Hello. This is bbc news. Well be taking a look at tomorrow mornings papers in a moment first the headlines. The mother of teenager harry dunn who died in a crash involving the wife of a us diplomat says the government must put pressure on her to return to the uk. The Us State Department expressed sympathy, but said diplomatic immunity was rarely waived. Democrats leading the impeachment inquiry into president trump, issue a legal order demanding that the white house hand over more documents. Dozens of people are injured, eight of them seriously, after a double decker bus overturns in devon. A british australian woman and her boyfriend are released after more than three months in an iranianjail. Hello, and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. With me are the Political Editor of the sunday mirror and sunday people, nigel nelson and the political commentator, jo phillips. Many of tomorrows front pages are already in. The telegraph says ministers are discussing plans which could see borisjohnson veto the eus seven year budget and send a euro sceptic commissioner to brussels if the Prime Minister is forced into a brexit delay. The observer leads on a claim that leading tabloid newspapers targetted prince harry and his friends over many years. The express carries a warning from the Prime Minister that hell take the uk out of the eu on october 31st unless brussels agrees to a compromise deal. And the mail on sunday goes with the duchess of sussexs father explaining why he made parts of a private letter from his daughter public. A flavour of some of the headlines and we start with brexit, as ever. Laughter you are just the man to ta ke laughter you are just the man to take us to the sunday telegraph and the suggestion that borisjohnson is about to Start Playing dirty. He has been playing it fairly dirty so far but now hes virtually declaring war on the eu. The argument in the telegraph is that if hes fulston to a delay, hes going to basically try and sabotage europe. What that means is hes thinking about vetoing the eu budget, sending a commissioner, a british commissioner over there to cause mayhem, nigel farage is a name being mentioned. Steve baker on the European Research group, the real hardline brexiteer, he says that would be like putting a Nuclear Weapon into the heart of finasteride. One of the interesting things is they talk about the delay. The telegraph is boriss bible and its interesting they mention that delay is now possible. What do you make of this potential strategy . think its childish, disappointing, could only have been thought up by a bunch of blokes whose egos are bigger than their brains and it is an absolute disgrace. Laughter we can laugh but i think three years on, if this is the best you can come up on, if this is the best you can come up with that you think youre going to send your archenemy nigel farage to send your archenemy nigel farage to disrupt the eu, its pretty pathetic. Borisjohnson was to disrupt the eu, its pretty pathetic. Boris johnson was talking about statecraft earlier in the week, which is something i think he knows very little about judging by the way he has behaved as Prime Minister. This isnt how you get deals done, its not how you negotiate with people. Its not how you talk to partners. I think what we are in danger of forgetting, this is only the beginning. This is only about the exit. We havent even started on trade negotiations yet. The suggestion as it is short sighted because if you cheese them off then where do you go . What im most interested about is this would be a tactic in the event of a delay. The whole thing is, Boris Johnson has made it clear, no wiggle room whatsoever, he says we are coming out on october the 31st. Now doubts are beginning to creep in that he will keep to that deadline. Hes got to negotiate because of the benn act. Many people are saying that the eu are banking on the benn act to get this extension. Although in this telegraph story it says downing street has vowed to sabotage a meeting of the eu council on october the 17th, if borisjohnson goes to bat or britain goes to that, and cannot agree a deal which at the moment it looks extremely unlikely because of this bonkers idea of having two boarders in ireland, you then end up with hes got to ask for an extension because he is now bound by an act of parliament to do so is. Weve all been looking for the loophole he is trying to find. A variety of things have come up, using the civil contingencies act so they cant pass but no deal law when he comes back with it, one idea is that hungary could be persuaded to veto our delay. Someone suggested to me earlier that if someone can do that, we can veto ourselves. Thats probably a bit bonkers. that, we can veto ourselves. Thats probably a bit bonkers. I wouldnt be surprised and it would probably end up back in the supreme court. Take us onto the express because it says boris mps backed his new exit deal and says he will leave in 25 days. He is writing in the express, obviously talking to his home grown constituency. But which mps backed his deal . Clearly not the liberal democrats, clearly not the snp. Nigel is better on the maths than i am but nigel is better on the maths than i am but i think he needs 320 in order to get any deal through. That would require, and thats not counting the dup, it would require about 14 or 15 labour mps dup, it would require about 14 or 15 labourmps or dup, it would