:53Where are you going to start? Let's start with Brits working longer than

3:23:53 > 3:23:57anyone else in the world. Every year we see this report. We are usually

3:23:57 > 3:24:11at the top of the pile. The average working hours here are 42.3.

3:24:11 > 3:24:14working hours here are 42.3. Are we earning more as well? No, and we are

3:24:14 > 3:24:20less productive as well. Men work longer hours than women. There was a

3:24:20 > 3:24:28gender gap in that area. I'm sure that is the next controversy. If you

3:24:28 > 3:24:33work in the mining industry, you work the longest hours of anyone.

3:24:33 > 3:24:38The education sector work the shortest hours.How much attention

3:24:38 > 3:24:45do you pay to this? We all know that miners work long hours and in

3:24:45 > 3:24:49conditions that the majority of the population would not want a working.

3:24:49 > 3:24:58Teachers also will say they work long hours.They are under more

3:24:58 > 3:25:04stress than they have ever been before.

3:25:07 > 3:25:11before. Journalists? Let's not get into that. It's not exactly digging

3:25:11 > 3:25:21holes for a living! Realistically though, every profession has

3:25:21 > 3:25:24different pressures. I find it strange that we have reached this

3:25:24 > 3:25:30stage in our evolution and we have yet to crack... We were told that

3:25:30 > 3:25:35the world of technology will change everything and we will be working

3:25:35 > 3:25:40less. It seems it's creating fewer jobs and we are working more.

3:25:40 > 3:25:51Something has gone wrong. This idea of having a three-day

3:25:53 > 3:25:59of having a three-day weekend, hasn't really happened.What about

3:25:59 > 3:26:08the winter Olympics?Every time I turn it on, a Brit falls over. I

3:26:08 > 3:26:14suppose it is the nature of the snow. Today is what is being dumped

3:26:14 > 3:26:22super Saturday. Potentially. Potentially. We all remembered the

3:26:22 > 3:26:27Olympics and Mo Farah and Jessica Ennis, just how incredible that was

3:26:27 > 3:26:34and how amazing that feeling was. Are we going to relive that via the

3:26:34 > 3:26:42Condon whipped snow? I'm not sure. There are so many events. It feels

3:26:42 > 3:26:47like a lottery. You have done that training and then someone else does

3:26:47 > 3:26:52something.I feel guilty as a viewer. I was watching a couple of

3:26:52 > 3:27:04Brits who were snowboarding. You watch them do it, it's over in 20

3:27:04 > 3:27:12seconds, but four years nonstop for that moment.What I find interesting

3:27:12 > 3:27:22is trying to overtake people on the way to a trend that is about to

3:27:22 > 3:27:29depart. Happened to me yesterday. You want a good seat. I overtake

3:27:29 > 3:27:39people. I have been known to go, excuse me, and slide past.

3:27:39 > 3:27:42excuse me, and slide past.Euston to Manchester Piccadilly. We are there

3:27:42 > 3:27:47waiting for the big announcement. Suddenly, everyone gets on the train

3:27:47 > 3:27:53and you are looking for the seat that has not been booked. Yesterday,

3:27:53 > 3:27:58the train we were on was technically cancelled and then it became the

3:27:58 > 3:28:01next train.This app will tell thee in advance if there is an empty

3:28:01 > 3:28:10seat.It's riddled with all types of problems. It will say carriage F,

3:28:10 > 3:28:17seat six is free.

3:28:17 > 3:28:24seat six is free. But if I'm looking at it, so someone else. Any of those

3:28:24 > 3:28:28long journeys up and down this country cost you an arm and a leg.

3:28:28 > 3:28:34But you will all chase the same feat. That's exactly it. Or you go

3:28:34 > 3:28:42to the next one, but the same thing will happen.

3:28:42 > 3:28:47will happen. The mentality is, if you can put it on an app, it will be

3:28:47 > 3:28:55a success.One of the things that we comports on apps is food. It has two

3:28:55 > 3:29:04tastes good.

3:29:04 > 3:29:06Donal Skehan's taking over Saturday kitchen this morning

3:29:06 > 3:29:08at 10 o'clock on BBC two.

3:29:08 > 3:29:13Donal, what's on the menu?

3:29:13 > 3:29:24We have Stephen with us. What is Steve heaven and hell?

