The cost of a degree. Students from the poorest backgrounds could leave university with debts of over £57,000. Also coming up, its day three of wimbledon. First up on centre court this afternoon isjohanna konta, who plays donna vekic, the player who beat her in the final of the Nottingham 0pen Last month. And Mark Cavendish is out of the Tour De France, following a crash which saw his sprint rival peter sagan disqualified from the race for his involvement. Good morning and welcome to bbc newsroom live. Its understood the goverment is to send a taskforce in, to take over parts of Kensington Council, in the wake of the grenfell fire tragedy. It is thought the Housing Department and other departments will be run by an outside organisation, but the council itself will not be taken over. Most of the families who lost their homes are still living in hotels, despite government pledges to rehouse them all by today. There was anger and frustration at a meeting with police and the westminster c
Sorry. And learning to help ourselves, should a lesson in life saving be compulsory . She was lying there on the sofa, totally unconscious, with eyes wide open. If i hadnt done the cpr my mother wouldnt have survived today. Im chris jackson. This is inside out. Tonight, in a special programme, we look at the increasing pressures on the nhs. As budgets tighten and the number of patients arriving in a doctors surgery rockets, gps are under increasing pressure to cut the cost of care. We followed one tyneside doctor to get a first hand account of how he and his patients are coping. Mike scott has been a gp in newcastle for more than 35 years. Good morning. Thanks, julie. Life saver. Cheers. The nhs is under huge financial pressure. Gps like mike are at the sharp end, making decisions about where the money is spent. Good morning, surgery, julie speaking. The surgery has more than 5,500 patients. Donna has back problems and suffers from depression. It got to the stage where i didnt want to
lifting the sanctions. the notion that this person was at the head of russian intelligence and puts in an e-mail, i have state secrets, do you want some is highly unlikely. from the stapt standpoint of a presidential campaign, people come forward all the time. i have information. not on russia. paul manafort should have known better. what should they have done? called the fbi. that request for a meeting goes into a drawer and is never heard from again, oh, we just can t do the meeting. then you re supposed toen ca ta contact the fbi. if you are a seasoned political person you should know that. the other two people may not know. let me disagree on two levels. number one, i have never run for office. as you well know you never will. certainly not the brightest guy in the room. i would know if our number one
negotiating with the chinese and the russians, involve the japanese as well because they re influential. so are the indians incidentally who are dependent on energy. that is the response that might have some effect. instead we re engaging in mass propaganda portraying this as a democratic war. who is fighting for democracy? ca ta tar and saudi arabia are fighting for democracy? this is a war waged by both sides. i repeat 93,000 were killed in a civil war, not just by the syrian regime. there are two sides to that struggle and neither one is waging it in a particularly attractive fashion. the risk is it will escalate and slip out of our control, not like the one we had in bosnia. we have to be more strategic, more determined and the leadership has to be more directed from the top down involving the president and his top, top foreign policy advisers. not by some casual communiques,