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tv   Patrick Christys  GB News  November 21, 2022 3:00pm-6:01pm GMT

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channel oh, you're with me. patrick christys right here on gb news. it's coming , it's coming. i've it's coming, it's coming. i've seen enough england now stuffing the iranian team six one, apparently, although i didn't the last go because i'm here with you. wonderful people. but there we go. i've seen enough to know that the world cup is definitely back to blighty, but there news talking there other news in town talking and home almost his and things home is almost his bride begum rich bride shamima begum should rich
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people their own health care people pay their own health care and will wales win that world cup opener? england they're off to a flyer for all the talk of virtues signalling. england put the iranians to the sword and qatar is currently six one, although by now probably scored another is impossible to another few but is impossible to separate football and especially when fifa decide to float the world cup in a middle east in shana world cup in a middle east in sharia states. the one live on bond was banned england, took the knee . we stop virtue the knee. we stop virtue signalling , get on with the signalling, get on with the footy. also this hour, should the wealthy be made to pay for their own health care? this is their own health care? this is the snp's latest bright side, taking a look at what it mean. wealthy paying twice wealthy people paying twice wouldn't a double health wouldn't like a double health tax . nhs wouldn't like a double health tax. nhs england also looking tax. nhs england is also looking to sack half of its bureaucrats to sack half of its bureaucrats to save money. about time to. how we survive as a health service without diverse citizens. but this a story that i'm sure will get you all going. we're going to do it every single hour. this show, the only bright shamima begum she could be back to britain. she's appealing uk citizenship after
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it revoked . we all make it was revoked. we all make mistakes, shamima. it was revoked. we all make mistakes, shamima . all make mistakes, shamima. all make mistakes. but fleeing tower hamlets to join a terrorist death cult is an absolute whopper. you've your best and you fine whopper. you've your best and you line it as far i'm you can line it as far as i'm concerned. but across overseas for we've used our for all ecology, we've used our gb news don't uk should shamima begum be allowed into begum be allowed back into britain? that comes after britain? all of that comes after you headlines come a man you latest headlines come a man who was caught . very good who was caught. very good afternoon to you. 3:02. i'm risk by giving up to date on gb news. england are up six one in their world cup opening match against iran. the second half is underway very about to finish. england and wales, along with five other european teams, decided though not to wear a rainbow coloured anti—discrimination armband whilst playing their matches. it was over concerns, they say, that players may be penalised with a yellow card on the pitch for wearing a non sanctioned kit. the iranian team appeared to stay silent during the
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rendition of their country's national anthem of the game. human rights peter tatchell says qatar , fifa should be the ones qatar, fifa should be the ones who get red card, not the players . the issue has become so players. the issue has become so big precisely because the missteps by qatar and fifa. they are making discrimination . human are making discrimination. human rights and so on. they're making the issue of the world cup which it wouldn't been if they hadn't kicked up a fuss. it wouldn't been if they hadn't kicked up a fuss . the prime kicked up a fuss. the prime minister says re—establish things stability is the critical first step in his plans. stabilise the uk economy . stabilise the uk economy. addressing business leaders at the confederation of british industry conference , sunak said industry conference, sunak said he was placing innovation at the heart of his government agenda . heart of his government agenda. he told delegates that controlling inflation was critical to improving living and to putting the economy on a stable footing for the future. he said he was determined to get this . i'm he said he was determined to get this. i'm just here to problems.
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i want to build a better country where we get inflation and grow the economy. where we cut nhs waiting times and improve the quality of care and where we invest more in schools and give every child a world class . every child a world class. education a court has heard a woman who left to join the so—called islamic state seven years ago was influence by a determined and effective isis propaganda machine . shamima propaganda machine. shamima begum, lawyer, said she have been treated as a child trafficking victim. the 23 year old is appealing the removal of her uk citizenship after it was revoked when she was found in a syrian refugee camp. she has denied involvement in terror activities . human rights lawyer activities. human rights lawyer hardeep singh bankole says bagan should be treated the same as a british citizen be. the issue is if he's a british citizen , which
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if he's a british citizen, which he has because she holds a passport or she did a british passport, a british citizen ship, then should she be treated like other british citizens or should she be sent to a country where she's not and she hasn't lived where she's not and she hasn't uvedin? where she's not and she hasn't lived in? or just because the bafis lived in? or just because the basis of her parents came from that ? a 31 basis of her parents came from that? a 31 year old man has been arrested on. suspicion of murder following the death . two young following the death. two young children in a fire in nottingham . emergency services were called to a flat in ferrel close clifton in the early hours of yesterday morning . the children, yesterday morning. the children, aged one and three, were treated at the scene for smoke inhalation. but later in hospital. woman in her hospital. a woman in her thirties remains in a critical condition. nottinghamshire police says it will do all it can to get justice . detectives can to get justice. detectives are working around the clock working very diligently to try and piece together this inquiry and piece together this inquiry and i'm pleased to confirm that and i'm pleased to confirm that an arrest has been made . an arrest has been made. enquiries will not stop because detectives will keep an open mind and we will turn every
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stone to make sure this family get justice . nancy footballer get justice. nancy footballer mason greenwood has been repelled after appearing in court charged with attempted rape. the 21 year old is accused of assault , as well as of assault, as well as controlling and coercive behaviour . controlling and coercive behaviour. all three charges relate to the same . a hearing relate to the same. a hearing will take place in february next year with a trial set for later in the year . a year with a trial set for later in the year. a government official in has said 56 people have been killed and more than 700 have been injured in an earthquake near. the capital. the indonesian agency says the magnitude 5.6 earthquake hit the west java , which rattled jakarta west java, which rattled jakarta about 75 kilometres away for several seconds . he said several seconds. he said authorities are checking the extent of the damage. i there was no potential for a tsunami . was no potential for a tsunami. the comedian lycett, who claimed to have shredded the comedian lycett, who claimed to have shredde d £10,000 in a to have shredded £10,000 in a protest at david beckham world cup role, says he didn't actually do it. the comic filmed himself giving the former england player an ultimatum of
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standing down from his position as qatar world cup when he destroyed the which would have gone to lgbt . mr. moyes . it has gone to lgbt. mr. moyes. it has since said yesterday's footage wasn't real . the truth is, the wasn't real. the truth is, the money that went into the shredder was real, but money that went into the shredder was real , but the money shredder was real, but the money that came out was fake . i would that came out was fake. i would never destroy real money . i never destroy real money. i would never be so irresponsible . in fact, the ten grand had already been donated to lgbtq+ charities . before i even pressed charities. before i even pressed send on the initial last week, i never expected to hear from you. it was an empty designed to get people talking . this is gb news. people talking. this is gb news. bnng people talking. this is gb news. bring you more as it happens. now back to . patrick
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leahy, england are six one up in their opening world cup game against, iran. it hasn't all been plain sailing knowing. them were apparently deprived of a clean porto's . decent clean by ec porto's. decent finish . harry clean by ec porto's. decent finish. harry maguire clean by ec porto's. decent finish . harry maguire wrote his finish. harry maguire wrote his old tricks again but goals from jack grealish bukayo saka. jude bellingham. raheem sterling and marcus rashford have given the three lions their five goal margin against their opponents. let's be honest, we could have turned it into an cricket score, couldn't we? gb news reporter paul hawkins currently in for paul hawkins is currently in for the world cup and theo chikomba a birmingham and a fanzone in birmingham and pleased say they both join pleased to say they both join now. theo, i'll with you a rather rowdy bunch. by this time |, rather rowdy bunch. by this time i, imagine england fans soaking up the final moments of a right royal thump . that's right. up the final moments of a right royal thump . that's right . just royal thump. that's right. just a few minutes left, actually , i a few minutes left, actually, i did hear you sing. and a few moments ago you would have fed right in with this crowd here. jubilation for most the afternoon. six one, almost just afternoon. six one, almost just a couple of seconds going around almost. equalised when they hit
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the crossbar. jordan pickford's been unlucky today not to get a clean sheet , but there are many clean sheet, but there are many more games to come . he'll be more games to come. he'll be looking improve that . but looking to improve that. but today has been so , so today so far has been so, so good england and, their good for england and, their fans. and earlier i spoke to them about what they've made so far the team and of course, far of the team and of course, what's been happening outside of the pitch well. yes. the football pitch as well. yes. i everyone's got start i think everyone's got start back just love it. it's my back and just love it. it's my boy. number one. boy. jude bellingham number one. it's coming on. i mean coming out . come on. it's coming on. i mean coming out. come on. lots of distraction around what's happening in qatar and everything . as i've been everything. as i've been suddenly even talking about with your friends as well. yes yeah. that's kind of a they made a spectacle of the world is what i've been hearing. and reading myself. and it's unfortunate for an event like this that they would do that it all. but it is what it is . we all just love to what it is. we all just love to see it. you absolutely love to see it. you absolutely love to see . i see it. you absolutely love to see. i imagine see it. you absolutely love to see . i imagine there was just see. i imagine there was just beer everywhere in the goes go
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and yes, it's definitely coming home. paul throw it over to you. you are in. what's the thing like that? i imagine are like that? i imagine funds are going start piling very going to start piling very shortly . paul oh, we can't get shortly. paul oh, we can't get paul hawkins. oh, sorry . they paul hawkins. oh, sorry. they got away. patrick yeah . look, got away. patrick yeah. look, the fans will be piling at the stadium, see they're probably making a lot of them will be making a lot of them will be making their way down to the, the working, which is where we are the moment still the are at the moment still the market in central doha. so they'll be coming down here, they'll be coming down here, they'll obviously not soaking they'll be obviously not soaking in but if they do want in the base but if they do want to a beer, they can head to have a beer, they can head for the hotel bars. fans for the hotel bars. all the fans in the designated where in the designated areas where you a beer, we're you can have a beer, we're talking welsh fans here. talking some welsh fans here. just you an idea of the just to give you an idea of the prices. they've managed get prices. they've managed to get a kind package deal, which kind of package deal, which a lot zones are lot of these fan zones are doing. lot these hotel bars doing. a lot these hotel bars are doing a curry, five bars for 80 quid. so those are kind of things some fans will be things that some fans will be doing, of them will be
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doing, but a lot of them will be heading central here heading into central are here mingling other fans and mingling with the other fans and they're imagine, they're probably, i imagine, taking game later. okay taking wales game later. okay okay. all right, paul, thank you very i'm you'll keep very much. i'm sure you'll keep us just getting us abreast. i am just getting fed in my ear. fed through in my ear. apparently some of apparently there's some kind of var request goal for iran. var request for a goal for iran. that's i'm hearing. theo, that's what i'm hearing. theo, i'm as i'll just throw it back to you theo your you are to you theo is your you are there for us are the fans there for us now. are the fans holding breath to come holding their breath to come back not forever . back surely as not on forever. now. okay. all right fair . now. okay. all right fair. alright, we'll come away from that. thank you very much both of you. theo chikomba there is a fanzone birmingham and also well paul hawkins who is in qatar as well, that we get a little bit of reaction. fantastic stuff. so hi. anyway do make of all of hi. anyway do you make of all of this england are currently assigned anyway assigned sunday anyway six one up the he's not up against the and he's not a bad way to start the world cup but as we've heard from earlier, england decided not to england and wales decided not to wear one love bands wear that one love on bands throughout world throughout the world cup apparently around have got the penalty yes the comeback won't be think we can just
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be on now i think we can just give him one anyway. this because fifa threatened to impose and possible impose sanctions and possible yellow did them. yellow cards if they did them. so should football so i'm asking, should football be love armbands so be wearing one love armbands so virtue signalling actually just be tut let's to announce be kicked tut let's to announce a former referee and fifa instructor . oh okay. apparently instructor. oh okay. apparently they're there . yeah, it was they're not there. yeah, it was all going so far all going rather well so far let's go into the inbox, shall we? our big for the day. we? because our big for the day. but move from that but we'll just move on from that for second is i wanted to talk for a second is i wanted to talk to you is something we're going to you is something we're going to on to talk about later on throughout the show throughout course the show actually is regarding shamima begum. not shifted tone begum. so it's not shifted tone actually, whether actually, and it's whether or not should back to the not she should come back to the country. trying country. she's apparently trying to not her to appeal whether or not her citizenship should be returned to the uk and whether she should have a citizenship sit back as well. a lot of people say no, made a bed and she can line it and inbox i was to go and the inbox i was going to go to throughout the show gives a gb news dot uk basically pretty much unanimous saying that they shouldn't into shouldn't allow her back into country is a gb news dot uk make sure that you keep that coming. my sure that you keep that coming. my understanding is that we
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might be able now to go to boxpark in croydon. yes there we go live at boxpark and croydon where fans are watching and take on iran and. yes. people that guessing very, very merry it's six two apparently now to england. hey not only going to solve this world cup so as it goes galore, we're all going to talking a little bit later on, actually to in a welsh pub as wales taken america later wales have taken america later on the us they re now group on the us say they re now group but looks england but it looks as though england will out the group pretty will make out the group pretty comfortably. yeah. so as we heard earlier today, england wales wear that wales decided not to wear that one throughout one of armbands throughout the world because fifa world cup. this is because fifa threatened impose sanctions possible cards they possible yellow cards if they did apparently harry kane did so. apparently harry kane and and all of that lot they and co and all of that lot they care enough about gay rights but not the point of them getting a yellow card maybe should have been shown a rainbow card instead just instead then they would just continue it. but i am continue to wear it. but i am asking you, should footballers continue budget continue to wear on budget virtue get out virtue signalling just get out of the world cup and gets out of
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football sport in general? i football and sport in general? i am finally by former am joined finally by former referee and fifa instructor joe. referee and fifa instructorjoe. okay, all right. unfortunately, we're not able to be joined by that particular individual at moment, which is a bit disappointing but that go. disappointing but that we go. all right . okay. well, anyway, all right. okay. well, anyway, i'll delve into the world i'll just delve into the world of the inbox . football virtue of the inbox. football virtue which is very on brand henry's on thank you very much, henry gb news gbnews.uk. it would seem as though potentially taking knee is okay, but the lgb communities are not allowed . display that are not allowed. display that thing and i think henry doesn't really important distinction jesus in he's fascinating isn't it . the england players are it. the england players are allowed to take the knee but wearing the one love armband wouldn't be. and i've got a couple views surely. couple of views on that surely. and i even shifted a bit because i thought, well, cup i thought, well, the cup absolutely be in absolutely should not be in qatar. shouldn't be human qatar. it shouldn't be so human rights syrian . rights cesspit. it's a syrian. it's got no footballing pedigree, frankly . obviously, pedigree, frankly. obviously, there's that there's women's rights. that law lack of should say and we're lack of should i say and we're playing stadiums built by in some cases , dead slaves, which some cases, dead slaves, which is not a good look for any
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industrial tournament. and i think we all have a strong suspicion is to maybe some of the reasons why the world cup ended up in qatar. so not a particularly great thing that is to heart going to interrupt to heart it's going to interrupt our footballing season . well but our footballing season. well but then i thought right. we said all of this stuff. we all know that it's happening. the world cup is happening. i think got rather miffed by the fact that the bear going be sold in the the bear going to be sold in the concourses because concourses in the because classic it was what they were always going to do the qataris wasn't it let everyone get that the world get that and then impose their and impose their rules and regulations them. but that regulations on them. but that said, people care more about said, do people care more about whether england just whether or not england just score and win the world score goals and win the world cup or not harry, cup or whether or not harry, harry kane takes a stand when . harry kane takes a stand when. it comes to gay rights or indeed takes knee, as they have done, and alcohol i well let's say and alcohol. i as well let's say that kane , a rainbow that harry kane, a rainbow coloured on, got booked coloured armband on, got booked in the tunnel and then just over the of this particular the course of this particular match and now gets match with iran and now gets done as he goes up for a header
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and he gets a second yellow and he's off and we lose him for the rest of the group stages and things don't go our way and then the next comes and wears the next captain comes and wears the next captain comes and wears the arm but at what the rainbow arm but at what point you england fans point do you think england fans would i'd rather we would go. well, i'd rather we made group stage than. made out the group stage than. we wore this armband, we actually wore this armband, but big take this is but my big take on this is doesn't show how hollow doesn't just show how hollow the whole i was whole thing is, if i was a member of the lgbtq+ community , member of the lgbtq+ community, which i am not, so i don't want to speak for them, but if i was, i be rather miffed now i would be rather miffed now because being would because we're being told would have your england have been told that your england captain to make a stand captain going to make a stand you all? that's right one love everybody were flying over there in plane. going to in a rainbow plane. i'm going to put rainbow arm. we put this rainbow on my arm. we stand with is absolutely stand with you. is absolutely disgusting the stand with you. is absolutely disg thatg the stand with you. is absolutely disg that homosexuals the stand with you. is absolutely disg that homosexuals and the stand with you. is absolutely disg that homosexuals and member way that homosexuals and member of the lgbtq community is treated there. we have treated over there. and we have to a stand for human to make a stand for human rights. really about. rights. we really care about. oh, what? you'll put me in the tunnel. right, the tunnel. all right, then the thing and it shows thing comes off and it shows that really, really that it's really, really skin deep, it? i want deep, doesn't it? but i want your on that. your views on that. vaiews@gbnews.uk but it's not all going football, which all going to be football, which i be honest, it's
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i think let's be honest, it's just as well for news channel. we're also going to be talking about the wealthy about whether or not the wealthy should to for that should be made to pay for that nhs treatment. you earn nhs treatment. if you earn megabucks frankly suppose megabucks or frankly suppose what's wealthy these days. anyone hundred anyone over a hundred grams, definitely grand. definitely over a hundred grand. if jeremy. hunt june 25 if you ask jeremy. hunt june 25 k you potentially could be k will you potentially could be made for your own health made to pay for your own health care? how feel about care? how do you feel about that? i think it's a that? right. i think it's a particularly good idea. we've got a whole and much, much got a whole lot and much, much more coming way. first, more coming your way. but first, let's quick your let's have a quick look. your weather. again. aidan weather. hello again. i'm aidan mcgivern office . it mcgivern from the met office. it has another very wet day has been another very wet day for many parts of the uk and it continues that through the continues that right through the rest afternoon into the rest of the afternoon into the evening showers evening blustery showers there isn't persistent isn't the more persistent weather. all it unsettled weather. all in all it unsettled low pressure . more than one in low pressure. more than one in fact is in charge of our at the moment and those areas of low pressure have sent a couple of fronts in and those low weather fronts in and those low weather fronts are as we begin evening bringing the persistent to northern ireland, southern scotland northern england, north wales and midlands. the rain finally the relentless through
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the evening overnight it turns more showery there'll be some lively showers for the south—west south wales and eventually the english channel coast, along with a gusty but away from the showers , there away from the showers, there will be some clear spells and touch of frost. western scotland. northern ireland into some areas that'll be some central areas that'll be some central areas that'll be some fog patches first thing. in fact, it's a fairly gloomy start the day for parts of northern england into the midlands. the rain, though, the cloud breaking up brightest guys return, although there be showers although there will be showers in longer spells of rain in the far of scotland, eastern scotland as well away from any showers though spells showers though sunny spells a brighter to come compared with monday , especially for northern monday, especially for northern ireland. western and wales into tuesday evening. for many showers die away and, clear spells will take hold for the time with some fog patches forming and a fairly widespread frost . many forming and a fairly widespread frost. many areas seeing that frost. many areas seeing that frost forming during the evening. but in the west, temperatures will rise by the end of the night as the next area of wind and rain returns .
