Begins to change and that r number begins to grow and from that the numberof begins to grow and from that the number of cases begins to grow, the number of cases begins to grow, the numberof number of cases begins to grow, the number of hospitalisations begins to grow and the number of deaths begin to grow. We have sufficient confidence we have sufficient headroom to make sure that any changes we make dont impact on the overall rate of growth. I want to bring in the Health Secretary on trace, track and isolate. As we start to ease restrictions and any easing of restrictions and any easing of restrictions will have an impact on the r, but the lower your baseline, the r, but the lower your baseline, the more headroom you have to cope with that. The more important it is to have the test, trace, isolate infrastructure in place to identify any outbreaks and try to suppress them straightaway. So any outbreaks and try to suppress them straightaway. 50 another really important part of what wer
Normal things they do day to day. Probably because they are thinking about where the next meal is going to come from for their kids. China cancels more than 1,000 flights into and out of beijing as a spike in virus cases continues. New zealands Prime Minister, Jacinda Ardern, puts the military in charge of quarantine facilities after two british women who were allowed out early later tested positive. Its the day football fans have been waiting for the premier league is back after a 100 day absence because of the pandemic. And having fun at a social distance how leisure and cultural attractions are working to be covid secure for when they re open. Hello and welcome if youre watching in the uk or around the world and stay with us for the latest news and analysis from here and across the globe. Hello and welcome to bbc news. The World Health Organisation has hailed the discovery of a potential treatment for coronavirus as a lifesaving scientific breakthrough. A cheap and widely available
other than gaza, there has definitely been opposition to its handling of the issue. and who are you? over the 13 years he has been the labour mp here, jon ashworth says he has worked hard to get to know constituents from all backgrounds. who do you think is going to win? you are! am i?- but one particular action is cited by many muslims as the moment they lost trust in their labour representative. in november, jon ashworth, like the majority of his labour colleagues, followed the party s order to abstain in a vote calling for an immediate ceasefire in gaza. i was saying at the time, we all want to see a ceasefire. but why not vote? because it was not a vote that would have delivered a ceasefire. but it would have sent a message to those people that you were representing their views what s wrong with that? because i am focused on the substance of the issue and i was calling for a ceasefire for some time, and actually we ve voted for a ceasefire now in parliament. we had a ceasefire vo
you are! am i? but one particular action is cited by many muslims as the moment they lost trust in their labour representative. in november, jon ashworth, like the majority of his labour colleagues, followed the party s order to abstain in a vote calling for an immediate ceasefire in gaza. i was saying at the time, - we all want to see a ceasefire. but why not vote? because it was not a vote that. would have delivered a ceasefire. but it would have sent a message to those people that you were representing their views. what s wrong with that? because i am focused - on the substance of the issue i and i was calling for a ceasefire i for some time, and actually we ve voted for a ceasefire now in parliament. i we had a ceasefire vote in early february. - how do we bring him to that seat?! in a chaotic episode, labour mps did manage to vote through a february motion for an immediate humanitarian pause, but that was too late to stop some
in a constituency where around 30% of the electorate is muslim, he appears to be making an impact. supporting you we would like a muslim voice in parliament. many feeling the labour party has not properly represented their views. our vote is going to be to hold the labour party accountable. in leicester we have a labour council. then you have labour mps. who is going to cause each of the. why is it more important for you to hold the labour party to account, rather than the government? regardless of who is in power, but maybe more so the labour party, because we have given them our vote, historically, we have trusted them. while many muslims do remain loyal to labour, or are voting on considerations other than gaza, there has definitely been opposition to its handling of the issue. and who are you? over the 13 years he has been the labour mp here, jon ashworth says he has worked hard to get to know constituents from all backgrounds. who do you think is going to win?