Transcripts For BBCNEWS BBC News 20240709

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what is a safe way to move forward. we are unlikely to see any changes to the professional game any time soon. but work is under way to make the game nesta mcgregor, bbc news. time for a look at the weather. here's sarah keith—lucas. over the weekend summer and head first into autumn because through this week things are looking cooler this week things are looking cooler this week things are looking cooler this week with rain and blustery winds. that is down to the fact low pressure is sweeping in from the atlantic. this weather front brought this morning's fairly heavy rain and squally winds and we had a report of a possible tornado in lincolnshire as the rain swept through. icy is mainly clearing towards the east but icy will linger for shetland into the afternoon so icy will be wet here and for the rest of the uk a picture of sunny spells but plenty of scattered, heavy, blustery showers, some of them bringing some hail and thunderstorms as well. eastern england looking the driest through the afternoon, 18 or 19 in the sunshine but further west plenty of showers and they will continue into the evening and overnight. some heavy bursts of rain with some of these downpours in the north and the west, could be quite a bit of lying surface water on the roads as we move through to the early hours of tuesday. a little bit drier towards the east to it's the biggest defeat in ryder cup history, europe losing 19 9 to the united states in wisconsin. rory mcllroy was 1 of the few players to win their match there were tears for rory mcllroy and ian poulter on the final day as europe were comprehensively beaten. and as andy swiss reports, the victory could bring with it a period of dominance for the us. have a great team this week and we this one will hunt for a bit but icy is things like this that make you stronger going forward. england all—rounder moeen ali has announced his retirement from test cricket, seven years after making his debut in the format since his debut against sri lanka he scored more than two thousand test runs, taking 195 wickets over 64 test matches. he reached the landmark of 2,000 test runs and 100 wickets faster than sir ian botham. he than sir ian botham. says the intensity of test cricket he says the intensity of test cricket is too much. he will carry on playing and shorter formats of the game and is in the preliminary squad for the t—20 world cup next month. he'll continue to play in limited overs internationals though, and is in england's preliminary squad. i hope on the back of what he has done there will be so many young boys and girls wanting to follow in his. is dash—mac in his footsteps because the way he plays and carries himself is fantastic. four—time grand slam winner naomi 0saka says she will return to tennis soon after getting the "itch" to play again. 0saka took another break from tennis earlier this month after her us open title defence was ended by eventual runner—up leylah fernandez in round three. the 23—year—old japanese player previously withdrew from this year's french open and missed wimbledon to focus on her mental health. she says her return would properly be seen and icy wouldn't really matter whether she one or not. nuno espirito santo has taken responsibility as arsenal beat tottenham in yesterday's north london derby. the gunners were 3—0 up by half time through emile smith rowe, pierre emerick aubameyang and from bukayo sa ka. son heung min pulled one back for spurs as mikel arteta's side move above them in the table. i believe that the game plan was good. credit to arsenal because they were stronger and faster than us. they were more aggressive and we were not able to control the possession of the ball. we lost too many duels but the responsibility is mine, it has to be mine. what i'm focusing on is to make the right decisions and to work and get it right. lewis hamilton says icy is a magical moment to become the first driver to reach 100 grand prix winds but can thank the weather for shaking up the russian grand prix. lando norris was leading with a few laps to go but could not keep his mclaren on the track and that let hamilton through to take the chequered flag and move above max von stapp and in the championship. above max von stapp and in the championship-— above max von stapp and in the chamionshi -. ., ._ ., .,, . championship. even today, fantastic on the it championship. even today, fantastic on the pit steps. — championship. even today, fantastic on the pit stops, amazing _ championship. even today, fantastic on the pit stops, amazing strategy l on the pit stops, amazing strategy and just continuing to not give up on this incredibly tight battle. i was really grateful for them continuing to push. icy has taken a long time to get that one when. of course the other competitors are super fast as you can see. but i am really, really grateful. shadow chancellor of the exchequer rachel reeves addressed the labour party conference in brighton and spoke about how she will level out the taxation system and end the exemption on private schools and put the money back into state schools. labour will lead a new era of industrial strategy working hand—in—hand with trade unions and businesses. this is about helping british business lead the world and growing high—tech industries like life science and electric cars and renewable