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area of wind and rain returns. so by first thing wednesday, the coldest air will be across northeast scotland, minus three minus four celsius in places eastern england as well. temperatures a degree, two below freezing, but quite quickly dunng freezing, but quite quickly during the morning, the rain marches north, pushes into northeast scotland by the end of the afternoon followed on by further blustery towards the west and southwest . so the west and southwest. so the weather chopping and changing over next few days. rain and wind by showers .
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yes welcome back, everybody. now reports the possibility that the government is consider closer ties with the european union has alarmed brexiteers . but alarmed brexiteers. but immigration minister robert jenrick has insisted the fundamental tenets of the deal signed by boris would not renegotiated . and this morning,
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renegotiated. and this morning, following rishi sunak as well squashed speculation about an arrangement similar switzerland style, saying he would block moves requiring the uk to align with eu laws. but if it was a possibility, should we actually pushing for a swiss style deal which is incredibly hard thing to say, pushing for a swiss style deal. quick out a tongue twister now. joining me now is the leader of rejoin the eu policy. richard he was. richard thank you very much for joining me. no rishi sunak has come out and said that this isn't going to happen. whether or not that means is up for debate. means anything is up for debate. but was the largest but that was the largest democratic referendum in british history. we did not vote for something that looks like a swiss style deal , something that looks like a swiss style deal, did we? you're well, the vote was simply to leave eu. there was no further instruction on the paper as to what to do next. and indeed , what to do next. and indeed, many people on the vote leave side were actually a swiss style deal side were actually a swiss style deal. someone about norwegian style deals. i'm about various
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other fantasy deals may or may not have happened. so everything apart from the actual vote, a matter of interpretation ? i matter of interpretation? i suspect i do. yeah, i get that. i'll get that. it was a it was a binary choice on the ballot papenl binary choice on the ballot paper. i understand. however, if you break down what the swiss deal which is, yes, deal is, which is, yes, switzerland technically switzerland is technically outside is the fourth outside the eu, is the fourth biggest trading partner to eu. it what's called selective it has what's called selective access to the single market and parties opposing research and parties opposing eu research and education up. it sounds education program up. it sounds like quite good but it is like it's quite good but it is also signed up to the schengen travel area also to the eu budget and also has to swallow eu laws that they themselves didn't want and that's not is it 7 didn't want and that's not is it ? well, it's not what i want either . of course i would argue either. of course i would argue exactly. you just outlined there that by doing that effectively, they become a rule taker and we have no say in it, quite frankly , we have the best deal. when we were a part of the eu. and i would like to see we join the
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eu. yes. in terms some of the short term economic problems of switzerland style deal will actually it will actually solve and it will restore rights that restore some of the rights that my children looking forward to and certainly the children the previous wall . freedom of previous like wall. freedom of movement to able to make your movement to be able to make your life eu . hang on. life within the eu. hang on. hang on. yeah but sorry. life within the eu. hang on. hang on. yeah but sorry . just. hang on. yeah but sorry. just. just that. just. just on. no, just on that. just. just on. no, but to come back on but i've got to come back on that. right, because when we voted the european voted to leave the european union. it didn't build union. right, it didn't build a around single eu . brits around every single eu. brits can still go and work and live on a holiday the continent and vice versa . notice what do we vice versa. notice what do we not is now going relocate your life in paris if you choose to 90 days and then you throw it back now someone who's operated businesses outright at particular small business which i've gone around the world for this is a significant innovation in terms of my ability to run my business as see it. and that is a big limitation in terms of what we can do. so a holiday. yes, but if you tried to do anything serious, the uk, it's now very, very state. and what
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is swiss style deals so that that particular issue i believe it would now let let's just be clear on this the european union has said very, very clearly they , don't want any more switzerland. that's something they said a long time ago and certainly surprising today. but equally in of the leak equally in terms of the leak from the conservative party, is everyone everyone's denying that they're responsible for it and be honest, patrick, this is a government party in trouble , its government party in trouble, its toe in the water to experiment, toe in the water to experiment, to see if it can be a little bit softer on. brexit can win back little support from the polls and certainly the reaction that there's been to that so far suggests that that's a very unlikely thing to happen. well, i 100% say is absolutely very, very unlikely. i 100% say is absolutely very, very unlikely . and i think the very unlikely. and i think the tories would risk being absolutely decimated if it was the case. and i, out of the decimated. well, not decimated . decimated. well, not decimated. yes, i absolutely. i do take your point. i they would completely split the vote and it be open door for the labour
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party if they decided to go soft on brexit . there is a massive on brexit. there is a massive insinuation and i am inclined to believe now aside from believe that now aside from rishi sunak's, you did allegedly anyway for brexit the likes anyway vote for brexit the likes of jeremy hunt and people like that never wanted to particularly leave and think particularly leave. and i think that is a sense now that that there is a sense now that there are people in charge who are maybe softly are thinking maybe softly softly, can we try to rejoin the european and have a brexit in name only and actually this something where brexit tears and staunch remainers can agree on because that will be the worst of both worlds, wouldn't it? well, i know i actually think where we are at the is the worst of all. why i think a switzerland style deal would make life slightly better on the economic . i think it would fail economic. i think it would fail to solve some of the fundamental issues such as sovereignty over what actually do . no, i what we actually do. no, i wouldn't agree. i mean, no, its ugly head again . it's obvious in ugly head again. it's obvious in amusement , ugly head again. it's obvious in amusement, but i do think this whole debate at the moment is just a red herring. it's a
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desperate just trying to throw a toe the water to distract us down angle. we can see in polls now a lot of people on unhappy with the brexit that was delivered they do want to revisit the issue of the relationship with europe and indeed one thing i find when i talk to a lot of people on the street, they don't necessarily agree about rejoining the eu agree me about rejoining the eu but think we need to do but they do think we need to do something about our. well, exactly . i suspect . yeah, i do exactly. i suspect. yeah, i do suspect that actually people might be after now a more and more independent brexit. so why not britain in this current financial crisis , some kind of financial crisis, some kind of hong kong thing? why not turn us into , you know, essentially a into, you know, essentially a bit of a tax haven? why not turn us into somewhere where we can get quick in that regard and completely pay off any kind of regulation that we would have with or alignment with with the eu or alignment with the i think people the european? i think people maybe let's be a bit maybe thought, let's to be a bit polite, now i might out polite, but now i might go out the window people see their the window and people see their energy through energy bills going through the roof, the cost of living crisis.
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why not actually make most why not actually make the most of sovereignty? of british sovereignty? because we that . we? well we haven't done that. we? well i think there was a widely respected. economist what was the name ? truss tried that a few the name? truss tried that a few months ago. didn't work out terribly well, but now but actually actually does. yeah, but you're you're you're playing politics, haven't you. because what liz truss did was go too hard , too fast. and what we're hard, too fast. and what we're seeing is that our only possibility for growth, according to our dear chancellor is to try to more immigrants , is to try to more immigrants, which would actually just lead to essentially looking slightly better on a spreadsheet, but not actually in practise and actually better in practise and if we rejoin the european union, that's what you do, isn't it? so introduce you just have a load more people coming over and that's do it as opposed that's how we do it as opposed to maybe going to actually maybe going for growth let's growth domestically. let's talk short term and long term here, partly because in terms of the short term, yes we would get an instant boost to rise. we instant boost to our rise. we would restore confidence in our currency we did that. so currency if we did that. so that's would give a that's certainly would give us a short boost of
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short term boost in terms of growth at expense of being growth at the expense of being able to control of our borders. yet we have to balance the short term term. now term and the long term. now i don't if you're aware of don't know if you're aware of this, in the uk, all this, but now in the uk, all reproductive rate down to reproductive rate is down to 1.75. that effectively means that with no child that even with no child mortality for every eight people we this generation, we have in this generation, we'll only seven in the we'll have only seven in the next generation. and that is going a shrinkage in our going lead to a shrinkage in our economic potential across the board. to balance that with . board. we to balance that with. okay, well, do you not suspect. yeah but do you not think. yeah, sorry, but that's completely self—defeating think self—defeating because think a lot of people would be more inclined to, have more if inclined to, have more kids if they that kids have they knew that those kids have somewhere to school and somewhere to go to school and they those are so they knew that those kids are so much go for. the gp much to go for. the gp appointments they need that those kids somewhere to those kids have somewhere to live. of the reasons why live. and one of the reasons why we any of that stuff we haven't got any of that stuff is because people yourself is because people like yourself and pro eu and were massively pro eu wanting welcome the world wanting to welcome the world here and now. we're absolutely aren't we're not. aren't we. oh no, we're not. we're not saturated. we're absolutely not saturated. we've situation where we've got a situation where i was one of own was reading one of your own journals today, same old a million on at million job vacancies on film at the there's more than
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the moment. if there's more than million job vacancies unfilled, that there's more than that means there's more than a million spaces for working people. necessarily, people. and i'm not necessarily, you know, on i don't know why you know, on i don't know why you are deliberately you you are you are deliberately you are deliberately are you are deliberately ignonng are you are deliberately ignoring the fundamental point of which why on of my question, which why on earth these people again, earth do these people again, where earth do all these where on earth do all these people live? where on earth? do we build the schools? are we going school places? our nhs is already and your already on its knees and your solution economy solution to our economy is to bnng solution to our economy is to bring more people ? well, the bring in more people? well, the nhs is on its knees because we don't have staff and don't have the staff and resources lot of the resources a lot of the immigrants who to this immigrants who want to come this country very, very skilled country are very, very skilled and in our nhs could and could work in our nhs could work our schools. these just work in our schools. these just people come here with people who come here with nothing to offer at all the think about what it to be. think about what it has to be. patrick for you to change your life, to move to another country to new life you are to make a new life you are looking for opportunity. and i would argue most of people who want to come to the uk and want to contribute our economy and to contribute to our economy and who want to try and our economy do all these things are getting these skills into the country
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would be an amazing change. try and boost our future and i have to say in terms the argument over. to say in terms the argument over . well how very quickly over. well how very quickly richard got to encourage people to have a few more millions to produce a few more children. i think that's a bit of a dichotomy that i think many i don't recall that rises to be five, seven. there we go. look, i'm good on good ideas that are out there, but yes, look, we fundamentally disagree on everything, but at least we can have a chat without killing each other. to other. richard it was lovely to see you, patrick, and thank you for the opportunity putting. well, we well, absolutely. yes. there we go not out, go all the time. not out, richard. he was in that region. eu policy. you make of eu policy. what do you make of that, ladies and gentlemen, we can't a kind of a can't deny there is a kind of a groundswell of thought that brexit the agenda, brexit is back on the agenda, isn't i kind of wish it isn't this i kind of wish it wasn't. but there we go. up next, a story that i'm sure will get all in stunned shamima get you all in stunned shamima begum, obviously begum, the bride she obviously fled the shockingly bad situations in hamlets to go situations in town hamlets to go to peaceful to join to the peaceful of syria to join islamic state. why was she actually a victim of human
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trafficking . the purposes of trafficking. the purposes of sexual exploitation . a court has sexual exploitation. a court has heard that today is a five day immigration hearing beginning, which is designed essentially to question whether not we should have removed her uk citizenship , which essentially would mean whether shamima bakam whether or not shamima bakam should it should come back to the uk. it was that she is also was noted that she is also accused making vests accused of making suicide vests that we go first and she got us headunes. that we go first and she got us headlines . hello. good headlines. hello. good afternoon. i'm tamsin in the gb newsroom. it's 333. england have iran six two. in a world cup opening match. england and wales , along with five other european teams , decided not to wear teams, decided not to wear a rainbow anti—discrimination armband in their matches. it's over concern as players may be penalised with . a yellow card on penalised with. a yellow card on the pitch for wearing a non sanctioned . the iranian team sanctioned. the iranian team appeared to stay silent during rendition of their country's
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national anthem ahead of the game . the prime minister says game. the prime minister says re—establish stability is a critical first step as he set plans to stabilise the uk economy. addressing business at the confederation of british conference, rishi sunak said he was placing innovation at the heart of his government agenda. he told delegates controlling inflation was critical to improving living standards and to pushing the economy a stable footing for the future . i'm not footing for the future. i'm not here to solve . i to build here to solve. ito build a country where we get inflation down and grow the economy where we cut nhs times and improve quality of care and where we invest more in schools and give every a world class . education every a world class. education a 31 year old man has been arrested on suspicion of murder
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following the death of two young children in a fire in nottingham . emergency services were called to a flat in farah close in clifton in the early hours of yesterday . the children, aged yesterday. the children, aged one and three, were treated at the scene for smoke inhalation but died later in hospital. a woman in her 30 is remains in a critical. the comedian joe lysette who claimed to have shredded lysette who claimed to have shredde d £10,000 in protest at shredded £10,000 in protest at david beckham's cup role, says he didn't do it. the comic filmed himself giving the former england player an ultimatum of standing down from his position as qatar cup ambassador. or he would destroy the cash which would destroy the cash which would go to charities. mr. lysette has since said yesterday footage wasn't real and he donated the to charity tv online and debate radio. this is gb news back now to . patrick well,
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news back now to. patrick well, there we go. let's get some more reaction now, because england managed to thump in that world cup. but we started a bang, didn't we? they've won two. and this was, of course, their opening world cup game. let's go now to birmingham, england's opening . jude bellingham opening scorer. jude bellingham actually started his career. he's at birmingham city. actually started his career. he's at birmingham city . they he's at birmingham city. they retained his shirt number as well. apparently at well. apparently everyone at the time was premature time thought was very premature . who the heck is this kid? and then he goes dortmund sets then he goes to dortmund sets then he goes to dortmund sets the and then in the world alive. and then on in early for, england as early doors for, england as well. we go. gb news is well. so there we go. gb news is reports that theo chikomba is there on the for us now. there on the scene for us now. there atmosphere like it there the atmosphere like is it calmed down a little bit. what's going on? the atmosphere in birmingham has been electric everyone is still here. some them are still here. the fans who've been here since the early hours of this morning . it's hours of this morning. it's a dream start for. england scoring so many goals . definitely we so many goals. definitely we want to send our to the rest of the teams they're going to be facing in this world cup during this group stage at the moment.
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but the atmosphere has been electric applause been shaking fans or bouncing drinks everywhere . but it's a dream everywhere. but it's a dream start. and i imagine many of those fans will be looking forward the next few games as forward to the next few games as . you take on the . england, you know, take on the team in this world cup . yes. team in this world cup. yes. well thank you very much. see, i hear you come to that. who is in the fanzone birmingham for us. yes so it was six. here we go. we managed. get on the board, early doors sort at a penalty. harry maguire was robbed. then there was a 15 minute added time at, the end of the first half as the iranian keeper to had put one his players accident one of his own players accident down. have caused massive down. they have caused massive damage nose and face 50 damage his nose and face 50 minutes and it almost just meant england start slotting in england start slotting him in left and centre a cracking left right and centre a cracking we won't pleased to conceded we won't be pleased to conceded a couple of goals though especially that first one which was defending . a lot was sloppy defending. a lot of people saying we come up people saying that if we come up against the better side, we will get out. but to them i say, come on, enjoy the moment. on, just enjoy the moment. wales, course, are action wales, of course, are in action later well, bring later today. well, we'll bring you the latest from there.
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you all the latest from there. in view is coming home in my view is coming home anyway. coming up, i will ask, should the wealthy pay more for the nhs ? and talking of things the nhs? and talking of things coming home, shamima begum should she be given a second chance? i'm on this one chance? yes, i'm on this one stay and the emails come flooding on one. flooding on this one. vaiews@gbnews.uk shamima begum asks know asks his bride. we all know anyway a uk citizenship anyway she had a uk citizenship . she was . i anyway she had a uk citizenship . she was. i think he's anyway she had a uk citizenship . she was . i think he's probably . she was. i think he's probably enough considered a threat to national security . there's now a national security. there's now a new trial going on, appealing against that. should she be allowed into britain? my allowed back into britain? my view is if i need to view on this is if i need to tell you, it's clear . no, tell you, it's pretty clear. no, no, we all mistakes, don't no, no. we all mistakes, don't we like stepping out and not twice in the road. he got hit by a bus the recycler starts a mistake doing something a bit squinty when you're at university that's a university maybe that's a mistake this country mistake but leaving this country to and join a jihadi death to go and join a jihadi death cult middle east and cult the middle east and allegedly helping to allegedly allegedly helping to suicide is an absolute suicide vest that is an absolute whopper i remain unconvinced whopper and i remain unconvinced assuming bigham will ever not be assuming bigham will ever not be a threat. on top that, of a threat. also on top that, of course, was just, you course, if she was just, you know, a bit of a silly idiot
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went out there, do we want to let her back in? do we need any more idiots we've got more idiots here? we've got quite it. in a moment.
