title
stringlengths
22
110
published_date
stringclasses
27 values
authors
stringclasses
2 values
description
stringlengths
0
382
section
stringclasses
65 values
content
stringlengths
29
17.6k
link
stringlengths
34
76
top_image
stringlengths
0
150
Saido Berahino: Stoke complete deal to sign West Brom's 23-year-old striker - BBC Sport
2017-01-21
null
Stoke sign West Brom striker Saido Berahino for £12m on a five-and-a-half-year deal.
null
Last updated on .From the section Football Stoke have signed West Brom striker Saido Berahino for a fee of £12m on a five-and-a-half-year deal. The 23-year-old's contract had been due to expire at the end of the season, and the Baggies offered him a new deal for a third time in December. He has not played since September and his relationship with the club had broken down since the 2014-15 campaign. "I've had a tough two years but everything happens for a reason. I'm mentally stronger now," Berahino said "Now I am finally here I just can't wait to start. For Stoke to show their faith in me is unbelievable," he added. "On match fitness I am not there yet, but I am going to work hard to get myself back so I can help my new team-mates climb the table." Stoke chief executive Tony Scholes said: "We've signed a young English striker who has already proven his ability in the Premier League. "After a frustrating period he's now desperately keen to reignite his career and we look forward to seeing him do that with us." Berahino reacted angrily to a bid from Tottenham being turned down on transfer deadline day in summer 2015 and two months later tweeted that he would never play for West Brom again under then-chairman Jeremy Peace. And in January 2015, he scored four goals but barely celebrated in what was interpreted as a sign of his growing disillusionment at the Hawthorns. Speaking after Saturday's 4-0 defeat by Spurs, West Brom boss - and former Stoke manager - Tony Pulis had said Berahino would not be sold "unless it is right for the club". He added: "It has to be a two-way situation. That has always been the situation; we will not sell the lad because it suits him." England Under-21 forward Berahino is the Potters' second signing of this transfer window after the loan deal for Derby keeper Lee Grant was made permanent.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/38696547
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…rahino_getty.jpg
Lawro's Premier League predictions v Split star James McAvoy - BBC Sport
2017-01-21
null
BBC football expert Mark Lawrenson takes on actor James McAvoy in this weekend's Premier League fixtures.
null
Last updated on .From the section Football BBC Sport's football expert Mark Lawrenson will be making a prediction for all 380 Premier League games this season against a variety of guests. Lawro's opponent for this week's Premier League fixtures is actor James McAvoy, star of new film 'Split'. McAvoy is a Celtic fan and says he grew up supporting them for many reasons. "I think your choice of football club quite often is not your choice," he told BBC Sport. "It is thrust upon you by your family, wherever you grew up, or sometimes even your religion, so it is a kind of environmental thing that you just soak up. "That is why I am a Celtic fan but why I enjoy being a Celtic fan is different and I have much more power over that. "In London, I keep an eye on Arsenal but I am not really an Arsenal fan. I am more of a plastic Gooner just because I used to live two doors away from the East Stand when they played at Highbury. "That was amazing. When I couldn't get tickets, which was quite often, I would be able to watch the game on TV, open the windows and turn the sound down, and just have the roar of the crowd in the background." You can make your Premier League predictions now, compare them with those of Lawro and other fans by playing the BBC Sport Predictor game. A correct result (picking a win, draw or defeat) is worth 10 points. The exact score earns 40 points. Last week, Lawro got four correct results, including one perfect score, from 10 Premier League matches. That gave him a total of 70 points. He beat UFC star Michael Bisping, who got three correct results, with no perfect scores, for a total of 30 points. All kick-offs 15:00 GMT unless otherwise stated. James McAvoy's prediction: I am looking for a thriller. 3-3 James McAvoy's prediction: I still keep an eye on Arsenal, and they just surprise you every now and again with the most ridiculous result. I am going to be positive here, though, and say they will take Burnley apart. 3-0
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/38632703
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…poolvswansea.png
Chapecoense plane: Footballer Neto dreamt of crash - BBC News
2017-01-21
null
Chapecoense football club player Neto is one of six survivors of a plane crash that killed 71 people in Colombia last November.
null
Chapecoense footballer Neto is one of six survivors of a plane crash that killed 71 people in Colombia last November. Almost two months after the accident, the BBC's Julia Carneiro met him at the Conda Arena in the city of Chapeco.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-38698277
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…item93726958.jpg
Australian Open: Johanna Konta praises support from her family and friends - BBC Sport
2017-01-21
null
Great Britain's Johanna Konta says her family and coaches were crucial to her progress after the Lawn Tennis Association cut her funding.
null
Last updated on .From the section Tennis Coverage: Daily live commentary on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra; live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website; TV highlights on BBC Two and online from 21 January. Great Britain's Johanna Konta says her family and coaches were crucial to her progress after the Lawn Tennis Association cut her funding in 2015. Konta, 25, has reached the last 16 of the Australian Open, after playing in the semi-finals in Melbourne last year. In 2015, the LTA reduced Konta's funding, as part of wider cuts in support for emerging players, which saw Konta relocate her training to Spain. "That period of time was very difficult," said the world number nine. "When the organisation decided to stop funding me it wasn't in my benefit. It's not a cheap sport and whether through a federation, a private sponsor or a family, no-one gets there without help. "I don't believe tough love is the answer and I was very fortunate to have very good people around me. "My family, my support system, also my coaches at the time did a tremendous job in pulling together and making sure our focus remained on the work and not on external situations out of our control." Sydney-born Konta has previously said she was grateful for the support the LTA has offered since she became a British citizen in 2012. Konta plays 30th seed Ekaterina Makarova of Russia in the last 16 in Australia after a convincing 6-3 6-1 win over Danish former world number one Caroline Wozniacki. "I was very happy with the way I was able to assert myself from the beginning and maintain my level to the end," said Konta. "Against someone like Caroline, she's not going to give it to you - you really have to earn it." Konta beat Makarova 4-6 6-4 8-6 in last year's Australian Open and the winner of their match on Monday could face six-time winner Serena Williams in the quarter-finals. On Makarova, Konta added: "Every time we play, we have a battle. That match last year was a high-level match from both of us. She always seems to do well on these courts and I'm looking forward to it."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/tennis/38704836
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…ta_wozniacki.jpg
Friends' 30-year-search for Celtic treasure trove pays off - BBC News
2017-01-21
null
Two metal detector enthusiasts found a huge hoard of Celtic treasure, reports Robert Hall.