energy. we will do something that has never been done before and we will have industrial strategies for the overlooked industries that make up our everyday economy. sectors which never before have been the subjects of industrial strategies like retail, hospitality and our care sector. the steps that i am outlining today represent an approach that is unapologetically pro— worker and unapologetically pro—business. this will mark a step change, a decisive shift towards the undervalued and the everyday. that conference is what a labour government will do. a fresh approach means we need to look again at how our tax system works. good public services have to be paid for but how we pay for them as a test of our values. today i want to share the principles that lie behind our approach to taxation. first we will make the tax system fairer ensuring the burden is not just falling on the wages of working people but those at the top p there fee as sheer as well. dash—mac those who are at the top are peeing their fears sheer. how can icy be right that the police constable on £27,000 per year should be taxed at 32p in the pound but someone making many times more from buying and selling stocks and shares should payjust 20p in the pound? that will not stand under labour. i pledge that as chancellor i will not balance the books on the back of working people. -- paying books on the back of working people. —— paying their shares. we will bring our laser focus to our approach to the tax system. many tax breaks are important but too many simply provide loopholes for those who can provide the best advice and added together they cost more than the entire nhs budget so we will look at every single tax break and if icy does not deliver for the economy of the taxpayer we will scrap icy. and here are a couple that we will scrap right away. under the conservative party private equity bosses who asset strip british businesses pay a lower rate of tax on their bonuses than their workers do on their wages. that is indefensible, we would scrap icy. dash—mac we would scrap it. and he has another. right now private schools enjoy charitable status which makes them exempt both from business rates and from vat. at a cost to taxpayers of £1.7 billion every year. but conference, here is the truth. public schools are not charities and so we will end that exemption and put that money straight into our state schools, state schools like the one i went to. conference, that is what a labour government will do. ah, to. conference, that is what a labour government will do. a flavour ofthe labour government will do. a flavour of the speech — labour government will do. a flavour of the speech by _ labour government will do. a flavour of the speech by the _ labour government will do. a flavour of the speech by the shadow - of the speech by the shadow chancellor at the labour party conference in brighton. after 18 months, the government fulough scheme that's been helping to support the wages of people whose jobs have been hit by the covid lockdowns comes to an end this week. as our business correspondent nina warhurst reports many employees and business owners are still worried about the future. it's the start of a pretty momentous week. after a year and a half, the furlough scheme finally comes to an end. at its peak, around nine million people, that's about a third of the uk workforce, were having their wages paid or topped up by government. that has never happened before. for the government and the taxpayer, supporting jobs costs money. around £60 billion at the last count. now that is around half of the entire budget for the nhs for the whole of the uk. if the economy is opening back up, why are there so many calls to extend the scheme? so manyjobs are still reliant on it, in aviation, travel, events, the arts. things are not back to normal for everyone. it varies week to week. talking last month, the airport was like a ghost town. never ever seen anything like that in the now when people are double—jabbed, it got a little bit easier. you know, as restrictions are being lifted, we are getting a bit more consumer confidence back at the airport. so we just have to wait and see now whether everybody has abandoned the plans for going away or there's going to be a resurgence. when furlough ends, ian will be back as a driver at manchester airport but on just 90% of his normal wage. but unlike many he's kept his job. the furlough scheme for me is a bit likejekyll and hyde. in one way it's been really good, i've kept myjob. in another way it's given too much home time. you know, when you spend too much time at home, it's not all that clever. for me personally i found keeping myjob has been quite good. mental health wise, in lockdown, we were suffering, i was suffering. in one way it has been very good i have kept myjob but in another way it has given me too much time. when you spend too much time at home, it is not all that clever. for me, personally, ifound keeping myjob has been quite good. mental health wise, in lockdown, we were suffering. i was suffering. and it's notjust furlough. 