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okay. welcome back. today, people, we've got loads on the agenda gassing the monstrous stuff iranian six to wales play a bit later on we're also going to be discussing throughout the show whether or not shamima begum be allowed back to blighty. get blighty. we're going to get stuck very, very stuck that one very, very shortly. before that, strong shortly. but before that, strong words been spoken words have been spoken today over future the nhs and over the future of the nhs and very quite literally to of very close quite literally to of our firstly, prime our hearts. firstly, prime minister rishi sunak pledged his lifelong support while addressing the cbi in burma again we also need to create a culture of innovation in our pubuc culture of innovation in our public services . now i grew up public services. now i grew up in an nhs family. it's in my blood . and as your prime blood. and as your prime
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minister , i will always protect minister, i will always protect an nhs free at the point use and that's in a budget where we had to make savings overall we didn't cut the funding for health and social care , we health and social care, we increased it . by £8 health and social care, we increased it. by £8 billion. so let no one ever doubt our commitment to the brilliant men and women who in our nhs yes, but for the fact of course is not free at the point of use because we do all pay for it. but scottish first minister nicholas sturgeon was forced to defend her position, declaring that behind the that the principles behind the nhs it's not up for nhs were quote, it's not up for discussion. her comments discussion. so her comments follow nhs scotland follow reports that nhs scotland has two tier system . has discussed two tier system. that would mean the wealthy would pay their own medical treatment, according leaked minutes of a meeting, health officials , given the green light officials, given the green light by nhs scotland to caroline lamb discuss reforms is the nhs boss offer to the service which is facing a £1 billion black hole
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and finances gasp? well joining me now is the former snp glasgow city austin sheridan austin thank you very much. great to have you on the show. what a wealthy man who's wealthy well as leaving from discussion and a council to lower the nhs should see the point and needs that are not always going to see their partner's needs and. it's not really for me to find that out. what did the finance who should be getting to see there shouldn't be because it's just it's not a who did it do so or the snp d i mean that does a discussion does the minutes late of a or or what changes that the people make to the nhs but end the day now will policy makers parliament that decides happens to the nhs and. i don't believe that those any political party in scotland that we propose having a two tier nhs. in scotland that we propose having a two tier nhs . so just having a two tier nhs. so just to clarify and the snp absolutely don't that it's a
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goodidea absolutely don't that it's a good idea for people who well—off to have to pay twice so they pay taxes for the nhs and then they'll pay for their own health care as that's been ruled as off the table is it off the table absolutely and because people around them more money pay people around them more money pay more tax and to the system that so of course there should be entitled to the same services and services as anyone else . and services as anyone else. another thing that we should always remember as well is that we do have a private health care system in the uk and what you tend to find is that for those people who can't afford pay for private health care , that private health care, that potentially speeds up treatments so on. we all know that people , so on. we all know that people, do that already and those lots of businesses i know for the company that i work for provide a private care scheme and you know in queues for better anything could happen to me at amy mccall weeks so these are these are already things that will create pay for. yeah exactly what's the snp track
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record like when it comes to looking after its own health service up there? in a sense because clearly, you know, vote for independence would mean a vote far as understand it vote as far as we understand it anyway have complete total anyway to have complete total control care control over the health care system was nicola sturgeon's track like it comes track record like when it comes to because? last time to health because? last time i checked there ever checked there was ever contaminated water system scandal deaths . scandal involving baby deaths. also highest deaths in also the highest deaths in europe . well, when it comes europe. well, when it comes today and to the contrary is what i mean i've been it comes to subject i have to be very to be very sensitive to the main sort voters who i've been impacted by it and certainly and, you know, we should wait to see , you know, what any and see, you know, what any and quite you know, things about as a result that and we should we should send the most affected in terms of talk that's absolutely i'm in scotland does have a problem after death was really pleased to see that the recent cycles you know showed that decline in scotland and doug decimate is so the bottle drug deaths had increased so it
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certainly just scotland and that has these issues are not particular to scotland issues that that that all governments in the united kingdom are facing no matter complexion to take away after coming through such a damaging pandemic. away after coming through such a damaging pandemic . yeah indeed damaging pandemic. yeah indeed and clearly the nhs is under the cosh big time at moment we've got a big backlog as a result of well let's be honest with you i suppose shutting the country down and turning into the national covid service and then sturgeon to for even sturgeon wanted to do for even for even sooner. for even harder, even sooner. and that is something is working its way through the system but it's apparently there are reports anyway that around half of bureaucrat that's in the of the bureaucrat that's in the nhs anyway the backroom as it were, the higher ups suppose were, the higher ups i suppose you call them 50,000 of you could call them 50,000 of them are just bureaucrats to people working behind the scenes that that some of that jobs could be well gone really as result of trying to save money do you back that's getting rid of some of this bloated management we
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management system. i mean we don't load of diversity don't really a load of diversity chiefs any organisation chiefs do any organisation should always believe in its doctors what can be monies and certainly when it comes to people losing jobs, you know , people losing jobs, you know, fundamentally they are in to see if, for example, make people redundant. i'm always of the idea that it be and should be voluntary redundancy and those are the kind of things we should be looking for. i'm having those discussions with . nhs staff i discussions with. nhs staff i certainly don't believe, you know that we should go and just essentially force relates get rid of people without stock for consultation measures and having discussions with the about any any kind of proposal, you discussions with the about any any kind of proposal , you know any kind of proposal, you know for structural changes in terms of stocks. so we don't delay and those would be discussions that it's quite easy for the unions. yeah, it just won't just one more. i mean the fact is which is something that i can understand what might not have been too keen to bring up but
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nhs scotland the hospitals that recorded worst a&e recorded the worst ever a&e waiting times. indeed this opfion waiting times. indeed this option the table as option was to be on the table as has been reported wildly in the press. i understand that nicola is on but reports is now back on it, but reports in press that there at in the press that there was at least a thought in trying to make the wealthy pay for their care. is essentially just care. donna is essentially just admitting and saying admitting defeat and saying punishing for is punishing the rich for what is a pretty abominable running the nhs in scotland, isn't it? i mean, there was a for and it's been discussed this community but nobody really knows the extent of how serious this and for example that these about taking out that living people are over and we be asking to check the bank balance that and wait bob before we stop all from treatment of course it should be free at the point of needs in terms of the pressures that scotland is faced overall . scotland is faced overall. absolutely. on nhs is not performing as standard. the scottish government would agree with that. i'm michelle will have to see this piece of action moving to make that moving forward to make sure that see these improvements. thank you former snp
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you very much. former snp glasgow city councillor austin shendan. glasgow city councillor austin sheridan . just discussing sheridan. just discussing whether or not rich are whether or not the rich are going to pay their going to have to pay their health in scotland. i'm health care in scotland. i'm just wondering whether or not actually some ways that actually in some ways that will be worst thing the world be the worst thing in the world if have to for if they didn't have to pay for the nhs terms of that tax as the nhs in terms of that tax as well. in a statement, well. but in a statement, scottish health secretary humza yousaf said the scottish yousaf has said the scottish government's could government's policy could not be on service be on national health service be maintained founding maintained as the founding principles publicly, principles of bevin publicly, publicly operated and free at the need? the provision the point of need? the provision of health services must always be the individual be based on the individual needs of and he suggested of a patient and he suggested that this should in some that this should be in some based ability to pay is based on ability to pay is abhorrent. prescription charges are a tax on illness. they were scrapped by this government and they will not be rescinded any way or form we are way shape or form that we are moving on something. i suspect that you will care a lot more about baig of jihadi about shamima baig of the jihadi bride isis for bride was trafficked by isis for sexual. why lawyers sexual. that's why lawyers told a appeal against her a hearing to appeal against her deprivation of uk citizenship back in she away from back in 2015. she away from a london home fled tower hamlets go goth for the safety of raqqa
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with two other girls. when she was just years old and arriving in syria, she ended up marrying of the terror group's fighters . of the terror group's fighters. bakam has launched her main appeal against the with her lawyers telling the court shamima is a young muslim woman , someone about who everyone can given . well, yeah, but that's given. well, yeah, but that's because fled to join isis anyway . our political reporter catherine foster at the asylum and immigration tribunal in central london for us. catherine thank you very much. so what's the latest ? she wants to come . the latest? she wants to come. home so this is a five day heanng home so this is a five day hearing which will be going all week. it started today, basically, shamima baig is desperate to come back to the uk. she in her bed with the supreme court to be re—admitted on the grounds that she'd been made stateless when former home secretary sajid javid removed her british citizen because the government , her family were government, her family were originally from bangladesh, she
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could claim citizenship there. so now are trying another approach her lawyers are here arguing that she is in fact a victim of child trafficking, that she brainwashed that she was groomed and so we've been heanng was groomed and so we've been hearing evidence . they've been hearing evidence. they've been questioning the home office and somebody from m15, the m15 person appeared obviously from behind curtain because his identity be revealed. the session is now continuing in close session. the public and press have been asked to leave because obviously this is a matter for national security. but the from m15 was saying interesting the difference in language between her lawyers saying grooming brainwash saying she didn't really understand what she was doing but m15 jumped on them. we're talking about radicalised nation, about terrorism and said that she was very bright, articulate girl,
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predicted to get a's and a star in her gcses . he said it was not in her gcses. he said it was not credible that she didn't know what isis was about. he was saying that at the time, of course, it was massively in the media. people were having their heads her public . and of course, heads her public. and of course, after she was discovered in the camp in 2000, 19, she said to the media that the manchester terror attack had been retaliation . and she also had retaliation. and she also had said that she wasn't fazed by seeing heads in buckets . she's seeing heads in buckets. she's very keen to come back now . she very keen to come back now. she said she regrets it. she says she's no threat to national security, but government see things very differently . yes, things very differently. yes, absolutely. thank you very, very political reporter catherine fawcett. that i saw them. an immigration tribunal . shamima immigration tribunal. shamima begum in central london. i'm just going to pass a couple of comments on this for goes my guest, which is that if she was so stupid that she could be radicalised like and so
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radicalised like that and so stupid thought the stupid that she thought the manchester which killed manchester arena which killed people people and got people loads of people and got allow arena full of allow for bombing arena full of children bomb children and packed that bomb with sorts. was so with and all sorts. she was so stupid thought that was stupid she thought that was essentially justified retaliate stupid she thought that was essentiawasttified retaliate stupid she thought that was essentia was unfazed etaliate stupid she thought that was essentia was unfazed byliate stupid she thought that was essentia was unfazed by having and she was unfazed by having severed heads in bins and joining a jihadi cult even if she was brainwashed , which i she was brainwashed, which i don't think she was . should we don't think she was. should we want someone that stupid back this country? i mean, it's not exactly a an advert for shamima is but joining me now is international security and border expert henry bolton obe. ithank border expert henry bolton obe. i thank you very , henry. great i thank you very, henry. great to have you on the show as would imagine, people are up in arms. even of shamima even the possibility of shamima bakam coming back to britain . in bakam coming back to britain. in my view she will never not be a threat . you know what ? she let's threat. you know what? she let's start at the beginning of this of this particular legal thing going on at the moment. she's got lawyers who are making a great deal of publicity themselves and marketing themselves, and they're making a lot money out of pro being lot of money out of pro being the british legal to try and find a way through it. everybody
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knows if they're honest that this woman understood precisely she thinks is the case and i started it. snorts yes. yeah. i mean, you know, but whether she's stupid or not, you know, tony messed around with the treason act . he put it into the treason act. he put it into the pubuc treason act. he put it into the public order act. but my understanding of that is and i have to i haven't looked at it in the last few days or weeks, but in there i believe that it says that somebody guilty of says that somebody is guilty of treason if they provide support , succour to the enemies of the crown. now, as far as i'm concerned, isis is such an enemy and as far as the british public are concerned, isis is such an enemy and. she made a conscious decision to go over and join them. maybe not carry a weapon. yeah, but actually to participate in supporting them in their agenda, which that they've sworn . yeah, they're , they've sworn. yeah, they're, they've sworn. yeah, they're, they couldn't be , they couldn't they couldn't be, they couldn't be more diametrically to the values in the. no so what you want to hear and also completely
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see many will in that barbarism over there . but i suppose the over there. but i suppose the thing centres around a centre whether or not she was groomed. okay and this can be seen as a response the issue by some people that in itself you drill down to it and she goes well she would have to have been especially vulnerable so especially vulnerable so especially some would say and taken for a ride sent over there under false pretences . is there under false pretences. is there any case for that whatsoever in your view? no. she was 15 years. you you can argue that we are all by what we read and what we see. i mean, people are influenced by this discussion now. it is it is what happens when you have a conversation with anybody ? does that amount with anybody? does that amount to grooming? no she made a very deliberate choice to join the enemies of this country, people who are killing our soldiers. and she knew there is no doubt in anybody's mind if we're honest . she knew exactly what honest. she knew exactly what she must have done. this is the
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thing. and for a lot of people, guns.she thing. and for a lot of people, guns. she was only 15. isn't it amazing how many of those people want people to have the votes? 16. so you can't really have it ways. she was a few months away from. of these people. from. century of these people. a lot people would have lot of these people would have it being to it that way. being allowed to vote general election so she's vote a general election so she's smart enough to do. also when you look at a track record at school, how much school, etc. and how much information was out there about isis is impossible. it's impossible not impossible to have not known what was doing. this is what she was doing. but this is a case for britain. sorry a test case for britain. sorry to just leave you this way, anne—marie, but we already anne—marie, but we have already there's that out. there's a report that came out. we in a high proportion of returning saudi returning isis fighters in saudi arabia saying arabia, which is saying something. really is something. okay, that really is saying something. this was saying something. and this was enough, because countries like saudi the saudi arabia understand the threat only in threat they pose not only in a direct security sense , but in direct security sense, but in terms of the messaging that sends to bring these people back and the message it would send the uk public is , although the uk public is, although somebody goes to fight for the sworn enemies of this country , sworn enemies of this country, for an organisation that is
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sworn itself to undermine our way of life , destroy our way of way of life, destroy our way of life , we're prepared to let them life, we're prepared to let them back in afterwards, probably on budget as well, because she's not going to get a job and so we'd have to pay for the this is really not only a test case in this sense, but a test case in terms of the courage, the boldness and the ability of the british government to up for the british. i agree with and as well people make mistakes of those mistakes are bigger than others some people make little mistakes. know they up mistakes. you know they pick up the of from the shop. the wrong type of from the shop. some people don't look both ways and they cross the road. they get a and that can have get by a car and that can have consequences, serious consequences, have serious consequences, have serious consequences they do consequences, and they can do fleeing brits, fleeing britain to and join a jihadi death to go and join a jihadi death cult in all of the cult and partake in all of the kind terror horrible kind of terror and horrible issues that took place over. that absolute whopper that is an absolute whopper of an from which i'm an error and one from which i'm pretty there is no pretty concerned there is no coming we do need to coming back and we do need to introduce threat into this introduce yet threat into this country in my view your views gb views gb news dot uk but coming
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up a shift in tone. we will look to wales's first world cup game with fans in a particular watering over there. i understand by this time they'll probably be pretty well lubricated because they've been since morning. you love to see it. also, should the wealthy pay for health care? is for the health care? is it a double tax on the rich. are you pleased to see that the nhs might be some of that back might be back some of that back room staff, of the room staff, some of the bureaucrats, they might to bureaucrats, they might go to make being far make way they're being paid far much. bloated, it's much. our nhs is bloated, it's time we gave money to time that we gave that money to frontline we've got frontline services. we've got all your way and yes all that coming your way and yes i'll be reading out some of your emails on shamima you emails on shamima begum do you think coming back think she should be coming back to britain or back in a moment.
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i yes. welcome back everybody is just going for o'clock this me patrick christys on gb news. okay is football too political and should we be focusing off the pitch or on it? it's a possible double tax for the rich when it comes to the nhs and this is really i think the big one for most of you at home today we've used gbnews.uk. so isis's bride have second chance, shamima begum could be coming back to blighty . there was a back to blighty. there was a gold frenzy. england iran six two to open up their world cup account with a thrilling victory. wales take on the usa in just under 3 hours time will be building up to that. we're going to report live from a welsh you love to see a welsh pub you love to see a strong reaction today to. fifa's decision to sanction players wearing anti—discrimination armbands was that to both england and wales, ditching them for fear a yellow can't just for fear of a yellow can't just say, look, i don't think the world cup should be in qatar. but also derek as pointless, but i'm also derek as pointless, pointless virtue . and if you're pointless virtue. and if you're going to make a stand putting a rainbow coloured armband the
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grounds we've had to get a yellow card in this tunnel. if not stop going it. just not stop going on about it. just focus your football. you focus on your football. do you feel the that some feel about the fact that some players caved in to wearing the rainbow armband? also, there's we're going to talk about maybe the wealthy paying more for that health care. scotland's minister said of the nhs health care. scotland's minister said free of the nhs health care. scotland's minister said free for of the nhs health care. scotland's minister said free for all of the nhs health care. scotland's minister said free for all is: the nhs health care. scotland's minister said free for all is note nhs health care. scotland's minister said free for all is not up-is health care. scotland's minister said free for all is not up for being free for all is not up for discussion. but there are serious suggestions now about rich having to pay for rich people having to pay for their care. oh you their own health care. oh you rich, will you go on record and say so email gbviews@gbnews.uk ? say so email gbviews@gbnews.uk? i suspect pretty paid. i suspect you pretty paid. you're health care anyway. you're on health care anyway. how do you feel about it? but the one for me today and the big one for me today and i strongly suspect the big one for you as gb news gbnews.uk you as well gb news gbnews.uk should bank. i'm should shaming the bank. i'm the easiest a chance easiest bride ever be a chance to back to the she's to come back to the uk. she's appealing the fact that we said that a national security that she was a national security threat removing our threat only removing our citizenship her lawyers citizenship. her lawyers are crying crying crying crying they're crying crying cry. she was a poor young girl. oh, she was a victim of human trafficking. this, that and the other. pull the one gbviews@gbnews.uk. but before that of latest that some of your latest headunes.