null
A 30-year obsession finally paid off for two metal detector enthusiasts when they discovered one of the world's largest hoards of Celtic treasure. The last coins of nearly 70,000 - worth millions of pounds - have now been removed from the site in Jersey.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-38703914
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…258_p04q88c6.jpg
Irish jockey Jack Kennedy performs amazing acrobatics to stay on horse - BBC Sport
2017-01-21
null
Irish jockey Jack Kennedy manages to stay on his horse Bilko despite almost being thrown off it at a meeting at Thurles.
null
Irish jockey Jack Kennedy manages to stay on his horse Bilko despite almost being thrown off it at a meeting at Thurles. WATCH MORE: McCoy 'has breakfast every morning now' Pictures courtesy of At The Races.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/horse-racing/38694316
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…587_p04q6frt.jpg
Man City 2-2 Tottenham: Pep Guardiola 'upset' not to win - BBC Sport
2017-01-21
null
Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola praises his side's "outstanding performance" but says he is "upset" they could not beat Tottenham, who came from behind to to draw 2-2 at the Etihad Stadium.
null
Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola praises his side's "outstanding performance" but says he is "upset" they could not beat Tottenham, who came from behind to to draw 2-2 at Etihad Stadium. The Spaniard was unimpressed by the first question he was asked by Match of the Day commentator Guy Mowbray. Three weeks ago, he gave a particularly awkward interview to another BBC reporter, Damian Johnson.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/38707859
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…501_p04q9cm5.jpg
Meet the British family spanning six generations - BBC News
2017-01-21
null
A family from Yorkshire is thought to be the only one in Britain with six generations alive at the same time. Grandmother Sue Godward and her daughter Niki Mellor spoke to 5 Live.
null
A family from Yorkshire is thought to be the only one in Britain with six generations alive at the same time. There are 47 family members; the eldest is great-great-great grandmother Hilda Hanson, who is 103 and known as “little gran”. The youngest, baby Finley, was born on Christmas Day. Grandmother Sue Godward and her daughter Niki Mellor managed to baffle 5 live’s Eleanor Oldroyd with their confusing family tree. This clip is originally from 5 live Breakfast on Saturday 21 January 2017.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-38704598
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…983_p04q868s.jpg
Martin McGuinness: The end of a long journey - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
The BBC's Peter Taylor looks back as Martin McGuinness retires from frontline politics.
Northern Ireland
The political retirement of Martin McGuinness on Thursday due to ill health marks the end of a remarkable journey. Perceived by some as a terrorist, others as a freedom fighter, he ended up a statesman, a journey similar to those previously made by other historical figures from Menachem Begin to Jomo Kenyatta and Nelson Mandela. It also marks the closing of a chapter in Northern Ireland's turbulent history in which Mr McGuinness played a crucial role both as perhaps the most important IRA leader on the island of Ireland and one of its most skilled and charismatic politicians. Without his endeavours, in umbilical political partnership with his former comrade-in- arms, Gerry Adams, I doubt if Northern Ireland, despite the continuing fragility of its institutions, would be where it is today. I first met Martin McGuinness 45 years ago this month, shortly after the day that became notorious as Bloody Sunday when British paratroops shot dead 13 civil rights marchers in the Bogside enclave of Londonderry/Derry. I remember watching a candle-lit procession on its way to the church where the coffins of the dead were lying and being told by the nationalist politician, John Hume, to keep an eye on one of the mourners. He pointed to Martin McGuinness. I followed his advice and soon met him on the steps of the gasworks that served as the IRA's headquarters in the Bogside. At the time he was second in command of the IRA's Derry Brigade. He was soon to become its commander. He did not fit the stereotypical role of an IRA commander at the time. He was personable, highly articulate and utterly committed to his cause of getting the "Brits" out of the North. A few months later, following an IRA ceasefire, he was sitting down in a posh house in Chelsea, along with Gerry Adams, as part of the IRA delegation that met the Northern Ireland Secretary, Willie Whitelaw. The IRA said it wanted a British withdrawal by 1975. Not surprisingly, the talks got nowhere and it was back to the "war". If anyone had looked into a crystal ball at that time and told me that the young IRA commander would go on to become Northern Ireland's deputy prime minister, sharing power and joking, as "the chuckle brothers" with his former arch enemy, Ian Paisley, and then would don white tie and tails to dine with the Queen at Windsor Castle, I would have said that pigs might fly. But pigs did. "The chuckle brothers" - Ian Paisley and Martin McGuinness at the Northern Ireland Assembly, 2007 Mr McGuinness's role was critical in persuading the IRA's rank-and-file that "armed struggle" had run its course and the future road to Sinn Fein's holy grail of a united Ireland lay in sharing power at Stormont with its unionist opponents. This was tantamount to accepting partition (the division of Ireland in 1922 into two states) and the role of the British state - albeit, as far as Sinn Fein is concerned, a temporary accommodation as a means to an end. Remarkably Mr Adams and Mr McGuinness finally persuaded the majority of the IRA to swallow the political heresy and agree to the ceasefire of 1994 that was to lead on to the Good Friday Agreement four years later. A measure of the faith and trust that rank-and-file IRA men and women had in Martin McGuinness is reflected in the sentiment I heard from many of them that "if it's good enough for Martin, it's good enough for us". Such sentiments speak volumes of Mr McGuinness and the esteem in which he was held as IRA leader. These landmark steps were only made possible as a result of a protracted and fraught secret back-channel dialogue, via an intermediary, between MI6 and MI5 in which Mr McGuinness was the key conduit to the IRA's ruling Army Council. But Mr McGuinness, because of his IRA past, remains a controversial figure. There are still some Unionists who would take issue with the tribute paid by Ian Paisley's son who said that by working with his father, Martin McGuinness had "saved lives" and "made countless lives better". His critics can only see him as the former leader of a terrorist organisation responsible for a grievous toll of death and destruction. They will never forget - or forgive the IRA - for the lives of the hundreds of policemen, soldiers and civilians murdered in the IRA's campaign and the number of families who have been left bereft. But for me, the true recognition of the journey Mr McGuinness has made came in an interview I did with the mother of Marie Wilson, the young woman who died in the IRA's bomb attack on the Remembrance Day parade in Enniskillen in 1987. The intelligence services believe that Martin McGuinness, although he denies it, was at that time the acting head of the IRA's Northern Command that prosecuted the "war" in the North. In words of moving candour, Mrs Wilson said she respected Mr McGuinness's role in helping to bring the conflict to end and making such attacks, she hoped, a thing of the past. • None McGuinness will not stand in NI election
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-38690431
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…es-488174534.jpg
Australian Open 2017: Johanna Konta beats Caroline Wozniacki to reach last 16 - BBC Sport
2017-01-21
null
Britain's Johanna Konta beats Caroline Wozniacki in straight sets to reach the fourth round of the Australian Open.
