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tv   Breakfast with Eamonn and Isabel  GB News  April 3, 2024 6:00am-9:31am BST

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ellie costello. >> the prime minister demands answers as three british aid workers are killed by an israeli missile strike. >> a study reveals vaping can raise heart failure by a fifth, so is it time to ban the habit? >> a teacher banned for saying islam will take over the world, and for branding western girls as lunatics will have more on that shortly. >> and after seven today, we've got a debate on is it ever
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appropriate to bring your children into the office? now, why would that be a good idea? children in the office let us know your views and in sport , know your views and in sport, only me. >> i'm the only child in the office today. by the way, in sport this morning. last night, three out of five premier league games ended one one. brighton hove albion are officially the most successful club in the country financially. that is. and adam peaty is back . country financially. that is. and adam peaty is back. i'm ready for the olympics morning. >> whilst there's quite a bit of rain across northern parts today, it's better news further south if it's drier and brighter weather you're after. i'll have the details shortly. >> so, leading the news this morning, the prime minister demanding answers from israel after seven aid workers, there were three british nationals
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amongst them were killed by an israeli missile strike. >> yes. james henderson, who's 33, and john chapman, 57, both of whom are believed to have served in the royal marines, were named alongside james kirby , a former army rifleman and sniper marksman , as the three sniper marksman, as the three britons who had died . britons who had died. >> now, israel's now facing questions about how all of this happened as the world charity kitchen had alerted the israeli defence force to the route they were travelling on. it marked its cars with logos on the roof as well . as well. >> while political correspondent at the spectator, james heale joins us now. good to see you this morning, james. i mean, this morning, james. i mean, this is absolutely horrific, isn't it? and of course, the prime minister now demanding answers. >> absolutely. and i think it's a testament to how serious this is, that we've seen such a striking response from the uk government and not just the government, opposition too, government, the opposition too, with releasing with keir starmer releasing a statement this statement condemning this in very words. think the very strong words. i think the nature of this, as you were saying there, the fact that the
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world central, central kitchen was on convoy, was marked out on the convoy, the that there are some the fact that there are some reports suggesting that there were strikes were three different strikes involved the involved in this, that the people moved one people involved moved from one vehicle to the third. >> there was three strikes. the cars were a mile and a half apart. i mean, they didn't just have one explosion that that affected all three vehicles. so i that's makes this i mean, that's what makes this really sinister. and the fact that have been we're that there have been we're talking this , but there's that there have been we're taliodd this , but there's that there have been we're taliodd other this , but there's that there have been we're taliodd other strikes)ut there's that there have been we're taliodd other strikes that1ere's that there have been we're taliodd other strikes that have 20 odd other strikes that have happened this year that happened so far this year that we talk about that. it's we don't talk about that. it's just how does an accident, so—called like that, so—called accident like that, like happen that is the question. >> absolutely. and they would have discussed their route with the idf beforehand . so they'd the idf beforehand. so they'd had advance knowledge of of had advance knowledge of all of this. think for these this. and i think for these reasons, i think one of the it's the reason why we're going to see of debate about this see a lot of debate about this in westminster today, because see a lot of debate about this in werwhyister today, because see a lot of debate about this in werwhy the' today, because see a lot of debate about this in werwhy the israeli because that's why the israeli ambassador was hauled last ambassador was hauled in last night, people really night, because people are really concerned about this. and obviously that they'll obviously the fact that they'll be incidents be going other incidents unreported well. no unreported as well. and it's no surprise there's also suggestions going to suggestions that it's going to really affect supply of aid really affect the supply of aid going because this convoy really affect the supply of aid goinheadingzause this convoy really affect the supply of aid goinheadingzause tijust)nvoy
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really affect the supply of aid goinheadingzause tijust docked was heading it only just docked on and it was on monday night and it was heading rafah provide sort heading to rafah to provide sort of starve off the starvation there. food have there. the food could have provided meals. i provided a million meals. so i think that's to be one think that's going to be one real impact of this. and real world impact of this. and in westminster, debate is in westminster, the debate is going about is israel going to be about is israel breaching international law in any areas. i think any different areas. so i think that's going that's what we're going to see in terms the next 48 hours. in terms of the next 48 hours. >> as you say, i mean, >> and as you say, i mean, again, to add to the whole tragedy, fact a full tragedy, the fact that a full shipload of food turns back to cyprus nobody of it, cyprus and nobody avails of it, it doesn't happen. >> and are concerns, >> and there are concerns, though, there? not that the though, are there? not that the hamas benefits from lot of hamas benefits from a lot of this food, that they hijack it, they steal it, intercept it. >> yes, there it. — >> yes, there is. it. >> yes, there is. and there's also the way in which they have been have a track record of using certain aid agencies to try and advance an agenda, also trying to incidents like trying to exploit incidents like this as a way of sort of sowing up dissent and encouraging support in these areas. and what's so striking about this attack just the fact attack as well is just the fact that this charity had very that this charity had a very good relationship the good relationship with the israeli to other israeli forces compared to other ones, instance, who've ones, for instance, who've been quite so think
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quite critical, etc. so i think that for reason, it's all that for that reason, it's all the more damaging to have such an aid agency, which has enjoyed an aid agency, which has enjoyed a good relationship with the israeli authorities, now having to so i think to be turned back. so i think that going to really that that's going to really complicate going complicate the on going relationship the relationship between the netanyahu and these netanyahu government and these kind charities. kind of charities. >> netanyahu described kind of charities. >> as netanyahu described kind of charities. >> as a netanyahu described kind of charities. >> as a tragic yahu described kind of charities. >> as a tragic error. described kind of charities. >> as a tragic error. butdescribed this as a tragic error. but there are also questions this morning that this is deliberate targeting of aid workers. and that's certainly the thoughts of the ceo of the world central kitchen , who said that food is kitchen, who said that food is being used by the idf as a weapon of war. >> absolutely. and the israelis will obviously come back and say that, you know, often this is used as a sort of an agenda for hamas as you were saying there. eamonn, i think it really just shows which how many shows in which how many civilians really the civilians are really on the front is that front line here, which is that there's minority of different there's a minority of different combatants this, combatants involved in all this, but they're ones really but they're the ones really paying but they're the ones really paying price. and that's why paying the price. and that's why you've about mass starvation in warning about mass starvation in places like rafah. >> look at of the faces >> you look at some of the faces involved there and these fatalities, and we about fatalities, and we talk about civilian involvement in all of this. know, people this. and, you know, people who
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are people doing are really good people doing this. i was if i was this. i mean, if i was if i was somebody who was asking me, do you want to be volunteer in you want to be a volunteer in helping out on all of this? no way. absolutely no way. what does to put your your does it take to put your your life the for this sort life on the line for this sort of thing? >> well, three very brave men, three veterans who are no one of them actually went over last month. we'd only been there a few weeks himself. james, what do you think happens next in terms of british israeli relations? do this is relations? do you think this is a turning point in this conflict? >> i it's a very worrying >> i think it's a very worrying flashpoint from of flashpoint from the view of british israeli relations. the ambassador was hauled in yesterday for a half an hour phone call, sorry for in—person conversation. and i think that shows previously has shows that previously israel has been sort of close to the been very sort of close to the uk government terms of its uk government in terms of its few allies can count on few allies that can count on around world. and i think around the world. and i think the big debate now is going to be about the discussion around international law. and the foreign received foreign office has that received advice israel has breached advice that israel has breached that it has, for that law? if it has, for instance, that would have obvious ramifications, the obvious ramifications, as the telegraph today telegraph reports today on
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things intelligence sharing things like intelligence sharing and sort of cooperation at different so i think different levels. so i think that's to be big that's going to be the big political debate, because the uk has moved to the has obviously moved to the position of calling for a ceasefire. but still remains ceasefire. but it still remains an israel. and if the if an ally of israel. and if the if the kind of incidents that we're seeing on a more frequent level, politicians going politicians are obviously going to public backlash, to respond to a public backlash, and talking to mps, and i think that talking to mps, that's something that's really coming that see coming across is that people see this a lot self—regarding, this a lot of self—regarding, decent minded and get decent minded people and get pretty by it. so pretty horrified by it. so i think it going to be a big think it is going to be a big issue. office issue. and the foreign office has conflicting advice on has given conflicting advice on whether received whether it has received that legal and i suspect legal guidance. and i suspect that we're under a lot of pressure the few to pressure in the next few days to release publish that release it and publish that guidance full. guidance in full. >> mean, how come, >> absolutely. i mean, how come, what an action aid , that what is an action of aid, that that the idf are informed about it openly and that they go into great detail and say, these are our cars, this is our route. this is where we'll be. and yet these vehicles are individually targeted. now, that is some mistake. if that is a mistake or it is a deliberate action or it
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is the sort of action that is going on without this man knowing about it . netanyahu, it knowing about it. netanyahu, it is embarrassing. absolutely no doubt more than embarrassing. i mean, it's again again, it's murder. and it just will be interesting to see what the repercussions will be. >> absolutely. i can only see it reducing support for israel. and they have to really make sure that it's either malicious or careless or wilful. and so i think this is going to be a really big issue and test for uk israeli relations. >> okay, james, thanks much >> okay, james, thanks very much indeed. to get indeed. we're going to get reaction viewers and reaction from viewers and listeners, we'll get you listeners, and we'll get you back we'll we'll talk about back and we'll we'll talk about what are saying about this what folk are saying about this for moment. thank you very for the moment. thank you very much thank you. gb news much indeed. thank you. gb news gb it? >> what is it? >> what is it? >> at gb news. com. >> gb views at gb news. com. >> gb views at gb news. com. >> no, it's not gbviews@gbnews.uk views gbviews@gbnews.uk you said views gb views gb news. >> com have your views on the news and we'll be here to reflect those throughout the program this morning. i just believe this is sinister. i don't believe this is an
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accident. and this is to calculated these cars were spread out over 1.6 miles each was individually hit. no one has said weather from the skies or missiles on the ground, or from a tank, or from , handheld a tank, or from, handheld devices or whatever. no one has said exactly how these vehicles were struck, what they were struck with. so we've got to get details on that as well. a new landmark study from the united states has revealed vaping can increase the risk of heart failure by almost a fifth. >> yes, researchers have tracked 175,000 participants and found that those who use e—cigarettes are 19% more likely to develop heart failure . heart failure. >> well, that's a big study. so is it time to finally crack down on vaping? joining us now, the director general of the uk vaping industry association, that's john dunne , who's a that's john dunne, who's a regular on the program and someone who nearly died from vaping, ewan fisher. but john,
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first of all, you know , i'm first of all, you know, i'm getting a bit fed up talking to you, john, to be quite truthful, you're always being called to defend what's going on here. this seems to be a pretty comprehensive, bought comprehensive, report bought into this. you must be concerned at some level about this. >> well, first of all, you need to take a look at what the report actually says. and the researchers point out themselves that this does not show a causal link to heart disease . this is link to heart disease. this is purely an observational study of data. it is not a clinical trial, the data that we have seen from clinical trials actually says reverse the british heart foundation's veritas study, for instance, shows that, significant improvements to vascular function within a month of switching from cigarettes to vapes. but nobody is saying that vapes. but nobody is saying that vapes are 100% safe. if you don't smoke, you shouldn't be vaping. but what we do know is that if you smoke, you're more
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than likely going to die from from doing that . so moving to from doing that. so moving to vaping is far less harmful for your health. but it's not 100% risk free. nothing in this world that we do is 100% risk free. >> well , you that we do is 100% risk free. >> well, you and you heard that, john, saying that it's a lot safer than smoking, but you say you almost died from vaping. >> yeah. so i had a very bad obviously reaction to vaping, that nearly ended my life. and so lucky to be here. so now i'm trying to spread the awareness and try and stop people, especially young people, vaping because there's not really much need to do it. obviously, unless you smoke , smoking beforehand you smoke, smoking beforehand and switching as , john just and switching over as, john just said, people are getting obviously many health problems from smoking, which we all know about because it's been around for many years now, and a lot of tests have came forward and shown who's say shown that. but who's to say that the line, vaping isn't that down the line, vaping isn't going to have the exact same effects smoking does nowadays. >> if you started vaping at underage , didn't you? did you
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underage, didn't you? did you find that it was quite easy to get hold of a vape? >> yeah, it was so simple. >> yeah, 100. it was so simple. and i think it's like that all around the country, like, i in my school uniform when i could even my school uniform when i could ever. i went into the shop one time by myself in my school uniform, and i've also been in my uniform, and i could ask people go into the shop for people to go into the shop for me, and no one batted an eyelid. >> point of >> john, from your point of view, are sales going? i view, how are sales going? i mean, how would look at the mean, how would you look at the overall business of vaping and tell us how popular it is? is it growing in popularity? has it levelled out? is it declining? >> no, absolutely. vaping continues to be, extremely popular in this country. in fact , it's now the most successful way that adults quit smoking , way that adults quit smoking, it's twice as effective as all of the other methods of smoking cessation products that are out there, but , you know, as you cessation products that are out there, but, you know, as you and said, there is a problem with young people getting these products, but they are illegal for young people to buy. anybody under the age of 18 should not
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be getting access to these products. and this is one of the reasons why we've highlighted many things to the government, looking at things like licensed , looking at things like licensed, for instance, vape retailers for instance, of vape retailers to that only responsible to ensure that only responsible people are selling these products, but also looking at at increasing the fines to up to £10,000 per instance to anybody selling these products to young people. these are an age gated aduu people. these are an age gated adult products, and that's what they're designed for, and that's who they should be sold to you. >> and do you think that we risk becoming a nanny state if we were to ban vaping entirely ? it were to ban vaping entirely? it does increase the risk of heart failure. according to this study. but so does junk food. so does, you know, things like alcohol. and we wouldn't think to ban those . to ban those. >> yeah. no, 100. i do understand where you're coming from , like if you were to ban from, like if you were to ban vaping and then obviously everything else that also can cause sort of problems , cause these sort of problems, then people would be looking at that also. so we can't get rid of everything that causes significant health problems of everything that causes significa we'd alth problems of everything that causes significa we'd be| problems of everything that causes significa we'd be foreverms of everything that causes
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significa we'd be forever banning because we'd be forever banning everything. there'd be nothing left us do, but left for any of us do, but obviously with what i've been through and like the people around me that i care for, i would want, like , i am happy would want, like, i am happy that the age limits obviously are 18 for vaping and not 16. and also that like shopkeepers and whoever selling vape liquids would get a significant fine, and like the problems caused obviously from the shopkeepers selling to underage people is causing a significant effect on young ones. so i hope that the stuff that is being done to obviously stop this keeps getting stricter and stricter . getting stricter and stricter. >> what is your your feeling? you and, you know, there's not there's not a high street in the land which isn't opening up vaping shops and outlets and whatever. and they they were all bright lights and look very happy places and whatever it is. so when you walk past or drive past one of these, what is your your overall feeling , especially
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your overall feeling, especially where i live, there's, our high street is bombarded with, vape shops , like, really, really bad, shops, like, really, really bad, you can't walk between ten, 15 shops without there being another one, and obviously it's not nice for me as obviously i've been through a bad, bad time from all of this, but just me speaking about it is me trying to help and spread awareness to help people , and awareness to help people, and that's the most i can do. i can't take on the world, you know what i mean? because, there's that many. there's that many vape shops nowadays, they'd be very, very difficult to try and have a even bigger effect other than what i can do from just speaking. >> yeah, they really are everywhere. do you think everywhere. john, do you think there is enough awareness? i mean, you and is mean, obviously you and is talking about us now, but talking about it to us now, but do think there is enough do you think there is enough awareness there the awareness out there about the harms of vaping? because with cigarettes get the pictures, cigarettes you get the pictures, don't on on the don't you. on the, on the outside of cigarettes, it's quite the harms may quite clear what the harms may be. but you don't hear too much about harms of vaping.
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about the harms of vaping. >> first of all, you've >> well, first of all, you've got understand, know, you got to understand, you know, you and situation and i think i've lost count of the amount of interviews you and i have done together. very rare, together. ulez is a very rare, severe reaction to one severe allergic reaction to one of food flavourings within of the food flavourings within the liquid. it's not a very common situation, but what we've got to be really aware of is that there's so much misinformation out there on vaping, very similar to what we're seeing in the media around this report today, you know, the report does not state what is being, bandied around in the headlines, but there is a huge opportunity , i think, for opportunity, i think, for sensible, education programs out there. but one of the issues is there. but one of the issues is the industry itself is being , the industry itself is being, basically muzzled by the regulations that are even getting worse. so it's very hard for us, to challenge the misinformation that's out there. we rely very much on the government to do it . but as
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government to do it. but as we've seen in recent months, the government is taking actions that, frankly, are baffling to us, as far as, public health is concerned. >> so, john, i mean, there you are. you are running the industry, you're telling us how it's going and whatever at the minute. do you do you actually vape? do you, do you do it? >> i, i vape on occasion. i'm actually an ex—smoker. i used to smoke three packs of cigarettes a day, and i lost both my parents to lung cancer from smoking. so i'm very aware of the issues that are going on, but what do know is that my but what i do know is that my occasional vaping will do me absolutely no harm whatsoever, it's probably just as harmful for me as the coffee i'm drinking this morning. so i'm not worried about it at all. >> okay, gentlemen. thank you both for highlighting the argument. and people will have their say this morning. really appreciate it. john dunne. and you fisher . appreciate it. john dunne. and you fisher. thank you. keep. you and fisher. thank you. keep. well, very much well, john. thank you very much indeed. you. thank you .
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indeed. thank you. thank you. yeah. an update now. yeah. let's get an update now. what is happening wise ? >> and 7 >> and taiwan has been hit ? >> and taiwan has been hit by its strongest earthquake in 25 years, leaving people trapped in collapsed buildings and many without power. tsunami warnings have also been issued after the estimated magnitude 7.7 tremors, with residents in coastal areas of southwestern japan being urged to evacuate . one person urged to evacuate. one person has died and more than 50 have been injured . that's according been injured. that's according to the taiwanese fire department. >> sussex dog owner is the first person known to have been prosecuted for the breaking of the xl bully ban. >> patricia mckeown confessed to keeping the dog. is that her or his is that a patricia mckeown or patrick mckeown? well, anyway , they're keeping the dog at their worthing address after police contacted them on a separate matter where the magistrates court heard how the
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gentleman i'm now told involved had not applied for an exemption for the animal, had not had the dog neutered and had not obtained third party insurance . obtained third party insurance. >> as a muslim teacher who branded westernised girls as lunatics and gave students advice on how to get girls, has been banned from teaching indefinitely. akua khan, who taught english at harborne academy in birmingham, was banned after a teaching regulation agency panel found he had undermined fundamental british values of individual liberty and mutual respect. >> talking about that throughout the program this morning, let us know your views. balmoral castle is to open up to the public. yeah, to you this summer, tickets will be limited to 40 per day and small groups will be shown around by experienced guides taking in several rooms used by the king and queen, the ticket will set you back £100.
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>> yeah, so 40 a day. >> buy 100. what's that? £4,000 a day they'll make. yeah. >> on that. not too bad, is it? would you do that on a trip to scotland? you love scotland? no, no. okay. >> scotland. i've been there to around balmoral and whatever it is, don't think so. i mean is, but i don't think so. i mean i've been, i've been to various royal in the past and, royal places in the past and, there surprising from the point of view that you look and you say they actually on that say they actually sit on that they that electric fire, is they have that electric fire, is that where's plasma tv? that where's their plasma tv? oh, that where's their plasma tv? 0h, don't, that where's their plasma tv? oh, don't, you know, oh, yeah. they don't, you know, i would not like to live like a royal. would you not? oh, absolutely not. would you not would have little butlers come around with cups of tea and whatever. that's all you get. but i mean, you don't have, you don't have a screen tv. don't have a big screen tv. there's no cinema room. there's no tables there. what's no snooker tables there. what's the point where are the comforts? my idea of being rich and being is the cinema room. >> yeah, i'm with you. i'd like
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a walk in wardrobe. yeah, that's when i know i've made it. do you have a walk in wardrobe? i bet you do. >> so, so tired of walking. >> so, so tired of walking. >> yeah, you definitely do. >> yeah, you definitely do. >> no. >> no. >> what? what do you mean? you're you walk inside the wardrobe? >> yeah, it's like but >> yeah, it's like a room, but it's a wardrobe. it's a whole room. >> well, i do have a room that's full of clothes, but i wasn't aware that it was a walk in wardrobe. >> is it? >> is it? >> that's what i want in my life. what now. life. that's what i've now. >> i've it too many shoes. >> i've made it too many shoes. >> i've made it too many shoes. >> probably. >> probably. >> do you have too many shoes as well? >> yeah. oh, we've got that in common. >> but i can't wear them. oh, because i'm because of the state that i'm in. my feet will swell in all sorts of things. so, you should the ones i'm wearing should see the ones i'm wearing today, anyway, things. what would you were a would you like if you were a royal? now, outside is a different matter. gardens. different matter. their gardens. >> you like that, do >> and. oh, you like that, do you? grounds. you? the grounds. >> i mean, that might be very good. all of that. anyway and if you're heading out and about today, what's going to be today, what's it going to be doing? wise? well, doing? weather wise? well, i've got tell before we go got to tell you before we go into the weather, this just. >> oh, this is good.