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that some of your latest headlines . patrick, thank you. headlines. patrick, thank you. hello. good afternoon. it's 4:02. i'm tamsin roberts the gb newsroom england have won their opening world cup match iran as eyes turn wales for their match against us later this evening . against us later this evening. the three lions won six two with goals scored by bellingham saka , sterling, rashford and grealish at the start of the match, the iranian team appeared to stay sign during their rendition of their country's national anthem. ahead the game both england and along with five other european teams, decided not to wear a rainbow coloured anti—discrimination armband in their matches. its over concerns players may be penalised a yellow card on the pitch for wearing a non sanctioned kit
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human rights campaigner peter tatchell says qatar . and fifa tatchell says qatar. and fifa should be the ones who get the red card, not the players. the issue has become so big precisely because of the missteps by qatar and fifa they are making discrimination , human are making discrimination, human rights and so they're making the issue of the world cup which it wouldn't have been if they kicked up a fuss. wouldn't have been if they kicked up a fuss . the prime kicked up a fuss. the prime minister says re—establishing stability is the critical first step as he sets out plans to stabilise the uk economy . stabilise the uk economy. addressing business leaders at, the confederation of british industry rishi sunak said he , industry rishi sunak said he, was placing innovation at heart of his government agenda . he of his government agenda. he told colleagues controlling inflation was critical to. improving living standards and to putting the economy on a stable footing for the future. he said he determined to get this right . we're going to get this right. we're going to get on with delivering the things that are important to you. we're
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going sure that the nhs going to make sure that the nhs is well funded and get the care that we all. we're going to make sure that our school one sure that our school is the one we're standing today. get we're standing in today. get funding. to provide an funding. they need to provide an amazing people. amazing for our young people. we're to sure that our we're going to sure that our streets safe and we're streets are safe and we're cutting we've security cutting that. we've got security of our borders, which really of our borders, which is really important with the important to me with of the challenges with challenges we're seeing with illegal that we're illegal migration and that we're spreading country so spreading around this country so that people can feel optimistic about. the future . a court has about. the future. a court has heard a woman left london to join the so—called islamic state seven years ago, was influenced by a determined and effective isis propaganda machine . isis propaganda machine. shooting the beckhams lawyer says she should have been treated as child trafficking victim . the 23 year old is victim. the 23 year old is appealing the removal of her uk citizenship after was revoked when she was found in a syrian refugee camp. she has denied any involvement in terror . refugee camp. she has denied any involvement in terror. human rights . involvement in terror. human rights. hardship. sing. bongo says beckham should be treated the same as a british citizen . the same as a british citizen. the issue is, is she's a british
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citizen , which she hates because citizen, which she hates because she holds a british passport. or she holds a british passport. or she did hold a british passport, a british citizenship . should a british citizenship. should she be treated like other british citizens or should she be sent to country where she's not born and she hasn't lived in? i'm just because the basis that her parents came from that a 31 year old man has been arrested on suspicion of murder following the death of two young children in fire in nottingham emerged and c services were called to a flat farah close in clifton in the early hours of yesterday morning the children, aged one and three were treated at the scene for smoke inhalation. but later in hospital. a woman in thirties remains in a critical condition . local media report that 160 people have been killed and more than 700 injured in an earthquake in indonesia. in tunisian weather officials say a 5.6 magnitude earthquake hit the west java region , which rattled west java region, which rattled
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jakarta about 75 kilometres away. several seconds rescue was trying to reach survivors trapped under the rubble after at least 25 aftershocks hit the region . the comedian jo ly set region. the comedian jo ly set to claim to have shredded £10,000 in protest at david beckham's world cup role says he didn't actually do it. the comic filled himself giving the former england player an ultimate of standing down from his position as qatar world cup ambassador . as qatar world cup ambassador. or he would destroy the cash which could go to lgbt charities. mr. ly citizen yesterday's footage wasn't real. the truth is , the money that the truth is, the money that went into the shredder was . but went into the shredder was. but the money that came out was fake.i the money that came out was fake. i would never destroy real money. i would never so irresponsible. in fact, ten grand had already been donated to lgbtq+ charities before i even pressed send on initial tweet last week . i never tweet last week. i never expected to hear from you. it was an empty threat designed to get people talking . this is gb
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get people talking. this is gb news. bring you more news as it happens, of course. now though, it's back to . patrick yes. england have done it. they've got their first game of the qatar world cup. iran six two, although that was a little bit like playing a pub team, wasn't it? it wasn't all plain sailing. the three lions after iran managed to peg a consolation in the second half before converting a penalty as well in the dying seconds of injury proved injury time. but england proved that attack really is the best for we've got for their fans. we've got bellingham, sterling bellingham, saka, sterling and rashford the rashford all getting the scoresheet to put six past their opponents in just under 3 hours time, though it's the turn of wales as they take on the mighty usa in, their first world cup
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match for six, four years. and a few moments i'll ask whether footballers should stick to the game on the page rather making gestures often there's nothing worse than picking something up virtue signalling and then not at least going through with it all. it took, by the way, for harry kane to not wear the rainbow armband. was the threat of being booked in the tunnel. so what message does that send to gay in qatar or around the world we stand with lgbtq community . well, you're going to community. well, you're going to book me . oh, i don't stand with book me. oh, i don't stand with you that much. then what's the point of even saying you're going do it if you don't actually do it? it's pathetic. and crack on with and we should just crack on with the football. because thing the football. because last thing on actually won on tax england actually won a major for rather a major tournament for rather a long time. but let's cross now to doha, speak to gb news reporter hawkins, who's reporter paul hawkins, who's been soaking up the mood, soaking atmosphere, the soaking up the atmosphere, the ambience. we can go to ambience. i believe we can go to paul from what is paul now from the what is currently epicentre of world football . paul's everything football. paul's everything right . yeah, yeah, yeah. he's
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right. yeah, yeah, yeah. he's just us in the aftermath actually they've just been having a i think an arab tv channel has been having a couple competition here . so they've competition here. so they've been getting tivo over . if you been getting tivo over. if you look at the distance, i'm not which fans are is saudi is it mexico . yeah. mexican fans over mexico. yeah. mexican fans over in the distance there's people there's fans over making a lot of noise. it's this is what it's like at night time in the supermarket, the central market area in doha anyway why is are taking on the usa later on kicks off at 10:00 local time. let's speak to american fans alex senior and alex joining us do you guys thanks for waiting us. i know you're off to the game . i know you're off to the game. and first of all, how are you about playing miles ? feeling about playing miles? feeling really good. i think the first time in four years since the us is qualified and the team's looking a lot better than we did four years ago, you know, a lot of young talent playing in europe this year and i'm really excited so i'm hoping our our fitness and our energy will
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propel us past tonight so are you worried about the way of the welsh alex you very much so you've got some amazing players most of them are playing in the premier league so actually this the best us team that we've ever play the best us team that we've ever play so hopefully they'll play well tonight . yeah. yeah. and well tonight. yeah. yeah. and how are you feeling finding the guitar experience of being over here . it's been amazing so far. here. it's been amazing so far. been here for two days now. you know, we've met few local people that have really shown us around and we've had a great so far. so we're happy be here and enjoying the weather here. yeah first it's told about how difficult is to buy a drink than if you big drinkers or not. i don't think it's a big deal. drinkers or not. i don't think it's a big deal . yeah. so yeah, it's a big deal. yeah. so yeah, i would agree. you can go without beer for 3 hours. yeah, yeah. and have you got a chance other than us say usa. is there another one. i personally don't know. i'm, i'm an i'm guilty of being a big english premier
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league and newcastle fan myself . so i think i got the tsunami. me but why newcastle have interest growing ? i was a big interest growing? i was a big fan of watching english soccer and alan shearer. i played in high school in college, so he played for newcastle at the time and i just got hooked. so i've been a newcastle fan ever since two through the good times and the yeah. so you might, you the bad. yeah. so you might, you may see alan shearer, i think he might be around there working, working so you working for the bbc. so you might around there. might even see him around there. yeah. lucky, we met yeah. we got lucky, we met on the way here, ronaldo or the way here, met ronaldo or nine the airport and he was nine at the airport and he was fantastic. yeah. when you say you well i actually you met him. well i actually happened. the lounge, happened. we were in the lounge, the airport, and i up the airport, and so i went up and, said hi and got to take a photo with him. yeah, he's super nice guy. i believe here as well doing some some news amazing. what meet? to what was he like to meet? to meet, know, original meet, you know, original renaldo? just it's great renaldo? it's just it's a great experience since older experience. and since i'm older , these names , i recognise all these names and you didn't ask the question, but since i'm older, i love messi. yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. well, yeah, he doesn't listen. thanks speaking to gq.
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thanks for speaking to gq. whenever on your way to whenever you get on your way to the enjoy it very much the game, enjoy it very much thanks thanks so much thanks is thanks so much speaking to us. thank you so yeah off to wales yeah they're off to the wales game. off at game. that one kicks off at 10:00. gonna be a little 10:00. it's gonna be a little bit cooler than is now. i bit cooler than it is now. i reckon it will up a game than reckon it will be up a game than the we watched earlier. the one we watched earlier. england against iran, of course, netherlands taking senegal netherlands taking on senegal at the then the moment. and then from patrick, go four games patrick, if we go to four games a day, four games they're a day, four games a day, they're going them in the next going to pack them in the next week because this is the world cup since 1978. so there's basically going to be to basically going to be wall to wall tough, wall football because tough, expertly there expertly done, fantastic. there we go. hawkins is. yes we go. paul hawkins is. yes surrounded by surrounded by fans. can't make out without saying saudi arabia fan . they're saying saudi arabia fan. they're taking on argentina tomorrow . taking on argentina tomorrow. there you go. good stuff. all right. well, there we go then. we know which way that was going to go. paul, thank you very much. phil hawkins from the epicentre of world football. good the fans, good stuff. the american fans, obviously, the obviously, big fans of the premier hoping that that premier and hoping that that team some offence team can have some good offence and in the goal hole and stick it in the goal hole later so wales are on seven i
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thought they do play us a and the same group as england which is why we care about it. so there we right. i believe there we go. right. i believe this is yes, this is the first time wales has played in a world since 1958. wales take on the mighty us away and hopefully their defence will keep the ball out. gb news is not. reporter geoff moody is live the rhondda valley where everyone is looking forward to tonight's game geoff. yes can i just say you've got some proper football fans over there. okay. what's the atmosphere like ? actually, the atmosphere like? actually, the atmosphere like? actually, the atmosphere is really good so far. certainly considering we've got just under 3 hours till kick off . people got just under 3 hours till kick off. people did come in got just under 3 hours till kick off . people did come in politely off. people did come in politely , watch the england match. there wasn't too much cheering but never mind the big cheering we hope will be tonight 3 hours to go until the first time that wales is in the world cup for 64 years. well, i'm the lion in treorchy . let's speak to the
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treorchy. let's speak to the landlord , adrian. thanks for landlord, adrian. thanks for joining us. adrian big day for wales. big day for you. yeah, massive day. i mean, it's been 64 years, a long wait, but i mean, we're in it now and i think, you know, football's really been growing in the country as well. we know historically as a as a rugby nafion historically as a as a rugby nation , not so much recently nation, not so much recently with the results we've had, but the wales of done a really good job of building up the as well and the family friendly last. so i think today's going to be a fantastic day and how many people are you expecting here tonight? i think we got about 120 booked seated and then 120 booked in seated and then there'll be standing room then. so you know, good so hopefully, you know, a good two maybe . so we really two or 300, maybe. so we really push that stadium sort of experience. so say and the pub here the lion ate one best community in britain month, didn't it, that some owner. yeah the town would have champion high school great britain and we are an award winning pub as well and for me pubs are a more just
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alcohol it's about experience just about being family friendly . so a lot of people that are booked in tonight know come in with their kids as it's with their kids as well. it's just really a good experience tonight and we are there for the community . they are there for us community. they are there for us as well. they know, i believe the king came here , one of his the king came here, one of his last public duties, prince of wales, in the summer. did wales, back in the summer. did he give you idea whether he he give you some idea whether he be england wales ? be supporting england or wales? yeah. the kings are regular. yeah. so the kings are regular. he comes here? yeah on a regular bafis he comes here? yeah on a regular basis and yeah, two things. one, i said him because he poured a pint behind the bar. any future king that was going to pour a pint behind the bar in the lion to be a king. and he did tell me he'd be supporting wales, especially week tomorrow when we play especially week tomorrow when we play england. so he's going to be when his welsh rugby is up for what's up even then he's going to as well as welsh going to wear as well as welsh rugby that's rugby tough. now that's a picture we pay an picture that i think we pay an awful lot of money to see, wouldn't we? in a word, who do you think's win? is it? you think's going to win? is it? it's david versus goliath versus goliath tonight, isn't it?
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because smallest because wales is the smallest team in in the world cup, so team in the in the world cup, so a smaller team to qualify so qatar's in it but they the so wales smallest team qualify wales smallest team to qualify population and usk is the population wise and usk is the largest so it is very much david goliath but i think for us every game is going be a cup final. so i think we've got it in us to at least get through the group stages and then and it's anyone's tournament then except for let's hope for some goals tonight . be for let's hope for some goals tonight. be here quite for let's hope for some goals tonight . be here quite late. tonight. be here quite late. i think i'm going to try not to dnnk think i'm going to try not to drink too much anger to drink anything. patrick going to be good but back now to you or think you're i think you're only kidding yourself that may but thank you very much jeff may the wonderful stuff come on wales now done the now england have done the business doors beating business early doors beating iran 6 to 8 will be lovely wouldn't say if wales could beat the usa and they should of course the american fans we to earlier will hoping the earlier that will be hoping the better offence can really trouble the wales is goaltender and they'll able to and then they'll be able to stick it the goal few stick it in the goal a few times. but think wales are
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times. but i think wales are probably enough to see them probably good enough to see them off go off personally that we go touchdown usa . so as we've heard touchdown usa. so as we've heard england wales fans decided england and wales fans decided not to wear that of armbands. in fact the companies to fact the companies decide to wear those around us. this is because fifa threatened to impose including impose sanctions, including a possible did possible yellow card if they did buy harry kane cares so buy them. so harry kane cares so much all make a much about gay. they all make a big song and dance about leading into world cup. the into the world cup. but the second wrestling with the second he's wrestling with the yellow card, which not yellow card, which does not match actually one match it, was actually one colour the rainbow. oh no. colour of the rainbow. oh no. that's why carrying stocks that's why the carrying stocks that's so a former that's torn out. so a former out of instructor jenny of fifa instructor jenny frampton and warshaw as well . he frampton and warshaw as well. he is a football politics expert. jd, thank very much. look, we all that we cannot regrettably separate politics from football, especially when it comes to fifa plonking , a world cup in the plonking, a world cup in the middle of a human rights sex cesspit is it may say freudian cesspit is it may say freudian cesspit in the middle east . what cesspit in the middle east. what do you think about all this? so should the football players have actually this armband and actually worn this armband and on so thank you. i do believe
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that we need to walk the walk and i do believe in this world cup . we all know that 12 years cup. we all know that 12 years ago it should never have been awarded to. but hey, we need to move on from that. but now it's a right. we look at it and think they are still dictating what can and cannot happen . and they can and cannot happen. and they talk the talk around that. they accept , you know, the gay, the accept, you know, the gay, the disability , etc, but they're not disability, etc, but they're not walking war because before about to qatar when it comes to wearing the armband but let's be really clear about the laws of the laws of the state very clearly that you cannot wear anything politically, culturally or religiously motivated . so or religiously motivated. so i think that's where the i get down. but i only get that. but i i'm kind of mixed about this because . obviously, i i'm in of because. obviously, i i'm in of gay rights and i think qatar's human rights record is a astonishingly awful . but at the astonishingly awful. but at the same time, i'm sick and tired of
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signalling in sports this radical was taking the knee before again. why did we have a debate one we still doing it wearing a rainbow armband is every single game the premier every single game in the premier league there's minute's league now there's a minute's applause then applause for something. then take europe. take the northern europe. it's like head, shoulders and toes. he's bonkers. and then eventually all treated to a little football. you little bit of football. you know, it's easy. i don't understand it. i'm going to understand it. so i'm going to go andrew warshaw, who go now to. andrew warshaw, who is expert . is a football politics expert. and what do you make of all of this? do you think we should just stop the virtue signalling we're in qatar? we've got abide by laws just crack on. by that. laws just crack on. listen i think i'm being a bit unfair to the players. patrick you shoot in the messengers, mate this is down to fifa. you shoot in the messengers, mate this is down to fifa . don't mate this is down to fifa. don't forget that the fifa president only a few ago talks about inclusivity , banged on about inclusivity, banged on about inclusivity, banged on about inclusivity till the cows come home and. and now at the very last minute , stop the players last minute, stop the players from wearing these armbands. last minute, stop the players from wearing these armbands . the from wearing these armbands. the players are there to play football . if you were a player football. if you were a player and you and you were told you'd
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be booked or possibly even sent off you wore armband, off if you wore these armband, you'd give in that as you'd probably give in that as well. so i think they're being a little bit unfair, but should my point that should have point is that they should have seen stuff coming. seen this kind of stuff coming. right. harry kane right. and know if harry kane makes massive deal about makes a massive deal about scandals, i'll just stay. even if kane is going to make a if harry kane is going to make a big it. no one held a big deal of it. no one held a gun to harry head and gun to harry kane's head and said, to do this now, said, you've got to do this now, have you. and he decided he was going to press ahead with it anyway back out anyway and then they back out of it. i mean it's not just harry kane, though, is it the bbc kane, though, is it it's the bbc in the likes of all of those people. an absolute people. oh it's, an absolute aberration. going to do aberration. we're going to do a panorama style of qatar's human rights record . we're going to rights record. we're going to send hundreds people over there to get paid to go and report on a country and all of this stuff . should we just all shut up about qatar's rights record? andre no we shouldn't because if we don't forget , if it hadn't we don't forget, if it hadn't been for western pressure, some of the human rights reforms that have taken place in qatar since
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they were awarded the world cup wouldn't been done in the first place. what i'll tell you exactly what kafala system that ties migrant workers to their employers without being able to get out of it. that now been scrapped. that's been abolished by qatar authorities and they are and they themselves pay them selves. patrick admit that have taken place and it's because it's not because of it's in spite of the fact it's so it's not in spite of its because of the fact that the world cup is in. but that's managed to happen because they are now obliged to show the world that progress being and this has happened being made and this has happened in sport of always in politics, in sport of always this complete nonsense to suggest it hasn't . yeah, you suggest it hasn't. yeah, you were obviously wrong . but it's were obviously wrong. but it's not just football. he's upset. everything it's very unfortunate. you cannot stick a wrestler paper between politics and sports. unfortunately but jane, i'll i'll throw it back over to you now. former referee ian fee for structure how would you have felt about the idea of blocking someone if they were
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wearing a rainbow armband . i wearing a rainbow armband. i think we have to be mindful of the laws of the game and of course there is the yellow card. we know that. but this is not about harry kane. this is about the face saying harry kane is not allowed to take that route . not allowed to take that route. and i do think you go back to the taking of the knee. i think the taking of the knee. i think the taking of the knee. i think the taking the knee has lost its significance along time ago. i don't believe in kicking racism of football. i would kick it out , but the taking the knee has lost his. it's in good terms. it's not relevant now . so it's not relevant now. so i think taking the knee was not really something we should have been demonstrating the cup is . been demonstrating the cup is. the problem is the problem, jane. you know, once you make a comment about something political and could tell political and no one could tell me black lives matter, not me that black lives matter, not a organisation. a political organisation. they've manifesto, they've published the manifesto, right? that's a start which right? so that's a start which you can online and it is you can read online and it is just because they call themselves lives matter. themselves black lives matter. people thought initially. well, that's stand for. not that's all they stand for. not they've got a political doctrine. so they're doing the
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start single and start of every single game. and once that , you open once you do that, you open yourself be to comment on yourself up to be to comment on everything political . it's everything political. it's a slippery slope. and this is where we all know jane , i fear, where we all know jane, i fear, isn't it? but i will say this one over two to andrew actually is a football football politics expert. once start expert. once you start commenting on one politics, all thing it opens the way thing in sport it opens the way it say it needs be it doesn't say it needs to be asked comment absolutely asked to comment on absolutely everything else depends. well, it what place you're it depends what place you're talking i mean, certainly it depends what place you're talkinshould i mean, certainly it depends what place you're talkinshould have ean, certainly it depends what place you're talkinshould have should rtainly it depends what place you're talkinshould have should havey there should have should have been a debate, more of a debate about hosting the olympics . about hosting the olympics. absolutely, there be absolutely, there should be a debate about other debate about. other sports venues . well, but, you know venues as. well, but, you know is right. and a lot of what she said i said it isn't just harry kane don't forget this there are several whose captains have also had to take this decision, not wear these armbands for fear of being booked or even sent. so it is not just harry kane, and it is not just harry kane, and it is it's wrong and it's misleading to suggest that it's only england because . it isn't, only england because. it isn't, patrick. no, i'm not i'm not suggesting it's only england, but i am currently based in
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england care a lot more england and i care a lot more about our captain of our about what our captain of our country, bloke with the country, the bloke with the three lions do, hopefully three lions when i do, hopefully slots him for the slots want him for was in the final and finally ends all these years hurt brings it years of hurt and brings it home. about either he's home. i care about either he's being used as a puppet by the fai and paymasters in general to put an armband him virtually put an armband on him virtually signal then he's being told put an armband on him virtually sigcan't then he's being told put an armband on him virtually sigcan't then gots being told put an armband on him virtually sigcan't then got conviction.i he can't always got conviction. jenny, the last word jenny, i'll give the last word to you. if i was gay , which i'm to you. if i was gay, which i'm not, i'd be incredibly hurt. this incredibly hurt by this i've be incredibly hurt by this i'd have have this because i'd have i'd have thought, here go. a ray thought, oh, here we go. a ray of a captain i'd not of hope, a captain who i'd not asked wear a rainbow armband. asked to wear a rainbow armband. i'd asked to do it. he i'd never asked him to do it. he was going it. and then all was going to do it. and then all of a sudden, not him, but our football association. our football association. our football on not football association on not doing because they want doing it because they don't want their captain get booked in the tunnel. actually, don't care tunnel. actually, we don't care about all. about gay people at all. patrick, i think you're very right. have that right. we could have that discussion about discussion all day. it's about a tick exercise and i do tick box exercise and i do believe the fai has taken an easy route out here instead of strong values. the integrity of
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our game . and when you look at our game. and when you look at what's happened over this last week, football is losing its integrity. yeah, great look, thank you. what message does it send? what message does it send to anyone out there? oh yeah. stand up for your rights until the when get a bit of the point when you get a bit of pushback and then don't anyway. but thank you much. but but thank you very much. but do you to free referee johnny you feel to free referee johnny france andrew warshaw, their france and andrew warshaw, their football what football politics expert? what do of this? suspect do you make of this? i suspect a lot are just sick and lot of you are just sick and tired of politics being anywhere near yes, that's the near sport. but yes, that's the way they're cookie crumbles, i'm afraid. gents, you afraid. ladies and gents, you are patrick christys on are with me. patrick christys on gb now, this is a big, gb news up. now, this is a big, important you vote important for you. did you vote for brexit? did you not vote for brexit? it doesn't really matter. what matter matter. but what does matter is what going forward. what happens going forward. rishi sunak has insisted that the realign when it the will not realign when it comes trade regulations comes to eu trade regulations being swiss a new being called a swiss style a new do, a relief to that very, do, just a relief to that very, very briefly. essentially is outside european union. outside of the european union. but they are the eu's fourth largest trading partner. they basically have free movement of people essentially and also to swallow laws that are particularly one which would see
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massive of brexit. massive cornerstone of brexit. so back involved with so getting back involved with would many as britain would be seen by many as britain rejoining the european union by the back door has denied that it plans to do this . however, do plans to do this. however, do you trust him ? do you believe you trust him? do you believe him? if you given that him? if you were given that choice would you vote for choice again, would you vote for brexit again? would you vote remain economy your mind all these questions these big questions gb news gbnews.uk. say you into .
