We spend the day with prince harry as he makes a surprise visit to a Charity Event for bereaved military children. Aston villas European Dream is over. Disappointment in athens as theyre knocked out in the semi finals of the Europa Conference League by olympiakos. Good morning from the blue peter garden, which is going to be fine in todays lovely weather once again. Is it going to last of the weekend . Join me throughout the programme. Its friday 10th may. Officalfigures released in an hour are expected to show the economy is no longer in recession, after growing in the first three months of this year. The uk entered recession after output fell during two consecutive quarters at the end of last year. Our Economics Correspondent andy verity reports. At this butcher on the Gloucester Road in bristol, business is ticking along, but hardly roaring away. After the soaring price rises ofjust over a year ago some customers are now seeing wages rise faster than prices, and the price of meat or
for his absence, really. and that s what it amounts to, isn t it? well, this is richard. the government says it has accepted the moral case for compensation and is working quickly to consider the recommendations. as things stand, though, it looks like there ll be no final decision before the autumn when the inquiry s final report will be published. jim reed, bbc news. competition among renters is so intense that there are 20 requests to view each available property, according to data commissioned by the bbc from website rightmove. the average number of requests to see each home has more than tripled from six in 2019. 0ur cost of living correspondent, colletta smith, reports. and then you come to this amazing kitchen. look at this. wow. it s not easy to rent anywhere at the moment. prices are going up, landlords are selling up and there s more people hoping for a dream home. i could see me cooking in here. but here on the outskirts of preston, there s a particular problem.
hearings did not consider one of their fathers, taher nasuf. he spent years sanctioned by the united nations for alleged involvement with an al-qaeda affiliate. he denied the claims and the sanctions were lifted in 2011. he was part of a legal political group which met at the mosque. another attendee at its demonstrations was salman abedi. a lawyer representing victims families thinks if our evidence wasn t heard in the secret part of the inquiry, it should be made known. if there is material which the inquiry may not have uncovered, then it s vital that it is supplied to the chair so they can pursue it even at this late stage. in a statement, five bereaved families told us they re disappointed to learn of more in abedi s background that doesn t appear to have been investigated. the inquiry s final verdict
so then they can pursue it even at this late stage. in a statement, five bereaved families told us they re disappointed to learn of more in abedi s background that doesn t appear to have been investigated. the inquiry s final verdict on the arena atrocity is due on thursday. daniel de simone, bbc news. let s take a look at today s papers. one story dominates. the times leads on the new brexit deal for northern ireland that s been reached by the uk and eu. the paper quotes the prime minister declaring the deal decisively better than the one struck by his predecessor borisjohnson. the mail s headline asks has rishi done the impossible? following the unveiling of the deal, while conservatives mps who were brexit secretaries have also written a joint article for the paper describing it as a complete and utter game changer . the financial times calls the agreement a new chapter