0n the same day, a special lower vat rate for tourism and hospitality will also go. the stamp duty holiday ends, too. next week, the millions of people on universal credit will begin to see benefit payments cut. for those left out or excluded from the main support schemes, this has been their only lifeline. most people who receive the £20 a week in universal credit are already in work. of the rest, many of those who cannot work are not expected to work because they are caring for their family or they are caring for someone in their family who is disabled or they are ill at the moment and they can't work temporarily. the idea thatjust because there are more jobs and there are vacancies, we won't need the £20 per week is really wrong. actually it's much more of a long—term conversation about how adequate we want our social security system without furlough, what happens next? for businesses, for unemployment, for poverty, for the prospects of young people? in the next week, we begin to find out. wales will merge the green and amber travel lists and remove the need for pre—departure testing for fully vaccinated travellers from october 4th, nut ministers said no decision has been yet made over removing the requirement for pcr tests. they are urging the uk government to reverse its decision. now it's time for our look at some regional stories with across the uk. figures obtained by look north show that nearly half of the victims who have sued south yorkshire police for compensation in relation to the rotherham child sexual abuse scandal are yet to have their cases settled. the police say they are not fighting victims over their compensation claims but there are concerns that too many cases are taking years to resolve. across yorkshire nearly two thousand victims of child sexual grooming have come forward to the police in the last seven years as david rhodes reports. in 2014 the streets of rotherham gave up a dark secret. the industrial scale of child sexual abuse perpetrated at times in plain sight of south yorkshire police. elizabeth not her real name was one of hundreds of victims. my abuse when i was locked in a flat for ten weeks, that's where he raped me. that's how my abuse started inside that flat. elizabeth received £25,000 from south yorkshire police, a process that took four years. it is just one barrier after another. everyone seems to benefit except the victims. the solicitors, south yorkshire police because they are paying out bare minimum. i worked it out, it was just a pound a day for every day i had suffered. 0urfreedom of information request has revealed that 103 compensation claims have been made to south yorkshire police by victims of child sexual abuse in rotherham, around half of them are yet to be settled and in total south yorkshire police has paid out of a £3 million in legal fees alone to lawyers. a spokeswoman told us our solicitors are not paid to refute claims, they are paid to review, assess and investigate them thoroughly as any amount claimed as compensation is paid using public money. to date we have received 103 claims, at present there are only 18 active claims in the group at various stages of review. the remaining claims have either been settled, denied or closed due to inactivity by the claimants�* solicitors. 0ne victim we have spoken to first lodged her claim in 2014. she got a pay—out in 2018, four years, is that acceptable? i would sooner see that timescale shorter but that is the question of the victim, we want to make sure they are fairly treated and get the compensation they are entitled and deserve. 0n the other hand i know that every pound spent on compensation is a pound that is not going to policing. child sexual abuse is not necessarily a historical crime. i had one person seem to me you would be really stupid to contemplate it in rotherham. professor chris whitty�*s report highlights huge health inequalities including significant differences in life expectancy. in kent alone, men in cliftonville, near margate, will die 15 years earlier on average than men in tunbridge wells. our health correspondent mark norman has the details... good morning, everyone, - welcome to margate park run! the park run in cliftonville, margate, attracts almost 200 people every week. they run alongside the stunning kent coastline and staying healthy is their number one reason for taking part. but walk 20 yards across the road and you're in some of the most deprived and challenged areas in the country. 0nce grand houses, converted into hundreds of often poor quality bedsits. professor whitty�*s report highlights the link between poor housing, poor health outcomes and the risk of dying young. one of the quotes that stood out for me in his report was the fact that people live short lives in poor health in coastal communities. yes, of course, he mentioned smoking, alcohol, and drug abuse, but the other big issue was that people here had very high rates of preventable illness. illnesses such as heart disease, diabetes and obesity that can lead to men in thanet dying as much as 15 years earlier than in some parts of west kent. driving a mile in thanet from one end to the other will give you a ten—year life gain. it is absolutely shocking and it's something we need to do something about. this cafe in cliftonville only charges people what they can afford. they understand the lack of possibilities. what they don't understand is the public health messaging that simply does not resonate with people on the margins. sam was homeless in cliftonville for four years. were those public health messages that you picked up? not really, no. i didn't know anything about them. you know, ijust got on with life. if i wanted to eat cake for dinner, i ate cake for dinner. if i wanted to smoke a cigarette, i'd