happens to be our national capital may be atypical of the wider uk. later on, you did an interview with him and i had to laugh, not at your interview because it was very good and interesting, but the actual setting, the main camera shot was you and him in a room where there was unionjack bunting on the walls. it looked like you were leaning against the bar in a traditional pub and then you could see there was quirky mugs and floral wallpaper. it was like you were in a middle england theme park. yeah, totally. there were unions like absolutely everywhere. funny enough, i saw kind of cardboard box that had union flag written on it as part of the kind of paraphernalia of election campaigns that the various party leaders all carry around the kind of helpe create the staging and choreography of these kind of events. there was a bit of concern as they were sort of setting up the spot where i did the interview and various journalists at that their interviews, because i think one s
he has managed to track down the smuggler across europe to luxembourg. here s his story. excuse me, sir. andrew harding from bbc news. we ve come to luxembourg to confront a man we ve been chasing across europe. we know who you are, you re a smuggler. no. he s responsible for putting hundreds of people in small boats heading from france to england. and responsible for one boat in particular. this one. we came across it back in april on a beach in northern france. police, battling with a group of smugglers. chaos as people clambered onto the boat. we saw a girl here in a pink coat. she was one of five to die at the scene. her name was sara, seven years old, born in belgium, raised in sweden. a few days later, we found her father, ahmed, an iraqi man consumed by grief and also by guilt. but what of the smugglers? multiple sources tell us the man paid to arrange sara s journey is still active and working from a distant city. so we ve come now to antwerp, a city in northern bel
a police chief has been sacked for gross misconduct after lying about his military career. nick adderley, who was the chief constable of northamptonshire, wore a falklands war medal on his police uniform, even though he was only 15 at the time of the conflict, and exaggerated his achievements in the navy. our midlands correspondent navteonhal reports. the most senior police officer in his force dismissed for lying. until today, nick adderley was the chief constable of northamptonshire police, but a gross misconduct hearing found he lied about his career to get the job. he claimed he had been a military negotiator in haiti, even though he d never visited the country, had attended the prestigious britannia royal naval college, despite his application being rejected, and implied that he had served in the falklands war, despite being 15 at the time. all the allegations against him were upheld. how did someone like this slip through the net? ido find i do find it extraordinary tha