require about 14 or 15 labour mps or tory mps who have the whip removed. This is all assuming that the European Research group, the hardline brexiteers, will support this. Which i think they will. All the indications are that they would support it. My personal view is, should he be able to get this deal through europe and bring it back, it probably would pass through parliament. Certainly, Jeremy Corbyn is trying hard to stop his people voting for it but there area number of his people voting for it but there are a number of labour mps who have already expressed and said they quite like this deal, Stephen Kinnock being one of them. Youve got the dup on the side, the erg, i think a number of the 21 rebels that we re think a number of the 21 rebels that were thrown out as tories in parliament, they will come back. Yes, it will probably get three. But what about ireland . Yes, it will probably get three. But what about ireland . The dup would vote for it. But the eu. But before we get there, weve got to get it through the eu and thats the bit thats looking unlikely. Where does this leave us . There is a lot of talk in the last few weeks about a general election and that seems to have quietened down. There have been some suggestions that the eu would like to deal with borisjohnson after an election and they are confident of the maths. Ive been away to the two Party Conferences in brighton and manchester, and the message from both of them is that people are becoming far less keen on the idea of a general election. In brighton, with labour, the idea would be a referendum first and general election second which would put it back to next spring. The tories i was speaking to and manchester were talking about Boris Johnson surviving the extension, we go through to january, and then we have an election after that so we might be some way away from an election. But weve also got the wintertime and turnout. Dark rainy evenings and no guarantee at the moment the way the pulsar that Boris Johnson would do anything other than. Thats a beautiful segway. But we havent done is the British Public and its the pollsters that are the focus. Exactly and this is a poll for the independent saying that 54 of people polled are dissatisfied with Boris Johnsons performance and that is up nearly 10 since september. And from 41 in august. His core supporters hovering around 35 . We havent got the complete breakdown but recent polls la st complete breakdown but recent polls last week are still showing labour very far behind which on paper, they ought to be ahead, given the dissatisfaction with whats going on. Liberal democrats have leapfrogged them. You didnt mention the liberal democrat conference laughter the other angle to this is, depending on what comes out in the wash, is there is a blame game to be played. In the observer, nigel saying Michel Barnier saying Boris Johnson will have to bear full responsibility if there is a no deal brexit but thats not the way the Prime Minister would see it. You a lwa ys Prime Minister would see it. You always blame someone else for it in politics. In the end, if he doesnt get it through, then the Prime Minister will be blaming europe. Dont you think he is setting himself up to fail . I cant see how his deal could ever get through europe in the first place. And then he would just blame it on everyone else . Yes. And then say, its not my fault, i did my best. At which point, he is cornered by his own whatever. Hoisted by his own petard. Exactly you cant be cornered by your owfi exactly you cant be cornered by your own petard laughter in the observer, their main story was all about prince harry and the fact hes joining a case against the sun and the mirror looking into potential evidence claim of illegal activity. Nigel, you are going to recuse yourself. I will the field open to jo, yourself. I will the field open to jo, prince harry has active Legal Proceedings pending against my newspaper. Tell us a bit more about it. Is rather bizarre for the observer to splash with this because its not their story. It seems as though they have lifted it entirely from a website called byline investigates. Is one of those agency things that looks at whats coming up things that looks at whats coming up in the courts and it details a lot more of the allegations that are going to come to court. The whole thing seems bizarre because this is obviously, if youre talking about phone hacking, you are going back years and years. There are whole questions about whether it is sensible and wise for harry to do this and to set himself up on a collision course. Much is being made about the fact prince harry has chosen a different path in his relationship with the media. The queens view has always been to never explain, never complain. It wouldnt be the first time the royal family have taken legal action against the press but some of the criticisms he and meghan have been on the receiving end of our of their own making. Nobody. Them to fly on private jets and then bang on about the environment. Nobody forced them to take range rovers and four vehicles in south africa so they have to be careful. Very much watch this space. Lets get back to the sunday telegraph. One in five murders committed by prisoners on parole. The actual figures breakdown two of 113 homicides, 112 were by people on parole. This begs the question what you do about it, which is, you must have another look at the Probation Service and see