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>> oh, this is good. >> this makes me angry. oh. >> this makes me angry. oh. >> so bad. >> so bad. >> it's good. >> it's good. >> bad it is good. and >> well, so bad it is good. and guess what? it's done nothing but for the past 3 or but rain for the past 3 or 4 months, right? but we could face, as i predicted, hosepipe bans summer. despite bans in the summer. despite record downpours. and, record winter downpours. and, you is? because you know why that is? because these companies, these these water companies, these utility , do not dig utility companies, do not dig enough holes. they don't dig reservoirs. there's rain down everywhere. but we're told it's our fault because we shower too much or we water the garden and we should be punished for it. do you know what? i think there should be an absolute public what's the word like disobedience campaign that if they impose hosepipe bans, we should just say, forget it, we're going to water our garden, we're going to water our garden, we're going to do all these things because we are not the villains this. it's villains in all of this. it's the companies, and they the utility companies, and they are spending their money to are not spending their money to create reservoirs so that we don't to worry about this. don't have to worry about this. because reason started because the reason i started talking this is it was talking about this is it was raining again this morning. >> course it was. >> of course it was. >> yeah, was raining all of >> yeah, it was raining all of yesterday as well. we've got a
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growing population and a reservoir been built in reservoir hasn't been built in this over 30 years. this country for over 30 years. >> so alex burkill, what's it going today? going to be like today? >> where's the rain going to fall today ? fall today? >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on gb news. who's . news. who's. >> morning. here's your latest gb news weather hit. brought to you in association with the met office. a bit of a north south split today. drier brighter towards the south, but further north there's a quite a bit of rain around. heavy persistent rain around. heavy persistent rain across parts of northern ireland and southern scotland this all this this morning. all of this breaking up a little bit, so turning a bit more showery as we go through the afternoon, but nonetheless pretty wet. nonetheless staying pretty wet. although the far north although across the far north northwest scotland northwest of scotland mostly dry. also some decent dry bright weather across central southern england, bright sunny england, some bright sunny spells, a scattering of spells, just a scattering of showers watch out for. showers to watch out for. feeling pleasantly any feeling pleasantly warm in any sunshine highs around 1516 sunshine with highs around 1516 celsius, markedly colder celsius, but markedly colder than further north. as we
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than this further north. as we go through the end of the day, there will be a spell of more persistent rain feeding into parts of the southwest, gradually its way across gradually making its way across parts england and and parts of england and wales and staying cloudy and wet staying pretty cloudy and wet across much of scotland too. and the bring some hill the rain could bring some hill snow, to slightly lower snow, perhaps to slightly lower levels as we go levels for a time. as we go through the early hours of tomorrow. otherwise, and touch tomorrow. otherwise, and a touch of frost possible the far of frost possible across the far north—west scotland first north—west of scotland first thing , a milder thing on thursday, a milder start elsewhere and again is start elsewhere and again it is going to be quite cloudy with outbreaks of rain for many of us. watch out for some heavy bursts of pushing their way bursts of rain pushing their way eastwards southern areas eastwards across southern areas as through the morning as we go through the morning could some on the could cause some spray on the roads some difficult travel roads and some difficult travel conditions, often conditions, otherwise often quite and a few showery quite cloudy and a few showery outbreaks here or there. perhaps something more persistent something a bit more persistent pushing later pushing into the southwest later temperatures will be temperatures for many will be similar to today, with highs around celsius by that warm around 16 celsius by that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news.
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sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> right now ease you into our biggest giveaway of the year so far. what is it? >> yes, well, it's your chance to win a £10,000 greek cruise for two. but that's not it. no there's also £10,000 worth of cash and a whole host of luxury travel gifts, so your 2025 houday travel gifts, so your 2025 holiday could be on us. >> see, we could have given you a £40 trip around balmoral as part of £4,000 trip, but we thought , well, part of £4,000 trip, but we thought, well, there's part of £4,000 trip, but we thought , well, there's £100, thought, well, there's £100, wasn't it a £100 ticket for 40 people? >> remember you did for what did you say it was £4,000 a year. >> anyway, we're giving you £10,000 trip and £10,000 in cash. >> and here's what you do. if you want to be in with a chance, you want to be in with a chance, you could win our biggest prize giveaway so far. >> first, there's an incredible £10,000 in tax free cash to spend however you like. plus, courtesy of variety cruises, a bespoke seven night small boat cruise for two worth £10,000 with flights, meals, excursions
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and drinks included. your next houday and drinks included. your next holiday could be on us. choose any one of their 2025 greek adventures and find your home at sea. we'll also send you packing with these luxury travel gifts, for a chance to win a prize worth over £20,000. text win to 63232. text cost £2 plus one standard network rate message or post your name and number. two gb zero four, po box 8690 derby rd one nine, double two uk only entrants must be 18 or over. lines closed at 5 pm. on the 26th of april. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com forward slash win. please check the closing time if listening or watching on demand. good luck i watching on demand. good luck! >> i love that great music, don't you ? don't you? >> yeah. oh great. made my day. that has . that has. >> i feel like i'm on holiday. i don't need to need a lot. just a bit of music. >> and paul's got the sport after the breakwater. you got my friend, i do. >> i'll do some plate smashing
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with ellie. i'll do it to music, premier league last night. plenty of games going on. most were brighton were draws. actually, brighton are successful team in are the most successful team in the premier league it comes the premier league when it comes to money. and adam peaty, our greatest ever swimmer. he's back to we'll do that to form again. we'll do that shortly
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i >> -- >> and the football results. last night, west ham won spurs one. bournemouth one. crystal palace one nil. burnley one. wolves one. newcastle one. everton one. >> honestly, it's like alexander james alexander gordon this is magnificent. >> you got a good voice for it. hahaha not ha ha ha. full of one. >> a lot of one ones in there paul >> that's it. i'm done now. that's all i had for you. that's it. you just done it all. yeah.
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they were lots of one ones. west ham against spurs because we had clive on yesterday didn't clive allen on yesterday didn't we. is going to be we. thought this is going to be a spectacle. expecting goals. and going know and it's going to you know i tell you a really interesting thing. our friend jim dale weather expert jim dale said to me he's and said, look, me and he's and he said, look, there's lot of when it comes there's a lot of when it comes to sport, weather huge to sport, weather has a huge say in so if it rains in what goes on. so if it rains and the weather is very wet, the ground is slippery and the it affects the game and you're more likely to get lots of goals . so likely to get lots of goals. so i'm thinking spurs, west ham, it was miserable out there, but it was miserable out there, but it was one. jim you know what? was one one. jim you know what? i expecting more. but did i was expecting more. but did kalvin phillips play last night. no didn't come on. no he no he didn't come on. no he didn't didn't come on didn't he didn't come on yesterday. it was lot of yesterday. but it was a lot of it just wasn't the spectacle. west ham set sat back and west ham set back sat back and spurs had a go. it was just a lot of little sideways. there wasn't enough shots. that's 65% possession. spurs only four shots were target. so shots that were on target. so west ham seven. >> spurs needed more than a point really in that it needed a winner. >> yeah, absolutely. >> yeah, absolutely. >> i mean go through a few >> i mean i'll go through a few
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of the others. i've got a few other bits and pieces. i'll keep it quick as well. newcastle drew one one with everton, everton 13th straight premier league game the game without a win and it's the worst. ever was 1937 worst. their worst ever was 1937 when they went 14, so . but a when they went 14, so. but a good result though to go away to newcastle. i think it was a good result. one one dominic calvert—lewin scored. forest beat fulham three one. huge win for so puts them three for them so that puts them three points the drop zone . then points above the drop zone. then we've got bournemouth against crystal palace, their fourth win in five games. this is now they're all they need. this is they're all they need. this is the highest ever points total. if they get another six points bournemouth. so they've done really well now burnley. wolves. what happened . there was a major what happened. there was a major problem because there was a collapsing roof. this is probably the highlight of the game. it was one one against against wolves . so there was against wolves. so there was this huge piece of metal i think we might actually have. look i don't there's don't know. that's there's a huge of metal. we'll huge piece of metal. we'll probably just probably see that in just a second in burnley. and then this
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huge piece of metal, this is this is see there's all the empty seats now. you can just about see it. someone spotted it that was coming down from the roof. there are. you see that roof. there we are. you see that little of there by the little bit of metal there by the lights? can you imagine that lights? can you imagine if that had fallen off the roof? down onto the crowd? so what they had to evacuate part of the to do was evacuate part of the jemmy mcilroy because jemmy mcilroy stand, because that fallen that could have just fallen straight way down. that's straight the way down. so that's why there's nobody sitting there just of this dangling just because of this dangling piece of metal. i don't know whether it's a metaphor for their season before the game started or during the game. it was during during game. was during the during the game. hold is that up there? hold on. what is that up there? so that was was the so that was that was the highlight. the highlight. that was the highlight. that was the highlight game. so one highlight of that game. so one one up there okay. one that ended up there okay. >> so we were talking about brighton. they manage the brighton. yeah. they manage the club and club well financially and physically . physically. >> oh absolutely. the blooms and paul barber just so well >> oh absolutely. the blooms and paul barberjust so well run. paul barber just so well run. you know it's almost it almost gets boring when people say how well run brighton is . gets boring when people say how well run brighton is. but it truly is brighton and hove albion. they have where you get
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clubs that are so much in trouble with profit and sustainability rules. oh, you know what? spending too much money, the club's in trouble, other clubs going out of business. they've set a record for the biggest profit ever made by a british football club. now, when it comes to finance stuff, it's not really what i get real my interest in. but this is incredible. worldwide, only barcelona have made more money than brighton and last year £122.8 million pounds in profit. and if you think how much they spend on, you know, they have to spend on, you know, they have to spend on, you know, they have to spend on players wages , etc, spend on players wages, etc, backroom staff, oh it's incredible. so includes 22 million they made for graham potter included chelsea selling players but they also have success. it's their best ever season on the pitch well. success. it's their best ever seaand)n the pitch well. success. it's their best ever seaand)n th they:h well. success. it's their best ever seaand )n th they have well. success. it's their best ever seaand)n th they have aall. success. it's their best ever seaand)n th they have a roof >> and also they have a roof that's falling. that's not falling. >> do have roof that >> they do have a roof that doesn't fall down. it's a very solid roof. >> so they've spent they've spent money i spent money on i have absolutely, yeah. >> turn to swimming and >> let's turn to swimming and we've adam yes. we've got adam peaty. yes. right. tell about adam. right. tell us about adam. >> well it's the gb swimming
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championships at the moment which you think. there used which you think. yeah there used to the day when we get to be the day when we get swimming on grandstand. everybody sees him. i always feel swimmers because feel sorry for swimmers because the only time it's like adam peaty. he's the greatest swimmer we had. yeah. and the we have ever had. yeah. and the only anybody talks only time anybody really talks about him is probably when he's in olympics. he was unbeaten in the olympics. he was unbeaten for years from 2014. then for eight years from 2014. then three years ago after the olympics after he won another gold, just hit a slippery slope . gold, just hit a slippery slope. mentally. he was struggling, struggled with alcohol and it just wasn't the adam peaty of the past. and i've got to say that of all the sports people i've met over the years, i've never met anybody quite so dnven never met anybody quite so driven as adam peaty. i mean, the main the man is incredible, but he's obviously something has triggered this. >> how old is he ? >> how old is he? >> how old is he? >> oh, god, i don't even know. he's probably. he's probably around 30. he's he's but he is so successful. but now coming into the olympics he's now coming back into form. so i'm really, really pleased for him
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because it was a real wobble that went through , and now that he went through, and now he's out other he's coming out of the other side of it. but he is an incredible human being and it always makes you wonder what it is . that's and always makes you wonder what it is. that's and it always makes you wonder what it is . that's and it often is. that's true. and it often makes wonder when i think of makes me wonder when i think of how how sports people are how how great sports people are put there's something put together. there's something that drives them, isn't it? there's something that drives them. >> other people don't have. >> other people don't have. >> something went wrong and >> and something went wrong and i'm what it was. but i'm not sure what it was. but anyway, he's back anyway, it looks like he's back on track again. on the right track again. >> this world is. >> no, this world is. >> no, this world is. >> it's a boring world. too many people to give opinions people afraid to give opinions or yeah. roy keane or say things. yeah. roy keane as a football pundit is not one of them, right? >> yeah, exactly. >> yeah, exactly. >> so there was a couple of things i want to say yesterday. i pointed out, guardiola's, attitude towards jack grealish, the rent on the pitch. >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> after the arsenal city game on sunday. yeah. and he did stuff with the lad chastising him on the pitch after the game, which i think should have been kept for the dressing room, grealish responded quite well to it, haaland. as well, he
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it, but haaland. as well, he basically said erling haaland , basically said erling haaland, roy keane basically said this. he played almost like a league two player. after the striker failed to spark in sunday's drab nil nil title showdown in arsenal. i mean, haaland is a superb player. yep, he did not have a good game. he's not used very well by city. he sort of left on his own to do what he has to do. but keane , if it has to do. but keane, if it wasn't for roy keane and very few like him, i mean gary neville's very, very good. >> souness was good until they gave him an elbow soon as very, very good, as well. >> what do you have? there's >> but what do you have? there's a of i could, i could name a load of i could, i could name and say what. so that's it. we get that's the best opinion you get that's the best opinion you get or whatever. i mean, these bonng get or whatever. i mean, these boring tunnel interviews that reporters do, you know. great game today. yeah what are you going say. it wasn't a going to say. no, it wasn't a great game today. you know it s a waste of time. all that tunnel interviewing stuff. >> but, you know, they're nervous of managers.
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nervous of managers. >> nervous of managers. >> is the problem. there's >> this is the problem. there's a spoken to. i've a lot i've spoken to. i've spoken a well known spoken to a very well known commentator. just other day, commentator. just the other day, and saying that there a and he's saying that there was a lot of the talking. lot of them, the talking. and there's that are there's a few of them that are very frosty. obviously jurgen klopp, guardiola and even ange postecoglou days. and postecoglou these days. and they're, they're just they're very upsetting very nervous about upsetting them. so the thing is it's either you go for it, but then you get some clubs. if you upset them they'll say we're you're banned, you're not coming back to so that's the to the club. so that's the reason. so it's great have it. >> it's the way alex ferguson used to at man united. used to operate at man united. you you're banned from you know you're banned from interviews. good interviews. that's no good is it. and the and the tv companies, all just about companies, it's all just about getting games, the getting the games, getting the sponsorship that. so sponsorship for all of that. so they're going to back as they're not going to back you as a reporter. for asking a reporter. no for asking a difficult question. but but roy keane for him. that's keane thank god for him. that's my yeah. and i think my view. yeah. and i think guardiola is a superb manager. >> absolutely. guardiola is a superb manager. >> butolutely. guardiola is a superb manager. >> but i utely. guardiola is a superb manager. >> but i reckon be a right >> but i reckon he'd be a right bore to live with. >> or do reckon . absolutely. >> or do you reckon. absolutely. >> or do you reckon. absolutely. >> giving you all this all the time. >> well he's, he lives and breathes the game so much. >> yeah. you know it means, it
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means so much to him. and he's had success, success, success. but that has to come at a price. you know it's the sort of person you are. >> everything. >> everything. >> does it feel like if you and i are out socialising and i was just preaching and talking about this program. yeah >> is finally what >> and which is finally what happened we up. happened last time we were up. >> yeah. mr paul coyte, but i enjoyed that. >> i enjoyed because you were so nice about it. that's what nice to me about it. that's what it zigi at 7:20. thanks >> paul zigi at 7:20. thanks very much. >> do you stay with us still to come, we'll be looking through the stories the day the biggest stories of the day with mccgwire and with scarlett mccgwire and claire that's
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next. >> gb news is the home of free speech. we were created to champion it, and we deliver it day in, day out. free speech allows us all to explore and debate openly the issues most important to us, our families, and of course, the british people having challenging conversations to enlighten each other. is why we hear all other. which is why we hear all sides of the argument.
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>> we are the people's channel. >> we are the people's channel. >> we are the people's channel. >> we will always stand by the freedom to express yourself on tv, radio and online. >> this is gb news, britain's news channel . news channel. >> welcome back to breakfast. time is 641. let's take a look at some of the newspapers. now, whether aid worker deaths in gaza dominate the front pages. the telegraph leads with the prime minister demanding answers after britons were killed in an israeli airstrike. the daily mail continues with the three british aid workers killed in gaza. british aid workers killed in gaza . the guardian leads with gaza. the guardian leads with charities halting gaza aid after a drone attack, and the times comments on sir keir starmer targeting voters who want more housing. >> well, joining us now to go through those stories and lots more scarlett mccgwire and claire muldoon. very good to see you both. and morning, morning . you both. and morning, morning. we're leading with the missile
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strike. whatever it was on the food convoy in gaza , scarlett, i food convoy in gaza, scarlett, i this reeks this really this is targeted. this was three separate vehicles over 1.6 miles, and each were hit separately. >> i know, i mean, what an and so it was targeted. yeah. i mean , this wasn't just a missile liv golf. no, no. >> and they were these were three. >> but what's worse is that the people who were hit first went to the second vehicle where they were hit again. so by the third, the time the third one, all the aid workers were killed. and you just think. and then and then netanyahu goes, well, that's war. and you think, yeah , that's war. and you think, yeah, that's your war. i mean, this is this is really , really serious is really, really serious information was given. >> the route was given . >> the route was given. absolutely. these people as to where they were going and what vehicles they were in. so either the biggest moron on the planet was behind this or, they
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deliberately did it. >> i know, and you just have to ask questions about about the effect . i mean, i mean, because effect. i mean, i mean, because what's so terrible is so much of the they're not going to aid workers are now being pulled out of gaza. yeah. right. so that that the ship was turned back, the ship was turned back even less food. but 200 aid workers have been killed in gaza by israeli strikes. i mean, this is absolutely terrible . and the absolutely terrible. and the israelis say, oh, you know, there isn't really a food problem in gaza. it's hamas who's taking it all. but actually, i mean, there's complete and utter chaos in gaza because you needed i mean, it was interesting that the three brits who died were security people . i mean, they weren't people. i mean, they weren't there to they were there to make sure the food got distributed properly. properly, i mean , the properly. properly, i mean, the other people who died were were aid workers and, and you need
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security people because , security people because, because, i mean, it's not just dangerous from the israelis, but actually you need security people to make sure this food is being distributed properly without them . without them, without them. without them, there's chaos without them. it's sort of the strongest gets there. i think it's a terrible story . story. >> and claire, what they used to mean, we don't know if this came from a tank, from the air. if it was ground missiles, handheld missiles, we don't , we don't missiles, we don't, we don't know yet and i don't see why that hasn't been announced yet. >> well exactly. i agree. and it's as scarlett said, it will be anarchy in gaza and the gaza strip if they cannot get that humanitarian aid in. and, you know, do we know the nationalities of the aid workers 7 nationalities of the aid workers ? are they all palestinian? you know, it surely every life matters. it doesn't matter what nationality you are, what religion you are. this war on the gaza strip between hamas,
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palestinian and israeli forces are just is just horrendous and it has to be stopped at all costs. whereas david cameron, now when he was calling for a ceasefire, why isn't other people saying now we need to deal with this, we need to get netanyahu, we need to sit him down and we need to find out what's happening. do you remember that they sent all the refugees rafah and then the refugees to rafah and then the size of what, 4 or 5 football pitches? and then netanyahu targeted at rafah and said he was going to target rafah, where we are still selling arms to the israelis? >> well, that's the next question, isn't it? alicia kearns, the chairman of the foreign affairs committee, has said if israel is not committing itself international itself to international humanitarian , it would have humanitarian law, it would have implications intelligence implications for intelligence sharing and arms sales. and that's going to be the question whether we should be scaling back on intelligence sharing. >> what are we doing? >> what are we doing? >> we're killing that's >> we're killing people. that's exactly >> we're killing people. that's exa precisely. claire i mean, you >> precisely. claire i mean, you know, the these these arms sales
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are being used to kill palestinians. and as it happens, aid workers and journalists. i mean, it is incredible the way these people are being killed. i mean, what are we up to, 33, 34,000? i mean, how many people have to die before we say no? enoughis have to die before we say no? enough is enough. and they go on about the hostages . well, so about the hostages. well, so far, an israeli strike has managed to free three hostages, a ceasefire managed to free over 100, 100. and that's what we want. and that's what actually you know, and there are now, demonstrations in israel against netanyahu because they realise that this is not working . that this is not working. >> i was listening to an israeli woman this morning, actually, who said she was so proud of her country, and she loves her country, and she loves her country so much. but she is appalled at what is being carried netanyahu's carried out by netanyahu's government. there's a lot of people that. people like that. >> claire, yesterday >> and claire, yesterday i wanted to speak to you. >> yesterday, i wanted your views on, this, hate crime bill
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in scotland . yeah. and mr humza in scotland. yeah. and mr humza yousaf, who always seems angry , yousaf, who always seems angry, he seems for such a young man. i always think he speaks in a very intimidating and threatening way. i find his tone always very angry. he's represented well. i'll say what i think he's representing, but it's just, you know, i just say, lighten up, mate, but he doesn't lighten up now with this hate crime bill, j.k. rowling comes out and criticises it yesterday. what is your take? because i think lots of english people and irish people and welsh people can talk about this, but we want to hear what scottish people think about this. what do you think scottish people? >> know that the scots >> i know that from the scots that that my family and that still that my family and friends are still there, are absolutely appalled at the money wasting. this wasting. not only that, this bill contributed to the bill has contributed to the fiscal purse, but also we need to remember this was a bill that was brought in in 2021, and it's the difficulty of it, the legislation of it that's taken three years for it to come to any form of fruition . who knew any form of fruition. who knew the date would be april the
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first for this to be brought in? the biggest april fool of the snp has made, in my view, at this point it cannot go on. it's unsustainable and people have to vote with their feet at the next general election. get the snp cabal out because it is just an absolute anathema. this law , or absolute anathema. this law, or scarlet scotland, is a complete sin bin of people who hate each other in in various ways , and other in in various ways, and this is needed. >> i mean, i don't know, i'm only putting it out there, claire, you know, i mean , i claire, you know, i mean, i mean, i, i don't know whether i agree with claire or not. >> what i certainly am finding really difficult is jk rowling's tweets because her her absolute sort of phobia about trans people. and you think she's not phobic. >> scarlett . well, claire, she's >> scarlett. well, claire, she's stating biological fact. >> well, i, i happen to believe that it sort of live and let live and if a few people feel
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very, very unhappy in the sex in which they were born and they want to change, and this has been going on this there's nothing new about this . nothing new about this. >> you finish. you didn't finish there, scarlett. you said they wanted change then you wanted to change and then you moved change what? moved on. change what? >> their gender. >> change? their gender. >> change? their gender. >> gender? you can change your genden >> gender? you can change your gender, but can't change gender, but you can't change your sex. >> p- pn- your sex. >> want change their >> so they want to change their genden >> so they want to change their gender. actually, i mean, gender. and actually, i mean, i remember, years ago remember, i mean, years ago before being appalled , when some before being appalled, when some poor woman at a, at an all all woman at newnham college, cambridge, which is all female, was outed because she was trans. i mean , you just think by and by i mean, you just think by and by and large, why can't we just let people be and why do we have to have this this the thing is it's affecting other people. >> letting them be is fine, but then it affects how other people have to behave and what other people have to accept it. >> but this law, but this law bringing in not one, 0.1% of the population, that's not even
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equivalent to what the number of trans in scotland actually is. but this law , humza yousaf but this law, humza yousaf himself has said there is such a high benchmark for it actually to get to court that the police scotland now have said, well, look, we don't actually have the guidelines , we don't have the guidelines, we don't have the tools to be effective to and enable us to protect those that need to be protected. but i'll tell you something else that's eamonn will will know to himself if in glasgow and the 4th of july they have the orange walks , july they have the orange walks, that's completely anti—catholic and that's completely anti —catholic and protected that's completely anti—catholic and protected . and that religion is protected. this law is going to be an absolute farce. scarlet, because scotland has got very sectarian issues knee deep in it. in fact, especially when you have the old firm games, which is particularly this weekend , which particularly this weekend, which is rangers versus celtic, it's horrendous. >> surely that is covered by this as well. >> it is, but how is it going to be policed? >> but it's clear that it's clear this law isn't going to work isn't it. i mean the police have i mean, you know, j.k. rowling has said said, you
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rowling has said has said, you know, do me if you can. and the police have said, no, we're not going mean , clearly what going to. i mean, clearly what i am, what i saying is, is, is am, what i am saying is, is, is actually there's nothing great about speech . i think the i about hate speech. i think the i don't think anyone does think there is falling. right. >> i don't think anyone is saying there's anything great about hate speech, but i would far rather out in the open far rather it be out in the open . i would far rather i knew what i was dealing with. i far, far, rather i could hear what was being said. it's my right to being said. and it's my right to being said. and it's my right to be offended not. it's be offended or not. and it's their right to say whatever they want me. their right to say whatever they warand me. their right to say whatever they warand he. their right to say whatever they warand i would come away with, >> and i would come away with, you if i was scottish and you know, if i was scottish and voting, i'd be saying, what sort of we have as of eejits do we have as politicians that time and politicians that waste time and time and money all of this time and money on? all of this is something that can only be implemented we just put implemented again, we just put it there. mean, i think it out there. i mean, i think a lot of politicians are egypt's. i think the system absolutely eamonn worse the people. eamonn worse than the people. but this is a this mr but i think this is a this mr angry humza himself there, there's he's always got something to there's always
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something. >> and do you know what. there's always something else. he takes his mind off the ferries, the calmac deals, the education on the drink, the drugs, the minimum unit spent for alcohol units. >> it's awful. if i was running scotland or northern ireland or anywhere, you'd do a betterjob than him. well, i would be saying we are proud of our country. we are. let's build up everything that we are really good at and whatever. with him. it's like, i think scotland, i don't know if i want to go there like scotland had john logie baird invented tv and baird invented the tv and alexander fleming penicillin there was. >> we've got such great, heritage in scotland. we should be building on that. we had fantastic tertiary education, fantastic tertiary education, fantastic education services . fantastic education services. now we've got nothing. okay. because of the snp, not in spite of. >> let's talk about another place that may have something. it's a place called homs chapel, not named after me, but, >> but it could be. >> but it could be.
