Hello. This is bbc news. Well be taking a look at tomorrow mornings papers in a moment first the headlines. Tensions at the top of the home office burst into the open with the dramatic resignation of its most senior civil servant, who quit after what he called a vicious and coordinated campaign against him. Thereve been persistent reports of a rift between him and the home secretary, priti patel. I have received allegations that her conduct has included shouting and swearing, belittling people, making unreasonable and repeated demands, behaviour that created fear and needed some bravery to call out. As worldwide efforts continue to contain the coronvirus, three more people test positive in the uk. A moment of history the United States and the taliban sign a deal that its hoped will end 18 years of war in afghanistan. Hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. With me are nigel nelson, the Political Editor for the sunday mirror and the sunday people, and the political commentator, jo phillips. Many of tomorrows front pages are already in. And theres one main story dominating the headlines borisjohnson and his new baby. The times has placed as its lead the news that the Prime Minister and his girlfriend are expected their first child together, alongside reports of priti patel being called a lying bully by the former home office chief sir Philip Rutnam. The paper exlaims, what a good day to announce a number ten baby that same photo of carrie and boris on the front page of the telegraph taken from a post on Carrie Symonds instagram in which she says she feels incredibly blessed after announcing her pregnancy, and engagement to the Prime Minister. First number ten wedding for 250 years reports the independent alongside a picture of borisjohnson and Carrie Symonds moving into number ten last december. This is following his election success. An exclusive on the front page of the mail on sunday which reports on leaked emails from one of the governments most senior advisers, suggesting that britain doesnt need its own farmers, as the food sector is apparently not critically important to the economy. And elsewhere news on the front of the observer that former Health Professionals could be brought out of retirement to form a dads army as part of emergency plans being considered by the government to combat the spread of coronavirus. Those are the front pages. Let us start our chat with the front page of the observer this evening. It is the trouble is at the home office and Civil Service. Priti patels future of home secretary is being cold into question according to the observer. This is after the stunning resignation you alluded to earlier of sir Philip Rutnam. The two of them, the home secretary and so Philip Rutnam have had a difficult relationship since she became home secretary, and while there is inevitably going to be some tension between Civil Servants and politicians, and probably a good thing to a certain extent, this has obviously become completely unworkable and it is completely unprecedented for someone of this level of seniority in the Civil Service to resign and then go public with a statement where he basically calls her a liar and a bully. think the unprecedented bit is the important bit, so Philip Rutnam is the original sir humphrey appleby, and these people have a code of alert where anything that goes on behind closed doors, they dont speak in public. He has come out and said this and as the observer reports, two heads of the Civil Service are using the words of unprecedented, that is what it is. I think they are absolutely right, that the home secretary is now certainly injeopardy. You can imagine what would happen if he does Something Like that today, what is he going to say if he goes to an employment tribunal when he sues them for constructive dismissal . If you are running government and it would be nice to know if someone was running the government, you need to work with the Civil Servants and the Civil Service, because if you think about it, we have had ten housing ministers in ten years. Who keeps that ministry going . It is the Civil Servants. It is the same with health. We have a massive crisis with coronavirus which i know we are going to talk about in the minute. We have a Health Secretary who is refusing to go on the programme to reassure people. It is the civil serva nts reassure people. It is the Civil Servants and the people in the Health Service keeping it going. U nless Health Service keeping it going. Unless you have a working relationship with those in Public Office who are public servants, you cannot carry on like this, and we know that the home office, back in the days ofjohn reid, he said it was dysfunctional and not fit for office and he was home secretary for 20 odd years. I know a lot of people who work with sir Philip Rutnam who described him as diligent, hard working, and my wife used to work for him at one point, so the fa ct work for him at one point, so the fact that he always comes across from other people who have been there as a perfectly reasonable person, and the allegations he is making against the home secretary really are very serious. There is talk about it being revamped and needing some change, some reform. Talk about it being revamped and needing some change, some reformm is one of the most complex government departments, and they have an enormous amount of things to deal with. I think it is about 35,000. Deal with. I think it is about 35,000. About deal with. I think it is about 35,000. About 35,000 deal with. I think it is about 35,000. About 35,000 people there, and of course there was an idea that the cabinet reshuffle, they were going to have a reorganisation of whitehall with brexit going on, it was not a good time to do it, but one of the ideas there is that the immigration ought to be hived off to a separate department, and that is a huge job. The home office to deal with so much. They are complex things. It is a very difficult department to run. It is policing, immigration and all sorts of things. Traffic is also parcelled through that place. Let us turn to