null
Last updated on .From the section Tennis Coverage: Daily live commentary on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra; live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website; TV highlights on BBC Two and online from 21 January. Britain's Johanna Konta saw off former world number one Caroline Wozniacki with a stunning display to reach the fourth round of the Australian Open. Konta, seeded ninth, won nine games in a row on her way to beating the Danish 17th seed 6-3 6-1 in 75 minutes. It was an eighth successive victory for the Briton, who won the title in Sydney in the build-up to Melbourne. Konta, 25, will face Ekaterina Makarova next after the Russian upset sixth seed Dominika Cibulkova 6-2 6-7 (3-7) 6-3. • Watch highlights of Konta v Wozniacki on BBC Two from 15:05 GMT on Saturday "We played in the fourth round here last year and I think it was 8-6 in the third, so I am expecting a battle," Konta said. "It will be tough, just like against anyone in any match, you don't have any easy matches any more." "I think if she keeps playing like this, then she has good chances against Serena," Wozniacki said of Konta. "Serena has won so many Grand Slams and she's been in tough positions. But I think Johanna is playing on a very high level right now." • None Serena powers through to round four • None How to follow the Australian Open on the BBC After a tight start to the contest on Margaret Court Arena, Konta took control midway through the first set and powered away from Wozniacki. The British number one's consistent aggression on serve, return and off the ground left the Dane struggling to find an answer. A thumping drive volley gave Konta the first break of serve in game seven and she got the better of the Wozniacki serve once again to clinch the set. A bewildered Wozniacki double-faulted twice to fall behind in the second set and in the end she did well to get on the scoreboard at all after going 5-0 down. There was the odd sign of nerves from Konta as she closed in on victory but after double-faulting on her first match point, she converted the second to end the day with 31 winners to Wozniacki's six. "I definitely played at a high level today," Konta said. "Caroline really makes you work for it and doesn't give you anything so I am happy with my level. "I knew it would be incredibly tough and I wanted to assert myself from the get go and play the match I wanted to play. What an amazing crowd, you guys were incredible." Konta's Australian Open challenge is gathering some serious momentum. Always aggressive from the baseline, she hit 31 winners against an opponent who is very quick across the court and one of the best on tour at getting balls back in court. Konta has now won eight matches and 16 sets in a row, and if she can get past Makarova in the fourth round, she is likely to face the ultimate test of Serena Williams after that.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/tennis/38702928
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…86_037406335.jpg
Greenwich mum makes Jamaican Patois-speaking doll - BBC News
2017-01-21
null
A mother from London has created a Jamaican Patois-speaking doll for her daughter to reflect her heritage.
null
A mother from London has created a Jamaican Patois-speaking doll because she could not find a toy for her daughter that reflected her Jamaican heritage. Toya was developed by Saffron Jackson, from Greenwich, who wanted the doll to look and sound like her daughter. It was launched six weeks ago and sales have been booming.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-38704697
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…607_p04q8fxl.jpg
Mild panic greets Trump digital transition - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
As Obama moves out the White House, he today also gives up key online real estate - a move already creating controversy.
Technology
President Trump's first tweet on the @POTUS account showed this image Much is written about the Herculean effort to move one family out of the White House and a new family in within the space of just a few hours. But in our modern age, the digital moving trucks must also roar into action, as prime presidential online real estate gets a makeover, and eight years of President Obama's social media chat is confined to the national archives. Let’s start with WhiteHouse.gov, the official website for the President, which as of noon Friday, has a brand new look - and has already provoked mild panic. Many noted that pages about climate change were swiftly deleted. So too were pages about LGBT rights and various science policies. But, let’s not get ahead of ourselves. Pages about everything were deleted as what was essentially Obama’s homepage was replaced with Trump’s. That means posts about any former policy positions no longer exist on the White House website if you follow the original links. So while the web address pointing to the White House’s position on climate change no longer works, the same can be said about Obama’s pages relating to the economy. Unpredictable as he is, no-one is suggesting Donald Trump is about to describe “money” as a hoax. That said, on the new whitehouse.gov, a search for “military” will yield 154 results. “Climate change”? None. Nervous internet sleuths have found one reference to climate change, a promise to lift the "harmful and unnecessary policies such as the Climate Action Plan and the Waters of the US rules". Make of that what you will. People on Twitter certainly are. Also wiped clean was the White House's petition website. On Friday, by 4pm in DC, only two petitions were posted on the site. The first demanded the release of the President's tax returns. The other demanded he put his businesses in a blind trust. If either petition gets 100,000 signatures, the White House has to provide a response - at least, that was the rule the previous administration set itself. Trump reportedly gave up his cell phone upon assuming the presidency Speaking of which, it’s all change on Twitter too. From today @POTUS - President of the United States - has been taken over by the Trump team. All previous tweets from Obama’s team - and Obama himself - have been deleted from that account, but archived under @POTUS44. The 44 relating of course to the fact Obama was the 44th US President. The tweets were not, as a smattering of people blurted out, “deleted by Trump” once he had control of the account. Twitter removed them - and that's because scrubbing the account of Obama’s tweets is a smart move for everyone involved. Had Twitter left the old tweets in place you’ll find yourself seeing people retweeting Obama’s words but with Trump’s identity attached, a recipe for misinformation disaster. Trump’s first tweet on @POTUS posted a picture and a link to his inaugural address - the full text of which was posted on Facebook. Is Trump having a change of heart over his social network of choice? Maybe. Facebook certainly offers the chance to speak more clearly at length, and, as the leader of the free world, it would be more useful to post to an audience of almost two billion rather than Twitter’s rather limited 300m. We won’t know for sure until about 3am, DC time, tomorrow morning. Everyone will be surely waiting for those twilight hours to see if the President springs back into life posting his thoughts on his own personal account, @realDonaldTrump. Follow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC and on Facebook
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-38699809
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…_whatsubject.jpg
Dan Evans: Britain's latest tennis star snubbed by Kevin Pietersen - BBC Sport
2017-01-21
null
Meet the new British tennis star who bought his own shirts and was snubbed by ex-England cricketer Kevin Pietersen.
