Transcripts For BBCNEWS BBC News 20240711

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temperature record, going from a minimum of —24 to a maximum of plus 18 in the space of a week, a rise of 42 celsius, it has never been such a big rise. this chart shows you how extreme the weather is, the deeper the red, the more extreme the heat of february and with the wind is coming in from north africa, spain area across england, it is here where we are seeing the highest temperatures whereas the scotland and northern ireland, still mild that the air is coming off the atlantic. between these two types of air, we have the weather front bringing increasingly heavy rain back into wales, a particularly wet afternoon in two parts of north—west england, cumbria, dumfries & galloway and the odd shower or two to come across parts of the london area and east anglia. not many, but you could see one or two. overnight, the band of rain will weaken while pushing eastwards so a lump of cloud, a bit patchy rain possible, some hill fog patches possible, show is working into scotland and northern ireland later in the night. let's have a look at the weather charts for thursday and at this weather front is still loitering across east anglia and south—east england, bringing cloud and may be the odd spot of rain loitering but not amounting to much. many of us will have a decent start to the day with sunshine but showers for scotland and northern ireland, perhaps some of them working across into the irish sea to perhaps affect the north of wales and north—west england. still mild but temperature is not as high as they have been, with highs between nine and 12 and the context, in london, the average for this time of year is nine celsius, so it is still mild and that theme continues into friday. high pressure builds and, most of us with a quiet spell of weather, some patches of mist and fog and temperature is not changing much, 10-12 temperature is not changing much, 10—12 through friday afternoon. the weekend and beyond, high pressure will keep weather settled for most areas but a weak weather front just thickening with the cloud for our time across northern ireland and the far north of scotland, where we could see a few spots of rain but it won't last long and for most of us this weekend, looking fine and dry, temperatures 10—12. so very mild weather today, temperatures come down a little bit over the next few days would stay on the mile side of things. a reminder of our top story... victory for people power. jo wiley welcomes changes to allow people with learning disabilities to get a covid good afternoon. it's 1.30pm, and here's your latest sports news. first news on the six nations. france's match with scotland goes ahead this sunday as planned. the game in paris had been thrown into doubt after ten french players tested positive for coronavirus. head coach fabian galthie, who has been isolating and leading training sessions remotely, was one of the first to contract the virus. it means the french will be without several key players. further tests in the past few days revealed no further positive cases. tournament organsiers said they would continue to monitor the situation closely and were in contact with both unions. it has been an opening day to forget for england in the third test with india in ahmedabad — joe root�*s side having won the toss bowled out for 112. the score card makes for grim reading, just four players made double figures, zak crawley with the only innings of note. joe root, who's been england's leading batsmen on the tour so far, out for 17. it falls to england's bowlers to haul themselves back into the match with india on top. it's a day night test, the floodlights on in ahmedabad, which could offer some favourable conditions to england's bowlers — james anderson and stuart broad both in the side. india are 5 without loss at tea. tiger woods is said to be "awake, responsive and recovering" following yesterday's career threatening accident which left him requiring surgery on serious leg injuries. the police officer who was first on the scene said woods was lucky to be alive. serena williams among those who've sent their support from the wider world of sport, there's also been reaction from woods�* fellow players. whatever has happened, he's always come back from it in a pretty amazing way. he's an amazing human being that has done incredible things. just hoping that out of his bad situation is the best possible outcome and hope he can recover from it and we can see him on the golf course as early as possible. you just hope tiger's all right, you know, and we all know- he is a strong cookie, _ physically, mentally, so someone is going to get through this, - he will and be back for the better, i'm sure. it was a great night for chelsea in the champions league. they beat atletico madrid 1—0 in the first leg of their last 16 tie. the game was played in bucharest because of covid travel restrictions. the only goal of the game came from striker olivier giroud, and what a goal it was. that's his sixth champions league goal of the season and definitely the best of the lot. in the premier league last night, leeds beat southampton 3—0. raphinha with the pick of the goals. it's now eight league matches without a win for southampton. tennis, andy