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>> i nearly bought a house in holmes chapel once. >> did you? yeah, for that reason. just. yeah. for that reason? >> yeah. yeah. >> yeah. yeah. >> was it not because it was close to manchester united? mr holmes? that was the real reason. >> and, you know, so. but anyway , nearly, nearly came to fruition, but the whole thing about holmes chapel is claire, who lives there. >> well , the one and only harry >> well, the one and only harry mighty st giles' from one direction, or as they're now known, no direction . this is a known, no direction. this is a beautiful story because there's a 5000 people travel to see where harry styles had his first kiss in the via near the viaduct. >> his first kiss. he's done a few since then. harry the visit, the chinese restaurant that he took taylor swift to. i think we might have our own dolly land here. actually, in holmes chapel. >> he worked in the bakery, didn't he? >> he did. he had a saturday job. yeah so that's all you gen—zers out there? go and get saturday jobs and then you might end up a superstar. >> so what's so lovely about
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this story is that they're looking volunteers to take looking for volunteers to take tour groups around, and you have tour groups around, and you have to harry styles look alike, to be a harry styles look alike, obviously. so this is great. finally all these all these sort of teenage girls and older , can of teenage girls and older, can actually do something with their obsession with harry styles. this is this is. >> we'll have to let my sister know she's a massive super fan. >> is she? >> is she? >> oh, yeah. i took her to see harry styles last year. she was a wreck, an absolute wreck. standing there crying her eyes out. oh, get grip. i see. but out. oh, get a grip. i see. but we can send her in this direction. yeah. >> no, i have a family. kosovo come and stay with and they come and stay with me. and they came they came over last came over. they came over last year to see harry styles. they're coming this they're coming again this weekend a weekend so i can. oh, he's a talented lad. weekend so i can. oh, he's a taleheed lad. weekend so i can. oh, he's a talehe islad. weekend so i can. oh, he's a talehe is very good looking. >> he is very good looking. >> he is very good looking. >> talented lad actually. >> talented lad actually. >> pretty sure harry's >> well, i'm pretty sure harry's family lived there. i family still lived there. i think his mum still does. >> yeah, yeah , that's that's >> yeah, yeah, that's that's what it said. >> what part of that did you not understand? i think his his family. >> i think his family, we were getting on so well i think his
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mum mum's there. getting on so well i think his mum mum's there . oh getting on so well i think his mum mum's there . on we were mum mum's there. on we were getting on so well . getting on so well. >> he is very, he is very close to his mum and he's very humble as well. when we did go to that and i don't have much to do with harry styles, but when we did go to that concert last year, he said he was really grateful to his he seemed very his family. he seemed very humble. that nice? yeah i >> isn't that nice? yeah i a nice boy who loves his mum. my son. please note. yeah, we like people who love their mum. >> we do. >> yeah. we do. >> yeah. we do. >> property i ever bought >> first, property i ever bought was in a place was an apartment in a place called stranmillis road in belfast. that was all very belfast. and that was all very good. just three good. it was, what, just three floors apartments? whatever floors of apartments? whatever and that was it. until the belfast tour bus would stop outside everybody. and an open top bus. that old point. and then the tannoy would go and i hear to the right, that's where our tv presenter eamonn holmes lives , and you'd be there in lives, and you'd be there in your dressing gown. >> i think that's brilliant . oh >> i think that's brilliant. oh dear me guys.
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>> thank you. >> thank you. >> price of fame eamonn isn't it terrible. >> no one's ever done it since so that's fine. >> i haven't had a day off since. >> let's we'll see you again in 40 minutes time, guys. >> thank you very much. and, claire, thank you very much. >> done a lot of >> so we've done a lot of talking about rain and who's not collecting it. alex burke will tell us where it will be. >> brighter outlook with boxt >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> morning. here's your latest gb news weather hit, brought to you in association with the met office. a bit of a north south split today. drier, brighter towards the south, but further north there's a quite a bit of rain around. heavy, persistent rain around. heavy, persistent rain across parts of northern ireland and southern scotland this morning. ireland and southern scotland this morning . all of this this morning. all of this breaking up a little bit so turning a bit more showery as we go through the afternoon, but nonetheless staying pretty wet. although far north although across the far north northwest mostly northwest of scotland, mostly dry. some decent dry bright dry. also some decent dry bright weather across central southern england, some bright sunny spells, scattering of
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spells, just a scattering of showers out for. showers to watch out for. feeling pleasantly warm in any sunshine highs around sunshine with highs around 1516 celsius, colder celsius, but markedly colder than north. as we than this further north. as we go through the end of the day, there will be a spell of more persistent rain feeding into parts of the southwest, gradually making its way across parts of england and wales and staying pretty cloudy wet staying pretty cloudy and wet across scotland. and across much of scotland. two and the could bring some hill the rain could bring some hill snow, to slightly lower snow, perhaps to slightly lower levels as we go levels for a time as we go through the early hours of tomorrow. and touch tomorrow. otherwise, and a touch of frost possible the far of frost possible across the far north—west scotland first north—west of scotland first thing , a milder thing on thursday, a milder start elsewhere and again is start elsewhere and again it is going to be quite cloudy with outbreaks of rain for many of us. watch out for some heavy bursts of rain pushing their way eastwards southern areas eastwards across southern areas as we go through the morning could some the could cause some spray on the roads some difficult roads and some difficult travel conditions, otherwise often quite cloudy and few showery quite cloudy and a few showery outbreaks or there. perhaps outbreaks here or there. perhaps something persistent something a bit more persistent pushing southwest later pushing into the southwest later temperatures many will be temperatures for many will be similar today, with highs similar to today, with highs around celsius by that warm around 16 celsius by that warm feeling inside from boxt
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boilers. >> sponsors of weather on gb news.
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>> good morning. it's 7:00 on wednesday, the 3rd of april. >> and you're tuned in to breakfast here on gb news. eamonn holmes and ellie costello reporting for duty . reporting for duty. >> the prime minister demands answers as three british aid workers are killed by an israeli missile strike. >> a muslim teacher has been banned for saying islam will take over the world, and branding western girls as lunatics. more on that. your views very welcome. gb views at gb news. com at 720 this morning we'll be debating. >> is it ever appropriate to bnng >> is it ever appropriate to bring your children into the office? >> no .
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>> no. >> no. >> stand up. >> stand up. >> that and another debate after 8:00. tenerife. right. locals head out there at badly behaved british tourists. we'll be debating this this morning whether britain's are to be avoided abroad . avoided abroad. >> and it is full this morning. three one ones out of five games in the premier league last night, with wins for forest and bournemouth as football clubs break rules for overspending. brighton and hove albion are making a fortune and talking about making a fortune . a punter about making a fortune. a punter has put £17 each way, bet on the horses this week and is now an extremely rich man. >> morning. whilst there's quite a bit of rain across northern parts today, it's better news further south if it's dry and brighter weather you're after. i'll have the details shortly. >> and thanks very much for having your say this morning on
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the gaza situation. and these aid workers who have been killed, archie says it's terrible that they have died. there must be an investigation into that. we're going to be talking about that next. and, stephen says there's a veteran of the british army. it was clear to us if we were mobilised to a theatre of war, we were in harm's way. and whether you're an aid worker or not, your life is in jeopardy. an aid worker or not, your life is in jeopardy . and let's now is in jeopardy. and let's now talk to james heale about this. and what's your whole view on what has happened ? what has happened? >> well, i think that what's so striking about this is the kind of unanimity of opinion on it in westminster, on it clearly . westminster, on it clearly. >> obviously, lots of aid workers have died, but not three british aid workers in this kind of incident. and that's the reason why i think a lot of british politicians today feel very emboldened criticise very emboldened to criticise israel and what's happened here. even themselves even the israelis themselves have said, you know, there was a mistake here. the israeli president apologised president has now apologised overnight. what's overnight. and i think what's interesting overnight us interesting is that overnight us president has come out president biden has come out in this year a tough
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this year facing a tough re—election and said, you know, he is heartbroken and appalled by well. so this isn't by this as well. so this isn't just british thing. just a british thing. >> what about netanyahu >> this is what about netanyahu in he can say, in in all of this, he can say, well, this is terrible. this is awful. question. why did he awful. big question. why did he not about it? is the not know about it? is the military operating independently not know about it? is the mipoliticians, ting independently not know about it? is the mipoliticians, org independently not know about it? is the mipoliticians, or dordependently of politicians, or do politicians know about this? and netanyahu's pretending they didn't . didn't. >> so i think about three different israeli officials sort of have to sign this off. there's a legal adviser, there's a military adviser, and all of this, when they go through this process for launching strikes, i'm it have come i'm not sure it would have come up personally as a kind up to him personally as a kind of political level. i think of political level. but i think clearly netanyahu has adopted a policy quite a hard line on policy of quite a hard line on all this and really a kind of all of this and really a kind of safety approach in terms all of this and really a kind of sa'dealing approach in terms all of this and really a kind of sa'dealing withroach in terms all of this and really a kind of sa'dealing with hamas, terms all of this and really a kind of sa'dealing with hamas, which is of dealing with hamas, which is obviously, think there's obviously, if they think there's a operative here, a hamas operative in here, they were going it out were going to take it out regardless what happened with regardless of what happened with the workers well. the other aid workers as well. in his own political in terms of his own political situation, there was protests. thousands of israelis protested against sunday so against him on sunday night. so i that really there is a i think that really there is a point the issue point where, you know, the issue
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of competence is coming of kind of competence is coming up say, hang on a up where people say, hang on a sec, you're killing the wrong people, alienating us internationally. actually, people, alienating us intythinkonally. actually, people, alienating us intythink he'sy. actually, people, alienating us intythink he's coming ctually, people, alienating us intythink he's coming under', do think he's coming under pressure right israel. so pressure right now in israel. so it's really keep it's something to really keep an eye over coming weeks, eye on over the coming weeks, particularly he's isolated particularly if he's isolated from america, which, of course, is most important is israel's most important ally. >> you think >> well, what do you think happens next, james, diplomatically, think diplomatically, do you think this turning point? this could be a turning point? because saw, didn't the because we saw, didn't we, the israeli being called israeli ambassador being called in first time in yesterday for the first time in yesterday for the first time in years? yeah. in 12 years? yeah. >> i mean, i think it was more a flash point than turning point flash point than a turning point in i think, you know, right in that i think, you know, right now about how warning. now it's more about how warning. but i think if similar incidents like this do then like this do happen, then i think is to think clearly israel is going to find itself increasingly denied allies because allies within the uk because politicians willing to politicians are willing to support to a point, support it up to a point, obviously remembers what happened october, happened on the 7th of october, etc. but of the and etc. but some of the conduct and way which been way in which they've been operating is clearly very concerning. that's what concerning. and that's what people are saying and people are saying publicly and what they're saying even more vociferously, privately as well. >> was deliberate. >> look, this was deliberate. this this this was targeted, this was three over this was targeted, this was thr
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from ground or if it was a helicopter aeroplane involved or a tank whatever. when helicopter aeroplane involved or a ta of whatever. when helicopter aeroplane involved or a ta of the, hatever. when helicopter aeroplane involved or a ta of the, the ever. when helicopter aeroplane involved or a ta of the, the people when helicopter aeroplane involved or a ta of the, the people in when helicopter aeroplane involved or a ta of the, the people in the] two of the, the people in the first car tried to get into the second car, after the attack happened, the second car was then hit, as you said, these cars were branded . they had the cars were branded. they had the sign of the kitchen on the roofs as well. and then the third car, these were deliberately, systematically targeted. so this isn't an accident. this isn't something that just happens from, you know , a wild explosion from, you know, a wild explosion going off somewhere. and this was just unfortunate . this was was just unfortunate. this was deliberate. yeah. >> and i think so far the israelis have been pretty honest about the fact that they were the ones responsible. and there hasn't been much defence. but the only kind of defence that's been mustard the kind been selling mustard is the kind of, is war. war. of, well, this is war. war. these happen war. and these things happen in war. and yes, understand that. yes, one can understand that. but you say, eamonn but equally, as you say, eamonn there, know the there there, you know the fact there were attacks were three different attacks involved fact that involved in this, the fact that they across, according they occurred across, according to two to reports, a range of two kilometres. wasn't of kilometres. so it wasn't kind of just going off
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just one bomb going off randomly. it'sjust just one bomb going off randomly. it's just a more kind of approach it, of sustained approach to it, which reasons why which is one of the reasons why it egregious, because, as it is so egregious, because, as you the report suggests you say, the report suggests they vehicle they went from vehicle to vehicle vehicle. they went from vehicle to vehyeah. vehicle. they went from vehicle to vehyeah. well,:le. they went from vehicle to vehyeah. well, let's get more >> yeah. well, let's get more insight into the just how detailed this was. yeah security analyst will geddes we get will's take on this now, well, you know, you've been to these areas you've served there, what do you make about what went on? >> well, i mean, it's very, very difficult to say at this early stage. i mean, i think we all agree. and you know, the fog of war can present all sorts of potential challenges in terms of information and intelligence about who's doing what and where they're doing it. and i can only speculate right now, but obviously, condolences to the families , obviously, of the aid families, obviously, of the aid workers that were killed in this incident. but one of the things that certainly is happening right in gaza is it's a real right now in gaza is it's a real mesh of problems between a non—clear or unclear combatant
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on the side of hamas in terms of their integration with the civilian population. and obviously the israeli forces and the idf in terms of how they're carrying out their strategic strikes in certain key areas . strikes in certain key areas. and there are many, many different factors here. there's been 196 aid workers that have been 196 aid workers that have been killed in gaza to date, since this conflict started . and since this conflict started. and certainly having operated, as you say, in war zones and conflict zones, one of the things that obviously aid workers are always going to be prone and vulnerable to is that they are moving into various key areas to supply and support humanitarian aid, but inevitably , if you have a combatant like hamas that are using civilians as human shields, there's going to be a risk . as human shields, there's going to be a risk. now, as human shields, there's going to be a risk . now, whether that to be a risk. now, whether that inevitably has any bearing on this instance, that time will only tell when the investigation is carried out and details are revealed as to why this particular strike was undertaken. >> well, you've worked in conflict zones yourself. what we
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understand about these three british men is they were working with aid workers, but they were actually security . they were actually security. they were there to help with the safe distribution of food. we've just had an email in from a viewer. you might have heard it from steven, who's also a veteran of the british army. now, he says that were to be mobilised that if he were to be mobilised into a zone, he knows he's into a war zone, he knows he's into a war zone, he knows he's in that in harm's way and he knows that his jeopardy. now, his life is in jeopardy. now, would men be aware of would these men be aware of that? or would you think that on this that they say they this route that they say they shared the idf that they shared with the idf that they were that they say were in vehicles that they say were in vehicles that they say were clearly with were clearly branded with logos, that they would believe that they were actually safe? >> well, ali, you make a very good point. i mean, the first point is, yes, you go and operate in a conflict zone in whatever you are whatever capacity you are putting yourself directly in harm's the second side, harm's way. the second side, which is identification of which is the identification of vehicles purely by decals and by by signage , is insufficient. by signage, is insufficient. there are certain aid workers and many of the well organised aid workers. i'm not saying world central kitchen wasn't within this category, but many
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of them will provide transponders. they'll provide trackers that can be then notified to opposing forces , or, notified to opposing forces, or, if you like, the majority forces to say this is where we're operating, this is what we're doing, and you will inform them if you are supplying aid to certain specific areas. now if world central kitchen had done that, they'd provided those tags, those electronic tags, so the idf could see where their vehicles were operating. the second question and the environments within their operating the question has to then be presented to the idf as to why they targeted them. now, the one thing that we do know about hamas is that they have used civilian vehicles. they've used civilian vehicles. they've used aid vehicles. they've also used aid vehicles. they've also used ambulances to move weapons , used ambulances to move weapons, to use move resources around the place. so again, it's not as clear cut as one might initially think, but i'm i think the jury has to remain out right now until we know more information. but these three individuals, as you say, ali, were part of the
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security contingent obviously for world central kitchen. and there's got to be a question raised about them that they would have the traditional skill sets and the knowledge to know how they should be operating, where they should be operating , where they should be operating, because not only do they need to keep themselves safe, but also those that are also working within central kitchen . within world central kitchen. >> just just to get this >> well, just just to get this clear , i don't see this as an clear, i don't see this as an accident. i mean, this this looks to me as if this was, thought out . definitely. there thought out. definitely. there was a there was a plan to this. they didn't just by chance. this wasn't collateral damage or whatever it was. this was specific targeting . as yet. we specific targeting. as yet. we haven't been told. by what? by whom , where, from the sky or the whom, where, from the sky or the ground or whatever. and what is your take on it? i mean, deliberate i to be honest, damon, i agree with you. >> it is definitely a targeted attack because we see the vehicles, as you say , they vehicles, as you say, they cross—decked from one vehicle to
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another to another and there were three separate strikes which were undertaken here. the biggest question that needs to be answered here is motive . why be answered here is motive. why did they target these particular vehicles and those are the questions that i need answers to. and i think we all need answers to determine in this answers to determine why in this particular were particular instance, they were focused on. because i would agree with you. this is targeted . this is not collateral damage by any stretch. >> okay . will geddes, thank you >> okay. will geddes, thank you very much indeed the very much indeed for the security take on on all of that. thank you. james heale right. okay. so he's agreeing with me. this looks very targeted, very deliberate. what about the political fallout of all of this? >> well, i understand this morning there's a nato summit going on in brussels, and before that, expecting david that, we're expecting david cameron, secretary, cameron, the foreign secretary, to statement the to make a statement to the cameras. expect see cameras. and i expect we'll see similar kind language that similar kind of language that we've i we've seen beforehand. and i think quite think what's really quite striking that we're striking now is that we're already calls by already seeing some calls by certain like alistair certain people, like alistair burt, former office burt, the former foreign office minister, for a kind of suspension israel arms sales, suspension of israel arms sales, as . so i think that's going
