and i pay for the things we buy in i the shops- we the shops. thank you very much. we will be back the shops. thank you very much. we will be back with the shops. thank you very much. we will be back with ben the shops. thank you very much. we will be back with ben later the shops. thank you very much. we will be back with ben later on - the shops. thank you very much. we will be back with ben later on in i will be back with ben later on in the programme. let s take a look at some of today s front pages. the telegraph focuses on a story we covered last week on breakfast, reporting that at least 300,000 housebound people are yet to get a third jab after gps opted out of home visits to administer them. the mirror is concerned about the cost of christmas but not in the financial sense. the paper quotes warnings from scientists that festive gatherings could trigger a surge in covid cases, leading to restrictions in the new year. the guardian leads with an even more sobering covid s
incredibly lucky girl. what an incredible story. the finances of some of the uk s biggest care home companies should be investigated by the competitions watchdog, that s according to the former health and social care secretaryjeremy hunt. he made the comments as part of a panorama investigation looking at whether complex company structures are causing too much money to leak away from frontline care. here s our social affairs editor alison holt. what was it like growing up here? lovely, everybody knew everybody. tess grew up in cannock in staffordshire. her mum died when she was young so her dad mick was at the heart of the family. it s more than a year since he died in a care home nearby, and she s been left with many questions about the care he received and the company that ran the home. four days in, five days in, the cracks start to appear. his bed was never made. the toilet area was shocking. my dad is walking in the urine, so my dad should be walking in that.
iam one i am one of europe s largest lorry parks in kent this morning where they are opening brand new facilities, which they hope will encourage new driver recruits to help plug the shortfall the industry has been facing. buckle up for a thrilling finish. lewis hamilton wins a chaotic saudi arabian grand prix, sparks flying with max verstappen. it ll be a winner takes all race in abu dhabi next weekend. good morning. a band of rain crossing as today with some snow, even at lower levels for a time across northern england and scotland. that will clear up followed by blustery showers, again they will be wintry on the hills, and then tomorrow we have got storm barra. all of the details later in the programme. it s monday 6th december. our main story. the education secretary will make a statement to mps today after ordering a national review into the death of six year old arthur labinjo hughes. arthur was killed by his father and stepmother after social workers found no safeguarding conce
is a nightmare! louisa pilbeam has the story. amelie 0sborn smith was on a gap year trip of a lifetime in zambia. but in the waters near victoria falls, the 18 year old was attacked by a crocodile. she suffered such serious injuries to her leg, she feared she d never walk again. when the accident happened, i fully accepted the fact that i was going to lose my foot. and i accepted that, and i said to all of my friends, it s fine, i ve lost my foot, i m still alive. and then i was told that my foot is going to be fine and i would get to walk again which is, it s such a relief. the accident happened on the zambezi river while amelie was white water rafting with a group. she was airlifted 214 miles to the capital lusaka where surgeons performed a life saving operation and saved her leg. people say, like, you see your life flash before your eyes but you don t. you just think, how do i get out of this situation? and your brain just goes into overdrive and you think how to get out.