good morning from birmingham wholesale market. i ll be getting reactions from traders. we ll speak to the parents of teenager harry dunn after their three year battle for justice which yesterday saw an american woman plead guilty to causing his death by careless driving. steven gerard is sacked by aston villa. he lost his job, after villa s defeat at fulham last night, with the club 17th in the premier league. and it s the final day for the children in need rickshaw challenge team. we ll be with them as they set off on the last leg of the journey. hopefully much drierfor hopefully much drier for them as well and certainly a dry day for eastern areas compared with yesterday. heavy showers in the west. details on that and your weekend forecast coming up here on your friday morning edition of breakfast. good morning. it s friday 21st october and i m outside number 10 downing street. liz truss moved into this famous building when she became prime ministerjust six weeks ago. by th
calls to stop punishing addicts if it is to end its reputation as the drugs capital of europe. president biden has tested positive for covid. the white house says the symptoms are mild. the bbc has apologised to the former royal nanny tiggy legge burke over a number of serious and false allegations made against her by panorama reporter martin bashir in order to obtain an interview with princess diana. a coroner has said that the five people, including four teenage soldiers, who died in the guildford pub bombings in 1974, were unlawfully killed. and no ordinary telescope for the first time scientists will be able to detect the smashing together of neutron stars good evening. now that the conservative leadership contest has been whittled down to two candidates rishi sunak and liz truss, the focus is shifting to what each of them stands for. it s early days but the battleground appears to be economic policy. mr sunak was chancellor for nearly two and a half years but ms truss sa
even during the 705, and i remember the 705 being very tumultuous and divided, but this kind of profiteering, which it is, i m sorry, it makes me sick! we ve got children in our country, all the countries, the poorer countries who can t eat, and these guys are raking it in, and you know what? they will go and support an museum, they will be very philanthropic, they will have the name everywhere, and it is totally unacceptable. the have the name everywhere, and it is totally unacceptable. totally unacceptable. the guardian . uotes totally unacceptable. the guardian uuotes the totally unacceptable. the guardian quotes the professor, totally unacceptable. the guardian quotes the professor, the - totally unacceptable. the guardian quotes the professor, the author l totally unacceptable. the guardian | quotes the professor, the author of this analysis saying the wealth captured by states and fossil fuel companies since 1978 is 52 trillion provided the power to buy every politic
sea. it s expected to be signed on friday. food prices have been soaring since russia invaded ukraine in february. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are yasmin alibhai brown, the author and journalist, and sian griffiths, who s the education editor at the sunday times. hello there. once again, let s have a look through what some of the front page are saying. the mirror leads on the bbc s shameful 1995 princess diana interview which panorama journalist martin bashir secured by making false claims about the ex nanny to princes william and harry. the front pages says cops should charge the culprits . the mail reports on migrant channel crossings, claiming some of those who arrived here came with guns. the times leads with the tory leadership race, as the two remaining candidates trade blows over their differing plans to manage the economy. the guardian reports on the same story, and says mr sunak s opponent liz
primary defeat, saying she s thinking about running for president. the congresswoman is one of donald trump s fiercest critics, and lost to a candidate hand picked by mr trump. now on bbc news, three engineers at the forefront of reimagining the carjoin kevin fong at the science museum in london. applause. hello and welcome to the science museum. i am kevin fong and this is the engineers: the future of ca rs. i am in the information age gallery, sat in front of an object called the rugby tuning coil, and 100 years ago, this big wheel of copper wrapped in wood was the most powerful transmitter in the world. so it is an appropriate place for us to have this broadcast which brings in an audience from five different continents through the magic of our video link, as well as a large audience here in the gallery for a programme that will be broadcast on bbc world service, on radio and television. the climate catastrophe and the sheer weight of traffic on our roads and the horrific