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will close from monday. a national service is held in new zealand to remember the 51 people killed when a gunman opened fire at two mosques in christchurch in 2019. hello and welcome if you're watching in the uk or around the world. we in the uk or around the world. begin this hour in l( a metropolitan police officer has appeared in court charged with the kidnap and murder of sarah everard, who went missing while walking home in south london ten days ago. our reporter greg mckenzie is at westminster magistrates�* court. where the hearing took place. can you tell us what happened saturday morning? you tell us what happened saturday mornin: ? ,., ., you tell us what happened saturday mornin: ? u, ., . ., ., you tell us what happened saturday mornin: ? _, ., ., ., ., , morning? good afternoon. yes, 48-year-old — morning? good afternoon. yes, 48-year-old wayne _ morning? good afternoon. yes, 48-year-old wayne couzens - morning? good afternoon. yes, - 48-year-old wayne couzens appeared 48—year—old wayne couzens appeared here at westminster magistrates' court this morning to answer to two charges, one of the kidnap and the other of the murder of 33—year—old sarah everard who disappeared, as you say, ten days ago. her body was discovered on wednesday in woodland near ashford in kent. now, wayne couzens has been remanded in custody. he has yet to enter a plea and will appear at the old bailey on tuesday. and will appear at the old bailey on tuesda . ., , and will appear at the old bailey on tuesda . . , . there had been plans for a vigil this evening in sarah everard's memory at clapham common in south london. but that has now been cancelled and organisers are encouraging people to join a doorstep vigil instead at 9.30pm. a crowdfunding campaign launched on saturday morning by the organisers reclaim these streets has now passed £100,000 in donations. that is just in the course of this morning. their target is £320,000 to donate to women's charities and causes and are already approaching atjust under 131,000. causes and are already approaching atjust under131,000. quite causes and are already approaching atjust under 131,000. quite a long way towards their target, about 40% of the target has already been met in the space of three or four hours, so they will be optimistic that that crowdfunding page will raise the targets they are hoping to achieve. earlier, caitlin prowle of reclaim these streets explained more about why they had to change their plans. we did try and find multiple ways through with the met and were unsuccessful in doing so and that is a real shame, i think. but, you know, it does not end here by any stretch. we are encouraging people, as you said, to light a candle in their doorstep or in their street at 9:30pm to remember sarah everard and her life, but also the lives of so many women that we have lost to violence of this kind and we are also as a team working away on some sort of online vigil event to be held this evening that will replace the physical one that we planned originally. the awful context of this is not just the terrible news about sarah everard, her disappearance and her death, but that these kind of incidents, although one could say proportionately they are rare, they happen and they continue to happen, incidents where women are attacked simply from being in a public space on their own and their vulnerability, potential vulnerability, is exploited. what can we do in terms of behaviour? because there was a debate in this country, older viewers will remember in the uk a0 years ago when there was a serial killer on the loose in the north of england and women were told to stay at home. ithink, i hope, our attitude now has changed that why should a man's behaviour, kind of one individual who has a murderous intent, stop other people living their lives in an ordinary way? but what do we still need to do to make that realistic, to make that possible, to make women feel that they have that safety and control of their own lives, that they can do things like walk alone on the street at night? yes, it is a really interesting question and it is a big question as well. i think what you reference there, the decades that have passed of this message to women of this is your responsibility, stay at home, stay safe, i actually do not think we have lost that. i think there has been a lot of that on social media in recent days. i think the police even told women specifically in clapham to stay at home while the investigation was ongoing, and obviously i can appreciate the immediate need for safety and that is paramount, but i think the thing i have been thinking a lot about over the last couple of days is women do not need to be reminded or told to be safe or to be careful. i don't think, certainly not speaking for myself i do not need that reminder and i don't think anyone does, that is something that is at the forefront of our minds all the time, every day and it is an immediate concern for us at all times. and so yes, i agree that i think we need to change the conversation. in terms of where we go from here, i heard on the report before