the second paper, a story that broke late on today, but it is the front page of the mirror, upcoming nuptials. Hilarious headline. Carrie to go into labour. It is interesting, it broke at 530, and you had Philip Rutnam running all day, and so that was the bad news, and suddenly we get good news coming in at 5 30pm, just before the six oclock news which was quite curious. Deliberate . I dont know if it was deliberate, we heard on friday the announcement was going to be made, and i spent most of the day phoning downing street asking if it was coming or not, and suddenly it drops at 5 30pm, so rumours have been going on for some time that she was pregnant. Over the last week at westminster, they started becoming frenetic, which seem to be based on the fact that she had given up drinking. That could be for lent or Something Like that, but obviously we fiow Something Like that, but obviously we now know exactly the reason. Something like that, but obviously we now know exactly the reasonlj remember we now know exactly the reason. remember sitting in his chair with you a few weeks ago, and one of the stories was that boris had predicted a post brexit baby boom. Stories was that boris had predicted a postbrexit baby boom. By that time, he knew what was going on. Absolutely, there is alliteration going down that route. A lot of the chatter following the breaking of this news has been around questioning the timing and saying, it is in poor taste with everything going on today and the coronavirus criticism, that we have heard about, particularly building up the past few days, and i think it might be. I think it was plant, because they could have easily done it at 1030 this morning. As we turn to the front page of the telegraph and the coronavirus, we are expected to hear from matt hancock appearing on the show. If you would like to tune in for that, but interesting take on the story. This is an idea that retired doctors and nurses and other Health Professionals could be called back into service if needed to cope with the extra pressures. It would require the emergency registration, oi require the emergency registration, or reregistration of lots of people who have retired. They could come m, who have retired. They could come in, buti who have retired. They could come in, but i mean, we have this crisis looming. You are damned if you do and you are damned if you dont. Nigel and and you are damned if you dont. Nigelandi and you are damned if you dont. Nigel and i were talking about it before, and we were looking back at the Previous Health scares that we have had like stars and swine flu and bird flu and everything else, and bird flu and everything else, and if you dont do anything, you are blamed for not preparing, and if you over prepare, you are accused of creating panic and things. But it is quite clear that one of the areas you do need people is staffing, so this is a reasonable idea. We have been slow on the uptake on this one, andl been slow on the uptake on this one, and i think one of the problems is obviously you start the process by trying to keep the disease out. Once it is here, you have to move very quickly to make preparations for dealing with it. They finally set up a proper room in the Cabinet Office to coordinate the whole thing, we have a cobra meeting that the Prime Minister. Monday, no hurry. That is the other thing about it, at least we have some sort of action plan. Asjoe least we have some sort of action plan. As joe said, least we have some sort of action plan. Asjoe said, part of it is taking doctors and nurses out of retirement. Others to change the rules on class sizes, so bigger classes if teachers cant get into school. Home working is being talked about, travel restrictions,. About, travel it school. Home working is being talked about, travel it couldnt be more diametrically opposed to the people who do care work in hospitals and ca re who do care work in hospitals and care homes, many of whom come outside this country, will not be allowed to be here. There is that as well. On that, we are hearing from a lot of people working in the nhs today on any answers, and a lot of them are saying there isnt the capacity, certainly within the nhs to cope, and finally enough, it came right back to social care. We have people taking up beds who we could use to treat. And the people who are going to be most vulnerable, old people, and if you have old people in their old homes or nursing homes, a lot of them will have weaker respiratory systems and things, and they will be vulnerable just as the arch of flu. As the telegraph points out, ina arch of flu. As the telegraph points out, in a worst case scenario, we could be talking about two or 3 Million People affected. Lets say on this front page, and it is the human rights laws and brexit. We are beginning to start a new round of negotiations on monday. We are a p pa re ntly negotiations on monday. We are apparently going to reject eu demands to guarantee that the uk will still continue to be bound by the european human rights law once the european human rights law once the country becomes fully independent. British negotiators are going to refuse to accept the clauses, and we know from the hard line in the cabinet, priti patel previously mentioned, dominic raab, foreign secretary, they are very opposed. And dominic cummings. He is not in the cabinet, he has much more powerful than that. People in the cabinets can be sacked. It is interesting, a little peace in the paper, many people think this is a recent thing but it goes back. Paper, many people think this is a recent thing but it goes backm has nothing to do with the european union, it was set up after the second world war, it is a separate organisation, and there is confusion that the European Convention on human rights is a eu thing, it is not, but. Winston churchill was instrumental. The important thing is the eu want us to carry on in the convention. Finally, very quickly, to the front page of the mail, we are talking about brexit, but we dont need farmers. This is another advisor, this time a person called tim