murray lost the first tour level match he's played since last october. he lost in straight sets to egor gerasimov who from belarus at a tournament in montpellier. murray, remember, missed out on the australian open after catching coronavirus. he's currently ranked 121 in the world. that's all the sport for now. lots more on the bbc sport website. a reaction to all of the stories that we have covered. that's bbc.co.uk/sport john, see you later, thank you. let's return to our main story this lunchtime. all people with learning disabilities who are registered on the learning disability register will be prioritised for vaccinations once the over—65s have been offered theirjabs. previously only those with the most severe disabilities were included the category six priority group. the decision comes after a campaign by the broadcaster and radio 2 presenterjo whiley, whose sister has learning disabilities and diabetes. let's listen to howjo whiley reacted to the news, she was speaking to my colleague victoria derbyshire. this is a great day. i'm so relieved, i am so happy for all of those people who have been living in fear. i'm grateful to the government for listening. it is a complicated situation. it is very difficult to categorise people according to their disabilities. very tricky, and that's become apparent over the last months. this is clear, this encompasses everyone, and all those people who have been feeling very neglected and like they don't matter, like we don't care, now know that we will be protecting them. this is absolutely crucial, and i could not be more delighted. have you told frances yet? no, i haven't. her housing situation, she lived in a house with six. all of them tested positive. two weeks ago they were all fine, a week ago they weren't. three of them ended up in hospital and one of them sadly died. this is enormous, and thatjust tells you about the how difficult it has been. this is going to prevent other people dying. so that person who died yesterday, their life will not have been in vain. that means the world. it is extraordinary when you look at the stats that everybody with a learning disability was not included in a priority group to start with, because, as you and others have been pointing out, people with a learning disability are dying from covid at six times the rate of anybody else. i know, this is the problem. these are vulnerable people, often they cannot communicate. they absolutely rely on us to look out for them and fight for them. so it was very easy just to forget and neglect them in the beginning. but it became apparent as the deaths ramped up, as more people were talking up about their loved ones. a lot of us are really fighting for our children, siblings, people we care for and look after. the problem was that it is really, really hard to categorise. it is such a complex issue about what defines whether someone is profoundly disabled, moderately disabled. this is the sensible thing to do, to just say that all of you with a disability, let us protect you, let us get you vaccinated. they can't control their environment, as well. they are living in homes where there are people going in and out all of the time, and that is how coronavirus has just gone wild in many of the care homes and settings that they are. that is why it is a sensible decision. thejcvi also recognises that not everyone will be on this register, and so it is up to all of us to reach out to community to make sure that those who are not on the register but have a learning disability come forward. that is important, too. absolutely, yeah. do not delay. i know many people will have been making those calls, sending e—mails week after week. now it is different. now attention has been shone on these people, on your situation. pick up the phone today, call the surgery. just make yourself known. make the person you care for, that you love, known, and you will get a vaccination. i want to say thank you to all of the gps and the vaccinators out there who have actually realised that people with learning disabilities have been forgotten about, and they have made an absolute effort to get out there and vaccinate. i cannot thank you enough for those people who have suddenly gone, "do you know what, i haven't really thought about this before, and now i am going to." and i think this has to proceed, we have to go from here on in. we cannot afford to forget these vulnerable people with disabilities. this has to change. this is a seismic day, it really is, for all of those in the learning disability community. it's a great day. how is your sister? she got home yesterday. she phoned me this morning. i always know how frances is because she facetimes me about a million times a day. while she was ill, those calls stopped. i got a really early morning call this morning. so that means she's doing well. apparently she got up at 4:30 in the morning to have some breakfast, her first breakfast, so she has got her appetite back, she's facetiming, so all is so much better in the world. obviously, my parents are now looking after her, so this is the first step in her recovery. it is going to be hard work from here on in, but she is doing great. we thought we were going to lose her. four orfive days ago, we thought she'd gone, we thought it was all over. so ijust