3:29:24 > 3:29:32Steve heaven and hell?Spicy food and goats.

3:29:35 > 3:29:40and goats. You have got food in the back of your throat. You may as well

3:29:40 > 3:29:47nick a goat.And we have two wonderful chefs with us.I will be

3:29:47 > 3:29:56making squid balls with needles and chilli sauce.And we have a goat on

3:29:56 > 3:30:02hand to lick at the end of it. Ken, what will you be cooking?I'll be

3:30:02 > 3:30:12making checking with black bean sauce.We also have a Saturday

3:30:12 > 3:30:20kitchen first for Chinese New Year. And we might have a bit of cider,

3:30:20 > 3:30:27depending on how we go with the goats.You guys at home are in

3:30:27 > 3:30:33charge of Stephen's dish. You can go to the website for voting details.

3:30:33 > 3:30:40We will see you at ten o'clock on BBC Two.

3:30:45 > 3:30:52Stay with us, headlines coming up.

3:30:59 > 3:31:02Hello, this is Breakfast, with Naga Munchetty and Charlie Stayt.

3:31:02 > 3:31:04Good morning, here's a summary of today's

3:31:04 > 3:31:12main stories from BBC News.

3:31:13 > 3:31:16In the last hour, Theresa May has urged the European Union to put

3:31:16 > 3:31:18aside "political doctrine and ideology" and sign up

3:31:18 > 3:31:26to a post-Brexit security treaty with Britain.

3:31:27 > 3:31:30First, let's update you with what's happening with President Trump.

3:31:30 > 3:31:32President Trump has met survivors of Wednesday's high school

3:31:32 > 3:31:35gun attack in Florida, in which 17 people were killed.

3:31:35 > 3:31:36He praised emergency workers and medical staff

3:31:36 > 3:31:39for their response, but has refused to discuss gun laws,

3:31:39 > 3:31:42despite strong calls from those affected by the shootings.

3:31:42 > 3:31:45In the last hour, Theresa May has urged the European Union to put

3:31:45 > 3:31:47aside "political doctrine and ideology" and sign up

3:31:47 > 3:31:49to a post-Brexit security treaty with Britain.

3:31:49 > 3:31:52Speaking at a conference in Munich, she said that nothing must get

3:31:52 > 3:31:55in the way of Britain and the EU helping each other

3:31:55 > 3:31:57to keep people safe.

3:31:57 > 3:32:00She also spoke about the need for real political will to safeguard

3:32:00 > 3:32:08the level of cooperation which has developed over decades.

3:32:08 > 3:32:16This cannot be a time when any of Farsala competition between

3:32:16 > 3:32:19partners, rigid institutional restrictions or deep-seated ideology

3:32:19 > 3:32:23to inhibit our corporation and jeopardise the security of our

3:32:23 > 3:32:28citizens. We must do whatever is most practical and pragmatic in

3:32:28 > 3:32:29ensuring our collective security.

3:32:29 > 3:32:32The President of Haiti has called for an investigation

3:32:32 > 3:32:34into the activities of aid agencies working in his country,

3:32:34 > 3:32:36saying that the scandal involving some Oxfam workers was just

3:32:36 > 3:32:38the tip of the iceberg.

3:32:38 > 3:32:40He said the charity Doctors Without Borders had

3:32:40 > 3:32:44repatriated some of its staff from Haiti without any explanation.

3:32:44 > 3:32:46The charity said it takes any reports of staff misconduct

3:32:46 > 3:32:52seriously and are seeking to clarify the questions raised.

3:32:52 > 3:32:5413 Russians have been charged with interfering

3:32:54 > 3:32:56in the 2016 US election, in a major development

3:32:56 > 3:32:59in the FBI investigation.

3:32:59 > 3:33:00Among the allegations are that they promoted disparaging

3:33:00 > 3:33:05messages about the Democratic candidate, Hillary Clinton.

3:33:05 > 3:33:10The Russian Foreign Ministry has described the allegations as absurd.

3:33:10 > 3:33:13It's exactly a week since Liam Colgan from Inverness

3:33:13 > 3:33:15vanished in the early hours while on his brother's stag weekend

3:33:15 > 3:33:18in the German city of Hamburg.

3:33:18 > 3:33:20possible sightings of him.