that the government are opening a consultation on this and i would strongly, strongly encourage people to flood responses into that. that is hugely important and it is a good step to be taken, overdue, i would say. i think more widely we need to stop looking at individual behaviours, both of women and to be honest of men. i think a lot of men in recent days have sort of reached out and said what can i do as an individual to make women feel safer on the streets? and that is a really compassionate way to approach this and i personally appreciate it, but you do not solve an issue as big as this with individual changes and i think there are massive structural issues at play that need to be addressed in terms of criminaljustice, in terms of the charity sector and the funding that it receives to support women in these terrible situations and for me, as a campaigner, that is where i would start. at least eight people have been shot dead by the security forces in myanmar, as protests continue across the country against last month's military coup. two men were killed in front of a police station in thaketa township in yangon, while a woman was shot dead in mandalay. images posted online show several severely injured people, including a buddhist monk. earlier i spoke tojonathan head, our south east asia correspondent. he gave me more details on the situation in myanmar today. we now have a total of eight dead, three overnight, in different parts of yangon, with a lot of people seriously injured and you could argue the circumstances are the same at night time, obviously a lot more chaotic. big rallies today in mandalay, it is a stronghold of anti—coup feeling, they had a general strike. they were going most of the day and then towards the end of the protest, suddenly you heard of this whiplash of high velocity bullets being fired into the crowd and they are still basically assessing how many people have died and how many may well die later because of the severity of their injuries. essentially, the pattern is that wherever there is a confrontation with the security forces, without really any warning, at some point the security forces will fire directly into the crowds using battlefield weapons. these are absolutely lethal. that was the pattern last night, in one case the residents had gone down to the police station to ask them to release three people they had detained and the police just opened fire on them. another man was manning a barricade at night as a volunteer night guard because the army and the police are going into these neighbourhoods at night and terrorising the population, so they are trying to keep them out so people can have some kind of sleep. again, someone opened fire from the security forces side, killed this man. mandalay was a massacre. we have seen in mandalay, there are reports of people being killed in another town today. you never know where it will be. there are protests in multiple cities almost every day and in those cities the police and army who work together on this either decide they will use tear gas or rubber bullets or they decide they will shoot in the crowd and kill a few people. there is no particular obvious objective to it except to terrorise people and one presumes the strategy is the hope that the sight of these dreadful, dreadful injuries of people hit by these bullets will eventually put them off but it has not yet. people are very angry and that anger is nationwide. it has all the hallmarks of a civil war, but it is not really a civil war because only one side is armed. new york's governor andrew cuomo says he will not bow to what he calls "cancel culture" and resign. there are growing calls for him to step down after allegations of sexual misconduct. us democratic senators chuck schumer and kirsten gillibrand havejoined the list of politicians saying he should go. paul hawkins reports. andrew cuomo, new york governor, but for how much longer? 0nce widely praised for his leadership during the first wave of coronavirus, he's now fighting for his political life. i did not do what has been alleged. period. there are often many motivations for making an allegation. seven women have now come forward making allegations against him, including sexual misconduct and assault. politicians who don't know a single fact but yet form a conclusion and an opinion are, in my opinion, reckless and dangerous. the latest of those politicians includes chuck schumer, one of the most senior democrats in congress and the senate majority leader. along with fellow new york senator kirsten gillibrand, they released a statement, saying... but, they add... already, more than 55 democratic legislators in new york have signed a letter calling on him to step down. the city's mayor bill de blasio says he should go. so too some democrats in congress, including alexandra occasio—cortez. and as for the white house... the president believes that every woman who has come forward deserves to have her voice heard, should be treated with respect, and should be able to tell her story. there also is an independent investigation that is ongoing, of course, in the state, with subpoena power overseen by