how they are operating on the basis of their primary duty must be to make sure the person coming out onto the streets is safe to do so. sure the person coming out onto the streets is safe to do so. I think its an indictment of the reforms of the Probation Service and i should think there are a lot of former probation officers thinking, we told you this is what was going to happen. Some services have been placed in the hands of private companies. I know that magistrates are deeply concerned about the weight of work and resources probation staff have to deal with. At the end of this, there are people being murdered and there are charities quoted in here, women and children are particularly at risk in many cases. Differing needs of different people and a lot of angles to that story. Lets end with the picture on the sunday telegraph, a filler thriller for the cambridges. We know the duke of cambridge is an aston villa fan. The only one missing was the youngest prince louis but youve got george and charlotte, kate, and they are obviously out there having a good time. Presumably the norwich city fa ns time. Presumably the norwich city fans werent because they lost. Laughter in terms of when one looks at the royal family, laughter in terms of when one looks at the royalfamily, talking laughter in terms of when one looks at the royal family, talking about prince harry just at the royal family, talking about prince harryjust a moment ago, a lot has been made of the differing approaches to. Its very evident between the split when they seem to between the split when they seem to be doing this fab four thing and theyve now split. This lot may be dull and doing the right thing but they are not causing ructions, they are not causing ripples and they are doing the thing that, you have to remember, if you want the public to love you, you have to share a little bit. They share the kids in a controlled way. A tricky balance. A quiz before we go. We know the duke of cambridge is an aston villa fan, prince harry is. No idea. No idea. A p pa re ntly prince harry is. No idea. No idea. Apparently arsenal. Prince charles . Jeremy corbyn is an arsenal fan. The queen as a west ham fan, apparently. I used to be a west ham season ticket holder. You saw her there. Laughter thats it for the papers this hour. Nigel and jo will be back at 11. 30 for another look at the papers. Next on bbc news its the travel show. This week on the travel show. I am in greece with a team of archaeologists, uncovering the long lost city of tenea. Plus, im going into battle. Finding out what it was like for the crew of an ancient athenian warship. We are heading to athens to uncover greeces ancient treasures, and the more modern ones. For more than two millennia, the temple of the parthenon has been towering over what has become the bustling capital city of greece. Nestled at the bottom of the hill, the modern Acropolis Museum houses most of the artefacts found in the area. And this year, it celebrates its 10th anniversary. This museum replaced an older building that had become too small to house the sheer number of antiquities found on the hill. Its ten times the size with a unique collection and as you can see from the queues, it is rather popular. Almost 50 Million People have passed through the doors of the museum since it was opened a decade ago. And to mark the anniversary, a whole new section has just been opened to the public underneath the building. So what are we looking at here . This is part of the ancient city of athens which is at the foot of the acropolis hill. It is actually a residential neighbourhood. There are houses and workshops, bath, private and public buildings. The Acropolis Museum was built on top of this vast excavation site, a challenge for any good architect. But a source of great pride for angeliki, who spent almost two decades here uncovering the homes of ancient athenians. I can see a tiled floor in the middle there. Would that have been a room . This is the Central Court out of the house of a middle class house. Quite big one, maybe 360 square metres. An open air courtyard. While archaeologists here have put down their shovels and brushes for good, there are enough forgotten treasures around greece to keep them in work. Greece is like heaven for history geeks like me and if you know where to look, there artefacts around every corner. I am driving to one of the most exciting ongoing excavation sides about 1. 5 hours outside athens. Last year, greek archaeologists announced to the world that they had located the lost city of tenea which until then had only existed on the pages of ancient texts. The city is believed to have been built by prisoners of the legendary trojan war, and this month the excavation continued. It is considered one of the 15 most important excavations worldwide. Tenea is a city coming out of myth. Oedipus was supposedly raised here. Agamemnon brought trojan prisoners all the way from troy and established them here. So here we are excavating ancient tenea, its cemeteries, its ancient houses, roads and slowly by slowly comes to life. Tourists and scholars will soon be able to explore the excavation site in a Virtual Museum through 3d animation. In the meantime, theres still some very practical work to do. Less than 5 of tenea has been uncovered so far. Digging up the past should keep archaeologists busy here for many decades to come. Itsjust the beginning. It will continue. Without