3:33:20 > 3:33:22Police are now looking into reports of further

3:33:22 > 3:33:23possible sightings of him.

3:33:23 > 3:33:25Earlier on Breakfast, we spoke to Liam's friend

3:33:25 > 3:33:30Alan Pearson, who was with him the night he disappeared.

3:33:30 > 3:33:39It was towards the end of the night out. So, the group became dispersed

3:33:39 > 3:33:43around several bars around the Reaper barn. A group of 18 had

3:33:43 > 3:33:49people that were going home, people popping up at different bars, and I

3:33:49 > 3:33:55believe Aman realised that Liam wasn't there, when we left a bar on

3:33:55 > 3:34:02the River band just after 1:30. But I think we got he had gone home was

3:34:02 > 3:34:06in another bar. -- I think we thought.

3:34:06 > 3:34:08A French designer is planning to travel over 100 miles

3:34:08 > 3:34:10over the Mediterannean, while riding a bike attached

3:34:10 > 3:34:11to a makeshift airship.

3:34:11 > 3:34:15This is Zeppy - made from a bicycle, it has two propellers

3:34:15 > 3:34:21and a helium-filled balloon.

3:34:21 > 3:34:23The sea needs to be flat, with wind speeds

3:34:23 > 3:34:28of less than 3mph.

3:34:28 > 3:34:30The attempted flight from Nice to Corsica is expected to

3:34:30 > 3:34:38take place later in the year.

3:34:39 > 3:34:47I sound kind of dubious, I'm a bit confused as to how all this works.

3:34:47 > 3:34:51Obviously the pedalling propels the propellers, it has to be just above

3:34:51 > 3:34:54the water, with no wind. I know the perfect man to give that

3:34:54 > 3:35:01a try! Put it on the list of things to do.

3:35:01 > 3:35:08You could go over to the Mediterranean and try that out.

3:35:08 > 3:35:14For you, special rules apply! So, tell us about what's happened. A

3:35:14 > 3:35:18great start to the state which could be the best ever for Britain at a

3:35:18 > 3:35:23Winter Olympics. We've got plenty of chances coming up, Elise Christie

3:35:23 > 3:35:28with the skeleton. But Izzy Atkin has got the first medal of the day.

3:35:28 > 3:35:33The skiing slopestyle. What do we have now? Two bronze

3:35:33 > 3:35:40medals, we hope there are plenty more to come.

3:35:40 > 3:35:42Izzy Atkin has become Britain's second medallist of the Games,

3:35:42 > 3:35:45adding to Dom Parsons' bronze in the skeleton with a bronze

3:35:45 > 3:35:47of her own in the ski slopestyle.

3:35:47 > 3:35:52Ben Croucher reports.

3:35:52 > 3:35:56This is the face of history, Greg Renton's first silverware on skis.

3:35:56 > 3:36:00Slopestyle is about nailing the rail and avoiding the bumps on the jumps.

3:36:00 > 3:36:04This teenager adds substance with some style. Born and raised with the

3:36:04 > 3:36:08US to a British father and Malaysian mother, Atkin honed her skills on

3:36:08 > 3:36:12the slopes of Maine when she was three. Tricks like this have taken

3:36:12 > 3:36:17her 16 years to plan. Before the final of three runs, Atkin was

3:36:17 > 3:36:19pushed from the podium. This had to be flawless.Biggest run of her

3:36:19 > 3:36:26life. Now.Every crime, twist and jump jiving with jeopardy. She laid

3:36:26 > 3:36:31down a school good enough for third, but could anyone deny her some

3:36:31 > 3:36:39slopestyle silverware?Oh, no, she's down! Great Britain's is the Atkin

3:36:39 > 3:36:43takes a bronze.There were tonnes of big names in the field. It could

3:36:43 > 3:36:47have been anyone's I was standing at the bottom after my third run, I had

3:36:47 > 3:36:52skied the best I could and I was just waiting for those last three or

3:36:52 > 3:36:57four girls to drop my heart was racing. But I just can't believe it.

3:36:57 > 3:37:01Well, believe it, you're and Olympic bronze medallist.

3:37:01 > 3:37:03In curling, Britain's women enjoyed a fairly routine

3:37:03 > 3:37:04victory against Denmark.