the attorney general, and he certainly supports that moving forward. andrew cuomo says he'll wait for the outcome of that investigation before deciding whether to step down. people know the difference between playing politics, bowing to cancel culture, and the truth. i'm not going to resign. but there's also another investigation, a federal one, into claims the state undercounted the true covid death toll in care homes. the pressure for him to go now could be too much. paul hawkins, bbc news. shops, schools and restaurants will close across much of italy from monday after the prime minister confirmed the country was now experiencing a third wave of coronavirus infections. cases have been rising steadily with more than 25,000 new infections now reported each day. 0ur rome correspondent mark lowen reports. it's just over a year since italy imposed the world's first national lockdown of the pandemic. now, the first country in the west to be overwhelmed by covid is in a third wave. with cases rising for the past six weeks, exceeding 25,000 a day, italy is closing its doors again. from monday, schools, shops and restaurants will shut in more than half the country. for three days over easter they will close nationwide. the new prime minister, mario draghi, said urgent action was needed. translation: i am aware that today's l restrictions will have consequences l in the education of your children, on the economy and on everyone's mental health but they are necessary to avoid a worsening of the situation that would require even stricter measures. it's a bleak situation in some other parts of europe, too. poland has seen its second highest daily number of cases since november and germany is reporting a rapid rise among schoolchildren, with new variants to blame. the speed of vaccination programmes in most of the eu remains sluggish. italy has administered just over 6 millionjabs, about a quarter of the doses of the uk, with similar populations. austria's chancellor said vaccines were not being fairly distributed among the member states, with signs that some countries were striking side deals with manufacturers. mark lowen, bbc news, rome. the irish foreign minister, simon coveney, has accused the uk of "perverse nationalism" for trying to get its own trade deal with the us. he said the eu, uk, us and canada should join together to reach a joint trade agreement rather than each racing to sign a deal. mr coveney has also called for talks to end the dispute over brexit border checks on goods going from britain to northern ireland. what the eu wants to do is resolve these issues through negotiation. to listen to business leaders in northern ireland, to understand what the problems with the implementation of the protocol are and try to accommodate their concerns. that's what we all want to do. nobody wants disruption or rancour or division. we have had enough of that on brexit. a huge car bomb in herat, in western afghanistan, has killed at least eight people. the powerful blast also injured around 50 more and destroyed more than a dozen houses. the united nations has condemned what it called an alarming increase in attacks deliberately targeting civilians, despite peace talks taking place between the taliban and the afghan government. no group has claimed it carried out the latest attack. the headlines on bbc news: a serving metropolitan police officer has appeared before magistrates. 48—year—old wayne couzens is charged with the kidnap and murder of sarah everard. he has not made a plea and will a appear in court again on tuesday. an event to remember sarah in south london has been cancelled, and replaced with a doorstop vigil. at least eight people have been shot dead by the security forces in myanmar, as protests continue across the country against last month's military coup. now to the american city of minneapolis, and one of the largest pre—trial settlements in us history — 27 million dollars to the family of george floyd. he's the african—american man who died while being restrained by police officers in may last year. lawyers for his family say the city has agreed to settle in the civil case for damages. separately, a former minneapolis police officer, derek chauvin, is standing trial on criminal charges, including third degree murder, following the incident. here's the floyd family lawyer, ben crump. the financial compensation most directly impacts george floyd and his family, the future of their family. but it is the policy reforms that affects all of us. dr rashawn ray is a fellow at the brookings institution. he has done extensive research into police reform. he believes that us taxpayer money shouldn't be used to settle wrongful death lawsuits like that of george floyd. there is no amount of money that can bring back a loved one. we heard that from george floyd's brother. i also think that the attorney, benjamin crump, made a good point about policy, that policy is the next step that needs to change to ensure what we saw happen last year is something that can never happen again. this $27 million is pretty much coming from taxpayer dollars in minneapolis and part of what needs to change is that we