learning. Anotherfriend of dominic cummings, he was in the London School of economics, on a two year advisory for the treasury, we do not know the power he has. We bring in people to the government to bring in people to the government to bring outside the box, but this is we dont need farming, at the time we dont need farming, at the time we have the virus spreading, do we not need to think about home grown, less import quiz night or are we going to sell the farmers and fishermen down the river . You could ask what would happen to lincolnshires economy. We are going to be back again at 1130. In the meantime, all the front pages are online. Head to the bbc news website seven days a week, and you can watch the programme back via the bbc iplayer. Big thank you to my guests nigel and joe, we will be back for that Second Review in about a0 minutes time. Until then, that Second Review in about a0 minutes time. Untilthen, here that Second Review in about a0 minutes time. Until then, here is click. The end of february every year is a big time for us, having painstakingly planned for months and fought thousands of other journalists for access to the big stories, we head to barcelona for the mobile World Congress. It is where the Big Companies launch their big new phones and the Small Companies show off clever new innovations that may one day change the world. Only this year, as you may know, the mwc is off. Cancelled because of concerns about the spread of coronavirus. It has proved a nightmare for the telecoms industry, but our chris fox who is due to cover it thinks he is going to get the week off. However, not everyone has cancelled. Some companies have gone to barcelona anyway. So ive got a bit of news for chris. The cancellation of mwc has been nothing short of a nightmare, especially for me. I couldnt cancel my flight at such short notice. I have been left stranded here in barcelona with no work to do. Turns out huawei hasnt cancelled its flights either and is still doing a press conference right now. With the venue already booked and huawei executive richard already in town, the company decided to do its lunch event anyway. Only this time it was pre recorded a day early and played out on the big screen. The big reveal was the follow up to its first folding phone. The folding huawei mate xs. If i open instagram here, some pictures of dogs, and if i open the phone out, the pictures expand to fill the view. One thing i cant show you is google maps because the phone still doesnt have those google apps, in fact, huawei has added its own app gallery which will be ana competitor to the Google Play App store, snapchat, tick tock, they are all on there. Some big ones are missing of course. One of the concerns of folding phones is that the displays might be easily damaged because they are flexible. Now, huawei says since the original, the screen is more resistant, although i have seen a display model with a big old scratch on it. Huawei say there will be cases available. Also revealed was a smart speaker. Here it is. It is the sound x. All you do is tap the phone here to pair and then you can play your music, including from spotify, because that is in the app gallery. Here we go. Quite loud. Oh, no. So one thing they did tell me is you can put your hand over it to silence the speaker if it is too loud, and that should have silenced it there. The company says the way the speaker is configured is one faces this way, one faces the other way so the vibrations cancel each other out, so they say you can turn it up twice as loud as the apple home pod without it vibrating itself of the table. That was very loud. While we are here, can we talk about huawei product names . I mean, we have to mate book, the mate pad pro. I wonder where they got their inspiration from. On the outskirts of town, toothbrush giant oral b pressed on with an immersive dinner and light show experience. If youre wondering why a toothbrush company is at mobile World Congress , well, the toothbrushes have bluetooth in them. Obviously. It has a new magnetic drive which is whisper quiet. To test that, i will have to go there silent to somewhere silent, and i knowjust the place. Usually at this time of year, it is full of the mobile phone industry, but i cannot think of a quieter place this time to test the toothbrush, so this time. Here we 90, toothbrush, so this time. Here we go, here is the regular oral b. Very noisy. Here is the new one. Also fairly noisy. They said in their presentation this is the toothbrush that whispers. I am not convinced that whispers. I am not convinced that that is a whisper. The ultimate testis that that is a whisper. The ultimate test is whether you can hear it through the bathroom door and whether it will disturb your partner, so we tested that in the hotel, and the resounding result of oui hotel, and the resounding result of our very scientific test is yes you can still hear it through the bathroom door. Recently, it has been impossible to avoid sg recently, it has been impossible to avoid 56 at megawatts c. Well, this year, you can. There is no show. The city and these train holes are eerily silent. But one project looking to make its debut for this event has still gone ahead, and it is all happening below the service. The surface. It has even reached mwc, they are going to experience the superfast mobile Network Coverage on the underground on the way there. The 56 Barcelona Initiative was set up to provide the city with the next generation of mobile broadband. It is currently available between four stations of barcelonas Train Service, including europa thera, the closest station to where mwc takes place. 56 is not just available on the train platform. It is also available in the tunnel, as the train travels, becoming one of the first in the world to do so. Let us just see how fast the coverage is down here. I was getting around 1. 