3:37:04 > 3:37:07They've now got three wins out of four and haven't got

3:37:07 > 3:37:08too long to feel too smug.

3:37:08 > 3:37:15They'll play South Korea later this morning.

3:37:15 > 3:37:21But they are on course to mollify for the semifinals. -- to qualify.

3:37:21 > 3:37:24The men suffered a shock defeat to South Korea,

3:37:24 > 3:37:27who came into this match bottom of the group and without a win.

3:37:27 > 3:37:29But Britain went down 11-5 and it means they are out

3:37:29 > 3:37:32of the top four places, and so as things stand

3:37:32 > 3:37:33wouldn't make the semifinals.

3:37:33 > 3:37:36But they have four matches to make the cut and turn it around.

3:37:36 > 3:37:38Following the bronze medal for Dom Parsons yesterday,

3:37:38 > 3:37:43Great Britain could add two more medals in the women's skeleton.

3:37:43 > 3:37:46Laura Deas lies in fourth position at the halfway mark,

3:37:46 > 3:37:51whilst teamate Lizzy Yarnold is third.

3:37:51 > 3:37:53She's just one tenth behind the leader,

3:37:53 > 3:37:55with two more runs to go.

3:37:55 > 3:37:58She's aiming to become the first Briton to successfully defend

3:37:58 > 3:38:04a Winter Olympic title.

3:38:04 > 3:38:11Elise Christie has a chance to put Tuesday's heartbreak in the short

3:38:11 > 3:38:12track speed skating behind her.

3:38:12 > 3:38:14She goes in the 1500 metres.

3:38:14 > 3:38:17She's the reigning World Champion over the distance, but as we've seen

3:38:17 > 3:38:23already in Pyeongchang - that can count for very little.

3:38:23 > 3:38:26This sport shows Mercy and anything can happen. You can follow it later

3:38:26 > 3:38:30on the BBC. -- this sport shows no mercy.

3:38:30 > 3:38:33Four senior West Bromwich Albion players, Jonny Evans, Gareth Barry,

3:38:33 > 3:38:35Jake Livermore and Boaz Myhill, have apologised after breaking

3:38:35 > 3:38:37a curfew and allegedly stealing a taxi from outside

3:38:37 > 3:38:41a fast-food restaurant in Barcelona.

3:38:41 > 3:38:43The team are bottom of the Premier League,

3:38:43 > 3:38:46and were on a mid-season training break in Spain.

3:38:46 > 3:38:47The players have released a joint statement

3:38:47 > 3:38:50apologising for the incident.

3:38:50 > 3:38:52Catalonia police interviewed them but didn't arrest the four men,

3:38:52 > 3:38:56in the early hours of Thursday morning.

3:38:56 > 3:38:59The club say the players will be "subject to the full

3:38:59 > 3:39:06rigours of internal disciplinary procedures."

3:39:06 > 3:39:13It wasn't what we wanted. I've gone... We've gone there to try and

3:39:13 > 3:39:17get ourselves up and ready for this running, and this is obviously not

3:39:17 > 3:39:22ideal. They broke the curfew and that's unacceptable. I feel a bit

3:39:22 > 3:39:27let down by that. But we've still got to train, my focus now is on the

3:39:27 > 3:39:28game.

3:39:28 > 3:39:30Remember, it's FA Cup fifth round weekend, with Leicester

3:39:30 > 3:39:33and Chelsea already through.

3:39:33 > 3:39:35You can watch the goals from their wins over

3:39:35 > 3:39:38Sheffield United and Hull on the BBC Sport website.

3:39:38 > 3:39:41But finally for now, Roger Federer has become the oldest

3:39:41 > 3:39:44player to become the world tennis number one, 14 years after he first

3:39:44 > 3:39:52topped the rankings.

3:39:53 > 3:39:57He beat Robin Haase by two sets to one at the Rotterdam open.

3:39:57 > 3:39:58It was actually a double fault from Haase

3:39:58 > 3:40:02that handed the match point to the 36-year-old Federer.

3:40:02 > 3:40:04But a very popular quarterfinal victory, and Federer was presented

3:40:04 > 3:40:11with a special award to mark the occasion.