need to shift taxpayers being responsible for these civil payouts to police department insurance policies and even police officer liability insurance. from 2015 through 2019, across the us, over $2 billion was paid out for civil settlements for police misconduct. this is something that simply has to change. there is a lack of accountability and, due to qualified immunity, which mind you the george floyd justice in policing act which was passed again by the house of representatives will actually address, will lead to more accountability on behalf of police departments and police officers. what it will lead to is police chiefs being able to look at a person like derek chauvin and say, "you have cost our city and our department millions of dollars." it would lead to a level of accountability and lead to us being able to get these bad apples out of law enforcement that rot the entire tree. on monday, two years will have passed since a gunman opened fire at the al noor and linwood mosques in christchurch, new zealand, killing 51 people. bereaved families joined religious and political leaders to honour those lives at a remembrance service on saturday, with the overarching theme of unity. tanya dendrinos reports. singing. a community gathered in solidarity. the emotion in the room was raw and palpable. the speakers took to the stage to honour their loved ones, 51 precious lives lost at the hands of terror and hate. haroon smiling goodbye on the morning of friday 15th march still echoes in my mind. little did i know that the next time i would see him, the body and soul would not be together. little did i know that the darkest day in new zealand's history had dawned. one of those proud kiwis we lost was ali elmadani. he was my dad and he took with him a part of my soul. the repercussions of that day still very much felt by a nation traumatised and still haunting for those who survived. i sat on the ground beside the ambulance with nine bullets in my body, filled with pain and fear. an inquiry into the massacre found a series of failures ahead of the attack but concluded the tragedy was unpreventable. the prime minister's call to action one of kindness and empathy. there will be an unquestionable legacy for march 15. much of it will be heartbreaking but it is never too early or too late for the legacy to be a more inclusive nation. please accept these to hold on behalf of our people and the people of new zealand and christchurch, within your mosque. a nation galvanised by grief, today standing united in love. tanya dendrinos, bbc news. if you're in the uk and you've got an old petrol or diesel car, would you be prepared to swap it for a bike or take the bus instead? a scheme's begun in coventry where people can hand their vehicles over to be recycled in exchange for credit to spend on more sustainable modes of transport. our business correspondent katy austin has the details. it's the end of the road for this car. it was sent here deliberately by its former owner. but why? let's reverse a few days. we met mohammed, who owned that 15—year—old diesel for four years. after the lockdown has kicked in, mainly working from home five days a week so i'm not using the car as much. he decided tojoin a trial in coventry. owners of cars over ten years old can give them up and get cash for other forms of travel. they were offering £3000 worth of credits, which you can use to travel by bus, train, uber, taxi. authorities in the west midlands are behind this scheme, using funding from a government grant. the idea is to get 250 cars off the road and get their drivers on to more environmentally friendly transport. this is trying to address what you might call the behavioural choices of individuals, what level of incentive is needed to encourage someone to make that change, notjust once or twice but forever, really, in removing their old car. the aa told us the timing was bizarre and the money would be better spent on electric charging points. the walking and cycling charity sustrans, though, welcomed the trial but said it wasn't a silver bullet. these schemes are more likely to work where you have already got decent public transport provision, safe walking and cycling routes. i think where it will be more challenging to try this scheme is obviously in rural areas or in some suburban areas. there aren't currently any plans for a national scheme but traffic was increasing before the pandemic and here they hope to change at least some people's behaviour. katie austen, bbc news. for many people, the end of lockdown can't come soon enough and for thousands who are feeling lonely and isolated, just being able to socialise again in person will make a big difference. former cricket umpire dickie bird lives alone and has been shielding for a year. ian white has been to see him. there he is, dickie! how are you doing? he has been shielding for a year, so for dickie bird, seeing another person face—to—face is something of a novelty. lockdown has been a lonely time. so dickie, what has the last 12 months been like in lockdown? it has been really hard, iwill tell you now, mate, it's been really hard. if you stick in the house and