could not believe seeing her yesterday giving her thumbs up and just looking at her and going, wow, she's back. jo wiley�*s reaction. in scotland, the first minister has explained why she believes her cautious approach to lifting lockdown is the right one to take. here's some of what nicola sturgeon had to say at her daily coronavirus briefing. let me say at the outset that i know how desperate everyone is. people, businesses, everybody across the country, is for more certainty and to be able to see as far ahead into the future with as much clarity as possible. so i will say a little bit about why i don't think it is right or possible to do everything that we all desperately want at the moment, but also a bit about how we intend to get to that longer—term position as quickly as possible. the framework provides indicative dates for the next six weeks because that is the timeframe that right now we can be most confident about. it is harder at this stage, this will chance as we go through the coming weeks, but at this stage it's harder to know the likely course of the pandemic after that period. the main reason for that is that we do not yet know how the new, more infectious variant of the virus will behave as we start to lift the lockdown restrictions. because it is only the restrictions that are keeping that at bay now. so what that means is that we have to monitor the first few steps out of lockdown we take very carefully so we are building our confidence about the speed at which we are able to go. over the next couple of weeks, that means looking closely at the impact of the first phase of school return that started on monday, and the impact of the next phase of school return that will happen on the 15th of march, when we hope to get as many more young people back to school as possible. my hope is that the more we learn about the impact of the early changes, the more confidence we will then have that we can go further and faster without risking a resurgence of the virus that would set us all back. in the meantime, we will move forward carefully, but over the period between now and the start of april, we will move forward. we will support the full return of schools, with as many pupils as possible back on the 15th of march. we will also support the return of care home visiting that i've just spoken about. we will let young people return to outdoor sports to help their mental health and to give them the chance to be with friends. we will let communal worship reopen. and let me be clear, i clarified this in parliament yesterday, but not everyone would've heard that, we intend to allow that reopening of communal worship in time for the easter weekend and for passover. and we will lift the stay at home restriction at the start of april, which compares, i think, to a target date for england of the very end of march, so not much difference there. and we will also reopen some parts of retail. so that is what we can reasonably be confident about doing between now and the start of april. there is always caveats in that because we cannot be absolutely certain about what is going to happen with the virus, but we have a reasonable degree of confidence in that six week timeframe. and if we become confident over the next few weeks that we can do more, then we will do more. and from the last week in april, our current planning, the expectation is the rest of retail will start to reopen, as will holiday accommodation, hospitality, gyms, and hairdressers, for example. and on that last one, as you can probably see, i'm as desperate as anybody to see hairdressers open. that will involve all of scotland going down to at least level three, but there might be parts of the country at that stage, perhaps more rural communities, that are able to go straight to level two, meaning the opening up can happen faster. and of course, all parts of scotland, we hope, will be able to move to lower levels of restrictions fairly quickly over may and june. in wales, the health minister vaughan gethin says the roll—out of vaccinations and community testing will play a key part in guiding the country out of the pandemic. the welsh government are yet to publish a similar plan to those published in recent days for england and scotland. he was speaking at the welsh government's daily coronavirus briefing. our incredible vaccine programme is the other beacon of hope that will help to guide us out of lockdown. i can today confirm that we will offer the vaccine to all eligible adults in wales by the 31st ofjuly, as long as supplies match our ability to deliver and rendition. deliver and ——ambition. and we are ambitious. our revised vaccine strategy, which i will publish later this week, will set out how we will grow and adapt the places where vaccines are being administered as we move into the next phases of oui’ programme. our strategy update will also talk about how we will maintain high levels of uptake and increase our engagement with people who may be difficult to reach or initially reluctant to have the vaccine. we are currently moving through vaccinating priority groups 5—9. that is everyone aged between 50 and 69, everyone aged over 16 with an underlying health condition that puts them at an increased risk of serious illness with coronavirus, and many of our invaluable unpaid