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okay people, right? well shortly i will be asking whether or not shamima begum the bride should ever be given a chance. come back to the uk. the appeal over the removal of a uk citizenship for joining islamic state underway in london. you can email me at gbviews@gbnews.uk , email me at gbviews@gbnews.uk, as you can imagine, loads of have hundreds of you have been getting in touch over shamima
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begum to give me your thoughts colin says how much is the appeal costing and who's for it? how many chances appeal on trying to assist him back? yeah, i with you completely, colin. i mean, i can't believe this is a discussion. said it before. i'll say mistakes have consequences some of them more major than others. i argue joining a jihadi death cult. the middle east. well, essentially allegation anyway. is anyway. the allegation is helping to sow suicide bombers the suicide fast only think that's quite a biggie and i will not you back here and the counter that was counter argument is that she was groomed 15 years old. if groomed she was 15 years old. if you me she's so you telling me that she's so thick she can't choose from thick that she can't choose from right the age of being right and wrong the age of being go over there and join a death cult. well, frankly, do we want her back the country anyway? her back in the country anyway? john's want to john's i don't want to see a situation she's allowed back in the and something the country and then something old to citizens old for happens to uk citizens who ever run off to join who haven't ever run off to join a terrorist group. i mean a terrorist group. yeah. i mean if not here one, if she's not us here either one, if she's not us here either one, if she's not us here either one, if she's easily influenced, if she's not easily influenced, then could just happen again. then it could just happen again. couldn't but couldn't say i'm sorry, but i just trust her and i don't think it's genuine although she was
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only. this is from steve statement that she was 15 statement that she was only 15 years when she went to work years old when she went to work work alleged got job work for us as alleged got a job in tescos have been aware in tescos she have been aware why were doing. let's be why is this were doing. let's be honest they were never to pubush honest they were never to publish of their sick publish videos of their sick behaviour. she behaviour. so in my opinion she knew what was getting into knew what she was getting into and must the price and now she must pay the price yeah. 100. and even after she got out there she said you know the west has done a lot of bad things over there, she tried to in some ways justify them including terror attacks that took she's said that she took place she's said that she didn't at the idea of didn't baulk at the idea of saying heads bins . saying severed heads in bins. sorry, but when we've got enough people over here who need our help when we've got enough people over , once they get into people over, once they get into the country as well legally, when we've got enough jobs that need all these need filling all of these things, we need to things, why do we need to introduce re—enter to shamima introduce to re—enter to shamima begum steph. and what begum and steph. right and what does anyone there does it send to anyone there right who's getting right now? who's getting radicalised online ? it is easier radicalised online? it is easier than ever to be radicalised. these let's be honest, i've got a laptop in front of right now. most people will have that and
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everything. if you fold a rabbit hole in your head thick enough, deluded in some cases deluded enough, or in some cases genuinely enough, it genuinely vulnerable enough, it pretty easy be radicalised pretty easy to be radicalised from islamism, the far right, whatever conspiracy theories that are out there as well. yeah, i get that . what kind of yeah, i get that. what kind of message does send to people message does it send to people who go and join a terror who want to go and join a terror group you know, go to group and, you know, go to middle let off bombs middle east and let off bombs and shoot people, frankly, shoot and shoot people, frankly, shoot and kill people who are as well. and british values . well, what and british values. well, what message does it send to them if they wander straight back in they can wander straight back in and, probably have to live in a council house. no benefits for the life. the nhs, the rest of their life. the nhs, can imagine in dire can you imagine being in dire need council house as need of a council house as shamima begum takes it? offer you on the you needing health care on the nhs and shamima begum gets it instead for, you know, school places and of stuff. places and all of stuff. absolute shocker. now i'm sorry britain already soft enough. britain is already soft enough. we not need to reintroduce , we do not need to reintroduce, but have more to do with but we'll have more to do with that. but we'll have more to do with that . on another topic that but we'll have more to do with that. on another topic that i'm sure is going to a lot of you going after this, shamima begum is on relationship with the
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union. are we going to end up rejoining the back door? will rishi singh really go for a swiss style deal? how do you feel about brexit in general now? there's lots of talk about people regretting they've got. i would argue it wasn't a proper of course that we've up of course that we've ended up having to deal with. if you could vote again, which way would news out well would you vote? gb news out well before all that see. like i before all of that i see. like i said, lines . hello, it's 433. said, lines. hello, it's 433. i'm tamsin roberts in the gb newsroom with the latest . newsroom with the latest. england have won their opening world cup match against iran as eyes turn towards wales for their match against the us later this evening . this evening. the three lions 162 with goals scored by bellingham saka , scored by bellingham saka, sterling, rashford and grealish at the start of the match, the
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iranian team appeared to stay silent during the rendition of their country's national anthem ahead of the game . both england ahead of the game. both england and wales, along with five other european teams, decided to wear a rainbow coloured armband in their it's over concerns . their it's over concerns. players may be penalised with a yellow on the pitch for wearing a non sanctioned kit . prime a non sanctioned kit. prime minister says re—establishing stability is a critical first step as he set out to stabilise the uk . addressing business the uk. addressing business leaders at the confederation of british industry , rishi sunak british industry, rishi sunak said was placing innovation at heart of his government agenda . heart of his government agenda. he told delegates controlling was critical to living standards and to putting the economy on a stable footing for the future. he said was determined to get this right . we're going to get this right. we're going to get on with delivering the that are important to you. we're going to make sure that the nhs is well funded and. we get the care that we all need. we're going to make
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sure that school the one sure that our school is the one we're in today. get the we're signing in today. get the funding. they to provide an funding. they need to provide an amazing our young amazing education for our young people. going to make that people. we're going to make that our are safe and we're our streets are safe and we're cutting that got cutting crime, that we've got security borders, which security of our borders, which is me with is really important. me with some challenges we're some of the challenges we're seeing migration some of the challenges we're seei we're migration some of the challenges we're seeiwe're spreadingnigration some of the challenges we're seeiwe're spreading opportunity and we're spreading opportunity around this country so that people optimistic about people can feel optimistic about the future. a 31 year old the future future. a 31 year old man has been arrested , suspicion man has been arrested, suspicion of murder following the of two young children in a fire in nottingham. emerging see services were called to a flat and fell all close in clifton in the early hours of yesterday morning the children, aged one and three, were at the scene for smoke inhalation but died later in hospital. woman in her thirties remains in a critical condition . tv online and dab+ condition. tv online and dab+ radio. this is. gb news
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well, here's quick snapshot of today's markets . pound will buy today's markets. pound will buy you $1.179 an d ,1.1507. the of you $1.179 and ,1.1507. the of gold is £1,471 and $0.96 per ounce. and the footsie one hundredths . at 7378 points . hundredths. at 7378 points. i suspect we're all hoping that we put this brexit debate about how many we aren't a massive referendum . then people couldn't referendum. then people couldn't accept the result of that. then it kicked off four years and we got something that. looks a little bit like a deal. boris johnson, and fish on it johnson, a tie on and fish on it in a way to symbolise the fact that we'd regain control of our waters. of course now what we know we started. but know about where we started. but there's the sunak there's serious talk. the sunak is to sell us out. is potentially to sell us out. he's denying all of this. but
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let's get stuck into the detail of this okay so he's saying of this now. okay so he's saying that uk will not realign that the uk will not realign with laws , those with european union laws, those on his watch, at least as the government seeks to sink speculation and then he's weighing the possibility of a swiss deal with the swiss style deal with the european union. so let's just run through a little bit about what the swiss model would involve. it's got lots of holes involve. it's got lots of holes in it now. what they that joke anyway to eu single anyway access to the eu single market liberal eu migrate market more liberal eu migrate in although full free movement would not be on the table. it would not be on the table. it would involve was paying brussels are paying back into the eu budget and potentially having to swallow eu laws that we disagree with a bit like switzerland just so being honest with you people bang on about the fact the swiss deal. oh it would be a great thing it's actually remarkably complicated things to be things frankly. it seems to be always forth in the always back and forth in the courts, this courts, but we are. this morning, immigration minister robert jenrick said there is no whatsoever reopening whatsoever of the uk reopening the deal with the european union. however, this serious concerns current concerns about this current version conservative version of the conservative party look at what's
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party because you look at what's just in last just happened in the last few weeks. well, we got massively high taxes , pretty much high taxes, pretty much everyone, 55% of the british public, i suppose they're, going to be worse off, i suspect is going be more than that, especially when you factor the cost of living crisis. so they're of high they're now a policy of high tax. seem obsessed with tax. they seem obsessed with a big green agenda in addition to everything else. also going to make very make us poorer. it's not very conservative. if ask me on conservative. if you ask me on that and they're not that one. and so they're not getting grips with illegal getting to grips with illegal immigration. last we heard immigration. and last we heard as they desperate as well, they desperate to increase the number of legal immigrants because that's only way they can come with way that they can come up with going growth. so not very going for growth. so not very tory. well, the next step will be to essentially to rejoin be to essentially us to rejoin the european union by back the european union by the back doon the european union by the back door, wouldn't so i think door, wouldn't it. so i think anyone well within their anyone is well within their right to whether right to sceptical as to whether or when rishi sunak says or not when rishi sunak says that he's got no intentions of reintroducing some kind of eu deal indeed accepting eu deal or indeed as accepting eu laws. thanks i think we've got a right to be concerned that he might want to that. joining might want to do that. joining me is director of orthodox me now is director of orthodox conservative roberts conservative is joseph roberts
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and you very, very and joseph thank you very, very much. and if there's anything a closer relationship with the european union in a legal sense anyway, we've already got the tories going to get an absolute kicking, they are kicking, are they not. they are and much to the chagrin of any true hardline brexiteers who , true hardline brexiteers who, just seen the appointment to number ten as a special adviser will dry who is the remain campaigner for our future, our choice. so clearly things are first in number ten to start making headlines in the direction that at least the chancellor seems to want things go. and i doubt the will be far behind as he as he seems to be cosying up with the globalist agenda once more as. he spreads fear into our hearts by beginning to backtrack in a way we haven't seen for quite some time . and yeah, i think this is time. and yeah, i think this is possibly beginning of his true colours being revealed. i actually and what depressingly i can . this is happening. but can. this is happening. but i wish i couldn't that it was
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happening because. we all seriously potentially at risk now, but having a chancellor who is so incapable of thinking outside the box . his is so incapable of thinking outside the box. his only solution to growth in, britain would appear, is import more people so that we can essentially pass. i don't want to say the numbers a spreadsheet, but it's not too far off taxing people at the expense. i argue, of british culture , british society in culture, british society in general. so that seems to be the only solution. high tax cuts to pubuc only solution. high tax cuts to public services. we can't possibly go for growth in any other shape or form. he is other way, shape or form. he is an remainer. is a big an avid remainer. he is a big globalist. rishi sunak, another big used work for big globalist, used to work for a all know which way a bank. we all know which way would rather go in that direction. are we actually seriously witnessing a political class? think that class? you might think that we're we can't see that we're so that we can't see that they're dragging back into the eu . yeah, they're dragging back into the eu .yeah, think they're dragging back into the eu . yeah, think , i think so. eu. yeah, i think, i think so. and more to that more to the point, do they really care about us? do they really care about the people? you just have to look at the budget. that was a piece alternative research
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piece of alternative research that out on the day . the that came out on the day. the budget alternative budget budget called alternative budget sorry uk , which i would sorry uk, which i would recommend people they found hundred and 76 billion in potential free money the economy. if we just do away with commitments to net zero and the ban internal combustion engines by 2030. so we're being to hike taxes up 50 billion supposedly to fill up the us moolah gap and the pm won't do anything that are we going be betrayed on brexit. well i think that's just a matter of course isn't it, when you don't care about people's bottom , you definitely people's bottom, you definitely don't care about politics. and i perhaps the next test for the government will be on 30th november when we see the pan challenge against the northern ireland go and see what kind of response government come out with that, whether they're to support the people of northern or they're going to or whether they're going to misstep yeah. and just to misstep again. yeah. and just to reiterate a point that you made earlier on which i think might have slipped under the radar,
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people. might seem people. now this might seem a bit a westminster bubble. bit of a westminster bubble. stories have one home, but stories have one at home, but i'm urging to more of i'm urging you to take more of this you might suspect, this than you might suspect, which there is a called which is there is a chap called old dry who was an avid remain campaigner. oh, if you draw a choice. i actually have debated against numerous a against him numerous on a variety much worse news variety of much worse news channels in the day . and he channels back in the day. and he wants what completely he wants rejoin union. rejoin the european union. obviously never wants us to leave the first place an leave in the first place is an absolute 100% dyed in the wool europhile and he is just joined number ten as a special adviser on the day after hearing reports that there might be some kind of swiss style deal, which we are told, oh, no, this will will never happen . i can't help but never happen. i can't help but whether or not there's almost a bit of a soft coup taking place not blaming will drive this he's been offered a job he's well within his rights to take it of course, but from people who? just don't believe in britain and just want to revert to the status quo. all in pockets of the big banks, etc. well, i
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remember when there was a big hoo ha because says in the carrie johnson was supposedly pulling inside number ten and everyone was all too afraid talk about it in and around westminster for fear of possibly losing popular or losing their job at hq or in number ten. and i think we're beginning to get a similar kind of habitat. people are starting to worry that heads will roll should they dare stick their neck parapet and their neck above the parapet and say, look what's happening. and i guess it's now down to us on the telly box to tell the politicians , we know exactly politicians, we know exactly what you're up to . and any what you're up to. and any anybody who can put two and two together should be able to see that. yeah, look, obviously, stevie wonder could see was taking place at the minute director of all today's conservatives, you conservatives, joseph thank you very lo. to great very much. joseph lo. to great have the show. i've got have you on the show. i've got massive reservations about what's moment. what's going on at the moment. ladies gentlemen , not ladies and gentlemen, not getting with illegal getting to grips with illegal immigration. we immigration. it appears that we want no plan want even more legal. no plan whatsoever how we're going to increase infrastructure in increase the infrastructure in order deal with that
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order to deal with that problems. it does appear , problems. it does appear, though, it's seriously on the table that we be rejoining the european union through the back doon european union through the back door. that's a bit of shocker, especially comes as especially when it comes as nigel described this nigel farage is described this particular called particular chap called will drive our future. drive from our future. our choice is one of the most choice who is one of the most promising of remain campaigners in the country is now essentially in number as a special adviser find that deeply deeply concerning i don't know about the reason why conservative backbench conservative backbench conservative mp is on not up in arms about what is happening is for two reasons. i liz truss trying to stick a head the parapet and introduce a pro—growth yet she went too hard to fastag i'm but i'm massively big pro—growth agenda . the banks big pro—growth agenda. the banks wouldn't have it. the big globalist bankers wouldn't have it, they didn't it, and they just they didn't want stick a head the want to stick a head above the parapet any but also parapet any more. but also they're sick and tired the they're so sick and tired of the chaos conservative party. chaos in the conservative party. don't rock the boat so don't want to rock the boat so remainers and have now got an utterly ride and that is pretty shocking . but mark words, if shocking. but mark my words, if
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it to the next, whether it comes to the next, whether it's indeed general the it's local or indeed general the conservative well, conservative party, well, i won't conservative policy and won't be conservative policy and that will pave the for conservative parties in conservative parties to come in and they've got an absolute kicking in regard. but kicking in that regard. but coming a someone got coming up a someone that's got you yes, that's you all going this. yes, that's right. bride bacon could right. says bride bacon could she coming home she's she be coming home she's appealing uk being revoked appealing her uk being revoked will make mistakes but fleeing tower hamlets during, a terrorist death cult in the middle east is a pretty catastrophic ask , me catastrophic one. if you ask, me and as far as i'm concerned, she's made it bed. she can and she's made it bed. she can and she will never not be threat to the kingdom . anyone who the united kingdom. anyone who is not easily led should not be easily led back into britain. i'll be back in a moment.
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welcome, gentlemen . this story welcome, gentlemen. this story just will not go away. shamima begum, the uk did not properly
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assess the former jihadi branch may move back and was quote a victim trafficking before making her stateless . that's what a her stateless. that's what a court has heard lawyers representing the now 23 year old who travelled to syria at the age of 15 argue that she was groomed for the purpose of beanng groomed for the purpose of bearing children for isis fighters. representatives also tell the court shamima begum is , a young muslim woman, someone about everything and everyone can give an opinion . yeah, i'm a can give an opinion. yeah, i'm a political . catherine foster is political. catherine foster is at the asylum an immigration tribunal in central. at the asylum an immigration tribunal in central . catherine, tribunal in central. catherine, thank you very much. a lot of people are saying, oh, you know, why on earth we've been having this discussion. but of course, this discussion. but of course, this drew legal process to go through the legal through what are some the legal arguments made right that arguments being made right that yes, this is yet another attempt by. should either bacon's lawyers to get her back in the uk she is of course still in a camp in northern syria despite their best efforts to get her back since she was found heavily
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pregnant back in 2019, when the caliphate collapsed. now her lawyers are saying that she is indeed a victim of child trafficking . that's the home trafficking. that's the home office . that's the security office. that's the security services should not have allowed her to go that a girl from school had gone two months before. the three of them went and. that why had that not been pursued ? why had they not pursued? why had they not followed that up ? and they are followed that up? and they are words like brainwash , describing words like brainwash, describing isis as a cult and the government very very in their defence both from the home office and somebody from m15, who of course, was giving evidence from behind a to protect his identity. they are very firmly saying that she was , is and will remain a threat to national security. and for that reason must not be allowed back into the united kingdom . now, into the united kingdom. now, the m15 chap used a phrase said
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that he didn't think was credible, that she didn't know what isis were about, that she was a smart article the 15 year old girl predicted get a's and a's stars that at the time what isis were doing beheading people very publicly it was all the media that she was responsible for her actions that she went volunteering and her lawyers are trying to make out that she went that was brainwashed, that she was that she was groomed whether this will work or not, who knows. but obviously the home office a lot of money and presumably her lawyers being paid quite a lot of money as well i imagine. yeah catherine thank you very much. just reinforces that reporting to us from outside court where this heanng from outside court where this hearing is taking place. so should begum be the should shamima begum be the opportunity come back the opportunity to come back to the uk with uk discussing this now with human rights lawyer shahab khan and political commentator emma webb who actually debated what a
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baker was lawyers back in 2018. good stuff . i will start with good stuff. i will start with you. you're national television extend the opportunity for shamima begum come and live with you . i don't know why you should you. i don't know why you should do that when it's the government's responsibility . i government's responsibility. i don't see why i should be doing that. but main thing is, i mean, you shouldn't have to somewhere. i just. haven't. you shouldn't have to somewhere. i just. haven't . people i just. just haven't. people with important to with just so important to contextualise discussion, contextualise this discussion, i think. personally think. would you personally happy of them to live , happy for some of them to live, you know ? i will. i wouldn't be. you know? i will. i wouldn't be. even though i mean, don't think we've seen any evidence that she's any she's actually committed any crimes. probably wouldn't crimes. but i probably wouldn't be even with suspension of be happy even with suspension of a crime to come and live a serious crime to come and live with me. but that's just a thing. just because, you know, if you know, need to if i say, you know, need to bnng if i say, you know, need to bring back from bring people back from guantanamo to not guantanamo bay, we need to not torture doesn't mean i torture people. doesn't mean i want with me. yeah, i mean, want them with me. yeah, i mean, that's you be all right with . that's you be all right with. but you would be you would be all the legal all right with putting the legal case to bring her back case forward to bring her back to the country so she to to the country so she has to live next someone else.