keep looking at the four walls, just watching television all day, you could go mental, mentally ill, and then you've got a serious problem on your hands. so strong—minded dickie was determined to combat loneliness with a regular exercise regime. just general exercises... just keeps you going, just general exercises. keeps you going. and running on the spot. not bad for 88 years of age! exercise has certainly given dickie a new lease of life. i could say oh, i can't be bothered doing these exercises, but i do an hour each day and i walk for an hour and a half, get out on the roads. and ifeel that, i come back and i have a shower, and then you feel good! you feel good, ian. and you are such a sociable person, you go to all these events, have such a busy time, to suddenly not have that... it has been a fight, i'll tell you. a realfight. i could understand the elderly people sitting in the chair and can't be bothered to get out of that easy chair, but my advice to them, please, get out. if you just walk around the block... get out of the house. just chatting can make all the difference to someone's day. i have enjoyed you coming today! he laughs. we always have a good laugh, ian. we always have a good laugh and a joke, don't we? you've made my day! dickie will get his second covid vaccination this weekend, and is determined to be back out and about as soon as he can. ian white, bbc news in barnsley. you're watching bbc news. keepers at chester zoo are celebrating the birth of a rare kind of giraffe. the calf — who doesn't yet have a name — was born to mum 0rla on the 3rd of march. here is something of a growth spurt we will never experience, even with the tallest child. he's already six—feet tall. the rothschild's giraffes are highly threatened in the wild and their numbers have halved in recent years. so the new arrival is really very much welcome to. here is another relatively new arrival at the map. now it's time for a look at the weather with 0wain wyn evans. hello, everyone, hope you're doing all right. it's been pretty unsettled over the past couple of days, we have seen very strong winds overnight with gusts of up to 70 mph in places and we have seen heavy outbreaks of rain as well. this is happening because we have an area of low pressure nearby that is feeding in these weather fronts which in turn are introducing that rain and if you look at the white lines here, the isobars, when they are packed closely together like that it generally means it will be pretty windy so that tells us what will happen next essentially on the pressure chart, but we are turning a corner over the next couple of days, everyone. something brighter and drier on the horizon, but we're not quite there yet, however. there's the headline for the weekend — we're expecting further blustery showers but we will see sunny spells as well. let's have a look at the graphics. the heaviest of the showers will continue to feed into parts of northern ireland, western parts of scotland, the north—west of england and down towards the south—west of england as well. we will see more in the way of sunny spells further east. i think we will see some of these across wales, top temperatures probably around 10 or 11 celsius in the far south—east but for most of us it will be between six and eight celsius, still very windy with wind gusts up to 50 mph and that is even further inland. 0vernight we will see further showers, again moving in on that brisk breeze and as with last night and today on higher ground some of these will turn to a bit of sleet or snow and we may hear the odd rumble of thunder out there as well but we will see clear skies across much of the country, it will be too windy for a widespread frost but having said that we will still get down to about one or two celsius. as for tomorrow, here is how it is shaping up. we will see plenty of sunny spells initially, then this feature starts to move in from the west, introducing heavy spells of rain into northern ireland, western parts of scotland, cumbria, the north—west of england and eventually into wales, but you can see here you can almost wrap a lot of dry weather around that feature so we will see sunnier spells to the east and over the coming days, less of this and more of something that looks a bit like this, so it's turning to that situation which means more of us will see brightness and some so we are going from low pressure that i was talking about earlier to that situation which means more of us will see brightness and some sunshine as well, so things are settling down as we look towards the middle of this coming week. i'll keep you posted. that is how it is looking. see you soon. hello this is bbc news. the headlines... a serving metropolitan police officer has appeared before magistrates. 48—year—old wayne couzens is charged with the kidnap and murder of sarah everard. an event to remember sarah in south london has been cancelled, and replaced with a doorstop vigil. at least eight people have been shot dead by the security forces in myanmar, as protests continue across the country against last month's military coup.

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