carers who provide care for someone who is clinically vulnerable to the virus. now, subject to vaccine supply, we expect to have reached all these people by the middle of april. the headlines on bbc news... a rule change to allow people with learning disabilitiies to get a covid vaccine jab now following a plea from broadcasterjo wiley. tens of thousands of people are now eligible. pupils in england who've been left behind because of the pandemic are offered catch—up lessons in the summer — as the government pledges hundreds of millions of pounds. will he ever play golf again? concerns for tiger woods after emergency surgery on his legs following car crash in la. following borisjohnson�*s announcement on the country's route out of lockdown, we're speaking to key figures from across society to get their thoughts on the past year and what their hopes are for the future. today, my colleague victoria derbyshire spoke to the archbishop of canterbury, the most reverend justin welby, about how those grieving could find solace injesus's story — and about why it's important to get a coronavirus vaccine. i think, like most people, there are things you... things that have caused ups and downs. i mean, there was a nice respite in the summer, and a beautiful summer, but by this time, like almost everyone in this country i think, i'm just longing to see people in 3d rather than 2d. and to be able to be with people. i mean, one of the strange things in myjob is that most anglicans around the world live overseas — there's about 18 million of us in 165 countries, and normally i spend a lot of time travelling and most of them are in really tough places — war and conflict and all kinds of things. and so one of the strange things for me is being here for a whole year for the first time in many, many years, rather than being with those people. and i've miss that hugely. i want to ask you about grief. i know you have experienced grief and loss after your baby daughter was killed in a car crash in the 1980s. for those who have lost loved ones to covid—19 and weren't even able to hold the relative�*s hand in hospital because they weren't allowed in as their loved one was dying, i wonder what words of comfort you could say to them. you know, in the church seasons at the moment — we're in a season called lent, which is the a0 days running up to easter. and lent is historically a time of austerity to some degree, of fasting, of simplicity. i think so many people have been on a year's lent, and the biggest thing that they've missed out on, as you say — and it's possibly one in ten of our population — have not been able to be with someone who is dying or not be able to be at theirfuneral. but at the end of lent, we remember as christians that there is suffering, there is the crucifixion ofjesus and there is resurrection, which is hope. death is the great liar. when someone dies in hospital, death says to us, you know, "you missed out, they missed out, there's no hope, there's no future." that is the biggest lie going. we can come together at the end of this lockdown and do the things we wanted to do. we can't be with them when they were dying, but the hospital staff will have loved them and cared for them. we can come together and remember them and weep and laugh and tell the stories we wanted to tell and celebrate their lives and mourn their loss. that will really help people when they don'tjust put it behind them, as it were, because you never can. but they take part in what they would've taken part in at the time. what do you say to those who might say, if there was a god, then god wouldn't have allowed the world to be consumed by this pandemic? well, that is one of the biggest questions, isn't it? there is a god, and what i say is that, as christians, we understand that god came and suffered with us and died on a cross for us. he suffered everything we do in a time of poverty and war, and he defeated death and rose from the dead. now, that's at the heart of the story of jesus christ, who historically wandered around in palestinejust about 2,000 years ago. and i think for us, that means that god is at our side in suffering. he doesn'tjust sort everything out, but gives us choices as to what we do, as to how we live, gives us space to be ourselves, but is at our side when we call on him and is with us and loves us. and every human being can know that love of god. i've been through those moments of asking myself about why this is happening — i've done it in our own family as you mentioned, but also in many places of standing next to a mass grave in south sudan, of going through town with unburied bodies everywhere around us — from war and conflict. and of course you ask those questions, but the answer is the crucified god. you had your first coronavirus vaccination, i think, back injanuary. i wonder if you're concerned at all about covid lingering for longer periods in poorer parts of the country, becoming "a disease of deprivation," as one government scientific adviser said yesterday. yes, i heard that said. and i think that's a real issue. the first thing is, i had myjab because i do some work in a hospital so i was one of those that needed to be jabbed for the protection of other staff and patients. and i will take my follow up in april. and i would say to