1 gigabytes per second on average on the platform. But it was quite a bit lower when travelling on the train. The speed does differ when going down the tunnel and being on the station. It is slightly slower in the tunnel, and it does vary. It can sometimes be as high as 500 meg or 170, but saying that, you are still getting decent coverage in a tunnel. And it meant i could watch a bit of click with barely any loading time whatsoever. But how is this achieved . Well, whatsoever. But how is this achieved . Well, we whatsoever. But how is this achieved . Well, we waited until the Train Service was closed so we can get into the tunnel and check out the sg antenna. Each set of and ten iare the sg antenna. Each set of and ten i are roughly 500 metres apart, with 15 installed between four stations. Only vodafone provides 56 coverage in barcelona and they own all the masts on the train line. But the plan is to do this for the entire train network. However, there is no clear date when this will happen. 56 requires more masts than Previous Network connections, so the setup can be quite complex will stop this is the final step, this is very difficult for us to make all the installations at this moment. We think it is a good investment for the city. Untilthen, this think it is a good investment for the city. Until then, this 56 setup will act as a test lab for companies to create and test their apps, both to create and test their apps, both to improve the Railway Logistics and what travellers can do on their phones while on the journey. So it looks like 5g is becoming part of the daily commute here in barcelona, but we did hit a bit of a problem. When testing the speeds of the 5g network, we hit the data limit. We used about ten gigs in about an hour, so probably going to want to switch to an unlimited plan. This little keyboard wants to teach you how to read music. So many people come up to me and say, oh, i really wish i had learned to learn an instrument but it is too late. I really do not think that is the case, certainly with some technology, it could be easier than you think to play your favourite song. Music company rowley took me inside their hq to show me their prototype keyboard, a light up bluetooth device which aims to give eve ryo ne bluetooth device which aims to give everyone the opportunity to learn their favourite song. Everyone the opportunity to learn theirfavourite song. Now, light up keys are available on quite a few entry level keyboards, but the lumi has multi coloured leds so it can make it easier to find where you are if all the sea notes are, say, red for example. Now sheet music has stayed the same for hundreds of yea rs, stayed the same for hundreds of years, originating from writing down hand movements of the choirmaster. The ceo feels it is time to bring reading music into the 21st century. Most people today, when you learn how to play music, they learn how to read music with a traditional score. That is x quill based technology, even the shape of the notes, even the fact they are not a perfect circle is to do with a quill pen and the type of calligraphy from a00 yea rs the type of calligraphy from a00 years ago. It is remarkable that that form of notation and that system is still what we use today. The device connects to an ipad, with the help of an app and something that gives you a little bit more than notes on a page. There is an element of intimacy or even privacy with the music learning experience. If you have a lumi and the lumi app and you put on your headphones, you are in yourown and you put on your headphones, you are in your own learning world and you can go at your own pace and the app will give you feedback. It is between you and the instrument, and you do not feel like you are being judged in a way you might if you had a teacher or your parents looking over your shoulder. It is possible that the software could prove more lucrative than the hardware. First, blocks that wait for you, a bit like guitar hero. Then you have to play in time and the colours help you find the notes, and finally grown up score reading. I certainly found the device visually pleasing and felt the urge to customise the colours, a feature that may soon become available. A few latency issues exist, but it is a clever way to game ifi exist, but it is a clever way to game if i learning music theory. Those with extra cash around can buy a few and link them together to get a few and link them together to get a longer keyboard. Regardless, i am going to take the opportunity to recommend this to anyone, because when it comes to learning, it is never too late to start. That is it for the short cut of click for this week. The full version is on iplayer waiting for you. Dont forget, we live on social media, youtube, facebook, twitter. Thanks for watching and we will see you soon. Good evening. Very windy in the uk because of storm jorge. We are expected gusts of up to 70 miles per are causing travel disruption. We also have quite a lot of rain and hills gathering wales and northern ireland, pushing into scotland as well. Lots of showers, winds, temperatures falling but frost free primarily because of all the wind with us, which again could bring down trees and power lines. Starting sunday on a chilly note, looking brighterfor parts sunday on a chilly note, looking brighter for parts of wales, and thats no retreat to scotland away from northern ireland, so fewer showers, but a question of. Strong and gusty winds in the north, but we could see some rain pushing into southern areas, and though showers continuing in the north. With the winds to ease, it could chilly still. This is bbc news. Im lukwesa burak. The headlines at 11 as worldwide efforts continue to contain the coronavirus, three more people test positive in the uk. Tensions at the top of the home office burst into the open, with the dramatic resignation of its most senior civil servant, who quit after what he called a vicious and co ordinated campaign against him. Thereve been persistent reports of a rift between him and the home secretary, priti patel. I have received allegations that her conduct has included shouting and swearing, belittling people, making unreasonable and repeated demands. Behaviour that created fear and needed some bravery to call out. A moment of history the United States and the taliban