null
Last updated on .From the section Tennis Four days ago, Dan Evans was not exactly a household name. The British tennis player had just reached his first ATP final and moved to number 51 in the world rankings. But that was not enough to get a photograph with former England cricket captain Kevin Pietersen, who turned down Evans' request when they met outside a restaurant in Melbourne this week. However, the 26-year-old might soon be the one getting asked for selfies after his stunning start to the Australian Open. Evans caused a shock when he reached the last 16 of a Grand Slam for the first time with a 6-3 7-6 (7-2) 7-6 (7-3) win over Australian 27th seed Bernard Tomic on Friday. The Birmingham-born player will pocket at least $130,000 (£79,000) for reaching the fourth round, regardless of whether he beats France's Jo-Wilfried Tsonga. But the British number three was a little rankled by the snub from the batsman, 35, who is in Australia to play for Melbourne Stars in the Big Bash League. "There was some serious rage for about 20 minutes after that happened," said Evans. "He didn't want me to have my picture with him. Quite funny, isn't it, how things work out? He was my favourite cricketer until that point. "I think he was worse for wear, That was his excuse when he replied [on Twitter]. It was so embarrassing, as well. He didn't even just say, 'No'. He handed me off, as well." However, it appears the two made up after the win over Tomic, with Evans tweeting a picture of himself at a Melbourne Stars game in the BBL on Saturday. BBC tennis correspondent Russell Fuller asked if he had got the tickets from Pietersen and Evans replied with the message of "sure did". 'He would have been proud of my efforts' Immediately after winning the final point of the match against Tomic, Evans was overcome with emotion and was seen pointing up to the sky. He later revealed it was a tribute to his former coach Julien Hoferlin, who died of cancer last year. In 2014 Hoferlin criticised Evans, saying tennis was just a "brief interlude in his life". Speaking after his victory on Friday, Evans told the BBC: "When he [Horferlin] coached me I didn't give 100% at the time and there was off-court stuff he wasn't happy with. "I wish he could have seen what happened tonight, he would have been proud of my efforts. He always said I could do it and that I should be playing top-40 tennis. Tonight was for him." Evans managed to overcome being distracted by an unruly spectator at the Hisense Arena. "This guy was coughing as I was throwing the ball up, as well as screaming at me when I was losing points," he said. Evans was also asked about comments from Tomic's father and coach, John, who once told him he was not good enough to train with his son. The British number three said Tomic Sr congratulated him in the changing room after the match. "It was nice of him," added Evans. "I didn't have a problem with him at all, to be honest. It was his opinion."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/tennis/38693517
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…690126_evan2.jpg
Barack Obama's last day as 44th president - BBC News
2017-01-21
null
From leaving a note for his successor on the Oval Office desk to giving a final speech.
null
Barack Obama spent his last day in the White House and as the 44th president of the United States. He received his successor, Donald Trump, at the White House in the morning and boarded Air Force One one final time in the early afternoon to go spend some time in California.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38699742
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…986_p04q7431.jpg
Women's March: A united message spanning generations - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
Thousands of men, women and children took part in the Women's March in London.
UK
"Stand united, we will never be divided," was the message chanted by the crowd as people marched through central London. Cheers erupted every few minutes as the crowd held up placards to the beat of drum and bass music from a portable sound system. "Girls just wanna have fundamental rights", "Women won't be trumped" and "Burn bras not bridges" were some of the messages directed at US President Donald Trump from the UK. Women - and men - of all ages descended on the capital for the Women's March in London on the first full day of his presidency. There was a united message from the crowd, who came with glitter on their faces and even fancy dress to take part in the two-mile walk. Many were parents who said they wanted to send out a message for the next generation that they have a voice and can stand up for the women's rights they believe to be under threat from the new US administration. Danae Savvidou said she had attended the march for her 10-month-old daughter Mum-of-one Danae Savvidou, 25, travelled alone from Gloucestershire to London to take part in the event for the sake of her 10-month-old daughter. She said: "She was born during the presidency of a man who openly supported women's rights and protected them. "I feel like we've gone back 100 years and I feel sad for her generation. "Donald Trump isn't presidential material. He's openly misogynistic and racist as well. I see America as a leader and partners in the Western world. He represents such a big nation. "Our leaders over here are right wing as well. It's not going the right way for me. "Brexit is a concern. I hope we protect the rights the EU offers, such as employment rights and maternity. These issues need to be spoken about. When a nation is doing badly, women suffer. "Personally I want my daughter to see what I've done today to show you can do things to change the world and she does have the power." It was a message which resonated with many other parents as they walked with their children in the fresh winter's air along Piccadilly. The march had many parents attending with their children Nancy Pegg, 39, a mum-of-two from south-west London, came along with her daughter Sophie, nine, who carried a yellow banner emblazoned with the words "Yes to equality". She said: "This is about equality for girls not in a fortunate position. "Trump is a concern but empowering women is the main motivation. I think it's important for my daughter to have a powerful voice and to know she can be a strong force. "We live in a male-dominated world. I want to show her anything her brother can do, she can do too. There are no boundaries." Although the event was labelled a Women's March, there were hundreds of men in the crowd showing their support. Car horns beeped to galvanise the demonstrators who, in turn, greeted the drivers with cheers as the march progressed to its rally in Trafalgar Square. The Raise Voices Choir motivated the protesters by singing "Don't let Trump get his way" to their own version of "The Battle Hymn of the Republic". Student Patrick Bone, from Shepherd's Bush, London, attended because he felt "progress made in the last decades is in threat of being eroded". He added: "Trump's election signalled a rise of the populist right who look to blame economic problems on minorities or disenfranchised groups. "His election was a catalyst for something that's been coming a long time. "This march is to show we will stand and be counted. This is only the beginning. The work begins today." Tom Amies, 33, a doctor from Middlesex, walked beside his wife Lydia, 34, as he carried their 11-month-old daughter Niamh in a baby carrier sling. "This is for my daughter, he said. "There has been a political slide to the right and a sense of misplaced trust. Trump wants to repeal Obamacare. It shows how good we have it with the NHS. "There are going to be people there who have that healthcare for life-saving treatment and they will no longer be able to afford it." Lydia Amie, husband Tom and daughter Niamh attended the march as a family The demonstration brought representatives from all nationalities, including Americans who felt they needed to take a stand even though they were thousands of miles away from their country. Retired banker Carol Moore, 68, originally from New York, came to represent the Democrats Abroad UK Women's Caucus. She said: "I've come because of the horror of seeing Donald Trump win. He is divisive and will hurt the middle classes by repealing the healthcare act. "This march has taken on huge visibility here in the UK because the issues are global. Women's pay was an issue when I worked in the City. "There is still the issue of sexual violence and how it's prosecuted and handled here. "I hope this is a message to women to recognise they have a voice to fight issues here in the UK and around the world." Business development manager Anna McDermott, 29, originally from California, has been in the UK for 11 years. She said: "As an American, I cannot accept what Donald Trump says and I can't accept him as a president. "I do hope this sends out a message. 'Good morning. Welcome to day one of the resistance. This is the world shouting back'." As the crowd moved into Trafalgar Square, the noise quietened so demonstrators could listen to the speakers on the stage, who included TV presenter Sandi Toksvig and Labour MP Yvette Cooper. However, the final address was given by 10-year-old Sumayah Siddiqi who read out a poem to the crowd which had a message of optimism with the words "I shall stand for love". Sumayah Siddiqi addressed the crowds at the Women's March
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-38706746
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…733385_nancy.jpg
Sorry cats, doggos run the internet now - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
After years of stability, we've recently we've seen signs of a dramatic shift in online governance.