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as well. so i think that's going to next key battle ground to be the next key battle ground is the legal advice about is should the legal advice about israel committing war israel committing potential war crimes from the crimes be released from the foreign second of foreign office and second of all, advice points a all, if that advice points to a breach of international are breach of international law, are we a debate we going to be in a debate around suspending arms sales to israel, happened and israel, as happened in 1982 and 2002 israel, as happened in 1982 and 20(and james appreciate it. >> and james appreciate it. james the editor at the james is the diary editor at the spectator . thank you very much spectator. thank you very much indeed. spectator. thank you very much indynow muslim teacher in >> now a muslim teacher in birmingham, aqib khan has been sacked for undermining fundamental british values by teaching regulation. agency professional misconduct panel are our west midlands reporter jack carson . jack carson. >> i'm going to go to him live and find out the fallout of all of this, my only question about all of this, jack, is how did it take them so long to sack him ? take them so long to sack him? >> yeah. so the actions in particular, which the teaching regulation agency were investigating, they were assessing a.q. khan or a.q. khan over comments made between may
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2021 and march last year. so he's the 30 year old man teacher of english here at the harborne academy in in birmingham . and academy in in birmingham. and actually it was a teacher themselves had actually reported themselves had actually reported the comments that mr khan had made through the own school's safeguarding portal. the school then conducted an internal investigation which interviewed several pupils, noted including and when they noted and sent their report, of course, to the to the tra, they noted the suggestion of inappropriate religious views as well as harmful comments about dating and relationships. i think it's important just to provide some of, of course, the comments which the investigator nation itself heard, some of them include if you believe in feminism, if you believe in aborting babies, in man and man and woman and a man and woman being married, if you believe in working until you are 35 years old, not having children, if
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old, not having any children, if you all your stuff that you believe all your stuff that he that believe but he said that believe in it. but he said that believe in it. but he says, telling you one he says, i'm telling you one fact, going to get fact, you're going to get replaced muslims even faster. replaced by muslims even faster. they replace they will replace you even faster. some of the faster. that's some of the comments made, comments of course, he made, including a one point including calling a one point muslim western women lunatics and the tra found that it was determined that he'd failed to maintain professional, professional standards. the panel also considered him to have undermined fundamental british values , they say, british values, they say, including individual liberty and mutual respect and tolerance of those different faiths and beliefs. it's also hurt the investigation. the panel itself also heard that he had sent a series of what they're calling professionally unacceptable messages on microsoft teams. in a group chat , messages on microsoft teams. in a group chat, and that that a group chat itself, which involved pupils . one of those involved pupils. one of those was a topless picture, of himself flexing, and then , as
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himself flexing, and then, as i said, he began teaching at the school in 2020. these actions are believed to have took place between 2021 and 2023. we have approached the academy for a comment and have yet to receive one. and if mr khan would like to appeal this decision , this to appeal this decision, this ban, this indefinite ban, he can do so from the 18th of march, 2026. >> okay. jack carson, thank you very much indeed. so there's going to be questions about why this man was even in the teaching profession in the first place, or how he managed to get that job the first place. that job in the first place. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> so have a view, w have a view, you >> so if you have a view, you have an opinion, please do get in touch. gb views gb news. >> com. we'd love to hear from you. we're on until 9:30 you. we're on air until 9:30 this morning. >> now at 7:15. let's take a look at some other stories coming into the newsroom. >> four people have died and dozens have been injured as taiwan, it has been hit by its strongest earthquake in 25 years, the result is people trapped in collapsed buildings
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and many of those buildings without power. tsunami warnings have also been issued after a magnitude 7.7 tremor, residents in the coastal areas of southwestern japan being urged to evacuate . to evacuate. >> a sussex dog owner, patrick mcewan, is the first person known to have been prosecuted for breaking the xl bully ban. worthing magistrates court heard how he had not applied for an exemption for the animal, had not had the dog neutered and had not had the dog neutered and had not obtained third party insurance , and the interior of insurance, and the interior of balmoral castle will be opened up to you. >> the general public, this summer, for the first time, tickets are limited to 40 a day and small groups will be shown around by guides taking in several rooms used by the king and queen, the tiki hall ticket will set you back £100. >> well, now it's time for your
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weather with alex burkill . weather with alex burkill. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> morning. here's your latest gb news weather hit. brought to you in association with the met office. a bit of a north south split today. drier, brighter towards further towards the south but further north there's a quite a bit of rain around. heavy persistent rain around. heavy persistent rain across parts of northern ireland and southern scotland this morning. all this this morning. all of this breaking up a little bit so turning bit more showery as we turning a bit more showery as we go the afternoon, but go through the afternoon, but nonetheless wet . nonetheless staying pretty wet. although across the north although across the far north northwest mostly northwest of scotland, mostly dry. some decent dry bright dry. also some decent dry bright weather across central southern england, some bright sunny spells, just a scattering of showers watch for. showers to watch out for. feeling pleasantly warm in any sunshine with around 1516 sunshine with highs around 1516 celsius, markedly colder celsius, but markedly colder than north. as we than this further north. as we go through the end of the day,
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there will be a spell of more persistent rain feeding into parts of the southwest, gradually making its way across parts england and parts of england and wales and staying cloudy and wet staying pretty cloudy and wet across much of scotland too. and the bring some hill the rain could bring some hill snow, perhaps to slightly lower levels as we go levels for a time as we go through the early hours of tomorrow. otherwise, touch tomorrow. otherwise, and a touch of possible across the far of frost possible across the far north—west first north—west of scotland first thing thursday , a milder thing on thursday, a milder start elsewhere and again it is going to be quite cloudy with outbreaks of rain for many of us. watch out for some heavy bursts of rain pushing their way eastwards areas eastwards across southern areas as the morning as we go through the morning could some spray the could cause some spray on the roads some difficult roads and some difficult travel conditions, often roads and some difficult travel condi'cloudy often roads and some difficult travel condi'cloudy and often roads and some difficult travel condi'cloudy and a often roads and some difficult travel condi'cloudy and a fewzten roads and some difficult travel condi'cloudy and a few showery quite cloudy and a few showery outbreaks here or there. perhaps something a bit more persistent pushing into the southwest later temperatures many will temperatures for many will be similar with highs similar to today, with highs around 16 celsius by that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers i >> sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> now you may have a holiday
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next. welcome back to breakfast now with schools on easter break. parents? well, some parents are being forced to find alternative arrangements and childcare for their children. >> okay , what happens if that >> okay, what happens if that childcare arrangement falls through ? c, why are we debating through? c, why are we debating this? days of old? you just got on with it. but no no, no, the little ones have to be looked after or even this is the worst idea i've ever heard. are you bnng idea i've ever heard. are you bring them into work with you? are you okay, frederick? yes. you okay? >> sybil. yes. not okay. >> sybil. yes. not okay. >> sybil. yes. not okay. >> sybil. yeah >> sybil. yeah >> oh, for goodness sake. because it all then turns to them. it's all about them. entrepreneur and commentator amy ansell, who agrees with this. she says no , forget that. and she says no, forget that. and the host of podcast how not to screw up your kids. doctor marion mundt and who says yes? so use some sort of sadist ,
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so use some sort of sadist, marion. or what? what what should your your thinking behind all this? >> i'm no sadist. i'm a pragmatist. >> i'm no sadist. i'm a pragmatist . and the reality is, pragmatist. and the reality is, i don't think we can really hark back to those good old days when we used to leave children unsupervised at home. we have more women in the workforce than we have ever had before , and two we have ever had before, and two thirds can't hear. >> somebody please >> man, could somebody please raise the sound? the same raise the sound? it's the same with interview . with every interview. >> can you hear me, man ? two >> can you hear me, man? two thirds of parents are are struggling with childcare in school holidays, so we don't have an alternative. really >> they don't have an alternative . well, what if they alternative. well, what if they don't have an alternative? amy >> well, they have to find a way where there's a will. there's a way. i think bringing a child to work is unprofessional. it's inappropriate. it's disruptive, andifs inappropriate. it's disruptive, and it's really a liability. there's no place for a child at
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work. as a matter of fact, i was supposed to be in the studio today, and my husband got a last minute call that he had to be in the office super early this morning. so i changed my plans. obviously, i'm working from home, been home, it would have been terribly disruptive and i would have been totally distracted if i had to bring my son with me to gb news. it'sjust wrong i had to bring my son with me to gb news. it's just wrong and inappropriate and shouldn't happen. >> amy, not only would you have been distracted, everybody else would and it's would be distracted, and it's not much. absolutely. it's not so much. absolutely. it's not so much. absolutely. it's not much. absolutely. not so much. absolutely. whether the children behave or not, you see, i'm quite in favour of being allowed to bring your pet, into work . what are you laughing at? >> that's a good idea. >> that's a good idea. >> pet doesn't talk back or say, can i have crayons or watch something on tv or whatever it is? the pet is much more relaxing and to have around . but relaxing and to have around. but the is, everybody then the thing is, everybody then feels their obligation to feels it's their obligation to be nice to two little brats or so that have been brought into into work, when actually they're all here to work and get on and produce something at the end of
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the day. so my point is, amy, it's not just about, you, the parent who'll be distracted. everybody around you will everybody else around you will be extracted, distracted as well, like you . well, like you. >> you'd be going, oh, i would, i'd be coming over them. i mean, marion, it's a it's a good point, isn't it? i mean, it's going to slow down productivity . going to slow down productivity. besides anything else, i think that we're, we're sort of very much focusing on a worst case scenario here. >> we have all sorts of campaigns around bringing children we have children to work. we have entrepreneurs actively entrepreneurs that actively bnng entrepreneurs that actively bring to work bring their children to work because it has a really positive effect. these little brats, eamonn are going to end up being our next presenters , our next our next presenters, our next prime ministers, and they can learn so much by being in a workspace, not suggesting that it becomes the norm, but where we have no alternative live. i definitely think that there are benefits in them , in them coming benefits in them, in them coming in, in more measure than than detriment. >> do you have children? marion i do, and how old are they now? well mine are older now.
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>> i've got a 24 and a 20 year old. yeah, and would they have come to work with you in the past? yeah. when i did my doctorate and i did my phd, both my children used to come into the research lab whilst i was researching at the time. >> and did your colleagues >> and how did your colleagues find not find that? not >> no, no complaints at all. i think it's part of to your think it's part of that to your face. i think it's about children can learn to problem solve. children learn from what they see and when they observe. in a workplace how people communicate, negotiate, problem, solve . i think it's empowering. solve. i think it's empowering. it really brings up that next generation ready for employment. >> amy, i suppose it depends on the parent, right? and how responsible they're being over that child . if everything falls that child. if everything falls through, choice. through, there's no choice. they bnng through, there's no choice. they bring child the bring their child into the office. it's thing if they office. it's one thing if they sit at their desk and that sit them at their desk and that child behaved, child is really well behaved, but to into but if they have to pop into a meeting leave their meeting and they leave their colleague set of crayons, colleague with a set of crayons, i that's not fair, it ? i mean, that's not fair, is it? >> absolutely not. it's definitely not fair. also, not all children are well behaved.
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so, you know, maybe your children are well behaved. but, you know, i can't say the same about children . so i think about all children. so i think that, you know, your point, that, you know, to your point, yes, there's bring your child to work day to teach them to, you know, learn to be various ways, whether it's, you know, they want to be a presenter or they want to be a presenter or they want to be whatever you do, that's great for them to be exposed time a year. exposed to that one time a year. but not think it's but i do not think it's appropriate . and, you know, it appropriate. and, you know, it could be dangerous. a child doesn't about a workplace. doesn't know about a workplace. you know, there's wires, some people's workplaces are quite dangerous. i just think it's dangerous. so i just think it's totally wrong . it doesn't suit totally wrong. it doesn't suit the child. it doesn't suit the parent. it doesn't suit the parents, fellow employees. so it just no i don't see any just there's no i don't see any reason why you need to bring your child to work. and also nowadays many people do work from home. so if you have child care issues, that's always an opfion care issues, that's always an option just to work from home. if you have very important meetings that can't be missed. nowadays we have zoom. there's so many other ways to work, you
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don't to be in the office, don't have to be in the office, and i don't think that's the right place for children for child to tag along with you. >> but marion sees, you see pluses in this. >> but marion sees, you see pluses in this . and would there pluses in this. and would there be an age stipulation for you, marion , in this? i mean, is a 13 marion, in this? i mean, is a 13 year old child different than a seven year old child, or is there an ideal age for all of this and generally will it become law at some stage? >> i don't. i think we're really the reality is we're talking aboutin the reality is we're talking about in extreme cases where parents are really struggling with child care. we know it's a huge problem. 66% of parents are struggling with child care in school holidays, and a quarter of a million women leave the workforce each year because they struggle to balance work and child care. so this is about a pragmatic approach to a problem that most parents are presented with on a daily basis. that most parents are presented with on a daily basis . and so with on a daily basis. and so it's i think it's got to be looked at from a the type of
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employment. clearly, if you're working in dangerous health and safety issues and factories, that probably isn't appropriate. and there are other workarounds, but it's really just other ways that we can support parents and keep talent in the workforce by being flexible around children coming in to work. >> doctor marion month, thank you very much indeed. and amy ansell, always nice to see you. thank you. we'll leave it there. thank you. we'll leave it there. thank you. we'll leave it there. thank you very much indeed. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> let us know you >> yeah. >> let us know what you think is it dangerous? is it inappropriate, could be inappropriate, or could there be benefits kids into benefits to bringing kids into the office? do let us know. >> the law and two >> it'll be the law and two years time. >> do you think? there >> what do you think? there should creches work. do should be creches at work. do you there should be you think there should be creches law? so that creches at work by law? so that people kids in people just put their kids in the creche? >> think a different >> i think that's a different thing. i think that's that's workable that's doable. workable or that's doable. probably you know, the probably but it's, you know, the trouble is, when we begin to treat seven year olds like adults and that's that's part of the problem. there's a lot of parents love doing this, talking to kids and treating them as if
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their opinions are more important than adults around them. and that leads to trouble. and then there's this whole question of, you know, do people not think of the consequences of having children? that's how it's going to change their lives. and these are things you've got to factor in. and if you've got four children, you know what's going to happen if you're ill or they're ill or whatever, whatever, whatever. but, i suppose you have to live it and, experience it. >> but have you ever brought your kids into work? no. on no. you just think it's not. not appropriate. >> of course it's not appropriate . appropriate. >> they probably really want to come to work with you. no, no . come to work with you. no, no. not loud. well, do you let us know your views on that one? >> 732 is the time we've got the sport with paul
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next. hello, paul. paul coyte here.
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>> hello, eamonn. >> hello, eamonn. >> the latest sport. and one of the things yesterday we were talking about usain bolt and we did this lovely thing. this amazing thing? yeah that we showed in a race between 100 metre race between usain bolt and a greyhound . and a greyhound. >> yes. >> yes. >> we asked people who would win and we were able to recreate it and we were able to recreate it and do it. >> yes, absolutely. exactly. >> yes, absolutely. exactly. >> and the answer was the answer was by a long way was the greyhound by a long way because the world because usain bolt, the world record has 9.58 record that he has is 9.58 seconds. the greyhound round. i think it was just a it wasn't like your everyday greyhound. i think this was like a fast greyhound. not that any greyhounds slow, so that was greyhounds are slow, so that was around five seconds the greyhound. >> yeah, it was amazing to see just faster the just how much faster the greyhound was. just how much faster the gre now 1d was. just how much faster the gre now today;. just how much faster the gre now today you want to go >> now today you want to go again? you go again? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> we should we go again usain bolt maybe be a bit tired. but you're track again. >> think we again, this >> i think we go again, this time against jesse owens. jesse owens, legendary sprint owens, the legendary sprint sprinter , won four medals sprinter, won four gold medals at the 1936 olympics. the hitler
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olympics, of course, and they hated him. and he of course he did. and he turned away, you know, it it was a great know, and it was it was a great success for jesse owens. know, and it was it was a great success forjesse owens. so know, and it was it was a great success for jesse owens. so we do have this is the do have this. this is the fastest but i do have fastest time. but i do have a few caveats that i may go through afterwards. okay. but this would go . this is how things would go. >> there are we to predict >> there we are we to predict who's going win. who do who's going to win. yeah. who do you think? >> well, think know, don't you. >> well, well, i would say well you've got to be quick. >> that's a good look >> that's a good start. look they usain they started off but then usain is pulling now. so if it is pulling away now. so if it was 30m jesse owens was was probably 30m jesse owens was in this. but there we are. >> so that was but training would be more advanced . would be more advanced. technologies advanced. yeah. >> 9 shoes. good >> shoes. shoes. good >> shoes. shoes. good >> more advanced. and they must be allowed to take supplements or something that are allowed. >> you know what you make every point on the money. and the other one, the probably the most important thing is the track because run on because they used to run on ashes. cinder tracks. yeah. do you know when the well, do you know early when the first tracks came in that weren't cinder ? so came in that weren't cinder? so
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they used to be sort of like, like eamonn says it was ashes. >> i'd say the 1970s. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> you're not off. 68 was >> you're not far off. 68 was the 68 olympics. so what jesse owens used to do, he owens used to have to do, he would go to the track a would go to the track with a little trowel and dig little gardening trowel and dig a little hole. because also, the other thing, if you're getting blocks, they never had blocks to fire right ? so if you take fire off, right? so if you take seconds off of all those things and fact that jesse owens and the fact that jesse owens neven and the fact that jesse owens never, had blocks, the never, never had blocks, had the cinder track , you know, you talk cinder track, you know, you talk about the shoes and you talk about the shoes and you talk about everything that they used to eat. i think it would have worked that jesse owens would have beaten the greyhound, would have beaten the greyhound, would have 44 seconds. have run it in about 44 seconds. but can't really but difference, you can't really compare. times compare. but if it was times that's they would have come. >> so, it was the irish grand national two days ago, and paul and were on the phone with and i were on the phone with irish grand national. good underway at 5 and i phoned underway at 5 pm. and i phoned him i said, irish him and i said, the irish nationals on and we went through some of the horses or whatever it and talked about it, and it is and talked about it, and paul good, good. i'm paul said, okay, good, good. i'm off i'm going a off because i'm going to put a bet and tell bet down. and you did tell people what happened .