3:40:11 > 3:40:13Federer took to social media after the event,

3:40:13 > 3:40:17joking that it's the first he has heard of the record, as he struggles

3:40:17 > 3:40:22with his hearing in his old age.

3:40:22 > 3:40:24Lovely story.

3:40:24 > 3:40:26Tickets for tonight's all-British boxing bout

3:40:26 > 3:40:29sold out in seven minutes for the World Boxing Super Series

3:40:29 > 3:40:31semifinal clash between Chris Eubank Junior

3:40:31 > 3:40:33and George Groves.

3:40:33 > 3:40:36There's a lot at stake for both men, but as Eubank told the BBC's

3:40:36 > 3:40:39Alex Gulrajani, he hopes this could be the fight that brings him

3:40:39 > 3:40:47out of his father's shadow.

3:40:47 > 3:40:52Peace and tranquillity on the South English coast. The calmness

3:40:52 > 3:40:57interrupted by the sound of Chris Eubank junior at work. This, the

3:40:57 > 3:41:05perfect place for him to quietly go about his business.It's London,

3:41:05 > 3:41:09there are distractions, it's hectic. Here, you have the sea, you have the

3:41:09 > 3:41:13house, we have your team-mates, your family. It's a lot easier to focus

3:41:13 > 3:41:18on your boxing.And that focus is held by having some familiar faces

3:41:18 > 3:41:27around, including the man who helped guide his father to the top.He was

3:41:27 > 3:41:32unbelievable, I've been looking after him, it's more than a trainer

3:41:32 > 3:41:36was my job. I've never seen a kid like him. He's got the old man's

3:41:36 > 3:41:41Power.A comparison that will never escape him, even with performances

3:41:41 > 3:41:51like this. But it's one he has learned to live with.

3:41:51 > 3:41:53learned to live with.We have done too much in the sport to not be

3:41:53 > 3:41:58compared. This is the type of fight that will help to release my name

3:41:58 > 3:42:01into boxing, really separate myself, really come out of my Father's

3:42:01 > 3:42:08shudder.And British world title fight with George gowks, that kind

3:42:08 > 3:42:12of fight that made his father a household name, and that's what

3:42:12 > 3:42:17Chris Eubank junior once too.My goal is to create a legacy, to make

3:42:17 > 3:42:23my mark on boxing, to be remembered. But for now, becoming a unified

3:42:23 > 3:42:25World Champion is the target.

3:42:25 > 3:42:27Let's talk about tonight's clash with a man who knows

3:42:27 > 3:42:29the sport inside out, the promoter and former

3:42:29 > 3:42:30featherweight World Champion Barry McGuigan.

3:42:30 > 3:42:31Hi, Barry.

3:42:31 > 3:42:37And your son Shane is George Groves' trainer.

3:42:37 > 3:42:45Give us the inside info on Camp Groves.

3:42:45 > 3:42:49He is, he won trainer of the year last year and him and George have

3:42:49 > 3:42:54really blended. That relationship is really important, really crucial. He

3:42:54 > 3:42:58had three attempts to win the title and didn't do it. Then Shane got him

3:42:58 > 3:43:02across the line last year. He was spectacular in his fight against the

3:43:02 > 3:43:11Russian. It was a superb fight, he got his jaw broken in the second

3:43:11 > 3:43:17round and fought back, it was fantastic performance from him. I

3:43:17 > 3:43:19thought it was a performance of the year. He's since gone on to defend

3:43:19 > 3:43:27his title and he is an improving fighter, he's one of these guys,

3:43:27 > 3:43:32he's 29 years old, he's got so much ambition and drive. You see that

3:43:32 > 3:43:38happen in the gym every day. I go and look over his shoulder and often

3:43:38 > 3:43:45get told off. For talking too much! That's what happened last night as

3:43:45 > 3:43:51well...That's another story! No disrespect to the boxers in the ring

3:43:51 > 3:43:56tonight, there's a lot of interest in the camps either side. Because

3:43:56 > 3:44:00you've got Chris Eubank, such a legend in British boxing, then

3:44:00 > 3:44:11yourself, on the other side of the ring.Yes, the

3:44:12 > 3:44:14ring.Yes, the legacy, and it's really important for him and

3:44:14 > 3:44:19important for us. By George himself is a brand on his own, he's a

3:44:19 > 3:44:24terrific fight. Summary I really admire and look up to. He's got