Technology
This is Igor, a very good dog Like many a BBC reporter before, I come to you with news of a coup, and perhaps the most significant transition of power you’ll read about this weekend. Cats on the internet are over. Done. "Cheezburgers" are off the menu. Play yourself out, Keyboard Cat. While in years past we’ve perhaps welcomed the charming cynicism of the likes of Grumpy Cat, it seems people of the internet are now, in stranger times, longing instead for the unconditional and unwavering love of dogs - and I have the highly subjective data to prove it. Let’s start with Reddit. The top three posts of all time on its r/aww subreddit, the section for all things cuddly, are all about dogs. "But wait!" you might say. "The fourth one is a cat!". Ah, but is it? It begins with a cat, but watch closely as it climbs out of its cage and into the one next to it. What does the cat find? A dog! That should be all the proof you need. If it isn’t, here’s something a bit more concrete. This is Gavin, a very good dog Socialbakers is a company that monitors social media for trends and stats relating to things that are most popular. I got in touch with them about this, and within hours they came back to me with the goods. For starters, the runaway champion of most popular animal on Facebook is a dog named Boo. He’s got more than 17.5m likes, more than double that of his closest competitor, Grumpy Cat. In third place, Nyan Cat - who isn’t even a real cat, for crying out loud. On Instagram, fine, I’ll admit, the top celebrity is a cat. But 2nd, 3rd and 4th place? All dogs. All good dogs. When it comes to searches on Google, dogs . But more significant was the historic moment on 3 January 2016, when, for the first time, the term "cute dogs" overtook "funny cats" in global searches. Like any viral phenomena, there’s a new vocabulary to get your head around if you are to be a part of this new term of internet governance. Dogs aren’t just dogs. They’re doggos. Puppies are puppers. And while not all puppers can be considered doggos, all doggos are most certainly puppers. Or woofers. Woofers that bork. If you want, you can boop a doggo’s snoot. That is - to lightly bop on one’s nose. This is Loki, a very good dog When in mild distress, or sometimes just for emphasis, their chosen curse word is the ferociously aggressive "heckin". Oh, and if a dog sticks his or her tongue out a little bit? That's a blep. Like any new language, the best way to learn is to engross yourself in the culture - and one fine place that speaks fluent doggo is the happiest corner of the internet, Facebook’s Cool Dog Group (CDG). Here you’ll find the likes of Igor, who, let me tell you folks, is a born superstar, believe me. Igor’s just one of hundreds of puppers posted every week, a most welcome addition to news feeds that would otherwise be clogged up with baby pictures and wedding photos. You’re welcome. It’s the grassroots of doggo appreciation that has the movement set to make huge strides in 2017. It’s being spearheaded by Matt Nelson, a 20-year-old who studies golf course management in North Carolina, and a man described by serious newspaper Washington Post as "the internet’s most famous dog rater". Nelson runs the WeRateDogs account on Twitter. People submit dogs to be rated, and Nelson will consider the merits of said dog and provide a score out of 10. Recent scores: 12/10 for Hercules, 13/10 for Duchess and 14/10 for Sundance who, in a short clip, plays the drums. Late last year this generous but fair system was brought into disrepute by the user Brant, who questioned why all the dogs got such unfathomably high ratings. "They’re good dogs, Brent," replied Nelson - an era-defining retort which you can now buy on a hoodie. Or a mug. Since then, popularity has exploded. He now has over a million followers. "We started up an e-commerce store," Matt tells me. "We have a book deal. So many things I thought you could never do with just a Twitter account." You could say there’s plenty of data out there to suggest that I’m wrong, and that cats are still very much in control. And you’d be right - I found plenty evidence which completely disproves the theory I’ve outlined here, but I’ve left it out as I don’t care. There was one piece from Gizmodo in 2015 that suggested there were scientific reasons to why cat memes were more popular online - but to that I say WRONG. Fake meows. Because the web is just different now. Looking at cat pictures was a way to waste time by mucking about on the internet. This is Zulu, a very good dog Now, like the therapy dogs of the real world, internet doggos are supplying a much needed diversion from the humourless drudgery that makes up much of the modern social web. "Dogs are just a pure innocent thing," Matt Nelson says. "They are the embodiment of unconditional love, and that’s what people want now. "I see my account as this refuge of something bright on the internet." And so that’s it. Sorry cats. You had a good run. Before publishing, my editor told me I was brave to write to this piece. "No no," I said. "Brave is allowing people to leave comments…" Follow Dave Lee on Twitter @DaveLeeBBC and on Facebook
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-38702996
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…_whatsubject.jpg
Cardiff Uni using jet sensors in osteoarthritis patch - BBC News
2017-01-21
null
Scientists are hoping to create a smart patch which could detect the early onset of osteoarthritis in patients' knees.
null
Scientists are hoping to create a smart patch which could detect the early onset of osteoarthritis in patients' knees. Cardiff University's team uses damage sensors from aircraft wings to catch subsonic cracking sounds in joints before the disease fully develops. They believe a disposable patch using them could save expensive diagnosis and treatment of advanced osteoarthritis. Dr Davide Crivelli, of the School of Engineering, explains how it could work.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-38660739
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…3726458_knee.jpg
Wayne Rooney: Goals from the Man Utd record-breaker - BBC Sport
2017-01-21
null
BBC Sport picks out some great goals from Wayne Rooney's Manchester United career after the striker became the club's all-time leading goalscorer.
null
BBC Sport picks out some great goals from Wayne Rooney's Manchester United career after the striker became the club's all-time leading goalscorer. WATCH MORE: It's a great feeling - Rooney on breaking record Available to UK users only.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/38705054
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…494_p04q9424.jpg
Meet the mum with quadruplet toddlers - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
Meet the mum to quadruplets who went viral after sharing a video that 'sums up motherhood'.