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people what happened. >> i'd bet on the 450 at chepstow because because i picked out the name of the horse i like . i like. >> the racecourse is fairy house. >> it's fairy house in ireland and then i've gone for i'll go. right. okay, well, i'll quickly put the bet on now because the horse is the race is about to start, and being the tipster that i am, i went with something around with name that that i am, i went with something aroun and with name that that i am, i went with something aroun and i with name that that i am, i went with something aroun and i thought, name that that i am, i went with something aroun and i thought, great, that i like and i thought, great, i'll have and i'm watching i'll have that. and i'm watching the thinking, where's the race. i'm thinking, where's the race. i'm thinking, where's the horse isn't the horse? the horse isn't there. wrong, wrong there. it's the wrong, wrong bet on damn race. and by on the wrong damn race. and by the didn't get anywhere the way, he didn't get anywhere in bet on. in the race that i'd bet on. >> however, a punter on one >> but however, a punter on one of the biggest payouts ever from how much? >> how his bet? how much? >> right. his bet? >> right. >> right. >> i'll go through so it's >> i'll go through it. so it's the at the easter the opening day at the easter festival fairyhouse? yeah, festival at fairyhouse? yeah, he had a £17.50 each bet on had a £17.50 each way bet on three races. >> oh, that's a big factor, isn't it? so yeah, three races. >> three races and it would. and each one would then run to three winners had to have three winners had had to have three winners. the actual stake winners. so the actual stake because it was each way was £35. so you know, it a it was a so you know, it was a it was a hefty pay . you know a lot of
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hefty pay. you know a lot of people only have £1.35. so the first had don charlotte, first race he had don charlotte, which was 9 to 1 horse comes in. well done. so he's on the way . well done. so he's on the way. second race ardara ru 33 to 1 rank outsider . second race ardara ru 33 to 1 rank outsider. boom comes in. so it's down to the last one. >> sweating on all the 430. >> sweating on all the 430. >> now he's probably thinking there's no chance that this is going to come in for 30. he's got mousy brown 50 to 1. so after the final finish you've got willie mullins who's the greatest trainer in the world at the moment. he's horse olympic man. it's over the first it's over the last hurdle. and you think it's going to walk it. and then mousy brown starts coming. it's like guy must be going it's like the guy must be going crazy. and then mousy brown wins at 50 to 1. do you know how much this guy won? no . £285,000 from this guy won? no. £285,000 from from a £37 stake. >> wow . you know, on him he's
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>> wow. you know, on him he's very lucky because the 415 you're talking about the 430, the 415. >> yeah. was delayed by eight minutes because one of the horses got . loose and decided to horses got. loose and decided to run around the course. yes. nobody could get it off. >> yeah. goodness me. >> yeah. goodness me. >> yeah. goodness me. >> yeah. i think you had £5 that the horse would be the horse the race would be delayed well. a 50 to so delayed as well. a 50 to 1. so he's i mean he's done amazingly well but the thing is well man. but the thing is though, we have say that though, we have to say that whenever you bets like that, whenever you see bets like that, people this money, whenever you see bets like that, peoquch this money, whenever you see bets like that, peoquch money this money, whenever you see bets like that, peoquch money d0|is money, whenever you see bets like that, peoquch money d0|is m> my father always said me, >> my father always said to me, you never a poor bookmaker. so. >> absolutely right. >> absolutely right. >> right. you >> absolutely right. see you again. >> absolutely right. see you agaivery much indeed. you very much indeed. >> still to come. claire >> i'm still to come. claire muldoon and scarlett mccgwire. we'll what's we'll be back to see what's making news today. that's
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next. you've been so good getting in touch. we items have been discussing. about ten minutes ago, had a debate about, ago, we had a debate about, bringing your children to school, and i was of the opinion i'd rather bring my pet not to school, to work, to work ? yeah, school, to work, to work? yeah, which feels like school, caroline says, why is that? people these days have to make excuses to make their life eafien excuses to make their life easier. how did we manage in the past without this woke society ? past without this woke society? see, david says utter rubbish. children learn at home children should learn at home from at from parents, informally at school and she says you only have to see how children behave in restaurants, shops etc. to know this would not work. i could think of nothing worse. sandra. no way. i wouldn't want my own children, never mind anyone else's sprogs yeah, this woman is deluded. >> yeah, michael makes a good point saying i was a miner for 23 years. how would i have worked with me taking my children to work? yeah, i think it children to work? yeah, i think h depend children to work? yeah, i think it depend on what? what it does depend on what? what jobs you do. lee is a taxi driver. he has seven children and he says he manages it. >> it doesn't depend on what job
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you there's quite clearly no you do. there's quite clearly no way be way that any child should be brought workplace. brought into the workplace. >> end off. i agree with >> end off end off. i agree with you. totally agree. >> end off end off. i agree with you buttally agree. >> end off end off. i agree with youbut you agree. >> end off end off. i agree with you but you know. >> end off end off. i agree with you but you know what? >> but you know what? >> but you know what? >> it'll be law within two years. >> be a protected right? >> be a protected right? >> yeah, it'll a protected right. >> yeah, but people >> yeah, but most people work from anyway, so there's from home now anyway, so there's a moot point. >> yeah. it's got people to treat children like adults. >> that really annoys me. >> that really annoys me. >> yes i know, yeah i agree. >> yes i know, yeah i agree. >> well i when my child care fell fell down i mean i, i, i would take my son i mean i was a single know i had go single mum you know i had to go to so very , very rarely i to work so very, very rarely i took my son into the office and was he well behaved? he was he was he well behaved? he was he was wonderfully behaved. >> and your colleagues didn't mind? >> but also it was it was. >> no. but also it was it was. >> no. but also it was it was. >> well, they're not going to tell you the mind, do they. >> they were behind your >> they were all behind your back didn't i mean i, i back but i didn't i mean i, i think you only do it in a complete crisis . yeah. and in complete crisis. yeah. and in those days you couldn't just work from home. >> oh, i agree with you, scarlett. i agree with you, scarlett, let's talk about this
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teacher who's 30 years of age muslim. he told pupils islam was going to take over and branded western girls lunatics , the western girls lunatics, the result is he's been banned from teaching, what? what do you think about this ? think about this? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i mean, obviously it was absolutely right that he should be banned from teaching. i mean, for a start, what he was saying to young women, was, was absolutely appalling. i mean, the and that he shouldn't he shouldn't be allowed back. i mean i but i, i think that that i mean i'm not quite sure why it's such a big deal. i mean, it's such a big deal. i mean, it's right. it's absolutely right. what happened. but actually there are worse things going on. i mean, you know, there are there are teachers abusing pupils, quite, quite, quite often. who also should be banned. i mean, i think just somebody who goes into school and says dreadful things, but i mean, i remember, you know, my headmaster, i remember obviously many, many years ago said, you
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know, the only thing the labour government has done is to legalise sodomy , which is, you legalise sodomy, which is, you know, appalling for any of the, the young gay people who were at that school, i mean, and some of them turned out to be gay. i mean, i think there's a there's a lot of stuff. i mean, i just, i don't quite understand why this is a top story, when quite rightly, you can't say those things. >> i think the reason this is a story is because of what's happenedin story is because of what's happened in batley grammar and the fact that the head teacher, the fact that the head teacher, the teacher, the religious the teacher, yes, the religious studies is still, studies teacher, there is still, you know, had no support at all for the past two years, since march 2021, when he dared to show the cartoon of the charlie hebdo cartoon. that's why i think this story is, is in the news. >> well, look what happened to that teacher was was appalling, is appalling appalling. he had he had no support from the school. he had no support from the unions . and he's still in the unions. and he's still in hiding. yes. >> as is his family.
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>> as is his family. >> and also the complaints came from outside the school. the whole thing was, was it was got up and it was terrible. right. but but actually, i mean, you this, this whole thing about, you know, muslims are dangerous is wrong. i mean , i mean is wrong. i mean, i mean a friend. >> i don't think that's why he was sacked. >> no, no, he wasn't. >> he purchased nichi hodgson. he why are you saying that he said, why are you saying that muslims all dangerous and muslims are all dangerous and people that can't people are saying that i can't understand why is such a understand why this is such a big when actually, you big deal when actually, you know, a friend, a muslim friend of mine whose children are at a muslim school, and he was really proud that his his girls came back and said, we're doing an assembly about pride. >> so actually , you know, >> so actually, you know, there's lots and lots of ways besides, you know, why you're saying that, scarlett? >> because this guy came back and he said , these girls, he and he said, these girls, he said, western girls are lunatics . yeah. no, it's not what you want them to be bringing back, right? >> right. it's absolute right that he's banned. of course, you can't things like that,
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right? >> right. right? >> well,. right? >> well, we're making it a >> well, we're not making it a general on muslims. general attack on muslims. >> exactly. >> yeah, exactly. >> yeah, exactly. >> it a general >> you're making it a general attack muslims. attack on muslims. >> what i'm saying is, is >> i'm. what i'm saying is, is i just don't understand hand why this is such an important story. well i think it's an important story. >> there is a nutcase running, you know, i think classroom. >> what i'm trying to say is there are lots of nut cases who are teachers in schools , not i are teachers in schools, not i mean, you know, there are a tiny, tiny minority . me, but tiny, tiny minority. me, but actually that , that that it's actually that, that that it's not i mean, of course he should be banned . of course she be banned. of course she shouldn't be saying things like that. >> but then there needs to be and there has been an investigation here, investigation done here, but there needs questions there needs to be questions asked about man was asked about why this man was such views was even in such extreme views was even in the profession in the the teaching profession in the first why able to first place. why was he able to mould with these mould young minds with these sorts mould young minds with these sonwith views? yeah. when it >> with views? yeah. when it wasn't put for critical wasn't put up for critical analysis, was his view . analysis, this was his view. unlike the batley grammar teacher who produced a picture of charlie of the charlie hebdo
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and that was a view he had that in his class for two years. he already taught it before and then all of a sudden it was a racial crime, hate crime. >> can i tell you what should be a crime ? selling protein, a crime? selling protein, yoghurt in any, anywhere? >> why ? >> why? >> why? >> i'm telling you, love, right? you're old enough to remember what ordinary yoghurt used to be like, right? thin, slim , like, right? thin, slim, strawberry flavoured mandarin flavour. >> you can still get that . >> you can still get that. >> you can still get that. >> well, well, every time i send anybody out here and say , get me anybody out here and say, get me a, get me a yoghurt, i come back with this rubbish with it. where's my spoon gone to your spoons. >> here. right, but basically so scarlet, this sort of yoghurt, which is thick, thick , thick. which is thick, thick, thick. it's like butter eating butter or whatever it is. it's hideous. and i specifically say to the youngsters , get me ordinary youngsters, get me ordinary yoghurt, get me old fashioned yoghurt, get me old fashioned yoghurt, get me thin yoghurt. >> what? they've got you eamonn. they're trying to build you up.
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is 25g worth of protein in that, that you didn't need to get that. >> okay? these young people are frightened of you. they probably think, oh my goodness me, get me a yoghurt eamonn holmes ronnie ronnie yoghurt. >> but they come back with that. >> but they come back with that. >> okay. you want i'll go now and get you one. >> okay. but i'm surprised it's not me sick, it's usually your greggs. it's under that table. >> that's just fantasy. >> oh no, that's just fantasy. >> oh no, that's just fantasy. >> it really from you, ali? >> is it really from you, ali? >> is it really from you, ali? >> want to back me up on me? >> fruit always. no. isn't it? and he shares it. >> you know, that according >> you know, that was according to you that or to psychologists. you do that or you blinked. you're telling a lie you just did that. lie and you just did that. >> no, no. >> no, no. >> i'm sure, eamonn, that nobody will dare give you anything but a runny yoghurt in future. >> it's impossible to get. it's not honestly . you call into not honestly. you call into petrol stations and you say, you know, there's all these shops. you think i'll get a yoghurt they don't have. >> it's very fashionable now. >> it's very fashionable now. >> the yoghurt. >> the greek yoghurt. >> the greek yoghurt. >> that's woke. >> yoghurt. that's gone. woke. oh , they have. oh my god, they have. >> there's no choice if there's a choice available at run a
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yoghurt. thick horrible butter like yoghurt. >> you don't get a choice . >> you don't get a choice. >> you don't get a choice. >> why does anybody even like them? >> i actually do love yoghurt. >> i actually do love yoghurt. >> do you love that honey stuff? >> do you love that honey stuff? >> i do, sorry . >> i do, sorry. >> you love scarlet. well over the weekend i had runny yoghurt. >> i don't know where your problem is. >> well, i'm telling you, we'll have to find you some in my life. >> it's a problem. i sit here every day. nobody can get greggs i >> -- >> yeah. >> yeah. >> oh, we're all supposed to feel sorry for him running like thick. >> you're. you're probably best off yoghurt . off sticking greek yoghurt. >> with granola and honey >> yeah, with granola and honey and fruit during it. and fresh fruit during it. >> i'm with you. >> i'm with you. >> let's talk about . let's talk >> let's talk about. let's talk about houses. scarlett, right. >> so what? why is labour getting involved in this? in a minute, please. well but we have a housing crisis. >> you do not have enough houses to live in. >> absolutely agree. >> absolutely agree. >> we've been promised for the last 14 years of this government that houses built and we that houses will be built and we don't get. and the great reason why they're not being built is
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planning regulations. >> labour change >> how will labour change things? going to make it much >> they're going to make it much easier to build, right. >> more difficult to object >> and more difficult to object and more difficult object. and more difficult to object. >> know how they're >> and you know how they're doing that. they're going into seats want. more seats that people want. the more housing in. it's completely political. >> well, well good. but yeah but shouldn't you. >> it's quite disingenuous i think . yeah. think. yeah. >> well you can't get a bloomin high size. >> what you're saying is because of way the model of the buy of the way the model of the buy to is wrong, they need to to lets is wrong, they need to attack model. attack that model. >> but but what you're >> no, but but but what you're saying buy lets, saying not only the buy to lets, but buy is that but the right to buy is that labour actually going the labour is actually going to the places there houses, places where there are houses, where housing crisis where there's a housing crisis and saying we're going to build more and what can't more housing and what they can't use coming from it. use this money coming from it. >> the planning coming >> where's the planning coming from? not. the from? they will not. the levelling worked. levelling up is not worked. >> i my scarlett, is >> i know my worry, scarlett, is that all talk and no that it'll be all talk and no action. >> yeah, will action. >> yeah, but it will be. >> yeah, but it will be. >> shall see. >> we shall see. >> we shall see. >> i hope they get somewhere. >> i hope they get somewhere. >> think really, >> and i think it's really, really important. >> i think really >> and i think it's really important social important to build social housing well. important to build social h0lsog well. important to build social h0lso do well. important to build social h0lso do i,nell. important to build social h0lso do i, iall. important to build social h0lso do i, i actually think >> so do i, i actually think that's what we should be
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building. >> that's what should doing. >> w— >> absolutely. we should. problem is the problem of right to buy is the money back into social money didn't go back into social housing. correct. >> thanks very much indeed. scarlett they're >> thanks very much indeed. scarleto they're >> thanks very much indeed. scarleto be they're >> thanks very much indeed. scarleto be back they're >> thanks very much indeed. scarleto be back in hey're >> thanks very much indeed. scarleto be back in about 40 going to be back in about 40 minutes going to be back in about 40 mirnow time update >> now it's time for an update on your with alex on your weather with alex birkeland. once birkeland. let's hope for once it's raining . it's not raining. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news. >> morning. here's your latest gb news weather hit brought to you in association with the met office. a bit of a north south split today. drier, brighter towards the south, but further north there's a quite a bit of rain around. heavy persistent rain around. heavy persistent rain across parts of northern ireland scotland ireland and southern scotland this morning. all of this breaking up a little bit so turning a bit more showery as we go afternoon, but go through the afternoon, but nonetheless staying pretty wet. although far north although across the far north northwest mostly northwest of scotland, mostly dry. also some decent dry bright weather central southern weather across central southern england. some bright sunny spells, just a scattering of showers to watch out for.
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feeling pleasantly warm any feeling pleasantly warm in any sunshine around 1516 sunshine with highs around 1516 celsius, markedly colder sunshine with highs around 1516 celsi this. markedly colder sunshine with highs around 1516 celsi this. furtheredly colder sunshine with highs around 1516 celsi this. further north. lder sunshine with highs around 1516 celsi this. further north. aser sunshine with highs around 1516 celsi this. further north. as we than this. further north. as we go through the end of the day, there will be a spell of more persistent rain feeding into parts of the southwest. gradually making way gradually making its way across parts wales and parts of england and wales and staying pretty cloudy and wet across of scotland. two and across much of scotland. two and the rain could bring some hill snow, perhaps slightly lower snow, perhaps to slightly lower levels for time as we go levels for a time as we go through the hours through the early hours of tomorrow. otherwise and touch tomorrow. otherwise and a touch of possible far of frost possible across the far north—west scotland. first north—west of scotland. first thing thursday. a milder thing on thursday. a milder start and again it is start elsewhere and again it is going to be quite cloudy with outbreaks of rain for many of us. watch out for some heavy bursts rain pushing their way bursts of rain pushing their way eastwards areas bursts of rain pushing their way eazweards areas bursts of rain pushing their way eazweardsthrough areas bursts of rain pushing their way eazweardsthrough the areas bursts of rain pushing their way eazweardsthrough the morning s as we go through the morning could some spray on the could cause some spray on the roads some difficult travel roads and some difficult travel conditions , otherwise often conditions, otherwise often quite few showery quite cloudy and a few showery outbreaks here or there. perhaps something a bit more persistent. pushing southwest later pushing into the southwest later temperatures for will be temperatures for many will be similar today, with highs similar to today, with highs around by. around 16 celsius by. >> looks like things are heating up boxt boiler as sponsors of
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weather on
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james and ellie costello and leading that news this morning. the prime minister demands answers as three british aid workers are killed by an israeli drone strike. >> well, the charity world central kitchen has now suspended its operations in gaza. there are urgent discussions underway to come up with a more robust system to prevent a repeat of monday night's tragedy . night's tragedy. >> a muslim teacher has been banned from the profession for saying that islam will take over the world and branded western
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girls as lunatics . we'll have girls as lunatics. we'll have more on that shortly. i keep khan fundamentally undermined fundamental british values. >> that's according to the teaching regulation agency , who teaching regulation agency, who have banned him from teaching indefinitely. i'll have the latest here in birmingham at 8:20. >> we're debating, debating, even , tenerife locals who are even, tenerife locals who are hitting out at badly behaved brits, we'll be debating this, this morning whether britons do make bad tourists and whether they should learn a whole set of manners and etiquette. >> and after 9 am. today, we'll be revealing the british suburb, which has been named the capital of beauty. sounds lovely . of beauty. sounds lovely. >> i have sport etiquette in the sport this morning. last night, three out of five premier league games ended one one, brighton, officially the most successful club in the country, although thatis club in the country, although that is financially. club in the country, although that is financially . and adam that is financially. and adam peaty is back and he's olympics
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ready . ready. >> good morning. whilst there's quite a bit of rain across northern parts today, it's better news further south if it's drier and brighter weather you're after, i'll have the details shortly. >> our top story this morning. prime minister is demanding answers from israel after seven aid workers, including three british nationals, were killed by an israeli missile strike. >> well, james henderson, who was 33, and john chapman, who were 57, both of whom are believed to have served in the royal marines, have been named alongside james kirby, a former army rifleman and sniper marksman. those are the three britons who have died. >> israel, now facing questions about how this happened as the world charity kitchen had altered the alerted even the idf to the route they were
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travelling , and marked its cars travelling, and marked its cars with their logo on the roof , all with their logo on the roof, all to no avail. >> well, the idf chief of staff, hirsi ali, has issued an apology for the strike, adding that it was a result of misidentified action which was being investigated and learned from. well, joining us now is our home and security editor, mark white. good to see you this morning, mark. and now very serious questions about this tragedy where seven people were killed . where seven people were killed. >> yes. and it's extremely difficult for israel because key allies of israel , america, the allies of israel, america, the us, australia and others have come out and are clearly very critical of the way in which this operation unfolded in which three of these vehicles in that aid convoy were struck. with this devastating loss of lives , this devastating loss of lives, including those three british nationals. and the thing we can say about the three british nationals is they were all
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experienced ex—servicemen. you will get , of course, with will get, of course, with charities working in a very complicated war zone like gaza, ex—service personnel who brought in to help advise those charities on the safest routes to a destination , just to try to to a destination, just to try to keep people safe and world central kitchen said that they were absolutely doing that. they had a good relationship with israel every journey that they made, they liaised with the israeli military to clear an area. they would go into what was called de—conflicted zones that would be carefully worked out to ensure that they weren't targeted, but something very tragically went wrong . the tragically went wrong. the israeli government and the military are pretty much put their hands up to this. they come out and acknowledged it was a terrible mistake. but that's not going to stop the very awkward questions now for israel and the pressure that will mount on israel. there has been a lot
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of concern about the aid situation in gaza for months now, with lots of arguments and fallouts between israel and the un aid agency in gaza. israel had been encouraging these other charities and ngos to come in and to provide humanitarian support to the people of gaza. well, uk was one of those charities who answered that call . and of course, now it's ended in tragedy. and that's mean for week and a number of other charities. they have suspended operations until they can get a more robust system in place. >> and what do you think will happen diplomatically next? mark >> well, diplomatically, the fallout is ongoing. we had, for instance , the israeli ambassador instance, the israeli ambassador to the uk being called in to the foreign office yesterday . that
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foreign office yesterday. that hasn't happened for some 12 years. the us president, joe biden, has made some very robust and angry comments about what went on, what happened and unfolded on monday night. so clearly, this is very difficult for israel at a time when israel was really starting to get mounting pressure from its closest allies. anyway, about the need to implement a more sustainable ceasefire. thus far, it's always been, of course , you it's always been, of course, you need a ceasefire that's going to work, and that's still very publicly what britain and the us are saying . but they are are saying. but they are pressure behind the scenes, pressuring israel to try to come up with a solution that is more longer lasting, that can bring some kind of an end to this bloody conflict and hopefully result in the release of the 150 or so hostages who are still being held. >> mark, thank you very much indeed. we'll leave it there .