everyone, get the jab. there really is no conspiracy. the only conspiracy is to make sure you don't get covid. get the jab, don't listen to the stories. secondly, there's a risk... because covid's going to be with us like flu is, but we have the solution to it. and that solution is in our own hands. you get it when you're offered it, you take it, you do the boosters as the years go by, and this willjust be a minor thing of no great concern to us. i want to ask you finally, if i may, about housing. thousands of hectares of land owned by the church of england could be used to build affordable homes in the next few years under proposals recently outlined from a housing commission that you set up. are you going to do it? how important is it for the church of england to show some kind of lead here? it's crucial. the housing commission's an independent one, and they have come up with an absolutely stunning report. they really know their stuff. they're challenging government, they are challenging developers, property owners. they're saying the problem isn'tjust building more houses, it's building communities with houses that are affordable. many of those watching this will know what it is to really struggle to pay the rent, to pay the mortgage — whatever it happens to be. and they've also really challenged the church. and they have said to us, "where is your soul? where is your heart?" because we have this land, which we've had in many cases for over 1,000 years. it's not getting rid of churches or anything like that, it'sjust land that has potential planning permission and the housing commission challenges us to be the developers and build beautiful, safe, secure, wonderful homes that are affordable for people. and are we going to do it? i'm not the chief executive of church of england plc, i can'tjust give an order, but i appeal to every part of the church to take part and to commit what they've got and to lead the way. i think we can really get this going so that people look back and say that was a change in the housing crisis and part of rebuilding this country post—covid. and the government recently announced billions more to reduce dangerous cladding from tower blocks, but leaseholders living in shorter buildings will be left out and will have to take on loans. what do you think of that? does that seem right to you? no, it does not seem right or fair. the cladding crisis, there's a huge enquiry going on into it. we will get the conclusions. but the only people who have deep enough pockets to solve it are the government. leaseholders don't. they need to commit everything necessary to get this done, and then recover the money from others — from developers, from builders, designers and people who are involved in this. the money, it's right that they recover the money, but they can solve this problem quickly and the one set of people who can't carry the weight are the vast majority of those living in the houses and flats that are suffering from this crisis. the archbishop of canterbury. a reminder, at 2:30 here on bbc news we'll answer your questions on the government's plan to ask secondary schools to consider delivering face—to—face summer schools as part of efforts to help pupils catch up. if you have any questions, get in touch with the hashtag #bbcyourquestions, or email yourquestions@bbc.co.uk. now, the weather with chris fawkes. hello again, the weather is going to stay mild for all of us through the rest of the day today. for some it is going to turn out to be quite wet with persistent rain, particularly for wales, southwest scotland in northwest england, but especially so in cumbria. elsewhere, even more likely that the weather will stay dry, and warmest day of the years apart. temperatures this afternoon reach 18 degrees in the very warmest spots. overnight tonight, orwhether front will push its way eastwards, whilst weakening significantly, so a few spots of rain left on it as it works into southern and eastern areas of england. mr fogg patches. for the northwest, little bit cooler than recent nights with showers coming into scotland, and the davis showers, the weather front is still there thursday morning, could be a bit of rain, but not amounting to much, many of us having a fun day, bosom showers across western areas. still mild, but not quite as mild as it has been. this is bbc news. i'm simon mccoy. the headlines... a rule change to allow people with learning disabilitiies to get a covid vaccine jab now. tens of thousands of people are now eligible. it follows a plea from broadcasterjo wiley. all those people who have been feeling very neglected, that they don't matter, that we don't care, now know that we will be protecting them. this is absolutely crucial and i could not be more delighted. this is a massive step forward. pupils in england who've been left behind because of the pandemic are offered catch—up lessons in the summer, as the government pledges hundreds of millions of pounds. it is there to be able to support them in terms of academic catch—up but also the softer side and the enrichment activities that we know all children have missed out on as well. will he ever play golf again? concerns for tiger woods after emergency surgery on his legs following car crash in la.

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