Education & Family
This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Ashley and Tyson Gardner had two sets of identical twins by IVF What is it like being the mother of quadruplets? Utah couple Ashley and Tyson Gardner had struggled to conceive for eight years, but they eventually had two sets of identical twin girls by IVF treatment. A photo of Ashley holding the ultrasound scans had already attracted huge attention online so shortly after the girls' second birthday, she posted a video on YouTube, that went viral, to show what her everyday life is like. The film, suitably called "Sums up motherhood in 34 seconds", shows Ashley having a brief break from the constant job of looking after her children by sneaking into in the pantry and treating herself to a stick of red liquorice. "They don't ever go away. They want everything you have," she says in the video and to prove her point, after only a few seconds, one of her daughters peeks under the door and calls out to her. The couple have a large social media following and their pages are littered with photos of smiling babies, but when they were told they were going to have four children at once, they did not know what to think. "When we first found out we were having quadruplets, it was pure terror and pure joy at the same time," Ashley explained. "The doctors said we only had a 40% chance of having one baby, so to have all four to come at once was a huge blessing and a huge miracle. "The odds of both eggs splitting are literally one in a million. "But I didn't know anyone who'd had quadruplets. I didn't know if it was physically possible for a woman, I knew nothing about it. "I had vertigo and morning sickness for the first 16 weeks. I couldn't eat anything and I lost 20 pounds in my first trimester. "My body hurt, my bones hurt and my hips would dislocate every time I rolled over." In order to support the family, the couple run four businesses from home. "We work when the girls are asleep - during their naptime and then after they go to bed, until one or two in the morning, every single night. "It's really helpful we both work from home, because every other morning one of us takes the girls and the other gets to sleep in. "Having quads was expensive in the first months. "They were on a high-calorie formula that cost $25 (£20) a can and needed lots of nappies." The couple's social media fans helped to ease the expense. "My heart was truly touched by the amount of nappies and baby outfits that turned up by our door when they were born," she said. "There really are amazing, kind, good people out there and I'm so grateful to those who follow our story and love these babies." Ashley and Tyson regularly blog and vlog about their children's progress. "When my pregnancy announcement went viral, so many people prayed for me and my babies. Now I feel it's my duty to show these people what they prayed for," she explained. Ashley insists that she goes about her daily life "like anybody else, it just takes a bit longer". "We do everything times four. We take them shopping with us and load them into the car several times a day. "Just because there are four of them, we can't let that stop us living our lives. We don't just stay at home." Ashley described the "special relationship" that the toddlers share. "There are four of them and they work together to conspire against you, which is really funny. They're definitely tearing the house down. "Each set of twins has their 'own language' and talk to each other. "If one girl steals a toy from another one, her twin will steal it back for her. They protect one another." At times, the quads can be overwhelming for Ashley and Tyson. "We're first time parents and we're learning as we go like anyone else. There are definitely anxieties. "Not many people have raised four toddlers at the same time so you're kind of on your own. "I feel like we're doing a good job. Just the fact that there's four of them and they're all healthy and happy and growing and thriving is an amazing miracle to science and to God."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-38690621
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…2_ultrasound.jpg
US President Donald Trump's first speech - BBC News
2017-01-21
null
It was 20 minutes long and touched on jobs, patriotism, rebuilding, radical Islam and winning. We have boiled it down to two and a half.
null
It was 20 minutes long and touched on jobs, patriotism, rebuilding, radical Islam and winning. We have boiled it down to two and a half.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38699839
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…item93726952.jpg
Chelmsford Morris group's 'fit, mildly eccentric men' plea - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
A decades-old Morris dancing group says it desperately needs "fit, mildly eccentric men" to join in order to keep going.
Essex
Chelmsford Morris was founded in 1972 and currently has about 30 members - but most are now women A decades-old Morris dancing group says it desperately needs "fit, mildly eccentric men" to join in order to keep going. Chelmsford Morris was founded in 1972 and currently has about 30 members. However, the vast majority of members are now women and some male members are expected to retire soon. Club bagman Celia Kemp said the the situation meant "the men of Chelmsford Morris may have to stop dancing in 2017 because of a shortage of dancers". "Eccentricity is not a requirement but is usually the definition of a Morris dancer," says Celia Kemp "The women's side is doing really quite well," she said. "They are going from strength to strength. "But we really need some younger people to join. We have nine grown up sons between us and none of them have taken up Morris dancing. "We would like people who have perhaps got fed up with the gym and who want to try something new - it is also such a good social life. "Eccentricity is not a requirement but is usually the definition of a Morris dancer." Dances usually involve six or eight men. But the club currently has seven male dancers who can perform most of the dances. "That is really pushing it," says Ms Kemp, "because people have lives outside Morris and you need people in reserve."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-essex-38663448
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…inchelmsford.jpg
Obama leaves Democratic party a skeleton of its former self - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
With the end of their White House rule, Democrats are left hoping for a Tea Party-style insurgency
US & Canada
Following the inaugural ceremonies, Barack and Michelle Obama - private citizens once again - were whisked off by a military helicopter stationed behind the US Capitol. They'll spend a few days on holiday at a California desert resort before, as Mr Obama tweeted from his personal account, getting "back to work". And, for Democrats, there's a lot of hard work to be done. With Mr Obama's departure, the party is only just beginning its long journey in the political wilderness. Democrats have lost Congress. They've been decimated in state legislatures. Their hoped-for liberal majority on the Supreme Court was blocked by intransigent Senate Republicans. And now the presidency is gone, as well. This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. In the days ahead, the party that thought it had time and demographics on its side, that saw Mr Obama's coalition of young, ethnic and educated voters as a durable governing majority, will try to figure out what, exactly, went wrong. Ironically enough, some liberals are looking at the Tea Party grass-roots conservative movement that emerged in the months after Mr Obama became president in 2009 as a model for their path back to power. At the time, many on the left mocked the impromptu outbursts of conservative protest - which bedevilled Democratic politicians at constituent meetings - as ill-conceived, uninformed or ineffective. Now, they point to recent efforts to confront Republican legislators over attempts to repeal Mr Obama's healthcare reform as signs of life in a dispirited party. Democrats face a tough challenge in the days ahead. They have to settle on a leader for their national committee - resolving an ideological battle between left-wing populists and those who preach continued Obama-style moderation and incrementalism. They need to devise a strategy to win back Congress, complicated by the fact they have to defend 10 Senate seats in the 2018 mid-term congressional elections in states that Donald Trump won. And, before too long, candidates for the 2020 presidential nomination will begin jockeying for position. More than anything else, however, they need to begin rebuilding their party on the local and state level. Mr Obama's successes glossed over a party that is bereft of young leaders working their way up through the ranks. At the moment, the Democratic Party is a skeleton of its former self. Until they put some meat on its bones, memories of the 2008 hope that Obama ushered in - that they were a party of destiny - will seem to liberals like a cruel joke.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38696853
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…es-632207092.jpg
Liverpool 2-3 Swansea City - BBC Sport
2017-01-21
null
Swansea lift themselves off the bottom of the Premier League table with a thrilling victory at title-challenging Liverpool.