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indeed. we'll leave it there. time 8:06 o'clock on bringing your children to work, which we've been talking about this morning , stephen says, of course morning, stephen says, of course it's not appropriate to do so. it's just not fair for your work colleagues. why should they have to be looking after your kids while you are working? they have their own work to do and to say, as most parents do, my children will be happy sit a desk will be happy to sit at a desk and their colouring. a reader and do their colouring. a reader book just true and richard book just isn't true and richard says, remember when we had pounds, and pence? says, remember when we had pound not and pence? says, remember when we had pound not rememberi pence? says, remember when we had pound not remember this, ce? says, remember when we had pound not remember this, but you'll not remember this, but it's of up until 1970. it's sort of up until 1970. and so here's happened. you got so here's what happened. you got 240 sweets for a pound from the penny counter . wow. and mum penny counter. wow. and mum could afford to stay at home. then decimalisation came and only 100 sweets for a pound , and only 100 sweets for a pound, and mum could no longer afford to stay at home. that about sums it up, richard. that's inflation for you, so keep those comments coming in. i don't think any of you are huge fans of bringing children into the workplace . a children into the workplace. a muslim teacher in birmingham has been sacked for undermining
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fundamental british values by teaching regulation, agency , it teaching regulation, agency, it was their professional misconduct panel. >> well, gb news west midlands reporter jack carson joins us now . and lots of questions, now. and lots of questions, jack, about why this teacher was even teaching in the first place. if he had such extreme views . views. >> yeah, definitely. i mean , >> yeah, definitely. i mean, this has been a decision made by the panel of the teaching regulation agency. they've considered evidence that was put forward by an internal investigation, initially by the harborne academy here. the teacher, aqib khan, who's a 30 year old man teacher of english at the academy here, he was put through an internal investigation after a after a fellow member of staff actually put concerns about his conduct and particularly around the students on their safeguarding portal that internal investigation then led, of course to these recommendations to the teaching regulations agency, whose panel have decided
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that he will receive an indefinite ban from teaching . i indefinite ban from teaching. i mean, some of the things, of course, that this panel heard mr raqib to have said in particularly the are striking words to the effect of having a baby over 30 was worse than cousin marriage, and that the child will most likely have disabilities and also including words to the effect of calling westernised girls lunatics . now, westernised girls lunatics. now, westernised girls lunatics. now, we have approached the academy for comment, but have not received anything thus far. but we know he was a teacher here from december 20th march last yean from december 20th march last year, when he was of course sacked after those internal investigations and the effect of an impact of that conduct, of course was found. and so the comments really, you have to ask wonder how within those two year penod wonder how within those two year period that of course, these comments were being assessed over from 2021 to 2023, why maybe nothing was done sooner. certainly, questions to answer. there other examples of what mr
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ukip the panel heard him to have done, including sending a series of professionally unacceptable messages on microsoft teams , messages on microsoft teams, that is, that teams chat included pupils , including one included pupils, including one of a topless picture of himself flexing as he tried to talk to them about how to get girls . them about how to get girls. >> jack, thank you very much and let us know your views on that story. >> vaiews@gbnews.uk . com now >> vaiews@gbnews.uk. com now royal mail is investigating problems with new barcoded stamps. it's after a gb news investigation found that britons are being charged £5 for their post. >> well, the senders insist they bought the stamps from a reputable source , but they are reputable source, but they are still facing the penalty. royal mail has committed to investigating the issue after a meeting with the post office minister this week. >> well, joining us now is our digital finance reporter, jess sheldon. really good to see you this morning, jess. so what's going on here? well it's all a
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little bit of a mystery. >> so it's good that royal mail will be investigating this, a investigation by gb news earlier this year found that people were buying stamps from reputable places. so post office shops and post offices and small supermarkets. royal mail was then sending them a note, charging them £5 to get their letter out. >> so it looks as though people were buying counterfeit stamps. at least that's what's what's being investigated , and that is being investigated, and that is what's being investigated. >> and we've heard examples from people across the uk who have been affected, there's particular concern for vulnerable people who are having to go to the delivery office. you can you can pay the charge online, but that's not for everyone, small business everyone, and small business owners have sent owners as well, who have sent out post thinking they've sent it with genuine stamp and then it with a genuine stamp and then being told it's counterfeit. >> well, of course you wouldn't think anything else, would you? i jess, this is on the i mean, jess, this is on the front page of the telegraph. this morning, but this actually front page of the telegraph. thi started ng, but this actually front page of the telegraph. thi started with ut this actually front page of the telegraph. thi started with a this actually front page of the telegraph. thi started with a gbs actually front page of the telegraph. thi started with a gb newsally front page of the telegraph. thi started with a gb news iny all started with a gb news in vestigation, didn't it? how did
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this begin? this all begin? >> it all began when gb >> well, it all began when gb news readers and viewers wrote in team, we've got in to our money team, we've got an email money at an email address money at gb news , so we investigated. we news .uk, so we investigated. we found some look fake, you found some which look fake, you know, they're entirely flat when you look at the barcodes rather than slightly bumpy. but we've also heard examples from people who say that one stamp in the book has been found counterfeit, but others have got through totally fine without a hitch. >> is it quite difficult to tell by the eye that you could have a counterfeit stamp? is it almost impossible, or is there, is there usually a sign that something could be awry? >> i think some some when , you >> i think some some when, you know, look slightly different to what counterfeit stamps, but what our counterfeit stamps, but then some in the book are being deemed counterfeit when others aren't. so it's all a little bit of a mystery, really. >> so what's going to happen next, do you think? >> well, royal mail will investigate. i think it's investigate. and i think it's really important they really important that they explain has happened, explain what has happened, obviously there's concern explain what has happened, obviotsendingz's concern explain what has happened, obviotsending post concern explain what has happened, obviot sending post if ncern explain what has happened, obviot sending post if you n explain what has happened, obviot sending post if you think about sending post if you think that the stamps you're buying at
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a reputable place counterfeit a reputable place is counterfeit . the advice at the moment, . but, the advice at the moment, i say , you know, go to the i would say, you know, go to the post counter and make post office counter and make sure you get a receipt if you're buying stamps and keep the paperwork , i think always paperwork, i think is always a good you can complain to good idea. you can complain to royal mail if you're affected. and also there's trading standards and citizens advice. yeah. >> and you say i suppose >> and as you say i suppose check your stamps well if it check your stamps as well if it looks as though it could be counterfeit, keep receipt counterfeit, keep your receipt and hopefully can get and hopefully you can get a refund. thanks so jess. refund. thanks so much, jess. really to you this really good to see you this morning. now we have had a response they response from royal mail. they say a customer reports to say when a customer reports to us that they have bought a stamp from a retailer that subsequently found to be counterfeit, we will always look into the circumstances of that case. also work closely with case. we also work closely with retailers and law enforcement agencies actively seek the agencies and actively seek the prosecution of those who produce counterfeit stamps. we reaffirmed that policy to the minister, kevin hollinrake, today , the post office, saying today, the post office, saying that the implication of such an allegation is that one of our
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postmasters or a member of their staff, has obtained fake stamps and has chosen to sell them to customers. >> this is why we insist any customer who thinks they may have purchased a fake stamp from a post office must produced an itemised receipt, so that this can be looked into further . can be looked into further. >> check your stamps now at 8:40, let's take a look at some other stories coming into the newsroom this morning. >> the taiwanese government has confirmed seven people have now died as the island has been hit by its strongest earthquake in 25 years. it's left people trapped in collapsed buildings, many of those buildings without power. tsunami warnings also been issued after the estimated magnitude 7.7, with residents in coastal areas of southwestern japan being urged to evacuate. >> a sussex dog owner, patrick mcewan, is the first person known to have been prosecuted for breaking the xl bully ban.
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worthing magistrates court heard how he had not applied for an exemption for the animal, had not had the dog neutered and had not had the dog neutered and had not obtained third party insurance and balmoral castle is set to open to you the public from this summer. >> tickets will be limited to 40 a day. small groups will be shown around by guides taking in several rooms used by the king and queen. and if you want to 90, and queen. and if you want to go, a ticket will set you back £100. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of whether on . gb news. >> morning. here's your latest gb news weather hit. brought to you in association with the met office. a bit of a north south split today . drier, brighter split today. drier, brighter towards the south but further north there's a quite a bit of rain around. heavy persistent rain around. heavy persistent rain across parts of northern ireland and southern scotland
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this of this this morning. all of this breaking little bit so breaking up a little bit so turning bit more showery as we turning a bit more showery as we go through the afternoon, but nonetheless pretty wet . nonetheless staying pretty wet. although across the far north northwest scotland, mostly although across the far north nortalsot scotland, mostly although across the far north nort also some:otland, mostly although across the far north nort also some decent mostly although across the far north nort also some decent dry stly although across the far north nortalso some decent dry bright dry. also some decent dry bright weather across central southern england, some bright sunny spells, just a scattering of showers to out for. showers to watch out for. feeling pleasantly warm any feeling pleasantly warm in any sunshine around 1516 sunshine with highs around 1516 celsius, markedly colder celsius, but markedly colder than north. as we than this further north. as we go through the end of the day, there will be a spell of more persistent rain feeding into parts of the southwest, gradually its way across gradually making its way across parts wales and parts of england and wales and staying cloudy and wet staying pretty cloudy and wet across much of scotland. two and the rain could bring some hill snow, to slightly lower snow, perhaps to slightly lower levels as we go levels for a time as we go through the early hours of tomorrow. otherwise, and touch tomorrow. otherwise, and a touch of possible across the far of frost possible across the far north—west scotland first north—west of scotland first thing thursday , milder thing on thursday, a milder start and it is start elsewhere and again it is going to be quite cloudy with outbreaks of rain for many of us. watch out for some heavy bursts of rain pushing their way eastwards southern areas eastwards across southern areas as the morning as we go through the morning could some on the
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could cause some spray on the roads some difficult travel roads and some difficult travel conditions, often conditions, otherwise often quite and a few showery quite cloudy and a few showery outbreaks here or there. perhaps something more persistent something a bit more persistent pushing southwest later pushing into the southwest later temperatures be temperatures for many will be similar highs similar to today, with highs around celsius by that warm around 16 celsius by that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. >> sponsors of weather on gb news . news. news. news. >> now it is our biggest giveaway of the year, so far. you could be in with a chance to win a £10,000 greek cruise for two, but that's not it. there's also £10,000 worth of cash and a whole host of luxury travel gifts and rescue workers have been sent out to get me some yoghurt today, which i'm not sure is greek yoghurt. >> i don't know if it's ordinary yoghurt. it's good, it's good. it's thin yoghurt. there you are. he's got the right stuff, he's got health. so that's good. >> that's fine. very good. >> that's fine. very good. >> yeah . i'll >> that's fine. very good. >> yeah. i'll be happy >> that's fine. very good. >> yeah . i'll be happy for the >> yeah. i'll be happy for the rest the day and you'll be rest of the day and you'll be happy to enter and happy if you were to enter and perhaps great british
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perhaps win our great british giveaway, win our giveaway, you could win our biggest prize giveaway so far. >> first, there's an incredible £10,000 in tax free cash to spend. however you like. plus, courtesy of variety cruises, a bespoke seven night small boat cruise for two worth £10,000 with flights, meals, excursions and drinks included . your next and drinks included. your next houday and drinks included. your next holiday could be on us. choose any one of their 2025 greek adventures and find your home at sea. we'll also send you packing with these luxury travel gifts for a chance to win a prize worth over £20,000. text win to 63232. text cost £2 plus one standard network rate message or post your name and number two gb zero four, po box 8690. derby dh1 nine, double two uk only entrants must be 18 or over. lines closed at 5 pm. on the 26th of april. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com/win. please check the closing time if listening or watching on demand. good luck
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and good luck if you come into contact with british tourists on your holiday as well. >> because tenerife aren't very happy, are they? they're saying britons are behaving very, very badly , so should they be banned badly, so should they be banned or they get some lessons or should they get some lessons in good old fashioned manners? we're be talking about we're going to be talking about that
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next. >> 2024 a battleground year. >> 2024 a battleground year. >> the year the nation decides . >> the year the nation decides. >> the year the nation decides. >> as the parties gear up their campaigns for the next general election. >> who will be left standing when the british people make one of the biggest decisions of their lives? >> who will rise and who will fall? >> let's find out together. >> let's find out together. >> every moment . the >> let's find out together. >> every moment. the highs, >> for every moment. the highs, the the twists and turns the lows, the twists and turns we'll be with you for every step of this journey. in 2024. gb news is britain's election .
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channel. >> look, we're talking about holidays now and we're talking about , you know, unruly people about, you know, unruly people when you're on holiday and specifically the attention's turning to brits because in tenerife, they've hit out at british tourists demanding that they would like higher quality people than brits following, following their island. and that's all to do with drunken behaviour riding outside stag parties, hand parties, all the sort of things. >> yeah, not behaving themselves well in response , holidaymakers well in response, holidaymakers from the uk are now threatening to boycott tenerife over the response from angry locals. so we're asking this morning are british tourists behaving badly on holiday? and if they are, what should be done? >> well here with her view, we've got the broadcaster, paula london, and we have the etiquette expert liz brewer. liz brits have a bad name, well deserved or not. >> eamonn. well, there's always an element of bad behaviour from certain brits and in tenerife
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those are the ones that are being targeted at the moment, you can't complain really against the people in tenerife. the fact that they're doing airbnb or they're hiring out caravans , etc. so a lot of what caravans, etc. so a lot of what they're complaining about is people who object to the fact that they go there. apparently some brits and they behave badly, they drink booze, they get drunk , they don't appreciate get drunk, they don't appreciate the culture of the whole place. and in actual fact, it gives us a bit of a bad reputation. however, i do agree that you know, it is a huge source of income for the country. yeah, andifs income for the country. yeah, and it's a local government issue. if the local government could put in some restrictions and control that , then maybe, and control that, then maybe, paula, is it our fault or is it local government's fault on this? >> i think that they should be
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more grateful. basically, the brits put tenerife on the map . brits put tenerife on the map. people have been visiting there since the 1890s, particularly british people. and then from the 1980s, a hell of a lot of people travelled there, mainly british people, because flying was for everyone then and then the package holidays were introduced and a lot of 18 30 introduced and a lot of 18 to 30 holidays. to remember holidays. you've got to remember a these people going to a lot of these people going to tenerife. it's their first time travelling without their travelling abroad without their parents. they're not going to be twiddling their thumbs, they're going shots, going to be drinking shots, they're having they're going to be having a laugh. if they didn't want laugh. and if they didn't want these types people there, these types of people there, they have so many they shouldn't have so many package to package holidays going to tenerife. i i'm just tenerife. and as i say, i'm just very unhappy so many people very unhappy with so many people vilifying brits, but they vilifying the brits, but they really happy the british really happy to take the british might vilify the brits herself. >> i'm not saying you do, but you know, if we all ended up, you know, if we all ended up, you in some sort of villa you know, in some sort of villa or hotel and there or apartment or hotel and there was large drunken was a large drunken gang dominated in the area, none of us would be happy. >> if they, you know, if >> well, if they, you know, if they wanted to attract more french people, because at the moment people are brits, moment most people are brits, then spanish, then it's
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then it's the spanish, then it's then it's the spanish, then it's the it's the german, then it's the french, then the nordic french, and then it's the nordic people. they're also people. but they're also complaining germans. complaining about the germans. so it's just us. no it's so it's not just us. no it's not, it's no. i've heard the canary quite snobby not, it's no. i've heard the carwell. quite snobby not, it's no. i've heard the carwell. they quite snobby not, it's no. i've heard the carwell. they don't|uite snobby not, it's no. i've heard the carwell. they don't evensnobby not, it's no. i've heard the carwell. they don't even like by as well. they don't even like the spanish. as well. they don't even like the it'sinish. as well. they don't even like the it's not]. as well. they don't even like the it's not just the brits. >> it's not just the brits. >> it's not just the brits. >> it's, it's. and it's not just tenerife. it's a problem. look at benidorm and older peoples. they behave better parties and the stag parties that go to prague or whatever. it's just the fact that. and it's not just young people in tenerife , it's young people in tenerife, it's a lot of them are the older people and they go there because it's cheap. cheap beer, cheap food, and they don't appreciate the culture of the place. well, i always say that you're going to always say that you're going to a country for a holiday. you really need to appreciate their customs and how they behave. and indeed learn a little bit of the language so you can have a conversation . conversation. >> liz, you were talking about restrictions earlier. sorry to interrupt you. you were talking about restrictions. do you think that might make things better ?
