could take years to repay, a uk advice charity has warned as a poll for the bbc indicates fear over unmanageable debt. hello, everybody. how you doing? they ve arrived! the paparazzi descend on burnley in the north of england, for the premier of the bank of dave the true story of how a businessman took on the big banks and won. hello and welcome if you re watching in the uk or around the world. nepal is observing a national day of mourning for the country s worst air disaster in three decades. both the cockpit voice recorder and the flight data recorder of the yeti airlines plane that crashed in the central pokhara himalayas region have now been found. at least 68 people died when a yeti airlines flight from the capital kathmandu to the tourist town of pokhara crashed close to the runway on sunday. rajini has travelled to the crash site and gave us this update from there. we re standing on the banks as we watch the recovery operation continue. there are hundreds of police
let s start here in the uk, where in just over an hour s time the latest inflation figures for april will be released. many analysts are expecting the rate to hit 9% for last month, which will mean the prices remain at their highest level in three decades. the bank of england has warned inflation could hit 10% within months, as the price of fuel and food puts pressure on household budgets. bbc s consumer affairs correspondent colletta smith has more on the impact rising prices is having on daily lives. shopping is like ten or more a week, more expensive, shopping is like ten or more a week, more expensive, bread shopping is like ten or more a week, more expensive, bread has gone up, the bread i have gone up gone up, the bread i have gone up 50p. gone up, the bread i have gone u- 50. , gone up, the bread i have gone u . 50 . , ., ., gone up, the bread i have gone u. 50, , ., ., , gone up, the bread i have gone u 50. , ., ., gone up, the bread i have gone up 50p. this woman i
we d have to get a cheaper one and all those kind of things. you know, takeaways are just kind of a special treat now, rather than kind of once or twice a month. and so, yeah, there s some deliberate choices that we just had to make in terms of cutting back. for alistair, with three children at home, the energy bills have gone through the roof. it s kind of like november blankets. i m not putting the heating on. it s not going to happen. and he s not alone. in fact, nearly seven in ten people in our survey said they ve turned the thermostat down on their heating this winter. households across the country are continuing to change habits and trim spending across almost every area of life. salami slicing the family cutbacks to keep the show on the road. coletta smith, bbc news in castleford. let s speak now to peter smith, director of policy and advocacy at national energy action, which campaigns against fuel poverty. thanks so much forjoining. let me ask you first of all, what you make