smoke a cigarette. it's very easy for somebody with a full kitchen to tell me that i should be eating a whole range of stuff when, you know, actually it's very impractical. short life expectancy is a problem health professionals have tried to highlight locally for many years. some are now calling for national focus on the issue improve health outcomes for people that chris whitty says have long been neglected and overlooked. new research has highlighted a stark difference in how climate change will hit rich and poor. it found that children born in high—income countries will experience twice as many extreme climate events as their grandparents, but children in low—income countries will see three times as many. climate change is already making inequality worse, as the bbc s population reporter stephanie hegarty has been finding out. the richest half of the world are responsible for 86% of greenhouse gas emissions, and the poorest half forjust 14%. but poorer people everywhere will be worst hit by the climate change caused by those emissions, for lots of reasons — and some of them not that obvious. like extreme heat. everything is exposed, the sun is beating down directly on you and it's just unbearable. during the june heat wave in the united states, scientists found that streets in poor areas where up to 3 to 10 c hotter because of too much asphalt, concrete, and the lack of trees. trees are life. the role they play in our ecosystem cannot be overstated. yvonne is the mayor of freetown, and has plans to plant 1,000,000 trees in the city. trees create shade and plants pull moisture up from the ground which has a cooling effect. peaople in areas with less vegetation have a 5% higher chance of dying of heat—related causes. researchers at the university of brussels found children born in high—income countries will see twice as many extreme weather events as their grandparents did, but for children in low—income countries it will be worse — they will see three times as many, and eight times as many heat waves. two thirds of children born today are born in these countries. mary vaughan has planted 250,000 trees so far, and it is notjust extreme heat they manage — they can also prevent flooding. when you cull the trees off a hill, water washes down when it rains, water does not seep down into the water reservoirs, the poor are definitely disproportionately impacted and they are the ones who are first hit, and they play the least role in many ways in contributing to this crisis. much of september has been warmer and drier than average but this week we're looking at a cooler theme to the and unsettled with spells of rain over the weeks of some quite heavy bursts of rain coming over the course of this week. a weather front that brought this morning screen cleaning towards the east and are still some heavy rain to come for the northern isles but for the rest of the uk a mix of sunshine and blustery showers. for parts of scotland and northern ireland and wales. east of england should avoid those showers and we should see temperatures of 80 or 19. those showers and we should see temperatures of 80 or 19 . not a sunny warm is yesterday but most of us stuck in the mid teens. much cooler weather for parts of northern scotland. through this evening and overnight we will keep heavy showers moving towards the north of the uk and if you catch a shower this evening and tonight icy could be heavy and thundery and some hill mix then and a lot of surface water where you will have seen showers overnight and a colder night that will see many of us in single figures. through tomorrow an area of low pressure developing across the atlantic moving west. we are expecting scattered showers for many western areas but for much of england and wales showers will merge into longer spells of rain moving gradually eastwards so a really 5°99y gradually eastwards so a really soggy day for much of england and wales tomorrow with brisk winds and thunder and lightning and hail still in place. a lot of water and rain falling in a short space of time. behind that area of rain showers return from the north west and as we head into wednesday a ridge of slightly higher pressure builds and so a bit of uncertainty how quickly this rainbow clear from the east. icy may linger a little longer into wednesday but once icy clears we're left with a much drier day. perhaps one of two shows in the north—westerly breeze. probably the driest day of the week on wednesday but not warm with temperature stuck between 11 and 16 . some of us about 10 cooler than between 11 and 16 . some of us about10 coolerthan last between 11 and 16 . some of us about 10 cooler than last week. a dry day on wednesday, return to something more unsettled on thursday and friday and temperatures not doing great compared to last week, certainly. this is bbc news, the headlines... long queues at petrol stations because of a tanker driver shortage. the government says there are no plans for the army to be drafted in. we always have a civil contingencies section in the army that is always on standby should they be needed, but we do notjudge that is necessary at the moment. labour pledges to spend £28 billion a year on making the uk economy green if it wins power. i will be a responsible chancellor, i will be britain's first green chancellor. conference, that is what a labour government will do.

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