3:44:24 > 3:44:28drive and determination and skill. And power. That's the difference in

3:44:28 > 3:44:35this fight tonight, because this Eubank has speed, I think the power

3:44:35 > 3:44:40is going to come from George.And different characters as well? I

3:44:40 > 3:44:48think Chris Eubank junior is all about the opening of a crisp

3:44:48 > 3:44:52packet...That's just jostling, gamesmanship. It's theatre in the

3:44:52 > 3:44:59week of the fight. That's the way it is. We get used to that.Talking of

3:44:59 > 3:45:03data, you always see it when they go head-to-head -- talking theatre,

3:45:03 > 3:45:12you've done that. Don't you feel just like going... Just doing

3:45:12 > 3:45:20something slightly mischievous?Or giving each other a kiss.That would

3:45:20 > 3:45:25cite someone out!It's all a bit of fun.What is going through your

3:45:25 > 3:45:33mind?It's just about keeping your composure. It has built up to this

3:45:33 > 3:45:38and there is a much interest in the fight outside, you know, you can go

3:45:38 > 3:45:44one step too far, and often you see it happen. But the two guys, this

3:45:44 > 3:45:50fight has the potential to be superb, but I genuinely think that

3:45:50 > 3:45:57the winner is going to be Groves, because it's fantastic jab at his

3:45:57 > 3:46:05power.Can we do see the young fella in the ring, the young Mr McGuigan?

3:46:05 > 3:46:10There he is, look at that hair?You look in great form, but how much

3:46:10 > 3:46:16heavier are you now than when you were there?I was skin and bones

3:46:16 > 3:46:26there. Now I'm about two stone heavier. Between fights, most

3:46:26 > 3:46:31fighters are a stone, possibly a stone and a half heavier. This was

3:46:31 > 3:46:38the Commonwealth Games in 1978, I was 17. That guy from Papua New

3:46:38 > 3:46:42Guinea, the power he had, he rocked me to my boots. What a powerful guy.

3:46:42 > 3:46:47When someone like that, you got thumped in the face, what does it

3:46:47 > 3:46:51feel like?It's hard to explain. When you get hit hard, it's

3:46:51 > 3:46:57pretty... It's pretty devastating. It can shake you to your boots,

3:46:57 > 3:47:03literally. It's a tough business.

3:47:04 > 3:47:06literally. It's a tough business. I was embarrassed last night, I was

3:47:06 > 3:47:17beaten in the wrestling. She won! Thank you for coming on and talking

3:47:17 > 3:47:24to us.I think George will win tonight.Mike, thank you as well.

3:47:24 > 3:47:30Let's have a look at the weather now.

3:47:31 > 3:47:35We have got a bit of cloud, a few spots of rain

3:47:35 > 3:47:36We have got a bit of cloud, a few spots of rain but for many people,

3:47:36 > 3:47:40seems a bit like this. We've got some blue skies around, we have a

3:47:40 > 3:47:43weather front reducing some outbreaks of rain, so sunny spells.

3:47:43 > 3:47:48By tomorrow more cloud moving in from the West and the arrival of

3:47:48 > 3:47:52some rain heading into the West later tomorrow. But let's look at

3:47:52 > 3:47:56today's weather in more detail. The satellite image shows the cloud

3:47:56 > 3:48:01that's been streaming in overnight. Behind that, clearer skies moving

3:48:01 > 3:48:05in. We have a weather front draped across central parts of the country,

3:48:05 > 3:48:09bringing back cloud, a few spots of rain. But either side of that, drier

3:48:09 > 3:48:14and brighter weather. It was a chilly start in the South East with

3:48:14 > 3:48:18frost and Fallbrook, now brightening up. Further North, we have a band of

3:48:18 > 3:48:21cloud with a few light showers coming out of that cloud underneath

3:48:21 > 3:48:24the weather front. Towards the North West, for the rest of the country,

3:48:24 > 3:48:29clearer skies, just a few showers, some of those following her snow

3:48:29 > 3:48:32across the West of Scotland but drier for eastern Scotland. The

3:48:32 > 3:48:35cloud in the South just clears away quickly this evening and overnight.