me, but i will always be here from somewhere looking at it. Just casting an eye over, you know, making sure everyones doing the right thing. Definitely. To end the show this week, ive come a short distance outside of the Athens City Centre to the coast. And this place its whats become known as the athens riviera. There are plenty of cool cafes, ritzy new hotels and plenty of course, plenty of luxury yachts. Moored close to the modern yachts, a different kind of ship is ready to go out to sea. The trireme olympias the only life sized replica in the world of the athenian battleships which dominated the naval wars from the fifth century bc until early christian times. This amazing looking galley belongs to the greek navy, and every year, groups of lucky people get to go aboard and actually row, just like ancient athenians did. This year, im one of those lucky people. So, i better get ready, i think its going to be quite hard work. It took 20 years of passionate research to work out a design for this trireme, as no remains of the wooden boats could be found. She was constructed here in greece in 1987. The important thing for the rowers of the boat, is that they were free citizens. It was a great honour to be a rowerfor trireme. And in such a small boat, we have so many people. They are the machine and they help the boat to move. I think it sounds like a fantastic lot of fun and hard work. Yes. Will you show me how to do it . Yes, of course. Wow look at this. Wow, this is amazing. This is the naval way to go down. This ship carries two small sails, just like in ancient times, most of the propulsion comes from the 170 oarsmen staggered over three levels below deck. Its quite tight in here. As i told you. Here we are going to fit in there. So, you sit in here. Whats your technique . The technique must be like that. Lift it up out of the water. One, two. Pull. Yes. Wow i think im going to have very good abs after this. I will give you the orders. Yes, absolutely. Thank you so much. Youre welcome. Well, my fellow rowers are starting to arrive. Ive picked a plum spot, right in the middle of the action. Im ready for ramming speed. Reaching speeds of about nine knots, or 17 kilometres per hour, this boat was considered pretty quick in its time. And its manoeuvrability won athens some decisive victories at sea. The bronze ram served as the main weapon to puncture enemy ships and sink them. We get a break, every so often. Oh, here we go again. Dramatic strings music. Im looking around. Its honestly impossible to imagine what this mustve been like for the people here who rowed these kind of boats. And to be in battle, three layers of different people all sweating, trying to ram another boat in the open sea. I mean, its unimaginable given how pleasant and lovely this is today. Fortunately, this trireme is now being used for less ferocious purposes. For now, the olympias is going back to the port for some pampering, where it will spend the winter before being spruced up for new visitors in 2020. A lot of hard work with all that rowing, but a good bit of fun, too. Thats all weve got time for this weeks travel show. But coming up next week. Mikes underwater in turkey to see if sinking old planes can really provide a safe haven for local marine life. And he meets the 96 year old woman who spent three decades fighting to save the countrys endangered loggerhead turtles. Some said i was mad, others said i was a spy. So, join us then if you can. In the meantime, dont forget to sign up to our social media feed so you can check out what were up to out on the road, and share your travel stories with us and the rest of the world. Until next time, from me Christa Larwood and the rest of the travel show team here in athens, its goodbye. Or, as the locals would have it, ya sas if you have to be out travelling, some unpleasant conditions. All of us are going to see wet weather. The wettest in northern ireland, clearing away but as the rain moves east it may cause minor flooding especially in southern scotland and northern england, where the rain gets heavier. Rain over most parts, drying in the south west later. Across the board, temperatures not dropping much from where they are now. A wet start across much of scotland, northern, central and eastern england. Rain persisting around the eastern counties with a gusty wind. Heaviest in east anglia, elsewhere becoming lighter. The best brightness further west. Most places will be having a drier and sunnier day than weve had today. The week ahead is fairly changeable. If you have a dry day it is likely to be followed by showers and longer spells of rain. This is bbc news, im rachel schofield. The headlines at 11. The mother of teenager harry dunn who died in a crash involving the wife of a us diplomat says the government must put pressure on her to return to the uk. The Us State Department expressed sympathy, but said diplomatic immunity was rarely waived. Democrats leading the impeachment inquiry into president trump, issue a legal order demanding that the white house hand over more documents. Dozens of people are injured, eight of them seriously, after a double decker bus overturns in devon. A british australian woman and her boyfriend are released after more than three months in an iranianjail. And at 11. 30 well be taking a look at the papers with Political Editor of the sunday mirror and sunday people, nigel nelson and the political commentator, jo phillips