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that might make things better? >> well, it's a local government problem and they need to do it in exactly the same way as they've done it in benidorm. exactly the same way as they've doneitin exactly the same way as they've done it in other countries. in europe. you put in restrictions, you tourists from every you welcome tourists from every level and you provide the facilities so that maybe the upper end of the market can go and appreciate it. you've got places now, even as far as where as jamaica and, let me think where else where you've got you've got gated communities. so you've got gated communities. so you've got gated communities. so you've got but the locals are in shantytowns towns and, and the problem is with place like tenerife, they have there have been a huge amount of people buying up flats and properties in order to do airbnb, and therefore the locals are complaining because they can't get onto the property ladder. but what you've got to do is if you want to change that culture, then the local government have got to do something about it, and got to actually make
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and they've got to actually make certain they limit the certain that they they limit the amount of, of airbnb that they . amount of, of airbnb that they. >> let's hear from paula. >> let's hear from paula. >> yeah. well i think it's i just think little bit of brass just think a little bit of brass neck there saying want to neck there saying they want to have people. i mean have cultured people. i mean it's not ancient greece. there's not to see. i don't not too much to see. i don't think there's very cheap, think there's just very cheap, dnnks think there's just very cheap, drinks food . and because drinks and food. and because it's near africa, the weather's better. much likely better. you're much more likely to a suntan there. that's to get a suntan there. that's what a lot people care about. what a lot of people care about. i going to mainland spain, i think going to mainland spain, people being people would object to being being they don't have being told that they don't have a culture. >> they don't really. >> well, they don't really. >> well, they don't really. >> mean, i went once , there >> i mean, i went once, there isn't a lot to do there. i call it ten hag greece. i didn't like it. i didn't like it 2 or days. >> i don't really want to do a lot on my holidays anyway. >> i mean, ijust like lot on my holidays anyway. >> i mean, i just like to drink >> i mean, ijust like to drink and read, but i like to lie by the pool. >> but i don't want too many rowdy people around. but if i don't want to be in a rowdy place, i don't go to place, i just don't go to tenerife. and if they want to get classy people, they'll get tight they'll go there tight people. they'll go there because can fly there with because you can fly there with a partner pay £325 for
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partner and pay £325 for a flight in star hotel. flight in a four star hotel. these people will be mean. they won't out spending won't be going out spending money anywhere in europe. >> can no. >> you can no. >> not anywhere. >> not anywhere. >> you can. they cater for >> yes you can. they cater for everyone. what they're trying to say the moment in say is at the moment in tenerife, the of very tenerife, the culture of very cheap ms3 is overrunning the cheap and ms3 is overrunning the sort call sort of the what you call classy, what call a sort of classy, what i call a sort of a better quality hotel. and i think you'll find that the only way to change that is for them to allow for the upper end of the market to actually be be catered for. and as i said, restrict the airbnb properties and not allow people to buy five. >> well, they are charging finding people £2,000 now or ,2,000 that don't let out their properties, which ,2,000 that don't let out their propertie agree ch ,2,000 that don't let out their propertie agree with. actually agree with. >> they're also fining >> and they're also fining people ,25,000. unbelievable if you're involved in a party that's causing a lot of noise , i that's causing a lot of noise, i mean, very few people, if any, will have that money to pay a fine there, and that i can understand. >> but it is those sort of stag parties and hen parties that encourage that type of behaviour. >> well, we put them on the map,
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we put them on the map. we've made tenerife a lot of money well over the years . well over the years. >> tenerife, it has been a stopping point for people flying to wherever. and to south africa or wherever. and there some lovely parts of there are some lovely parts of tenerife. paula, i wouldn't criticise that. >> paula, how do you think liz's suggesting there that tenerife needs to attract a higher quality ? have no chance. quality? have no chance. >> how would you do that? pr the best pr the world will never. you'll never be able to say guess what? tenerife is classy now. never. as i say from the 18905, now. never. as i say from the 1890s, brits have been going there. i mean what how classy. people not going to go to people are not going to go to tenerife if i say they may do just to save money, but you know, you want someone know, you don't want someone going a bar and nursing going to a bar and nursing a glass of red wine all night, demanding entertainment, at demanding live entertainment, at least brits spend money. least the brits spend money. they abroad. they they are generous abroad. they love a drink. >> love a love a drink. >> thank you. they love a drink. okay, liz, thank you much okay, liz, thank you very much indeed. so will take it. indeed. so we will take it. neither of you two are going there summer then. neither of you two are going the though ummer then. neither of you two are going the though ui am er then. neither of you two are going the though ui am definitely neither of you two are going the though ulam definitely not. >> though i am definitely not. >> though i am definitely not. >> i'm going there. i've got friends i enjoy going
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friends there and i enjoy going to i've only been to tenerife. i've only been there three times and as i said, it to change. okay well, it was to change. okay well, actually plane, not change. >> good guys . >> good guys. >> good guys. >> thank you both very much indeed. happy holidays. thank you. we've got the sport you. and we've got the sport next paul. with that right after this short break, please
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a load of premier league games last night, and they're going to be completed tonight. tell us more, paul. we have arsenal versus luton town. >> can't see anything more than an arsenal win, can you? >> well, the thing about luton is again they just lost narrowly at the weekend. and there's so many. they lose so many games by just one goal and otherwise they would be they'd be sailing up top four or something a feeling it'll be more than one tonight. >> but we'll see. arsenal, brentford play brighton, manchester city against aston villa. obviously manchester city need win . keep the pressure need to win. keep the pressure up on the top there. liverpool
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at the top aston villa also going for top four. >> yeah i mean i think villa's very interesting because you know a win cements their place in the top four. and truly. in the top four. well and truly. >> thing is it looks >> but the thing is it looks like the top five should get champions league football. so that brings spurs into whether it's aston villa. but it's spurs and aston villa. but that all depends on what goes on in europe because it's you know, you get an extra an extra place that goes to a country that does better in europe. so it's either germany england. at germany or england. at the moment it like england. so moment it looks like england. so that's we are at the that's where we are at the moment. should be moment. okay. so it should be top brighton i'll tell you top five brighton i'll tell you about brighton. >> they're doing well. >> they're doing well. >> well tell you >> yeah. well tell you financially doing financially ellie, they're doing extremely well. clubs in trouble at see. on all at the moment you see. on all the time we've seen all the thing about financial fair play, profit sustainability clubs profit and sustainability clubs that too much that are spending too much money. just huge money. brighton are just a huge success. if anybody can look success. and if anybody can look at and run club the at brighton and run the club the way they do, it'll take a way that they do, it'll take a lot of beating. if they lot of beating. so only if they had best on the had their best season on the pitch year, but also pitch last year, but also financially as well. and they have made a huge profit. it's
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the record for the biggest profit ever made by an english team. £122.8 million. they've made in profit. so if you think of players and people are just spending so much money, look at chelsea spent a billion and then you've got a club like brighton and not only succeeding on the pitch, but doing extremely well off it as well. it is incredible. i'm doing really, really got really well. i mean, they got £22 compensation for £22 million compensation for graham now this talk graham potter and now this talk about de zerbi, their about roberto de zerbi, their manager, talk about manager, they always talk about whether to be the whether he's going to be the next at liverpool. looks next guy at liverpool. looks unlikely. are unlikely. now bayern munich are interested. it's the same interested. so and it's the same as managers and players. they leave. but what brighton do very well is that they bring. it's all about great recruitment , so all about great recruitment, so they bring him great players and managers that then in after managers that then come in after that. it never seems to dip. that. so it never seems to dip. so very run. so very well run. >> talking about dipping haha. they much greater. they don't get much greater. they don't get much greater. they don't get any greater than adam peaty in swimming. >> peaty is the best and >> adam peaty is the best and he's had a bit of a tough two, 2
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or 3 years. you know what it was about the same time he was in strictly come dancing. i don't know whether it's actually anything to do with that, but adam peaty, he's won olympic anything to do with that, but adam he's:y, he's won olympic anything to do with that, but adam he's oure's won olympic anything to do with that, but adam he's our he's'on olympic anything to do with that, but adam he's our he's the )lympic anything to do with that, but adam he's our he's the world c gold. he's our he's the world record holder still for the 100m breaststroke. and it's the olympic which happening breaststroke. and it's the ol'london which happening breaststroke. and it's the ol' london this which happening breaststroke. and it's the ol' london this week. happening breaststroke. and it's the ol' london this week. andyening breaststroke. and it's the ol' london this week. and he ng breaststroke. and it's the ol'london this week. and he came in london this week. and he came through and not only did through there. and not only did he come through, but it was the fastest time that he's swum since ran his since he won since he ran his since he won his title in 2021. his olympic title back in 2021. so in paris, pete so the olympics in paris, pete is going for gold again and fingers crossed for him because he has had a difficult time and i've often said this before with him . he's the most driven and him. he's the most driven and without doubt the most driven person. to you. eamonn the person. next to you. eamonn the most driven person i've ever met. >> goodness me. >> goodness me. >> and that takes some drive, doesn't it, i noticed on the on the back there's a bit of the back pages there's a bit of a has broken out between pep a row has broken out between pep guardiola and roy keane. roy keane be worried about keane won't be worried about this, keane at the this, but roy keane at the weekend that , erling weekend said that, erling haaland, was playing like a
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division two player, which obviously implied that he hadn't got much, skill or whatever it is. and he was a bit anonymous. it has to be said in the arsenal game on sunday. yeah. >> i mean, he's i think his argument was in front of goal. he's lethal. but build up play and especially on saturday at the weekend he was he looked like a division two player. it's roy keane being roy keane isn't it. he says exactly what he thinks. whether people are agree the way, it's the way guardiola plays him and strategy that plays him and the strategy that he has. >> as to how haaland is brought into game . i mean there's no into the game. i mean there's no club would turn down club that would turn down haaland of course not haaland and they of course not have that he scored. have goals that that he scored. but think the great thing is but i think the great thing is i'd see guardiola, who i'd love to see guardiola, who thinks big am and thinks he's the big i am and he's very he's a genius. he's a genius, there's no doubt. but he told off jack grealish front told off jack grealish in front of cameras on the pitch on of the cameras on the pitch on sunday, which thought was bang sunday, which i thought was bang out and, you know, so. out of order and, you know, so. but yet he can't take it. if someone like keane calls him and roy keane won't be in the slightest . slightest. >> pritt stick no, he will love
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it. and it's interesting because there was that thing that you mentioned he go at mentioned where he had a go at jack grealish. now there's always i don't think always something i don't think it's just go out. i'm not happy with i'm going to start with the i'm going to start shouting you. think there's shouting at you. i think there's always method behind the madness. it madness. deliberate. i think it probably was. i think he's probably was. i think he's probably thinking, right, i'll show you. we'll do it in front of the cameras and you don't because you see players, don't you? and when they talk to each other, they always do this and they you you can't they tell you so you can't actually hear what they say. so you it. so you can't even lip read it. so if manager is going go, if a manager is going to go, that's exactly that's exactly okay. say we said he okay. i won't say we said he said thank very much for said thank you very much for being so but but that's being here. so but but that's exactly right. and so if you're going to end up berating someone, know what someone, you know what you're doing. someone, you know what you're dthook someone, you know what you're doiilook littler. >> look littler. >> look littler. >> yes. >> oh yes. >> oh yes. >> look we'll see. what's he doing name? doing with his name? >> is now trademarking his >> luke is now trademarking his name. agents are name. so obviously agents are thinking close to thinking 17 years old, close to the championship. the world championship. everybody he is. darts everybody knows who he is. darts player. there's going to be money so agents and money involved. so agents and sponsorship. so there's a
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possibility. true. this is . possibility. how true. this is. i at the darts. i mean look at the darts. there's you can already already get darts. very get the nuke darts. very nice too. there's they're too. and there's luke they're looking handsome behind his looking very handsome behind his pack but you can also pack of darts. but you can also buy. would you buy ellie? buy. well would you buy ellie? would you be interested in luke? littler gym gear. i don't know when pilates. littler gym gear. i don't know wh< i | pilates. littler gym gear. i don't know wh you wouldn't doing that thinking. >> i think he's smart. i think a lot of people would love to play with his dance. >> people love him with his dance. would. but gym gear, dance. they would. but gym gear, gym, weightlifting, martial arts kit exercise belts kit and trimming exercise belts aren't littler trimming aren't you luke littler trimming exercise aren't you luke littler trimming exercis obviously use >> he obviously doesn't use those. well strong 17 year old. >> we'll see. >> we'll see. >> well, she'd sit like that. >> well, she'd sit like that. >> all the best, my friend. >> all the best, my friend. >> anyway, good luck to luke. let's hope you make some money out of this. thanks, paul. >> appreciate it. >> appreciate it. >> thank you. now, still to come, got fabulous come, we've got a fabulous pairing muldoon pairing of clare muldoon and scarlett this morning. scarlett mccgwire this morning. they're taking us they're going to be taking us through papers. that's
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next. >> scarlet and clare. going through the. the papers today. and the scarlet . there's great and the scarlet. there's great news if you're a billionaire. because they're now more of them than ever. so these aren't just millionaires . these are billionaires. >> i know. and taylor swift has joined them. the wonderful taylor swift is now a billionaire. she's she's sort of at the bottom , of the at the bottom, of the billionaire. there's, between the billionaires, they have more money than any than the gdp of any country apart from, the us and china. i mean , they are it and china. i mean, they are it is just incredible. and the billionaires go on getting nchen billionaires go on getting richer, which means that the rest of us go on getting poorer. >> yeah, they get i did a program on this a few years ago, and the truly rich people like
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that earn money while they're sleeping . so if they've written sleeping. so if they've written the record or they get musical rights or it's usually oil, gas, petrol , you know, something like petrol, you know, something like that, something gold, minerals coming out of the ground. if something's coming out of the ground, they can go to sleep. then go on holidays. it's still coming out of the ground. they don't have to be involved in it. >> so the guy who owns >> well, so the guy who owns louis vuitton is the richest man person because of person in the world because of that other things. that company or other things. yeah. and second elon yeah. because and second is elon musk and third is jeff bezos. those are the three top earners. and i mean, you're right. i mean they they go on making money and you sort of think the thing about taylor swift is at least she's making money out because she's making money out because she's brilliant and she's a nice person with it. >> i think about her. she gave all of the lorry drivers on her toun all of the lorry drivers on her tour. i think it was something like £10,000 each as a bonus, just for coming along with her. and look, going to see her and look, i'm going to see her at wembley in the summer. oh, but she's charging a pretty
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but also she's charging a pretty penny, is. penny, so that's all she is. become billionaire. become a billionaire. >> actually you that's >> so it's actually you that's paid lorry drivers, not paid their lorry drivers, not her. >> yeah. so maybe i'm a nice person. >> think it's quite. >> well, i think it's quite. i think it's quite disgusting actually money these actually how much money these people making. absolutely. people are making. absolutely. i really, do. there's really, really do. there's a difference between what need difference between what you need and difference between and there's a difference between what there's what you want and there's a difference what difference between what you actually why or actually have. why on earth or what would do with that what would you do with that amount money you're right, amount of money you're right, claire, i think could spend claire, i think you could spend it quickly and then you'd it quite quickly and then you'd run things to spend it on. >> on. >> there's only so many helicopters or houses or swimming can have jets. >> but, i mean, what's awful >> but, i mean, what's so awful is bezos, know, is that jeff bezos, you know, who amazon ? i mean, he's who owns amazon? i mean, he's the people who work for him. work for a pittance, zero hour contracts as well, which are shoved in the bin. they, you know, they have problems going to the loo for, for any length of time. i mean, i mean , and of time. i mean, i mean, and they don't recognise unions. i mean, what is what is amazing is, is that he's you call it i mean tight, tight, tight is all
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he wants is more zillions and zillions and you you'd think you'd think his workers would , you'd think his workers would, would benefit from decent conditions. but they don't. they are appalling. yeah. you think some of the satisfaction would be having people saying we really enjoy working for you. >> yes. but then you get someone like bill gates, i don't know if he's still on the list but he is still on the list. >> he's number seven away. >> he's number seven away. >> so much of his wealth, as does his wife claire. >> let's talk about free nursery places. the prime minister's admitted for admitted that these places for two olds will only work two year olds will only work with 40,000 more staff. so the reason just have smile reason you just have to smile about these is just usual lies of politicians . you know, we're of politicians. you know, we're going to do this. the very fact we don't have to pay for it because there's no staff. that doesn't matter. >> wee bit of a side >> that's a wee bit of a side issue, isn't it? yeah. nurseries are stretched because are already stretched because of the of staff that they the amount of staff that they need per capita to need per ratio per capita to child. the nurseries are already stretched the, stretched because of the, the, the, the rigorous stretches of
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red tape that they have to go through. i mean, and the videoing of the children and the reporting of the children or anything , reporting of the children or anything, it's ridiculous what they have to go through. i would rather they actually looked after instead after the children instead of worrying out worrying about filling out a report for a heart finger or something. now this is absolutely, unapologetically going absolutely nowhere because, as you've quite rightly said, eamonn the plan that sunak and the conservatives have said to give 30 hours for two year olds free or 15 hours, they need 40,000 extra staff. they don't have that. they don't even have the nursery for infrastructure for to support the 40,000 needed. now, i know a couple that are going to save £400 a month because of this, and their child's already in a nursery. that's fine . but you know what that's fine. but you know what else is happening? their mortgage rate is ending. so they need to put the they change their mortgage. that £400 is going to have to be paid into the mortgage. yeah. it's taking money somewhere and move money from somewhere and move it to else. and it's under
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to someone else. and it's under the optic. it's under the optic that the conservatives and this government are there to help families. well i'm sorry. wake up. smell the coffee, lads. it ain't happening. and it's not going work. going to work. >> the problem is, is >> because the problem is, is this government i mean it, you used to say, you know, you campaign in poetry, govern campaign in poetry, you govern in they govern in in prose, they govern in headunes.i in prose, they govern in headlines . i mean, that's all headlines. i mean, that's all they do is they make announcements and nothing happens. and yet some people are going gain, but many, many going to gain, but many, many more people cannot get their children into nurseries, desperate to go back to work. the and then nursery workers. i mean, who who should be you know, they're bringing up the next generation and they're, they're paid the minimum wage. i mean, it's terrible, actually. it's really, really difficult . it's really, really difficult. >> it is difficult. it's very difficult doing our job as well when we sit here and they say, and of course, what we're doing, we are carving national insurance wherever. and then you
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realise , wait a minute. you realise, wait a minute. you announced that two years ago when you got big headlines. yeah. there and then it doesn't happen for another two years. then then you then you do it again, then you take bubble it. take double bubble for it. another credit for it and another bit of credit for it and it just goes on. and that is the way country is governed. way this country is governed. and i'm really concerned and i'm not really concerned singling out, singling out the conservative party, though . conservative party, though. they're, they're they're in charge. they're sitting in the hot seat. but the next lot will do it as well. yeah, i'll do it. whoever comes in next, we've already seen they've starting to do it with sunak's announcement that he's going to be building houses. >> and if you look a bit further in, be able to do that in, he'll be able to do that from the constituents that he's putting mps order putting in. strong mps in order to win labour for the seat. >> but claire, you see, i still come to that and i think that's a necessary thing to do. i mean, come to that and i think that's a nhave ary thing to do. i mean, come to that and i think that's a nhave gotthing to do. i mean, come to that and i think that's a nhave got aing to do. i mean, come to that and i think that's a nhave got a housing,. i mean, come to that and i think that's a nhave got a housing, complete we have got a housing, complete housing somebody housing crisis and somebody somewhere to take their somewhere has got to take their finger out and go the big finger out and go to the big building and say, oh, building companies and say, oh, stop all all stop land banking, all the, all this ground whatever it is, this ground and whatever it is, start houses. that's start building houses. that's what or we'll
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what you're there for. or we'll take licenses away or take your licenses away or whatever, it happens to whatever, whatever it happens to be. the venture be. but it's the venture capitalists into capitalists that have got into with the funders , the big with the big funders, the big all the hedge funders have got into with all the construction companies that are building homes, they've they've built in an order for it to an equation in order for it to be quiet. >> they say affordable >> they say it's affordable housing. nothing but housing. it's nothing but unaffordable. you what unaffordable. i'll tell you what affordable means. >> affordable means very small, very dank, very stuck away, very badly made. sorry. >> what? badly made as well. yeah. >> yeah, it could well be, but it's i mean, and then you look at the rental market, i mean, so my, son has a tiny, tiny my, my son has a tiny, tiny little flat and, he can't pay for it. he luckily he's got savings because he lived with his mum for six months, and he, he has to he has to get out part of his savings to pay for it. so it's, i mean, to try renting is, is just impossible . and then you is just impossible. and then you look, you know, you you go through london and you look at these beautiful places and
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they're all dark. >> dark because they're not inhabited. >> because. yeah, because they're bought by people from hong kong. from people hong kong. people from people from, abu dhabi. i mean, from, from abu dhabi. i mean, that's where the sales are going. and actually we should be tougher. i mean, you know, we have a housing crisis . we've got have a housing crisis. we've got to move it. we've got to be able to move it. we've got to be able to live in the people. >> i would so tough. on if i >> i would be so tough. on if i see another news report of, mould damp in some person's mould and damp in some person's home kills children. yes. home that kills children. yes. how does hold on to how does anybody hold on to a license to rent after that? you know, these private landlords. absolutely despicable . absolutely despicable. >> absolutely terrible. absolutely terrible. >> okay, scarlet , should we take >> okay, scarlet, should we take a look at this one in the daily stars? >> i mean, totally different. we'll talk about i a lot, don't we. at the moment. and now we have i fridges. yes. >> so, so this this is a fridge that tells you when your food's going to go off. who been going to go off. who who's been who when the fridge door is open. so that, you know, when
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people have been getting, getting a hold of night and, and you just think actually, do you really want in your house? i really want it in your house? i mean, you want i would find mean, do you want i would find it very, very difficult having all these gadgets in my house that record everything that's going on because this fridge comes with a camera, doesn't it? >> so you can literally see who's going and out of the who's going in and out of the door and who's taking what. >> know what the truth >> and you know what the truth is? it isn't for you, ellie. it is. it isn't for scarlett. it's for supermarkets. to be for supermarkets. it's to be able tell supermarket bits able to tell supermarket bits what sell. know, what foods to sell. you know, what foods to sell. you know, what to up on on a friday what to stock up on on a friday or whatever, i bet. >> steve tuckwell. >> steve tuckwell. >> i don't think there's enough bottles the shelf to show to bottles on the shelf to show to show if they bottles on the shelf to show to shova if they bottles on the shelf to show to shova camera if they bottles on the shelf to show to shova camera in if they bottles on the shelf to show to shova camera in my if they bottles on the shelf to show to shova camera in my fridge hey bottles on the shelf to show to shova camera in my fridge .ay had a camera in my fridge. >> what do you make of it though? fridge is listening to you. >> oh, it's just i just don't want anything like that. i'm just of the opinion now. i'm off to australia next week for a few weeks to see one of my children who's out there and you know who's out there and i. you know what? might just not come what? i might just not come back. it's got, just sick back. it's just got, just sick of here. i really, of everything here. i really, really am. >>
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em- really am. >> not coming back from >> were you not coming back from australia? that's australia? yeah, that's far enough. >> that's good. >> that's good. >> you just couldn't help yourself, could you ? yourself, could you? >> so you're seriously thinking of staying out in australia? >> no, not seriously, i just dropped that in there to see what? >> you wouldn't leave you. she never could. i couldn't leave you, eamonn. >> but. servants. scarlett >> but. civil servants. scarlett we've aren't we've got a minute. aren't leaving this is leaving home. and this is a staff with the hmrc, i. >> no, i do not understand why working from home, is the reason that hmrc isn't any good? because you can. you can ring people up when they're at home. that's the whole point. >> you can't get through . >> you can't get through. >> you can't get through. >> well, you could just walk in when they were all in the office playing with their kids or taking a delivery of their amazon. >> yeah, on the fridge. >> yeah, on the fridge. >> i just think i just think it's a it, it's saying two and two in equals ten is yes. people work from home. yes hmrc is terrible. yes. you know i was sent a bill when my after my uncle died and tried to get it
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and you can't get through but it's not because they work from home. >> it is okay guys thank you for coming into the studio with us today. always nice to see the pair of you claire and scarlett. appreciate it. >> thank you very much indeed. let's have a look at the weather now with alex burkill. >> things are heating >> looks like things are heating up. boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news. >> morning. here's your latest gb news weather hit. brought to you in association with the met office. a bit of a north south split today. drier, brighter towards the south, but further north there's a quite a bit of rain around. heavy persistent rain around. heavy persistent rain across parts of northern ireland southern scotland ireland and southern scotland this morning. all of this breaking a little bit. so breaking up a little bit. so turning bit showery we turning a bit more showery as we go the afternoon, but go through the afternoon, but nonetheless staying pretty wet. although across the north although across the far north northwest scotland mostly northwest of scotland mostly dry. some decent dry bright dry. also some decent dry bright weather across central southern england. some bright sunny spells just scattering of