3:48:35 > 3:48:40We have clear skies for many central and eastern parts. That's where

3:48:40 > 3:48:45temperatures will fall the list. Again, certainly some fog patches

3:48:45 > 3:48:50and forced to start. Then we have high pressure pulling off across the

3:48:50 > 3:48:55near continent, then this weather front moving in. It's a warm front

3:48:55 > 3:48:59so brings much milder air. You can see that West or South westerly wind

3:48:59 > 3:49:04through the day on Sunday. But it will be a cold start in the East

3:49:04 > 3:49:09with frost and fog gradually clearing. Sancho for eastern

3:49:09 > 3:49:12Scotland and eastern England. Clothing of elsewhere with rain

3:49:12 > 3:49:15arriving for Northern Ireland, western Scotland, western England

3:49:15 > 3:49:19and Wales too. Temperatures about ten or 11 towards the South and

3:49:19 > 3:49:22west, slightly fresher further north-east. Monday, we still have

3:49:22 > 3:49:28the remnants of that front, but by the afternoon, just a bit of rain

3:49:28 > 3:49:32for northern and eastern parts of the UK. Further west, a drier story.

3:49:32 > 3:49:36We could see temperatures of 11 or 12 but quite cloudy and murky on

3:49:36 > 3:49:40Monday. Heading through the rest of the week, that's when we start to

3:49:40 > 3:49:45see a real change because those milder conditions get cleared away

3:49:45 > 3:49:48towards the South West. That opens the door for an easterly wind to

3:49:48 > 3:49:52develop so the blue colour is returning to the map as we move

3:49:52 > 3:49:55through the second half of this week. So through next week it is a

3:49:55 > 3:50:00mild start, but don't be fooled, the winds turning towards the least, it

3:50:00 > 3:50:02is going to become colder once again.

3:50:02 > 3:50:03is going to become colder once again.

3:50:03 > 3:50:09Thanks very much. If you are a fan of the mullet or

3:50:09 > 3:50:13the beehive, a new exhibition celebrate is the history of

3:50:13 > 3:50:17everything. Colin Paterson find it brought back some hair raising

3:50:17 > 3:50:22memories!

3:50:24 > 3:50:27Sometimes the way stories are assigned at the BBC can lead to the

3:50:27 > 3:50:31cruel hand of fate been dealt. Despite being one of the very bald

3:50:31 > 3:50:35list correspondence, here I was dispatched to Barnsley to cover the

3:50:35 > 3:50:42opening of a new exhibition dedicated to hairdressing. Beehives,

3:50:42 > 3:50:46bulbs and blow dries explores the mystery of hair from the 1950s until

3:50:46 > 3:50:50the present day, and former hairdresser of the year Andrew

3:50:50 > 3:50:56Barton was back in his hometown curating the Whigs. .I think

3:50:56 > 3:50:59hairdressing is one of those careers that can be incredibly exciting for

3:50:59 > 3:51:04young people to get into. We employ about 1% of the total UK workforce.

3:51:04 > 3:51:10It's a true profession. Rue-mac what is it about a new lifestyle della

3:51:10 > 3:51:15hairstyle that gives a new personality? What you want to do in

3:51:15 > 3:51:21the exhibition is really kind of showcase of the cultural aspects,

3:51:21 > 3:51:25why things are happening in hair fashion throughout history.And what

3:51:25 > 3:51:29could be more flattering than a style that can be adapted simply by

3:51:29 > 3:51:33the addition of a magic wake. Despite hairdressing being a

3:51:33 > 3:51:36multi-million pound industry for decades, this exhibition brings to

3:51:36 > 3:51:42be the first ever in Britain to fully examine the subject.Everyone

3:51:42 > 3:51:46has a hair story, everyone has explains of being in the salon, that

3:51:46 > 3:51:49transformation. So we really want to be showing that side of it and think

3:51:49 > 3:51:55about the links, how did hairdressing evolve, how does the

3:51:55 > 3:52:00technology come into this?