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live next door to someone else. well, yes. under the eyes of the government. i choose to be very careful, supervise just as we do any other serious criminal. like i said. i mean, one thing is no crime has been proved yet. but even and when it does, just even if and when it does, just like we do , i mean, obviously, like we do, i mean, obviously, murderers, rapists, everyone does eventually get released. it's not if we lock people up for . the thing is, for life. but the thing is, i mean, what's happened to i mean, what's happened to her? i think barbaric. think think it's barbaric. i think it's mediaeval just shouldn't it's mediaeval we just shouldn't be people anymore. we be exiling people anymore. we can't be exiling people anymore. we cant you be exiling people anymore. we can't you know . she can't just say, you know. she was person born the was a british person born in the uk she does something uk once she does something horrific really bad the can't just say well you're no longer british, bangladeshi. british, you're bangladeshi. she's do with she's got nothing to do with bangladesh. is she? bangladesh. how is she? bangladesh. how is she? bangladesh to be. so did bangladesh wants to be. so did she. she didn't want to be british. my understanding is that a passport that she got a passport initially went initially when she went over there to join there and she wanted to join a jihadi death cult. i a webb. i'll bring you into the fray now how about the idea how do you feel about the idea that shamima baig be that shamima baig might be patrolling the streets of britain. think it's more britain. i think it's more likely that she'll come home than the football. well and i
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think that that would be terrible national security. what we're seeing now and playing out in the courts is due process. i think that the government have far more information at their disposal than we do when it comes to the sort of security risks that she poses. we've seen the of the iceberg in terms the tip of the iceberg in terms of some of the accusations and the levelled her, the witnesses have levelled her, which are quite horrific, by the way, i think the point is way, and i think the point is that the age of criminal responsibility in this country is you report said, that is ten, as you report said, that she articulate 15 year she was an articulate 15 year old girl, very much above the age of criminal responsibility at the time when she chose to travel . that the year travel. that was just the year after a series of people had been very publicly beheaded . been very publicly beheaded. james foley, alan henning , these james foley, alan henning, these things were all across the media at the time, and we already aware of the genocide that was being against shia muslims, against yazidis and against christians in iraq and syria. so knew she knew what she was going to do. and her story has changed multiple while this has been reported . at first she said she
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reported. at first she said she actually enjoyed her time there and. it's very clear that she only bailed out islamic state when the state started fail. so i don't see any reason why trust her british public at risk. it's 100% true i mean it's it interesting true islamic state money managed to run roughshod across the middle east and was actually some kind of wall in power or whatever you what i was going to say some kind of political force whatever they are not absolutely still are you're not absolutely still beyond it can't just beyond that and it can't just turn back to you turn back over to you know, human card you as as human rights show card you as as i tell anyway no way of i could tell anyway no way of justifying one of the reasons why should bring shamima justifying one of the reasons why overrld bring shamima justifying one of the reasons why over backing shamima justifying one of the reasons why over back over hamima justifying one of the reasons why over back over here ma justifying one of the reasons why over back over here .|a justifying one of the reasons why over back over here . allow begum over back over here. allow us come back over is us to come back over here is well, we monitor her at well, we could monitor her at the expense, as you just said , the expense, as you just said, like we do with other criminals , like rapists murderers and , like rapists and murderers and i think therein lies the issue. shoaib why on earth would we want to introduce somebody else, the expense back , so the taxpayers expense back, so that yourself can that people like yourself can just point and just make a legal point and presumably of cash as well .
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presumably of cash as well. i don't know why it should be because she's british. she was born here. she's brought up here. we made her what she is. she went to a school. she didn't make we make her what she make we didn't make her what she she was on the radicalised onune she was on the radicalised online by people abroad or we made what she is. she was made her what she is. she was radicalised by people radicalised online by people is what says. so sorry, what the case says. so sorry, it's not our problem. batch passports saying bit now, passports saying a bit now, which is our problem. i mean, definitely not bangladesh's problem. what are we saying? because even government's because even the government's home isn't she home office case isn't she should in syria, she should should die in syria, she should go bangladesh that's go to bangladesh because that's her from. but two her parents came from. but two years ago. i think that's ridiculous and unfair. that just makes note. never been to makes note. she's never been to bangladesh. not bangladesh. she's not a bangladeshi national. she is bangladesh. as you said, we won't take about. she's never been here. we have nothing do with that. so, i mean, any time someone becomes olympic someone becomes an olympic athlete or, a world champion, whether brought here a refugee, the british, and someone who behaves horrifically , how is she behaves horrifically, how is she bangladeshi in any way ? i don't bangladeshi in any way? i don't care she is. i care what care what she is. i care what she is. but she's not. as far as i'm concerned at the moment
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we've had her citizenship revoked and she's a bet she revoked and she's made a bet she can i mean, she cannot world class from what you've already so you wouldn't want living with you who would next door to you presumably that's because you still she's still believe that she's a threat some way, or threat in some way, shape or form. you said that you form. you also said that you would be happy legal case would be happy to the legal case for to come and live near for her to come and live near somebody else. i realistically does , the pretty awful situation does, the pretty awful situation for yourself . do you do you for yourself. do you do you sleep well at night knowing the idea you would shamima idea that you would want shamima begum uk to be begum back in the uk to be threat that threat someone else does that make good ? i don't know make you feel good? i don't know what any of that means. watching what any of that means. watching what do with living with me. what you do with living with me. i i mean, you i don't know. i mean, you seriously that's well seriously think that's it? well no, because human rights no, because people, human rights always are trying always at the moment are trying to get her back in the united kingdom. that would mean kingdom. okay. that would mean that have live next that she would have to live next door somebody will be a part door to somebody will be a part of you're not happy of society. you're not happy with live with which with her to live with you, which means realistically, means that realistically, really, down, you really, if you deep down, you don't should don't believe she should be back in uk, do? yeah. there's in the uk, do? yeah. there's lots of people in prison who i think shouldn't in prison. it doesn't i want them living
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doesn't mean i want them living my i don't my house. i mean, i don't i really don't see how you think that's an intelligent to that's an intelligent point to be because she has be making, but because she has to go and be looked after by somebody live somewhere, somebody or live somewhere, if she's she's she's a threat, then she's a threat. we shouldn't be threat. and we shouldn't be making back the united making come back into the united kingdom webb i'll give kingdom and the webb i'll give the final word on this over you all that some crimes and some things just things that are frankly all just so human are so that all human rights are almost wiped she's got almost wiped away. if she's got even she had a human rights even if she had a human rights can i have a head joining a jihadi death cult is something that mean that she that maybe should mean that she doesn't well, doesn't come back. well, we're legally allowed strip her of legally allowed to strip her of her did the her citizenship. we did the thing jack. let's jihadi thing with jack. let's a jihadi jack who a dual canadian jack who was a dual canadian british national security . british for national security. we legally allowed to strip we are legally allowed to strip people of their citizenship . i people of their citizenship. i think that she's being treated differently because she's a woman, because she that she was just housewife. but just a housewife. but fundamental chose betray fundamental. she chose to betray this country , go and take part this country, go and take part in a state exercise that created a project that creates that committed genocide, that killed people on british soil in the manchester attack. children i
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might add. so i think we're actually forgetting who the real victims are. the victims are the yazidi boys who were trafficked by the organisations she knowingly went to join . and so knowingly went to join. and so the fundamental issue here is that if she could be brought back and, tried here and see justice here , that would be one justice here, that would be one thing. but the chances of that happening are slim to none . and happening are slim to none. and the is, as we've seen , the reason is, as we've seen, the reason is, as we've seen, the jihadis return to this the jihadis who return to this country tend to be country tend not to be prosecuted. it's very to get the evidence so . and so for evidence to do so. and so for national security reasons, there are very good arguments for why should keep her out and not allow to come back here. why allow her to come back here. why should okay, look, both should we? yeah okay, look, both of very, very of you, thank you very, very much have our much great to have our discussion. rights lawyer discussion. human rights lawyer khan commentator khan and fiscal commentator emma webb. the webb. just in terms of the relevance this when they go well why well what's the relevance of saying that. oh i wouldn't saying that. oh well, i wouldn't be to have this person be happy to have this person live they have the live in house, but they have the right to come back. it's because she to go and she has to go and live somewhere. and be a somewhere. jessica and be a problem for somebody else. and i help get my head the help but get my head around the idea the lawyers are happy idea the these lawyers are happy
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to make some political point every but actually every human right but actually then taxpayer everybody every human right but actually then dealpayer everybody every human right but actually then deal with' everybody every human right but actually then dealwith' you1erybody every human right but actually then deal with' you want)dy else to deal with it. you want with me patrick christys on gb news coming up we're i'm of hours from kick off wales hours away from kick off wales take mighty they will take on the mighty us. they will be that their goaltender be hoping that their goaltender a match they stick the a good match and they stick the ball the end zone of the ball into the end zone of the welsh team can effort on the welsh team but can effort on the pitch controversy pitch stop the controversy surrounding overshadowing pitch stop the controversy surrcompetition overshadowing pitch stop the controversy surrcompetition and'ershadowing pitch stop the controversy surrcompetition and more dowing pitch stop the controversy surrcompetition and more d0\your the competition and more of your thoughts whether the ice thoughts on whether the ice broken. should broken. shamima begum should be given chance in britain given a second chance in britain and a on the nhs. it's on and a second on the nhs. it's on its knees back in a moment.
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yes, welcome. everybody is just gone. five. i want you all with me. patrick christys and a barnstorming win for england demands for more locks
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immigration laws got a load of that and talking in which shamima begum potentially fighting to return to the united kingdom that's all to come in this been good day for this it's been a good day for engush this it's been a good day for english football the national english football as the national team run to the sword team puts the run to the sword six two in their opening world cup game. but will there be celebrations the other uk nafionsifs celebrations the other uk nations it's wales example nations it's on to wales example they're to face the united they're set to face the united states of america 7 pm. that's going to kick off is that first world cup match in six, eight, four years. hopefully america will still get into that goal all too much. but anyway, there we go. also this hour, britain needs a new deal on immigration we go. also this hour, britain needmorezw deal on immigration we go. also this hour, britain needmore foreign on immigration we go. also this hour, britain need more foreign labournigration we go. also this hour, britain need more foreign labour toiration we go. also this hour, britain need more foreign labour to fillon with more foreign labour to fill shortages . according to the shortages. according to the chartered for business. shortages. according to the chartered for business . and chartered for business. and they're saying they're not sure, you know , the only way to solve you know, the only way to solve the current crisis is now more immigration. the current crisis is now more immigration . that's right. good immigration. that's right. good grief. you couple with the fact that it's looking as though potential just potentially potential or just potentially there people there are some people in government to government who want to essentially rejoin essentially make us rejoin the european the queue , say european union in the queue, say it's good . the other it's not looking good. the other thing, it's not looking particularly well is the
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particularly good as well is the potential of shamima potential return of shamima begum, joined by begum, the isis bride joined by her. horrors of tower her. she fled horrors of tower hamlets for and join a hamlets for to go and join a jihadi cult. well her uk citizenship was revoked for joining state, but now she's challenging that decision. apparently she was trafficked and she was vulnerable , despite and she was vulnerable, despite the fact that she was, of course, protected as and i started to say, what do you think all of this. do you think of all of this. do you think of all of this. do you think shamima begum should be allowed back in the uk? if she does come back? why should we passit? does come back? why should we pass it? would you be happy with shamima moving in next door to you? do you think she's still a threat? i certainly do. vaiews@gbnews.uk kay. but before you i said before that, if you like i said headunes before that, if you like i said headlines . hello. good headlines headlines. hello. good afternoon. it's 5:03. i'm tamsin roberts the gb newsroom england won their opening world cup match against iran as eyes turn wales for their match against us later this evening . the three
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later this evening. the three hons later this evening. the three lions won six two with goals scored by bellingham's , scored by bellingham's, sterling, rashford and grealish. both england and wales, along with five other european teams, decided to wear a rainbow colours armband in their matches. it's over concerns may be penalised with a yellow card on the pitch for wearing a non sanctioned kit. human campaigner peter tatchell says qatar and fifa should be the ones who get the red card, not the players, the red card, not the players, the has become so precisely because of the missteps by and fifa they are making discrimination human rights and so on they're making the issue of the world cup which . it of the world cup which. it wouldn't have been if they hadnt wouldn't have been if they hadn't kicked a fuss. wouldn't have been if they hadn't kicked a fuss . the prime hadn't kicked a fuss. the prime minister says re—establishing stability is the critical first step as he set out plans
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stabilise the uk economy . stabilise the uk economy. addressing business leaders at the confederate of british industry conference , rishi sunak industry conference, rishi sunak said he was placing in innovation at the heart of his government agenda. he told delegates controlling inflation was critical to improving living standards and to putting the economy on a stable footing. he said he was determined to get this right. we're going get on with delivering the things that are important to. you. we're going to make sure that nhs going to make sure that the nhs is and get the care that is well and we get the care that we all need. we're going to make sure that schools, the one we're standing get the they standing in today, get the they need provide an amazing for need to provide an amazing for our we're going to our young people. we're going to make sure that our are make sure that our streets are safe cutting that. safe and we're cutting that. we've security of our we've got security of our borders which really borders which is really important the important to me with of the challenges seeing with challenges we're seeing with illegal that we're illegal migration and that we're spreading country so spreading around this country so that people can feel optimistic about. future . a court has about. the future. a court has heard a woman who left london to join so—called islamic seven years ago was influenced a determined and effective isis propaganda machine . she may be
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propaganda machine. she may be vegans lawyer says should have been treated as a child trafficking victim. the 23 year old is appealing the removal of her uk citizenship after it was revoked when she was found a syrian refugee camp. she has denied any involvement in terror activities. human lawyer high singh banga says bakam should be treated. the as a british citizen . the issue is if she's a citizen. the issue is if she's a british citizen , which she has british citizen, which she has because she holds a british passport or she did hold a british passport, a british citizenship , then should she be citizenship, then should she be treated like other british citizens or should she be sent to a country where she's not born and she hasn't lived in? or just because the basis that her parents came that a 31 year old man has been arrested on suspicion of murder following the death of two young children in a fire in nottingham . in a fire in nottingham. emergency services were called to a flat in fair isle in clifton in the hours of yesterday morning. the children aged one and three, were treated at the scene for smoke
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inhalation, but later died in hospital. a woman in her thirties remains in critical condition . 162 people have been condition. 162 people have been killed and more than 700 have been injured in an earthquake . been injured in an earthquake. indonesia, according to officials there. local weather officials there. local weather officials say a point six magnitude earthquake hit west java region which rattled jakarta, which is about 75 kilometres away for several seconds. rescuers are trying to reach survivors trapped under the rubble . at least 25 the rubble. at least 25 aftershocks hit . the comedian aftershocks hit. the comedian joe lycett, who claimed to have shredded joe lycett, who claimed to have shredde d £10,000 in protest at shredded £10,000 in protest at david beckham's cup role, says he didn't actually do it. the comic filmed himself giving the former england an ultimatum of down from his position as qatar world cup ambassador. or he would destroy the cash which could go to lgbt charities . mr. could go to lgbt charities. mr. lysette has since said footage wasn't real . the truth is , the
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wasn't real. the truth is, the money that went into the shredder was real, but the money that came out was fake. i would never destroy real money. i would never be so irresponsible. in fact the ten grand had already been donated to lgbtq+ charities . before i even pressed charities. before i even pressed send on the initial tweet last week . i send on the initial tweet last week. i never send on the initial tweet last week . i never expected to hear week. i never expected to hear from you. it was an empty threat designed get people talking . designed get people talking. this is gb news. we'll bring you more news as it happens. now though. straight back to . patrick de day. there we go. it's coming home. all right. don't get too carried away. iran is basically like a pub team, but we still stuff them. england won their first game against iran at world
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cup, pushing politics aside, the players let that boost to the talking. those boobs, crucially, did not rainbow coloured laces but bellingham, sterling grealish all found grealish and rashford all found their way onto the scoresheet . their way onto the scoresheet. it wasn't without its drama for england, though iran managed to put two past gareth southgate's men. the result men. but ultimately, the result was never in doubt. the three hons was never in doubt. the three lions already falling up lions were already falling up before opponents managed before their opponents managed to second just to score. the second they just 90, to score. the second they just go, were back the other go, we were back at the other end and nabbed one back. end and nabbed another one back. so there we go. but will it actually this actually becoming home this year? wales as well. we're year? and wales as well. we're going to be about wales going to be talking about wales because under 2 hours because in just under 2 hours time and blame. yeah, just 2 hours time now. wales kick off against the united states . against the united states. america. it's their first world cup match for 64 years. come wales england, wales final would be nice . unrealistic. that is. be nice. unrealistic. that is. it still nice . let's it will still be nice. let's talk to our reporter paul talk now to our reporter paul hawkins, for the hawkins, who's in qatar for the world. paul, i think you found a slightly quieter location that just less people behind anyway. what's going on where you are, paul the lots and lots and lots
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of people to see what keith now packed because it's that kind of day quite frankly fans from all across the world actually bumped into mohammed just now. he's a big england fan. and mohammed, you iran you are at the england iran game. was it? great. game. how was it? great. great game. how was it? great. great game , great atmosphere . fans game, great atmosphere. fans were the best. yeah. did you have any problems getting into the ground? because some people did with ticketing apps. did you know very smooth. even if know it? very smooth. even if you have the they will let you just quickly they will got just and quickly they will got you. smooth. we you. everything was smooth. we just yeah the just quickly and yeah and the atmosphere ground. atmosphere inside the ground. wow amazing amazing english fan were amazing even the iranian fans were as well. great. yeah. and were kind of they were there were some jeering wasn't there of the iranian national anthem by own weren't they. by own fans weren't they. because what's happening in. because of what's happening in. i think so, yeah. there was a big cheering there. yeah. yeah. i think so, yeah. there was a big ytheering there. yeah. yeah. i think so, yeah. there was a big ythe match ere. yeah. yeah. i think so, yeah. there was a big ythe match itselfeah. yeah. i think so, yeah. there was a big ythe match itself just yeah. i think so, yeah. there was a big ythe match itself just talki. and the match itself just talk us it went for you. us through how it went for you. actually was actually the first half was amazing. england where we're at the best team, you know , course the best team, you know, course they played very right. apparently guy one team just
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played this second half iranian team played good as they did they scored twice, but it was not that much them. yeah, yeah, yeah. not that much them. yeah, yeah, yeah . you're happy. are you yeah. you're happy. are you going the other games as well as usa next . yeah, but i'm not usa next. yeah, but i'm not watching. i don't have tickets for that. i have a couple of games. but not that that one. yeah. yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. feeling, feeling positive about there . about england's chances there. it's six. it's it's a good game six. it's a good score. good scoreline . good score. good scoreline. hopefully they will be as fit as this. yeah. maguire went out. yeah. you were harry maguire fan. yeah not much . i don't fan. yeah not much. i don't think the fans feel like that . think the fans feel like that. really? yeah. were you surprised that gareth southgate started with harry? exactly i was surprised. i was shocked, actually , yeah. everyone in actually, yeah. and everyone in the asking , like, the stadium was asking, like, it's gamble, but he did good. it's a gamble, but he did good. he did good. the first half until the first goal. but the change came. yeah it was a good game. yeah. and how far can go, do you think? i hope as far as they can . hopefully it's the