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spells just a scattering of showers to watch out for. feeling pleasantly warm in any sunshine highs around 1516 sunshine with highs around 1516 celsius, colder celsius, but markedly colder than further north. as we than this further north. as we go through the end of the day, there will be spell of more there will be a spell of more persistent rain feeding into parts the southwest, parts of the southwest, gradually its way across gradually making its way across parts wales, and parts of england and wales, and staying pretty cloudy and wet across scotland. two and across much of scotland. two and the rain could bring some hill snow, perhaps slightly lower snow, perhaps to slightly lower levels for a time as we go through the early hours of tomorrow. otherwise and a touch of possible across the far of frost possible across the far north—west scotland. first north—west of scotland. first thing a milder thing on thursday. a milder start and again it is start elsewhere and again it is going to be quite cloudy with outbreaks of rain for many of us. watch out for some heavy bursts of rain pushing way bursts of rain pushing their way eastwards bursts of rain pushing their way eazweardsthrough the morning as we go through the morning could some spray on the could cause some spray on the roads and some difficult travel conditions. otherwise, often quite cloudy a few showery quite cloudy and a few showery outbreaks there. perhaps outbreaks here or there. perhaps something more persistent something a bit more persistent pushing southwest later pushing into the southwest later temperatures will be temperatures for many will be similar today, highs similar to today, with highs around celsius by a brighter around 16 celsius by a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors
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of weather on
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gb news. >> a very good morning to you. the time is approaching 9:00 on wednesday, the 3rd of april. >> i hope your day is going well so far. this is breakfast with eamonn and ellie and leading the news. >> the prime minister demands, answers as three british aid workers are killed by an israeli drone strike. >> a muslim teacher has been banned for saying islam will take over the world and branding western girls as lunatics . more western girls as lunatics. more on that very, very shortly. >> hakim khan had undermined fundamental british values. that's according to the teaching regulation agency, as they have banned him indefinitely. i'll have the latest here in birmingham and don't go anywhere as very shortly we're going to be revealing the british suburb,
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which has been named the capital of beauty . of beauty. >> warning whilst there's quite a bit of rain across northern parts today, it's better news further south if it's drier and brighter weather you're after, i'll have the details shortly. >> we're getting a lot of reaction on this story that we're leading with this half houn >> yeah, we certainly are. it's about a muslim teacher in birmingham, aqib khan. he has been sacked for undermining fundamental british values by a teaching regulation agency . they teaching regulation agency. they were a professional misconduct panel and let's find out what it was all about. >> west midlands reporterjack >> west midlands reporter jack carson with this one. so this man is now he's now history. he's been thrown out of the school. tell us why jack . school. tell us why jack. >> well, this was an investigation and a decision by a panel from the teaching regulation agency, aqib khan, who is the 30 year old man, a
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former teacher here at harborne academy teaching english. he was found after an internal investigation was handed to the agency for investigation . there agency for investigation. there were complaints against the from a fellow member of staff about concerns around mr khan's conduct with students that was put forward onto the school's safeguarding portal. then, after an internal investigation found and including, you know, the interviews of several pupils , as interviews of several pupils, as it was noted that there was a suggestion of inappropriate religious views and harmful comments about dating and relationships . it was passed relationships. it was passed forward to the teaching regulation agency, who, after that investigation, hearing both sides, representations sides, including representations from mr khan about working in a particularly stressful environment and being of course , environment and being of course, noting that there were no previous disciplinary against him , they did find that he had him, they did find that he had clear motive for some of the comments that he had made. we'll go through some of them for you to give an idea of what was said
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. he included said things to the effect that a having a baby over the age of 30 was worse than a cousin marriage, and that the child will most likely have disabilities. he's also thought, heard to have said that western girls were lunatics , and he also girls were lunatics, and he also made a specific comments in a whatsapp in a microsoft teams group. sorry which had several students in one of those messages, including a topless photo shared to a pupil, as, of course , he's one of the things course, he's one of the things he was accused of was showing his students how to get girls. so he has been banned indefinitely after this review by the panel, and the earliest that he can, appeal that review is in march 2026. >> jack carson. thank you so much for bringing us up to date on that story. loads of you getting in touch on the debate that we had a little bit earlier
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on about tenerife and britons behaving badly , gordon says we behaving badly, gordon says we need to learn the culture. let's be honest and tell it like it is. the spanish simply do not like us. there isn't a spanish speaking country that likes us brits . brits. >> ooh, but a lot of you are saying, you know, there's a cost to ed davey, there is nice los gigantes, that you go to. you say you're all treated very well. and carl says the problems drink. the location is irrelevant. age is irrelevant when they get drunk, they cause trouble. it's as simple as that. >> well, do keep your views coming in on that story. or indeed any of the stories that we're talking about today. gb views at gb news. com. well, let's go now to the shadow chief secretary to the treasury, darren jones. good to see you this morning. darren. look, i know that you're here to talk to us about rishi's recession and talking small businesses, talking about small businesses, but we do want to talk to you about our top story this morning, which is, of course, those three aid workers
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those three british aid workers who killed by an israeli who were killed by an israeli drone strike, seven killed in total, seven people. what's the labour party's response to this attack ? attack? >> well, firstly, the tragic news is, going to be hard for all of the families to hear. as i've said already this morning in tv interviews, one of the families are based here in bristol, and so we've been in touch, with them to help as best we can. this should not have happened. we can. this should not have happened . aid workers are happened. aid workers are supposed to be protected . they supposed to be protected. they should not be targeted by military forces in a war zone, their vehicles, their convoy were clearly marked. the route they were taking had been pre—notified died. and israel now has to answer questions as to how this unimaginable circumstance could have happened in the first place, and they should do so quickly. the difficult thing, then, is that the consequence of this is that it makes it harder for aid to be
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made available to people who so desperately need it in gaza, because the aid because this puts the aid workers more risk than they workers at more risk than they should be under. and it closes off routes that people thought might have been available to them to help, and reminds us why it's a consequence of that. we have to get to a position of a sustainable ceasefire as quickly as possible, and for a political dialogue to resume. >> there are discussions in the foreign office at the moment in response to this about limiting intelligence sharing with israel and also limiting arms sales. if it is found that israel isn't abiding by international humanitarian laws, should we limit our intelligence sharing with them? and should we limit arms sales ? arms sales? >> so there's a couple of separate issues there. firstly, the foreign secretary, lord cameron, has said that in the first instance, israel must answer the questions that we've just discussed and that the government will consider whether further action should therefore be and we will wait to be taken. and we will wait to see what the government says about in about that in due course. in terms arms licences, there is
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terms of arms licences, there is a process for licence control for the export of arms . and if for the export of arms. and if the evidence shows that those export licences, the terms of those export licences have been breached, consequences breached, then the consequences that flow from that should flow from and we would expect from that. and we would expect the to set out more the government to set out more detail on in due course. detail on that in due course. and should be transparent and they should be transparent about that with relevant parliamentary . but parliamentary committees. but the thing to of the last thing to say, of course, is talked about the course, is you talked about the international, course and that is for the is decisions for the international court to make, not for politicians to make in the same way as it has been, through this conflict, even though very readily the images that we see are horrifying and we want them to stop, we need to leave legal judgements to judges, not to politicians. >> darren, just moving you on now to the economic agenda and you ali was was using this term rishi's recession and what what proof do you have of this and what are the figures to back up a term like that? >> yeah. hear you. fine. sorry
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about the delay. >> at the helm of the government and we are in a recession. it's been confirmed by the independent statistics. so that's why we call rishi's that's why we call it rishi's recession. it's recession. even though it's quite to say , the data that quite hard to say, the data that we've published today, though, from the labour party, the from the labour party, shows the real that. 40,000 real impact of that. 40,000 businesses across the country, small are either small businesses are either making less money than they did last year or have gone bust entirely. and people will know that, they look at that, because if they look at their high streets, they will have seen independent shops and businesses go bust. and this is an that can't be related an issue that can't be related to the pandemic. this is a post pandemic issue too, and it really affects the vibrancy and quality of local communities. and that's why we say that there are measures that the government should if they won't, should take, and if they won't, that will take. if we win the that we will take. if we win the election this year to election later this year to support and independent support small and independent shops businesses high shops and businesses in our high streets across the country, i was this morning that was reading this morning that the labour party are pinpointing
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housing a leading issue in housing as a leading issue in the next general election , that the next general election, that sir keir starmer is going to be taking on the nimbys in order to get lots of new houses built. i mean, that will be welcome news to many people watching to many, many people watching and today. but you've and listening today. but you've got to ask the question, haven't you?is got to ask the question, haven't you? is this talk and no you? is this all talk and no action to get? planning is very, very difficult. there's very difficult. and there's a lot regulation place. lot of regulation in place. >> yeah . we have the plans that >> yeah. we have the plans that underpin our target of delivering 1.5 million homes over the course of the next parliament, but we probably don't have time to go through all of them. but there are measures that we have in place about making sure that more planning are available, planning officers are available, at be able to at the councils to be able to make decisions about freeing up, what we call grey belt, where some of are missed, some areas of land are missed, misclassified as green belt when actually really actually they're really brownfield should and brownfield sites that should and could about could be developed about coordinating our infrastructure investment, whether that's on transport or water and utilities to make sure that new towns are being built with sufficient capacity to meet the needs of
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local people, and taking the view that where local councils are not getting on with setting targets and setting out the plans for how housing will be delivered, we will use the measures available us in measures available to us in westminster win the westminster if we win the election later this year, to mandate so we can mandate that. so that we can make progress on this important issue for people. >> got >> darren jones got to leave it there. thank you very much indeed. darren jones is the chief secretary to the treasury. joining us now, defence and foreign affairs editor this is at the telegraph , colin at the telegraph, colin coughlan. for this one, coughlan. and for this one, colin, we're talking colin, obviously we're talking about this convoy yesterday we said convoy three vehicles, three vehicles over 1.6 miles each individually targeted. what on earth's going on in your mind, colin? what do you think is behind this? how could something like this happen? it has to have been deliberate. it's not an accident . it's not an accident. >> well, it's. i mean, clearly there's an investigation going on, i don't want to prejudge anybody, but, i mean, clearly, this is a very dreadful event. these people were undertaking
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humanitarian work , you know, the humanitarian work, you know, the company they've been working for , the charity they've been working for, says that they told the israeli defence forces what they were doing, and now we've had this absolutely dreadful attack. and, you know, you must you must think from israel's perspective. i mean, this is a pr disaster. they're all the israelis are already under a lot of pressure over their handling of pressure over their handling of the conflict in gaza, and this really brings it back home to a domestic audience. i mean, i think there will be a lot of palestinians thinking, well, you know, we've had 30,000 odd palestinians killed so far, and a few aid workers get killed and everybody's jumping up and down. what about everybody else ? so, i what about everybody else? so, i mean, this this could actually prove to be a turning point in the war, for israel . the war, for israel. >> and i totally get what you're saying. there my friend, about, a few aid workers and whatever, but they're not the only aid workers. this year, there has been strike after strike after
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strike. most most of which have gone unreported or unnoticed by this. so is there a conspiracy? is this a deliberate policy or is this accidental ? well, well , is this accidental? well, well, again, you know, we have to see the outcome of the israeli investigation. >> i mean, they say they're going to be transparent. and i think the pressure they're under from the american, british and australian governments, to australian governments, just to name few, is to put israel name but a few, is to put israel under the most intense scrutiny of conduct of its military of the conduct of its military operations as its face for many, many years . so let's not many years. so let's not underestimate just how bad this is for israel. and i'm not in any way seeking to , you know, any way seeking to, you know, underplay, the loss of these seven people. i was just trying to put it in some kind of context. and as you say, hugh, sorry , as you say the, the whole sorry, as you say the, the whole problem with so many aid workers, i think the un says they've lost about 190 odd, the
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fact that so many have been lost, during the six month conflict suggests that there is there are some real problems with the way the israelis are conducting this, their operations. i don't think i can say any more than that until we see the outcome of the investigation . investigation. >> and con, what does this mean diplomatically for israel, especially with israel and its allies? i mean, we saw, didn't we, the israeli ambassador being called in to the foreign office yesterday , the first time in 12 yesterday, the first time in 12 years that's happened. and also the us being very critical towards israel . towards israel. >> yeah. well, i think this is a diplomatic disaster. i mean , diplomatic disaster. i mean, whether whether it's intentional or not, the implications for israel are quite horrendous. and the fact that you've got, as you said, these these very senior , said, these these very senior, the prominent world leaders personally berating netanyahu over what's gone on is a diplomatic disaster. and to have the israeli ambassador summoned
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to the foreign office. i don't think that's happened for many years, and that just shows you the strength of international revulsion at the what has happened. and as i say, i think this is going to have implications for the future of the gaza conflict is going to make israel even under even more scrutiny in the way it conducts its military operations. and what its ultimate objectives are. >> we'll follow with great interest. colin, thanks for your take on things. really appreciate it. got to leave it there. thank you very much. >> now britain's newsroom is coming up at 930 and andrew pearson are back pearson bev turner are back together us all about together to tell us all about the program. you? very the program. how are you? very good morning. yeah. we're good. how you? how are you? >> good. just >> very good. i've just come back malta, rested and. >> yeah, raring. well, you look lovely. >> w course, gm— >> and of course, malta is a case in point about starvation as a means of military strategy in a war, because germans in a war, because the germans tried starve the people of tried to starve the people of malta submission . malta into submission. >> that's why the island got the george cross. what george cross. is this what
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israel trying to do by israel is trying to do by attacking these the these attacking this, these the these humanitarian workers? because tons aid that was tons and tons of aid that was due go into gaza was diverted due to go into gaza was diverted because the charity said they couldn't protect their staff. and i'm afraid if they find it was deliberate, it's a war crime. it really is. yeah >> they died and as you say in the meantime, that that tanker full of, aid has to turn around. it's gone back to cyprus. shocking. and more people starve. yeah >> it's awful. we're going to be talking to lord dannatt about that, at the top of the show, we're also talking about the fact that four out of five teachers think that ofsted needs overhauling, presumably you've been talking about that a little bit as well. i think probably you can't overhaul a system like that. i mean, you can overhaul it, but some teachers are asking for it to start again, put a line through it and have a completely different system. are you talk that you going to talk about that muslim teacher? >> yeah, we're talking of teaching. >> yeah, we're talking of teaexactly. related, if >> yeah, we're talking of teairemember related, if >> yeah, we're talking of teairemember in related, if >> yeah, we're talking of teairemember in 2021,lated, if >> yeah, we're talking of teairemember in 2021, the d, if you remember in 2021, the teacher batley still in teacher in batley who's still in hiding he used the
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hiding because he used the cartoon of, of the prophet muhammad and that school treated that teacher really badly. this school, it seems, has been pretty proactive by getting rid of this teacher, outrageous things. he was teaching those kids. >> yeah, and also the fact that generation z, the under 27 are killing our nightlife industry because nobody goes to the pub anymore and nobody drinks , and anymore and nobody drinks, and that generation don't don't dnnk that generation don't don't drink anything. >> what do they do , bev? how do >> what do they do, bev? how do they entertain themselves? >> they around their >> they sit around in their bedrooms, their phones and bedrooms, on their phones and meeting future partners meeting their future partners online. to me probably online. it seems to me probably having a bit of wacky backy and smoking cannabis. having a bit of wacky backy and smoking cannabis . yeah, smoking cannabis. yeah, absolutely. of drinking, absolutely. instead of drinking, drinking also it's just drinking beer and also it's just so expensive for them, you know, it's so expensive if they're getting a taxi out to the pub and a taxi back and having a few dnnks and a taxi back and having a few drinks with their friends, you could easily blow £100 in one night and they can't afford to do it. so fair point. >> yeah. okay guys, thanks. from half nine. >> thank you very much indeed, the great british giveaway ,
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the great british giveaway, we're running it again, and this is what you could get. >> yes. >> yes. >> well , you >> yes. >> well, you may have already got your holiday book for this yean got your holiday book for this year, but if you haven't booked for next year, well, you could win bespoke for win a bespoke greek cruise for two. add £10,000 in cash, two. and add £10,000 in cash, plus luxury travel plus a luxury travel gift package is how you package too. this is how you could it with thanks to could win it with thanks to variety cruises, a family company sailing since 1942, you have the chance to win a £10,000 seven night small boat cruise for two with flights, meals, excursions and drinks included. >> you'll be able to choose from any one of their 2025 greek adventures and explore greece like never before. plus, you'll also win £10,000 in tax free cash to make your summer sizzle, and we'll pack you off with these luxury travel gifts for a chance to win a prize worth over £20,000. text win to 63232. text cost £2 plus one standard network rate message or post your name and number two gb zero four, po box 8690. derby de19
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jvt uk. only entrants must be 18 or over. lines close at 5 pm. on the 26th of april. full terms and privacy notice at gb gbnews.com/win. please check the closing time if listening or watching on demand. good luck i watching on demand. good luck! >> right after the break we're heading to croydon , you may heading to croydon, you may think not as glamorous as the greek islands, but we've got more health and beauty salons than anywhere else in the whole country. we'll be
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>> welcome back. now, croydon has been named the beautiful . has been named the beautiful. the beauty capital of the uk. with more hair and beauty workers than anywhere in workers than anywhere else in the country. >> 1 in 32. in fact, 1 in 32 people are employed in the industry, is four times industry, which is four times the average . so what is the national average. so what is it about beautiful croydon that works so well here? well, let's
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now talk to nikki thompson . now talk to nikki thompson. nikki is the owner of nick's hair and beauty and business is good for you. nikki >> it is. thank you. yeah. good morning. yeah it's very good at the moment. >> and, nikki, what are the most popular treatments? >> well, we're a hair and beauty salon. so on the hair side, lots of colour . we do a lot of of colour. we do a lot of colour, lots of balayage, and on the beauty side, and, you know, i think self—care has become, much more important since the pandemic. lots of facials and pandemic. so lots of facials and massage, definitely popular here. and nails too. definitely. nails have become a massive industry and there's so many people working in the industry. >> is one in every 32 people in croydon are employed in beauty jobs. so what do you think that's all about? do you think you're just a very creative bunch are just very beautiful? >> well, i mean both obviously, but know, croydon is big
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but you know, croydon is a big borough and, i know where we are. we're very much part of the community, and there's a real great community spirit, in croydon. and i think people, they like to come out, they like to support local, and, you know, it's such a diverse area as well , which is wonderful, so i think the great thing is you've got the great thing is you've got the affluent areas, the not so affluent areas, and there's a salon out there to suit all needs and all budgets. and i think that's why, you know, croydon does so well, but nick's, you don't mind if i call you nick's, do you? >> sorry. what was that? >> sorry. what was that? >> you don't mind if i call you nick's, do you? >> you can call me now. you can call me nick's. that's absolutely fine. >> there is a cost >> well, nick's there is a cost of living crisis as well. how do people, you know when things get tough a lot tough for people? a lot of people up themselves. people give up on themselves. they hair can go another they say, my hair can go another three weeks won't get my three weeks or i won't get my nails done, or i don't need a false tan or plant myself or
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whatever it happens to be. what is it about people in your area? i mean, i know very fashionable areas. i essex is very areas. i think essex is very fashionable. think cheshire fashionable. i think cheshire is very well. but very fashionable as well. but for to in and steal for croydon to nip in and steal this accolade is brilliant. why do you think? how do you think people find the extra money? >> said a minute ago, >> like i said a minute ago, i think since the pandemic, self—care has become a lot more of a priority on people's list , of a priority on people's list, and i think because there are different salons within croydon that can suit different budgets , that can suit different budgets, i think people just do find the money. they might stretch that out a little bit more now. definitely. since you know, there's more that sort of crisis over money, but i think generally people do find that money just to come and pamper themselves and just feel good about themselves, you know? >> a beautiful accolade . >> so it's a beautiful accolade. i mean, you know, it was in croydon last week. i was i was down in croydon last week. i
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passed through as well. and croydon was famous for the trams and things before all of that. but this is really lovely to be, to be famous for. and i might p0p to be famous for. and i might pop down again with so many good looking people to see nick come and pampered. and be pampered. >> i'm afraid. >> eamonn i'm afraid. >> eamonn i'm afraid. >> but it's been lovely to chat to you and she is a beauty. there she is. nikki thompson, the owner nick's and the owner of nick's hair and beauty in croydon. >> way off there to get >> we are way off there to get our nails and our roots our nails done and our roots done everything else. see done and everything else. see you next week. >> see you later. >> see you later. >> a brighter outlook boxt >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar weather on gb news. >> morning. here's your latest gb news weather hit brought to you in association with the met office. a bit of a north south split today. drier, brighter towards the south, but further north there's a quite a bit of rain around. heavy, persistent rain around. heavy, persistent rain across parts of northern ireland and southern scotland this morning. ireland and southern scotland this morning . all of this this morning. all of this breaking up a little bit so turning bit more showery as we turning a bit more showery as we go through the afternoon, but nonetheless staying pretty wet. although far north although across the far north
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northwest mostly dry northwest of scotland mostly dry . also some decent dry bright weather central southern weather across central southern england. some bright sunny spells, a scattering of spells, just a scattering of showers watch for. showers to watch out for. feeling pleasantly warm any feeling pleasantly warm in any sunshine around 1516 sunshine with highs around 1516 celsius, markedly colder celsius, but markedly colder than this further north. as we go through the end of the day, there will be a spell of more persistent rain feeding into parts of the southwest, gradually making its way across parts of england and and parts of england and wales, and staying wet staying pretty cloudy and wet across scotland. two and across much of scotland. two and the could bring hill the rain could bring some hill snow, to slightly . lower snow, perhaps to slightly. lower levels for a time as we go through the early hours of tomorrow. otherwise and a touch of frost possible across the far north—west of scotland. first thing thursday, a milder thing on thursday, a milder start and again start elsewhere and again it is going to be quite cloudy, with outbreaks rain for many of outbreaks of rain for many of us. out some heavy outbreaks of rain for many of us. of out some heavy outbreaks of rain for many of us. of rain some heavy outbreaks of rain for many of us. of rain pushinge heavy outbreaks of rain for many of us. of rain pushing their/y outbreaks of rain for many of us. of rain pushing their way bursts of rain pushing their way eastwards areas eastwards across southern areas as go through the morning as we go through the morning could some spray the could cause some spray on the roads travel roads and some difficult travel conditions. often conditions. otherwise, often quite few showery quite cloudy and a few showery outbreaks there. perhaps outbreaks here or there. perhaps something persistent
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something a bit more persistent pushing southwest later pushing into the southwest later temperatures for many will be similar today, with highs similar to today, with highs around celsius warm around 16 celsius by that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> 930 on wednesday, the 3rd of april. this is britain's newsroom on gb news with andrew pierce and bev turner. >> very good morning. thank you. we're glad to be back together now. workers now. three british aid workers killed. have killed. world leaders have condemned israeli condemned the fatal israeli missile is it actually a missile strike. is it actually a war crime? the former head of the army is going to join us in just a moment. >> a teacher in birmingham has been banned for islam been banned for saying islam will over the world and will take over the world and calling westernised girls lunatics. values at lunatics. our british values at risk . cause the players gonna risk. cause the players gonna play, play, play , play, play and play, play, play, play, play and the haters gonna hate, hate, hate , hate, hate baby i'm just
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hate, hate, hate baby i'm just gonna

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