null
Last updated on .From the section Football Swansea lifted themselves off the bottom of the Premier League table and dealt a huge blow to Liverpool's title hopes with a thrilling win at Anfield. Gylfi Sigurdsson scored from close range with 16 minutes left to give Paul Clement his first win as Swans boss and the club their first away league victory over the Reds. Roberto Firmino had struck twice to draw the hosts level after Fernando Llorente's two goals in four minutes after the break. The defeat leaves Liverpool seven points behind leaders Chelsea, who now have a game in hand, at home against Hull on Sunday. The Tigers are one of three teams, along with Sunderland and Crystal Palace, leapfrogged by Swansea, who move up to 17th after only their second win in eight league games. In the wake of last weekend's demoralising 4-0 defeat by Arsenal, Clement said Swansea would be "naive" to ignore the possibility of Premier League relegation this season. On the evidence of their performance at Anfield, it would be equally naive of anyone to write them off. In the space of seven days they have gone from a side who collapsed at the first setback to one capable of rallying under extreme pressure. Their first-half defensive display - which saw them restrict Liverpool to a couple of half-chances - belied their status as the club with the division's most porous defence. Their second-half performance was clinical, epitomised by Llorente's two strikes - a close-range finish following Federico Fernandez's header from a corner, followed by a header from Tom Carroll's cross - and Sigurdsson's decisive, well-placed finish. These were their only three efforts on target. It was also gutsy. They had to dig very deep against a side who, before Saturday, were unbeaten in the league in over a year at home and who had scored 26 goals in their previous nine league games. In the programme for this match, Liverpool boss Jurgen Klopp described October's encounter with Swansea in Wales - a 2-1 win sealed by a late James Milner penalty - as "one of the toughest we have had all season." The German may feel the need to revise that after Saturday's game. Despite having Philippe Coutinho back in the side - and ending the game with Divock Origi and Daniel Sturridge on the pitch - the Reds were short of attacking invention and strength in the absence of Sadio Mane, who is at the Africa Cup of Nations with Senegal. Their failure to move the ball quickly enough in the first half meant they did not properly test Swansea's packed defence. And while Firmino scored his first goals in six games - the first a header from Milner's cross, the second a fierce finish after he had chested down Georginio Wijnaldum's delivery - a total of five shots on target and an Adam Lallana deflected effort against the bar is scant product from nearly 75% possession. With this result coming after successive away draws at Sunderland and Manchester United, the Reds are in danger of allowing a title challenge to slip away before February has even begun. Their next game, at home to the league leaders, is now surely a must win. What the managers said... Liverpool manager Jurgen Klopp: "It's hard to accept. In the first half we created four or five chances which we didn't take. "The start of the second half we were poor and then we played brilliantly and scored two. Then we were a bit passive and one player was alone in our box, which is completely senseless. "The most disappointing moment was the third goal and I can't explain it as we had so many chances to challenge. "It's really difficult to accept at this moment. It is fair Swansea won, no - but was it deserved, yes." Swansea manager Paul Clement: "We frustrated Liverpool and defended really well. We showed great togetherness and it was a massive team effort. "At half-time I told the players we would get at least one chance, but to get three was unbelievable. "It's very important for the confidence of the side that we can come to a big team and get a result. We need to work hard on the training pitch and make sure we get another result in 10 days' time." Reds first to 50 goals - the stats you need to know • None Liverpool's unbeaten Premier League run at Anfield has ended after 17 matches (11 wins, six draws). • None Firmino has scored three goals in his past two Premier League games against Swansea. • None Llorente has now scored eight Premier League goals but his first two away from home. • None Liverpool conceded three goals at Anfield in a league game for only the second time under Klopp. • None The Reds are the first Premier League team score 50 goals this season, while Swansea are the first to concede 50 (both now on 51). • None Swansea have won back-to-back away league games in the same season for the first time since May 2015. Liverpool will attempt to overturn a 1-0 deficit when they host Southampton in the EFL Cup semi-final second leg on Wednesday (kick-off 20:00 GMT). The Reds then welcome Wolves to Anfield in the FA Cup fourth round on 28 January (12:30), before another home game - the big one in the Premier League against Chelsea - at 20:00 on 31 January. Swansea's involvement in the FA Cup ended in the last round so their next game is at home against Southampton in the Premier League on 31 January (19:45). • None Substitution, Swansea City. Jay Fulton replaces Leroy Fer because of an injury. • None Offside, Liverpool. Dejan Lovren tries a through ball, but Divock Origi is caught offside. • None Delay over. They are ready to continue. • None Delay in match Leroy Fer (Swansea City) because of an injury. • None Leroy Fer (Swansea City) has gone down, but that's a dive. • None Attempt blocked. Roberto Firmino (Liverpool) right footed shot from outside the box is blocked. Assisted by Divock Origi with a headed pass. • None Attempt missed. Gylfi Sigurdsson (Swansea City) right footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the right from a direct free kick. • None Attempt missed. Adam Lallana (Liverpool) header from the centre of the box is too high. Assisted by Daniel Sturridge. • None Attempt missed. Roberto Firmino (Liverpool) left footed shot from outside the box is close, but misses to the right. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/38620045
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…lfi-_reuters.jpg
Week in pictures: 14-20 January 2017 - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
A selection of the best news photographs from around the world, taken over the past week.