3:52:00 > 3:52:02technology come into this?Deborah and Denise have worked together for

3:52:02 > 3:52:11almost 40 years in the same Barnsley salon.That is me.For them, a trip

3:52:11 > 3:52:16to the exhibition was a slip down memory lane.People used to have

3:52:16 > 3:52:21rollers in their hair, that was the only way to get moving image, and to

3:52:21 > 3:52:25do it at home would have been a great time saver.Sign that pop

3:52:25 > 3:52:32music had a really big influence on hair. Bands like Human League from

3:52:32 > 3:52:42Sheffield...Your customers wanted that to be recreated.But finally

3:52:42 > 3:52:47before I left I wanted to share my own peace of hair history. This is

3:52:47 > 3:52:58me at my school prom. Sun wow! Rockabilly cooking style. Do you get

3:52:58 > 3:53:02people coming into your shop asking for that.Very on trend at the

3:53:02 > 3:53:09moment!Colin Paterson, BBC News, bald in Barnsley.

3:53:09 > 3:53:18I like Colin's look back in the day! Did it remind you of today? So,

3:53:18 > 3:53:25Colin didn't escape... Oh, my goodness. Do you recognise that?

3:53:25 > 3:53:34That is not Bon Jovi, that is our very own Mike Bushell! Magnificent.

3:53:34 > 3:53:43Have we got any others? I'm sure we have. Oh, Charlie! Less hair. That's

3:53:43 > 3:53:46quite an odd thing that you get older and gain more hair!

3:53:46 > 3:53:52Marvellous. Getting better as the years go on. Next one. But hey,

3:53:52 > 3:53:57let's turn that off now! No-one recognise there, just a young

3:53:57 > 3:54:02graduate... Let's talk about it. Time is ticking

3:54:02 > 3:54:12on. Let's look at some view pictures, we? -- view our pictures.

3:54:12 > 3:54:22That's a resplendent bouffant, I must say. Here's Patrick.

3:54:22 > 3:54:31A homage to Johnny Rotten? And Sarah says her hairdo required a lock of

3:54:31 > 3:54:35hairspray. That's a good look, looks like sort of mid-80s, that kind of

3:54:35 > 3:54:40time. Terrific.

3:54:40 > 3:54:46Terrific. Elise Christie is on the ice in the 1500 metres, remember she

3:54:46 > 3:54:50had a devastating crash in the final of the 500 metres. She trains at the

3:54:50 > 3:54:54National Ice Centre in Nottingham and Colin Hazelden is there this

3:54:54 > 3:55:02morning chatting to a few people who know her well.

3:55:02 > 3:55:03know her well.Good morning. Yes, hard to overestimate the importance

3:55:03 > 3:55:08of this. You will have seen the short track speed skaters Ella,

3:55:08 > 3:55:12these are the learners here. Bobby is waiting for her very first

3:55:12 > 3:55:17skating lesson. As you coming here, you know who the icons are. Torvill

3:55:17 > 3:55:21and Dean on the wall as you come in and as he down, Elise Christie, it

3:55:21 > 3:55:25says, you are about to step on the same ice as the fastest woman on

3:55:25 > 3:55:30ice. That's why so many people are gathering here to watch her in the

3:55:30 > 3:55:33cafe and that's why we can talk to the Head Coach at the academy here,

3:55:33 > 3:55:44Jo Eley. There is no doubt that it Elise Christie is objectively be

3:55:44 > 3:55:47fastest woman on ice.Of the athletes are right on the ice

3:55:47 > 3:55:51together, we're not in lanes, you're interacting with each other and what

3:55:51 > 3:55:55one athlete does not impact on what another athlete decides to do. It's

3:55:55 > 3:55:59all about delivering the best race you can and that doesn't always mean

3:55:59 > 3:56:04the fastest person will win.That is what makes it going. Even you have

3:56:04 > 3:56:10your eyes on four years but your brother is in the pipe is it is

3:56:10 > 3:56:15today, what's that like?I'm so proud of him. My brother at the

3:56:15 > 3:56:22Olympic Games. It's been incredible. Very briefly, what does it mean to

3:56:22 > 3:56:32have police do well? -- Elise If you're interesting in learning to

3:56:32 > 3:56:37speed skate, get down to your local and learn to speed skate.They will

3:56:37 > 3:56:43all be watching and we will be too. Thanks very much. Colin gets the

3:56:43 > 3:56:46award for walking backwards the most during the programme!

3:56:46 > 3:56:51Clare Balding will be with live coverage from the Winter Olympics,

3:56:51 > 3:57:02Donnell in Saturday kitchen on BBC Two. That's all from us, bye.