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they can. hopefully it's the final but let's see , wait and final but let's see, wait and see other teams how they perform. great stuff. yeah pretty good thoughts to you. thank you so much for speaking to us. thank you. really appreciate thank you, appreciate it. thank you, sir. i was the england iran game was at the england iran game just give you well, tell you what, gareth southgate's been saying conference saying in a press conference after england still after the he said england still have levels can have other levels that they can go the issue of the go in on the issue of the wearing those armbands and he said the armband is not the players and myself have been involved last hours involved in the last 24 hours the discussions between the discussions been between management and fifa. he understands situation because they need to set a precedent and do you draw the line? he says in an ideal world, that would be a much clearer situation much earlier. but we had to focus on the football. people know what we stand for. so think that we stand for. so i think that she's to rumble on and on she's going to rumble on and on a as go through the world a as we go through the world cup. focus now on cup. now yeah, focus now on wales on the usa in just under 2 hours time. big game for wales their first world cup match since 1958. good paul. thank you very much. paul hawkins there from qatar. anyway away from the
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pitch, lgbt charity say fifa is giving a platform to hatred after affairs there will be sanctions on players wearing anti discrimination armbands at tournament. a joint statement from seven european nations who had signed up to the one love campaign in which included england and wales, confirmed that the armbands will no longer be worn to fear of a yellow card being issued that's how being issued said that's how strongly gay . if strongly they care about gay. if there's a yellow card involved, they stop caring. what's more important to football or morals, that sort of . hackett is that sort of. hackett is a former professional footballer . former professional footballer. he also he coach gathers jude bellingham , father mark bellingham, father mark bellingham. they or anybody and a new jude bellingham growing so that would go jude bellingham of course scored for england today so somewhat to argue that's a relatively tenuous link i would argue is the best we could do it sure no say so can you hear me there . okay we're going to have
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there. okay we're going to have to come off him. unfortunately i can't hear anybody . okay. that's can't hear anybody. okay. that's all right. let's get off our thing for a second. whilst we saw. that's out, shall we? yes. okay all right. let's see. you've been getting in touch with your views. how do you feel about idea , all of politics about the idea, all of politics getting football? i'll getting in way of football? i'll just my views it really just get my views on it really very quickly what have get very quickly what we have to get that chat up i personally that chat back up i personally don't that there should be don't think that there should be much virtue signalling in sport, especially done such especially it's done by such a pathetic group people. so if you don't really get an issue, why don't really get an issue, why do you do it? we're all really taking before taking a knee. i mean, before any match seems to any football match seems to start, at the moment there has to a bit of nailing down, to be a bit of nailing down, a bit of standing, a bit of clapping. it's have clapping. it's like have shoulders, toes. why on shoulders, knees, toes. why on earth it? you do earth do we do it? and if you do have and conviction okay, have morals and conviction okay, only the don't go and take the dollar. so don't go over and do it. or if you do you do it. or if you do do it. you do decide join our band least decide to join our band at least see through it all. it takes see it through it all. it takes for them to stop. actually the visible the of visible symbol is the threat of a yellow card. i that quite shocking. one thing i actually thought more was
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thought was more powerful was the team not the iranian national team not saying were going to not saying that were going to not sing national anthem before sing the national anthem before then doing it. i thought that was good thing. but your was quite a good thing. but your views this gbviews@gbnews.uk views on this gbviews@gbnews.uk something you something i've been asking you to in touch with is an to all get in touch with is an issue would argue is issue that i would argue is probably close lot of probably more close to a lot of your than whether or not your hearts than whether or not people rainbow armband at people wear a rainbow armband at the cup. and that's the world cup. and that's shamima begum and her potential anyway. impending return to the united lows. have you united kingdom lows. have you been in touch all been getting in touch about all of gbviews@gbnews.uk of this? gbviews@gbnews.uk audrey, have this woman's husband vile terrorist lived? she would still be with him. she lost her citizenship by law. the end rachel says no question she should not come back to the uk, although i bet with all human rights obsessed world court be back. yeah, don't know. these back. yeah, i don't know. these are that i am really are the issues that i am really deeply concerned it sets deeply concerned because it sets a precedent if can at a massive precedent if can at the age of 15 years old you are legally in country you're responsible for your actions legally. okay so if she was too young to become of too young to
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know what she was doing . well, a know what she was doing. well, a lot of those people who make the argument at, the same people who say that 16 year old should get the photo, there are a few months from just being able to do so that stack up do that so that really stack up for so then she goes abroad, for me. so then she goes abroad, which she's the british citizenship. she didn't want to be a british citizen. what she went abroad to join jihadi death cult in the middle east where she perfectly happy the allegations go anyway too. so suicide suicide suicide bombers into suicide vests. okay so perfectly happy to that. allegedly she was to do that. allegedly she was okay saying beheaded heads okay with saying beheaded heads in bins he didn't in at. she was happy to marry and always fighter and all of this stuff and bad children by him them . and bad children by him them. let's be honest if isis had been more successful she'd be over that. she said that she thought the arc the manchester arena bombing that was all part and parcel because actually you know we do some terrible things abroad as well. i cannot for the life of me understand why on earth we would want to have her back rights so i back and human rights so i believe the rule of law don't believe in the rule of law don't get wrong and believe that get me wrong and i believe that there case puts up for
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there should a case puts up for everyone we have due everyone and we do have due process and i am not saying there shouldn't be due process but well my rights raise but i am well my rights to raise serious questions about some of the lawyers the human rights lawyers who are choosing to take this case because you have a choice you because you do have a choice you have take this case and if have to take this case and if there's a legal loophole there, it should closed frankly and it should be closed frankly and i a human lawyer i didn't a human rights lawyer on so long ago and he didn't on not so long ago and he didn't seem to be able understand where i coming this . i was coming from with this. would you be happy with shamima and and in your and coming and living in your spare living next door spare room or living next door to grandparents, dare to your grandparents, dare i say, sitting to next sitting next you tube for next to you on the tube for example? well, if the answer to those questions is if you do those questions is no, if you do believe she is going to be a threat or could well be threat to british society when she comes then only don't comes back, then only don't really you should really think that you should be lobbying to have lobbying the legal case to have her back. it will be the her back. it will be at the taxpayers expense as well. is it because going give her because who's going to give her a be honest with. you a job? let's be honest with. you she was she going to live so british taxpayers going to do it. then go, all right, it. and then they go, all right, okay, well, we'll it back, okay, well, we'll bring it back,
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but monitor all the time. but we'll monitor all the time. well, taxpayers paying for well, the taxpayers paying for that that really that as well. i find that really scary. do you feel about it, scary. how do you feel about it, david gbviews@gbnews.uk says no. that allowed that woman should not be allowed to england. she should to return to england. she should have brains to know have had enough brains to know what she was doing at 15 years old know that she was being old or, know that she was being lied and i'm inclined believe lied on and i'm inclined believe it as well. look, she didn't want to a party system when want to be a party system when decided join isis, she's made decided to join isis, she's made a can. as far as a bet she can. lyon as far as i'm concerned, and the only she wants to come back now is because she's not happy with her current well, i'm sorry, current life. well, i'm sorry, shamima, that decision shamima, you made that decision yourself and i'm sorry, but that's what mean. that's exactly what we mean. patrick gb news patrick christys on gb news coming uk won't ease to coming up, the uk won't ease to immigration in bid to immigration in a bid to encourage workers into the country. this story a country. this story in a nutshell about whether or not nutshell is about whether or not a to sort out economy and go a way to sort out economy and go for growth is to introduce more foreign labour. however, this has been poo pooed slightly by robert jenrick. he's reportedly with business leaders calling more liberal laws and overseas workers. is it time? maybe that we fill the 1 million job vacancies? he's with british people should some brits work
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harder and do jobs that they don't particularly want to do . don't particularly want to do. may be easy for me to say because i get to sit here every day and do a job i love. but should we be recruiting a foreign workforce? all of that to come gbviews@gbnews.uk . keep to come gbviews@gbnews.uk. keep those emails flooding here. ladies gentlemen first, those emails flooding here. ladyour gentlemen first, those emails flooding here. ladyourweather.ymen first, those emails flooding here. ladyour weather. hello first, those emails flooding here. ladyour weather. hello i'mt, it's your weather. hello i'm aidan mcgivern from the met office. has been another very office. it has been another very day for many parts of the uk and it continues that right through the afternoon into the rest of the afternoon into the rest of the afternoon into the evening. blustery showers where the more where there isn't the more persistent weather. in persistent wet weather. all in all, it is unsettled low . more all, it is unsettled low. more than one, in fact, is in charge of our weather at the moment . of our weather at the moment. and those areas of low pressure have sent couple of weather fronts in. and those low weather fronts in. and those low weather fronts begin the evening fronts are as begin the evening , bringing the persistent rains. northern ireland , scotland, northern ireland, scotland, northern ireland, scotland, northern north wales and the midlands the rain. finally through the evening and. overnight, it turns more showery. there'll be some lively showers for the southwest south wales and eventually the english channel coast along with a gusty
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wind but away the showers wind but away from the showers will be some clear spells and touch frost western scotland. northern ireland into some central areas where that'll be some fog patches first thing. in fact, it's a fairly gloomy start to day for parts of northern to the day for parts of northern england midlands. the england into the midlands. the rain easing, the cloud rain though easing, the cloud breaking up brightest return, although there will be showers in longer spells of rain in the far of scotland, eastern far north of scotland, eastern scotland away from any scotland as well away from any showers , sunny a brighter showers, sunny spells a brighter day to come compared with monday especially for northern ireland. western england and wales into tuesday evening. for many any showers die away and. clear spells will take hold for the time, some fog patches forming and a fairly widespread frost . and a fairly widespread frost. many areas seeing that frost dunng many areas seeing that frost during the evening. but in the west, temperatures will rise the end of the night as the next area wind and rain returns . so area wind and rain returns. so by first thing wednesday, the coldest air will across northeast scotland, minus minus four celsius in places eastern england as well. temperatures a
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degree or two below freezing, but quite quickly during the morning. the rain marches north pushes into northeast scotland by the end of the afternoon on by the end of the afternoon on by further blustery showers towards the west and southwest so the weather chopping and changing over the next few days, rain and followed by showers .
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welcome back, everybody. now the biggest business group has called on the government to increase immigration , boost the increase immigration, boost the workforce, see beyond boss. mr. dunker has said a more liberalised in immigration is needed to help boost economic growth when public spending is tight. this comes many firms struggle to recruit staff . struggle to recruit staff. apparently with job vacancies near record levels. however, immigration robert jenrick has disagreed with these comments arguing that there are still 5
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million britons, no economic active. speaking earlier at the cbi conference in birmingham , cbi conference in birmingham, rishi sunak's said his focus remains on illegal immigration . remains on illegal immigration. i'm unapologetic about wanting to deliver an immigration system which highly competitive for the best and the brightest, and that's what will deliver . but best and the brightest, and that's what will deliver. but i think the most pressing priority right now is tackling illegal migration. and that's what i'm determined to fix. well joining me now is john elliott's mba , me now is john elliott's mba, who is the founder of uk manufacturer. thank you very much, john you back brexit. i understand you believe there is now a shortage in uk. so do you more legal immigration into the uk to fill the shortage or do you just want brits to off their backs to fill those jobs ? you've backs to fill those jobs? you've got it in one. it's that simple , isn't it? we don't we consume more than we produce as a nation. and the only way balance the books is we've got to consume the same that we produce and balance the two. and we can do it. it means we've got to get
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people doing more work and get people doing more work and get people don't work add some people don't work to add some value. it's not quite simple . value. it's not quite simple. you've got to balance the books. and if we've got immigrants coming, you know, more skilled than our people you know, more they know fitter . they just got they know fitter. they just got a desire make money. a bigger desire to make money. and problem in the is, and the problem in the uk is, i'm afraid lot of people don't need earn they can get need to earn money. they can get by nicely government by quite nicely with government handouts . so we need by quite nicely with government handouts. so we need in your now we need to incentivise or at least change the attitude of many british people people already to get them to want to do different jobs or work hard. we've got a bit we've got to make sure they don't have to he's got to stop giving handouts so they don't need to work. look, we've got lots of vacancies and we've got an economic crisis. why are those filled? my assumption of filled? my only assumption of that the current people that is that the current people have don't need have got money. they don't need to we've change to work. we've got to change that. what that ? i think that. what was that? i think we've fallen into a trap though. and i think we've fallen into a trap. long time ago, we very nearly that. i think when
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nearly got of that. i think when we brexit, which of we had the brexit, which of course the political course the people, the political class, the establishment, the globalist us to vote globalist didn't want us to vote that but did. was that way, but we did. it was undeniable. then we nearly for growth. but now we couldn't quite have that. worry quite have that. and i worry that falling into this that we're falling into this trap they go? trap now where they go? well, let's the back and let's take the easy back and let's take the easy back and let's just try to import cheap foreign labour. it'll make us goodin foreign labour. it'll make us good in a spreadsheet. it'll be more people tax, actually more people to tax, but actually they don't factor the fact that this would if we continue, this would mean if we continue, by way, a net rate, net by the way, a net rate, net migration rate of 205,000 a yeah migration rate of 205,000 a year. i mean, it's the amount of people that we would have in this country, no infrastructure to do you think that to do it. do you think that we're just being lazy or? politicians are being lazy. can you all of us stop you imagine all of us stop working and import 10 million people, go all to work that work because it wouldn't you know, it's a wrong concept completely got to balance the books. we've to we consume . to produce what we consume. everyone in this country consumes goods and services rhodium fuel supply them need more people supplying more people useful work and people doing useful work and we've got to forget about things
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like infrastructure, which is a luxury it's got to balance. we've to get people employed in making the things we making the things that we currently import, more and currently import, using more and do more dishwasher, do that use more dishwasher, more washing , whatever it is more washing, whatever it is we've got to do it. we can do it. there's all those things you there's also a group people there's also a group of people who can't leave still. who people can't leave still. they're so people want to they're 18. so people want to know that, why not? they'll develop quicker. i agree with you. one. i obviously agree with you. one. i obviously agree with you on what we've done. i think stigmatise certain practical trades . so there's this trades. so there's this presumption which is completely wrong, by the way, it's completely a complete ludicrous perception that, oh, so—and—so at the age of 15 or 16, it's patently obvious that that particular individual is not going to be a mathematic or is not going to be a physicist , not going to be a physicist, isn't going to be whether or going philosophy at cambridge why not encourage them to get practical trade and get out into the workforce. but why do we look on those people which is knows i hire a mechanic or a plumber because . i've got no
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plumber because. i've got no idea the way my car runs or the way that my plumbing was. that makes intelligent than me makes more intelligent than me in departments. don't in those departments. don't think. sure think. i think. i'm not sure about that. it's not about look, it's being or it's not about being thick or bright. useful. and bright. it's being useful. and the we need. i the useful times we need. i think people put better food on the , build a roof over our the table, build a roof over our head. but clothes on our back, make our washing machines . those make our washing machines. those are the useful people and we need of them. out need more of them. we're out there, but we do stigmatise it. we think somehow what that we think somehow about what that person apart path that's person they're apart path that's useful, you've got you know, useful, but you've got you know, we've to forget about academia and look at practical most useful jobs . you learn on the useful jobs. you learn on the job. if you can read and write, you can learn it from the job thatis you can learn it from the job that is the basis of all of this. and no genius any better in this country. well why do you say that's a simple solution for surely the best people don't tend to get in the job. john david, thank you very his ongoing job what it to go and it won't happen now. well it could
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quickly john aren't you just quickly john aren't you just quickly . we are in a situation quickly. we are in a situation right now, although government is this idea where is pooh poohed this idea where potentially there was some form of rumblings that we might have a swiss style deal with the european union for just a swiss style deal with the european union forjust our european union for just our viewers analysis, i'll just run quickly through. i'm sure you're aware john, but i'll run our viewers and listeners through exactly what this might mean. it would okay. we would would mean. yes. okay. we would be back into the eu we be paying back into the eu we would to swallow some would still have to swallow some kind as we would have kind of eu law as we would have a closely integrated trade , the a closely integrated trade, the european union, etc, such we would contribute to that budget . it would take part in research programmes essentially. it's kind of like bit of a factual kind of like a bit of a factual entry into the european union, free movement of people, etc. do you feel as if do you feel like we should be ? you've been let we should be? you've been let down by kind of brexit that we've had because easy for people to make the case that we should now. and i think that must be a bit disheartening. i don't think it is actually the eu is a fundamentally flawed concept. you know, it doesn't
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work, doesn't for the work, it doesn't for the europeans. another lot of useful, politicians , you useful, useless politicians, you know. and how can you have the same for greece and same currency for greece and germany? you the of germany? how can you have the of input use for finland input that they use for finland and the euro do it with germany and the euro do it with germany and france? we all each and france? we all need each country different and we need the rules to suit us . and the the rules to suit us. and the european union goes all of that. it's fundamentally flawed i should never think about with john thank you very much. john elliott founder of elliott mba's founder of uk manufacturer just manufacturer ebay. just reacting. that's the idea now that import more foreign that we to import more foreign workers order to fill labour gaps, can't we get off gaps, why can't we get off our backsides fill backsides and fill them ourselves got you ourselves anyway, we've got you with christys on gb with me. patrick christys on gb news. next up, former bride shamima was trafficked by shamima begum was trafficked by isis for sexual exploitation and that's what her lawyers have told a hearing to basically try told a hearing to basically try to the of a uk citizenship to get the of a uk citizenship revoked so allow back into the uk . she's launched her main uk. she's launched her main appeal now against that decision. do you think that shamima begum should be allowed into britain? cannot believe into britain? i cannot believe there's question there's even question about this. she went off abroad to this. no, she went off abroad to join a jihadi death cult. she
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made her bed. can lie that made her bed. she can lie that and that bed should and crucially, that bed should never in the united kingdom. never be in the united kingdom. those your those are views. what your gbviews@gbnews.uk uk be right now is your headlines headlines. hel in the gb newsroom england have won their opening world cup match against iran as eyes turn towards wales for their match against the us later this evening . it's. against the us later this evening . it's . the three lions evening. it's. the three lions 162 with goals scored by bellingham saka sterling rashford and grealish, both and wales, along with five other european teams, decided to wear a rainbow coloured a.d discrimination armband in their matches it's over concerns players may be penalised with a yellow on the pitch for wearing a non kit while . after today's a non kit while. after today's match, england fans say they're
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happy with the result . i thought happy with the result. i thought they really put out the fires. we have a slow start but once they got going they really got going. i just couldn't stop running. we were expecting goal negativity, but flat back five, but no goals . football intensity but no goals. football intensity and strangely a comfortable win . if we have carried on it could have been or nine but we'll settle for that fantastic performance . i can't really performance. i can't really criticise anyone was just that everyone was pretty faultless . everyone was pretty faultless. the prime minister is establishing stability is the critical first step as he set out plans to stabilise the uk economy . addressing business economy. addressing business leaders at the confederal initiative, british industry conference rishi sunak said he was placing at the heart of his government's agenda. he told delegates controlling inflation was critical to improving living standards and to putting the economy on a stable for the future . a 31 year old man has future. a 31 year old man has been arrested on of murder following death of two young
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children in a fire in nottingham . emergency services were called to a flat in fair isle close in clifton in the early hours of yesterday morning. the children, aged one and three, were at the scene for smoke inhalation but died later in hospital . a woman died later in hospital. a woman in her thirties remains in a critical condition . tv, online critical condition. tv, online and dab+ this is. gb news is a quick snapshot of today's markets. the panel will buy you $1.1783 an d ,1.1523. and the $1.1783 and ,1.1523. and the price of gold is £1,472 and $0.99 per ounce and 5100 closed . at
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$0.99 per ounce and 5100 closed. at yes. welcome back onto the main discussion of day and my five officer has told the court the shamima home would have known what she was doing when she travelled to syria to join isis. the witness only known as witness e said i think it's worth noting how m15 are experts in, national security threats and not the definition of trafficking, i.e. that shamima begum was not essentially trafficked and against her will, etc, and that they have come the conclusion that clearly she is a threat to national security, which is why they don't want her back in the uk. ms. begum, now 23 years old, left britain. two friends bethnal green friends from the bethnal green academy east london . both are academy in east london. both are thought to have been killed in the conflict. shamima, believed to the only survivor of then to be the only survivor of then earlier from gb news both a human lawyer hancock bengal. to get his take on whether not sugarbaker should be coming , she
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sugarbaker should be coming, she was a child and we know she's been assisted. we knew she was assisted by government spies or government agents at assumes she was assisted by terrorists . now, was assisted by terrorists. now, if that's not the and it turns out that governments are involved and that there's been some double agents involved , some double agents involved, that's as is the evidence to, and that certainly changes the picture and it brings a lot of weight to her side in relation to what hold on. this could have been stopped she could have been prevented. why won't the police alerted beforehand? why was she to to the truth security? why to go to the truth security? why wasn't anyone's or local councils a local authority flagged up? you know , there are flagged up? you know, there are protocols in place to prevent all of this happening . well all of this happening. well there we go. this debate is rumbling is whether or not we would beg or should be allowed back into britain. i think my views is this particularly clear but that we go on political reporter is on the reporter catherine is on the assignment immigration tribunal reporter catherine is on the as central1t immigration tribunal reporter catherine is on the as central londonjration tribunal reporter catherine is on the as central london .ation tribunal reporter catherine is on the as central london . catherine,nal in central london. catherine, what tell us about what can you tell us about what's just
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what's taking place today? just in right behind in that building right behind you are now. yes the first day of a five day here thing and evidence being given by the home office. and then as you've heard by m15, they a witness , by m15, they a witness, obviously, behind a screen because his identity had to be protected actually been law lawyers very saying that she should be brought back to the to face justice try to get her citizenship back because they say she is a victim of child trafficking. they say that she was groomed, that she was brainwashed that she was taken out to syria to have sex with adults men. the government defending themselves very robustly indeed saying that she was and remains a threat to national security . now it's national security. now it's important to say of the evidence being held has been being held
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in closed session . basically, in closed session. basically, they kick out the public , kick they kick out the public, kick out the press, because for national security reasons, clearly very delicate. there are things we cannot know and cannot report on. so often while i was sitting in the courtroom, there would be questions would be asked and they would say i may be able to answer in closed session . that includes the session. that includes the allegation that, in fact, she trafficked into syria via a canadian spy via a double agent . whether we will ever get to the bottom of the truth of that. i'm not at all sure because of course spies are very careful about what information they give out. but this is an that really does divide people it. lots of people say she was only 15 she was just a child have a duty. we have a moral obligation . she have a moral obligation. she grew up here. she was british. we need to get her back here . we need to get her back here. but many others feel that we
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should just wash our hands her that she's made her bed, that she needs to lioness and clearly the government believe that she was and remains a threat to national security and also of course if she was to win this that might potentially open up the way to appeals from 150 odd other british civilians who have had their passports taken away because they are suspected of terror offence as catherine, thank you very much , catherine, thank you very much, catherine, for today. he asked just breaking down the shamima and child and i think that final point is something that's really worth bearing in mind. ladies and gentlemen, if shamima is allowed back, it might pave the way for other people openly , way for other people openly, voluntarily pledge allegiance to who willingly knowingly travelled abroad to go and either fight for isis. travelled abroad to go and either fight for isis . marry in either fight for isis. marry in isis fighter and try to help kickstart old islamic stays over there . you know, fund either there. you know, fund either economic hinckley or through
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their reproductive organs to just wander back into united kingdom and live amongst as well. presumably, they won't be able to get a job, so they'll have to live on benefits, rest their life. so you and i'm be monitored so you and i, the taxpayer end up paying to taxpayer will end up paying to essentially house jihadi . to essentially house a jihadi. to break this down further. i'm joined by the former head of counterterrorism the counterterrorism at the of defence, chapman. chip defence, chip chapman. chip thank much. let's get thank you very much. let's get down brass tacks this issue down brass tacks on this issue of your bag. i'm always going to be a threat to the united kingdom. probably kingdom. but probably but i think you to go back to understand why she shouldn't be allowed back chronology allowed back by the chronology of what happened so the caliphate was declared in june 2014 by baghdadi in she made it back and went in february 15. so some seven or eight months later we already knew what the islamic state was like. it was a book burning monument, destroying, gate killing, genocidal cult. it was a bunch of islamic fascists that was widely known , but yet that was widely known, but yet somehow she was into that. the
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real key is that in the first year of the 900 people who went from the uk to syria, 40% of them returned because understood them returned because understood the nature of that regime. when they got here, she not and she stayed to the bitter . in 2019th stayed to the bitter. in 2019th march 2019 and was captured at baghuz, which was the final stand of isis. she was part of their organisation and heavily involved in their organisation that the case her third child to remember she was married to an isis fighter from holland was called al jazeera that really kept translate says able fighter one who wins basically he was a general in the first caliphate. he was for kicking the kicking seven battles out of the infidels. yes, indeed. i mean , infidels. yes, indeed. i mean, you paint a pretty picture of what needed to be painted of shamima begum but it does and i've got to ask you, you know, does the human rights quote unquote of shame vacuum, do
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trump what she's done because from where i'm sitting now, this is lawyers desperately trying to find a loophole into the country and probably screaming about the taxpayer as they do it would be a threat to national security because it could the way for other similar other similar people to come back as well. there's a bigger picture here isn't that chip . yeah there are isn't that chip. yeah there are at least two or three others who are trying to go down the line that it was involved, the human trafficking line and this case has been going on for some time because the citizenship of shamima begum was stripped away her in 2000, 19 under a concept called sanguine is that is the right blood you can't make someone stateless but the home office got that because of a bangladeshi heritage. it was not illegal to strip her british citizenship from her. what she's seeking to do is not come back to say she was or innocent is to
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come back to say that she have her case held in the uk because it is unfair that she can't do that. it is unfair that she can't do that . now that's already been that. now that's already been through a judicial in 2020 and thatis through a judicial in 2020 and that is why are now looking at the same siac the special immigration appeals commission not whether it was wrong to what they did, but whether she can come to the uk to fight citizenship. yeah, that's that is the issue which is being at the moment. chip, thank you very much insightful stuff that chapman who is the former head of counterterrorism at the ministry of defence . that's the ministry of defence. that's the former head of counterterrorism at the ministry of defence saying pretty much captive of a clear there is absolutely no way in that shamima begum in hell that shamima begum should be allowed back into. britain to have this britain we have to have this right, if only this more successful she would be a member of isis and still would be churning out isis babies, wouldn't she? but because only she has got clobbered the end she has got clobbered in the end she has got clobbered in the end she decided flee now she's she decided flee and now she's desperate come . well, tough
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desperate to come. well, tough now . got at least something else now. got at least something else after that then. but i just about restrain myself. someone who has spent a number of years in fighter an anti isis macer in is fighter an anti isis macer gifford thank you very much. so you also fighting alongside ukrainian forces against russia. so thank you very, very much for taking time out. that particular battle is coming. it was i really do appreciate your experience of isis and isis and the people behind all. and to me, these guys, the people who sleep with them, do you think they can ever be deemed they'll always be a threat i do. i have been listening to your program over the last minutes and it's a discussion . the best thing i can discussion. the best thing i can do now is actually introduce a bit more of the human . i was bit more of the human. i was there for three years. i saw entire communities devastated by isis, particularly the community, 6000 of their young girls, some as young as three
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years old, were sold into sexual slavery. many of those girls, i mean, i think half of at least are still missing . and we must are still missing. and we must remember, as a society as britain, we must remember who are the real victims here? is it shamima begum or is it people of syria and iraq that this death cults that she and she was above the age of criminal? she chose to go out there . as we already to go out there. as we already have heard, she's she was there right to the bitter end alongside them and behind closed doors in that courtroom. we're heanng doors in that courtroom. we're hearing a little bit more about what she got up to while she was there . so this is not an there. so this is not an innocent person we must remember who . the real innocent people who. the real innocent people are . and i think that was are. and i think that was fascinating. if there is finite number of people who are allowed britain, which is looking reason out there is. but in this hypothetical world i think most people would be more inclined to want to take somebody who , like want to take somebody who, like you mentioned, every yazidi girl had been raped, abused by isis as to someone who went over
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there and married isis fighter , there and married isis fighter, did all of this stuff, you just to be clear , you reject the idea to be clear, you reject the idea that she was in some way an innocent idiotic young girl who went out there and was trafficked for sex you. you you reject the idea . oh, i reject the idea. oh, i absolutely . i reject the idea. oh, i absolutely. i mean, reject the idea. oh, i absolutely . i mean, well, first absolutely. i mean, well, first things first. there are two conversations to be had . what conversations to be had. what was she back in 2015 and what is she now? very because she's no longer a 15 year old girl at the time when she went out, she was above the age of criminal responsible party. she wasn't trafficked. all that's complete nonsense. she actually planned with great detail how she steal money, fund the trip herself and facilitate her transfer from the uk all the way to syria to this genocidal death cult. and then while she was there, she then she was alongside them. they're are i'm not going to make them about she got up to while she was there some appeared in the
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mainstream press about how she was seen selling suicide onto suicide bombers that she was part of a hezbollah, which is the morality police that she was particularly the is people were terrified , met so many innocent terrified, met so many innocent people in raqqa and many other places that were beaten, had their family members shot in the streets and, decapitated by the hezbollah so—called morality police . and the fact that she is police. and the fact that she is now a young woman who has shown now a young woman who has shown no remorse , her actions now no remorse, her actions now wishes to come back. and it's already been said the programme that there , believe it or not, that there, believe it or not, there are worse people than shamima back and we are about to open door to many other people who are who are committed fanatical jihadists who will use the same legislation to get back to here. so these things. this is what i want to get to what many said about this myself at the moment. no, no, no, no. this is this is what i want to get
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you almost because there'll be plenty of time, but important point to finish on, which is do you people, other of you think these people, other of the i'll just say jihadists who claim that they were the victim of . do you claim that they were the victim of. do you think that there's a chance that they will be saying that they would come back to britain and they would commit a terrorist act on british? well look at the recent past i mean, salman abedi, the man who committed terrible atrocity. and in manchester, he slipped through the net. he was a young man that went to libya to an act of war zone. his family were fanatical islamists and he supped fanatical islamists and he slipped , through the nets of the slipped, through the nets of the services our brief services and m15, who by way who are as we've heard, are totally her returning. he slipped through the nets and many girls and boys were killed in the manchester arena. so that is the stake if we must put our families, our children who are going on the underground, who are going to concerts we need to put them through local. shamima begum
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absolutely 100. i couldn't agree more. maysa and a really sticky wicket in some senses because the rule of law equality before the rule of law equality before the law all of the same you know these are principles literally people fight for and so you know you're currently fighting against russia and ukraine within at the same time i'm really feel that comfortable with human rights lawyers knowingly trying get someone back into the country or people back into the country or people back into the country unequivocally, at least more of a risk of being a threat than you or i. it's very difficult, one, for the british public to get their heads around this in myself. my 17th student, myself included, because it got very serious and trump there's an entire industry of ambulance chasing jihadists this so they are making great deal of money from this and it's just an industry it's just it can be i agree with you. completely agree. he makes a thank you very much. i did say before they
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should they should have shamima begum going live with them. i thought desperate for it to come back country because back in the country because i think stop after that. thank think it stop after that. thank you it that is you very much if it that is currently fighting alongside ukraine for ukraine against russia also for a of years was there a number of years was there against isis's as well so a lot of relevance when it comes the shamima begum case. it's kicked off inbox. shock, horror, off in the inbox. shock, horror, gbviews@gbnews.uk your gbviews@gbnews.uk get your views coming in about whether or shamima should back shamima begum should come back to we are going to to the uk but we are going to finish bit lighter finish something a bit lighter because up we'll look because coming up we'll look ahead because while go up against the united states kicks off at 7 pm. so not long now it's the first game at a world cup i think i'm to say, for 64 years anyway. come on welsh i'm going to be an honorary welshman because hopefully we can we can have america. america of have beating america. america of course, hoping that course, will be hoping that that goaltender good game and goaltender has a good game and that defence stops, that their defence stops, the ball goal haul ball going in, their goal haul and the touchdown anyway i coming a moment moment.
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right okay well i think if head of fifa can say that a occasionally he fails gay or if he feels disabled then today i can feel welsh. okay england have already stuff the iranians the welsh are playing next their kick off is at 7 pm. against the united states of america. woo! anyway, they're in the same group as england. so both be going against the lions going up against the three lions over eight days. this over the next eight days. this is the first time that wales have played in a world cup since 1958. it's fair to say it's a massive occasion for the dragons. good sam, i say gb news is next on reporter geoff moody is next on reporter geoff moody is and then on to is live and then we're on to valley. geoff yes, he's there. what's here ? a pub . what's going on here? a pub. it's loud here. it's noisy , it's it's loud here. it's noisy, it's filling up. it's fairly quiet all day. but now we've an hour to go until the kick off for the big match . things are really big match. things are really beginning to hot. up next, speak to the landlord, the lion, adrian . here in treorchy . a big
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adrian. here in treorchy. a big night for wales. this isn't . night for wales. this isn't. yeah, it's going to be massive . yeah, it's going to be massive. as you said just now, it's really filling now. there were a few in here for the iran game, early voting. iran there'll be more now sport in so think more now sport in wales so think it's especially this time it's great especially this time of year and where it is as well because there's not many going over to qatar and with the being so close to christmas as well. so we're really hoping for that for be nice and busy for public to be nice and busy and certainly busy tonight. and then of once, this is then of course once, this is oven then of course once, this is over. you've christmas over. you've got the christmas rush. of does this kind rush. it kind of does this kind of way making up for the of go way to making up for the last couple years? does. last couple of years? it does. i mean, been a struggle. you mean, it's been a struggle. you know, no one deny that. know, no one could deny that. but think the good businesses but i think the good businesses have got back to and every diversify tour. yeah, it's barnett. know football barnett. you know the football crowd book is crowd with a christmas book is trying to merge two trying to merge those two together. okay, well, let's speak crowd . let's speak the football crowd. let's talk to the lads . are you right? talk to the lads. are you right? a very good thank you. yes, you sound so. i'm all right. yeah. good. now it took wales 64 years to get here . what did it take
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to get here. what did it take you so long? admittedly, it took the 64 years a little bit longer than would have liked, to be honest. but the most important thing is we, you know, used to compete not just as tourists and i'm forward to i'm really looking forward to a good tournament son as good tournament with my son as well . our first world cup well. so our first world cup first league appeal, my son really looking forward to a good time. and very time. excellent and very quickly, sir, one who's quickly, sir, in one word, who's going ? it's got to be going to win? it's got to be wales. it's to be wales. it's got to be wales on wales. back now to balderdash. actually i thought was absolute gold . jeff, thought was absolute gold. jeff, thank you very much. jeff moody and a pub in the valley with the lads. there you go . okay bev lads. there you go. okay bev turner is here because it's not the usual james and co today bev is filling but what you're coming up i love that i love the fact that he said guys in the pub why is it taking so long is it because it's is that for we're going to be we're going to talking about similar topic to you actually patrick are you actually patrick we are going talking about the going to be talking about the qatar football we're going to talk about politics be talk about politics that be clear between the sport
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clear water between the sport and ideology that various and the ideology that various people want to push forward. we've curtain hey and we've got david curtain hey and amy nicol who are both fantastic and they've got very different opinions on these issues it opinions on these issues so it should some good debate we should be some good debate we also be talking about also going to be talking about shamima was only 15 shamima begum. she was only 15 when she when she was a child was that made and also meghan and harry have won an award in america for exposing racism in the royal family. so do they deserve that ? i will be sitting deserve that? i will be sitting in for michel as well. i tell you what you've got me to ask. sure, but there's going to be a box office show and well we box office show and as well we can't keep off the telly at can't keep you off the telly at the can because you the minute, can we. because you are you're on at so 12 is on are you're on at ten so 12 is on you well. so today i did my you as well. so today i did my show. i went and watched match. i had a little nap patrick i can't lie. and then i'm back and ready to do this at six. oh, good stuff. well gb news the better for you on better place for having you on board back fantastic board back to that fantastic stuff. tune in stuff. make sure you tune in because be talking to all because she'll be talking to all the the most the big topics. the most controversial topics, the talking the you talking points of the day. you very, very shortly. thank very much changing do much everybody is changing do
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putting clients it makes putting the clients it makes today we've done little bit of today we've done a little bit of football fair say also football it's fair to say also of got the shemima bacon of course got the shemima bacon stuff popped up in the inbox stuff has popped up in the inbox gbviews@gbnews.uk. okay well i'll just finish message. i think begum has bet think shamima begum has made bet she long as that bet she can lie as long as that bet is anyway. there we go. is abroad anyway. there we go. patrick hey, we're is abroad anyway. there we go. patri
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channel coast with a gusty wind. but away from the showers there will be some clear spells and touch frost western scotland, touch of frost western scotland, northern ireland into some areas where that'll be some fog first thing. in fact it's a fairly gloomy start to the day for parts of northern into the midlands. the though easing, the cloud breaking up brighter skies return although there will be showers in longer of rain in the far north scotland, scotland far north of scotland, scotland as . any showers, as well away. any showers, though sunny spells brighter day to come compared with monday especially for northern ireland. western and wales into tuesday evening for many showers die away and spells will take hold for the time with some fog patches forming and a fairly widespread frost many areas seeing that frost forming during the evening but in the west, temperatures will rise the end of the night as the next area of and rain returns . so by first and rain returns. so by first thing wednesday the coldest air will be across scotland, minus three four celsius in places
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eastern england as well. temperatures a degree or two below freezing, but quite quickly during the morning, the rain north pushes into northeast scotland. by the end of the afternoon on by further blustery showers towards the west and southwest . so the weather southwest. so the weather chopping and changing over next few days. rain and followed by showers .
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very good evening to you. it is 6 pm. this is james and co. obviously i am not michelle. i'm bev turner normally seen on this channel at 10 am. but tonight i'm playing up front while michelle has a night off. and did football ? 6 to did you see football? 6 to 2 england against iran qatar even if you're not a massive footie fan, you a little lift fan, it gives you a little lift it. none of the players wore the

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