In Pictures
Ice skaters competed in the women's platoon during the first ice skating marathon on natural ice in Noordlaren, the Netherlands. Skating on natural ice in the Netherlands reportedly dates back into the 13th Century when it was a method to get fast and easily from one place to another on the frozen canals in the country.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/in-pictures-38688378
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…48333da1ff76.jpg
Empathy and education in the age of Trump - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
A Davos cocktail party may not, at first, seem like the ideal place to teach people to understand those with whom they disagree, but that's what some academics are doing.
Business
Donald Trump has been sworn in as president, after running a divisive campaign The rarefied environs of a Davos cocktail party may not, at first, seem like the ideal place to teach people to understand those with whom they disagree. But Peter Salovey thinks there is no better place to preach the gospel of empathy. As president of Yale, he has direct access to the university's distinguished alumni. Some, such as Blackstone's Stephen Schwarzman and Chinese billionaire Zhang Lei, are the very epitome of the so-called global elites against whom there has been somewhat of a populist backlash in the past year. Prof Salovey comes to the World Economic Forum with a message. He says the business leaders in Davos would do well to understand the ordinary men and women behind populist uprisings, such as the one in his own country, which culminated on Friday with the inauguration as President of such an unlikely candidate as Donald Trump. "We live in a complex world, a world where our fellow citizens are telling us that they feel left out," says the convivial psychology professor. In such times, he adds, reaching across cultural, political and economic divides is more important than ever, and Prof Salovey thinks he knows how to help Davos delegates do just that. Prof Salovey says the Davos elite must try to understand what has driven populist uprisings "How does one learn how to listen, how does one learn how to think critically, how does one learn how to communicate? And how does one learn to develop emotional intelligence, the ability to empathise with another person?" The answer, he says, lies in education - in particular, the humanities. To that end, the function room at the Belvedere Hotel in which Yale's annual reception is held features some rather novel exhibits, at least for a forum mostly dedicated to dealing with the immediate present. In conjunction with the Smithsonian, delegates can explore some of the world's most endangered languages by watching interactive videos of their last remaining native speakers, or flick through an archive of pictures displaying ordinary Americans at work in factories and farms - taken for propaganda purposes at the behest of Franklin D Roosevelt, in order to highlight the success of his New Deal. Perusing such artefacts, says Prof Salovey, can help the gathered Davos crowd grapple with complex problems such us: "What are the fundamental problems that humans have grappled with for millennia? What are ways in which we share a common humanity?" Davos delegates at Yale's annual reception can look through old photographs to try to learn from the past He says people do feel that they have worked hard and paid their dues, and yet still they feel downwardly mobile. "That's not the American dream," he adds. One person who understands the American dream all too well is Lonnie Bunch, the founding director of the Smithsonian's National Museum of African American History and Culture (NMAAHC), which was opened to great fanfare by President Obama in Washington just a few months ago. President Obama, pictured here with Lonnie Bunch at a reception at the White House a day before opening the NMAAHC Since then, nearly a million people have wandered through its doors, and encountered one of America's darkest moments, in slavery, and one of its greatest strengths, in the huge contributions of African Americans to the country's cultural makeup. "I think it is crucially important in the times we are living in to be able to give people a sense of hope and possibility, but to also help them understand that despite how bad you may think things are, they were once worse, and people struggled to improve, across racial lines," says Mr Bunch. Addressing the assembled businessmen and women, he says: "You can't be a good businessman without understanding the societal issues that have shaped the moment you are in. "Businessmen always forecast what they think is the next trend. Part of that comes from understanding the past. "What we want is not only for people to understand the past but also to bring those skills of the humanities - critical thinking, nuance, ambiguity - to basically be able to be nimble, to wrestle with a variety of issues, not just have a single point of view." However, Mr Bunch stresses, "change doesn't happen without struggle, without sacrifice." Alluding to the incoming US administration, the historian says that it is "incumbent upon all who enter the museum to be an activist, to help make America better". Mr Bunch has been director of the Smithsonian Institution's NMAAHC since 2005 For his part, Prof Salovey is committed to defending the values of educational institutions such as Yale, not just as bastions of free expression, but also as havens for diversity. "We believe that the most stimulating educational environment that we could create comes when we have a wonderful mix of the world on our campus," he says, in a thinly veiled broadside at Donald Trump's campaign rhetoric. "We have policies on campus who support students called 'Dreamers', who came to the US as children, but perhaps their parents were not documented. "We support DACA, the act that gives a status to people whose immigration status may be ambiguous, or undocumented." Prof Salovey cites his own family heritage - his grandparents, he says, were uneducated immigrants and education lifted their children out of poverty. This, he says, is the American value he most wants to protect. "We want to educate the world," he emphasises. "I'm not willing to give up on that, and I will advocate as vigorously as I know how, to continue that tradition in all of our institutions of higher learning."
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-38695006
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…item93690236.jpg
Eight ways President Donald Trump will make history - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
From his bank balance to his lack of pets - here's how Donald Trump is making presidential history.
US & Canada
Donald Trump has already pulled off a series of presidential "firsts" Donald Trump is guaranteed to make history as the 45th president of the United States. And whether you love or loathe him, it's a fact that the Republican will set a range of records as soon as he occupies the Oval Office. From his age to his bank balance, via his notable lack of pets - here are just some of "The Donald's" historic "firsts". Donald Trump celebrated his 70th birthday on 14 June, which makes him the oldest man in US history to assume the presidency. The previous record-holder, Ronald Reagan, was 69 when he took office in 1981. Perhaps keen to allay fears about his senior status, the business mogul had his doctor prepare a gushing letter pledging that he would be "the healthiest individual ever elected to the presidency". Right-wing Indian activists celebrate The Donald's 70th birthday in New Delhi The average age of all 44 previous incoming presidents is a sprightly 55. The youngest ever incumbent - Theodore Roosevelt - got the job aged 42 years and 322 days, after President William McKinley's assassination in 1901. Mr Trump is the first billionaire president. Exact estimates of his personal wealth vary, with Forbes putting it at $3.7bn (£3bn) and the man himself claiming in a statement that it's "in excess of TEN BILLION DOLLARS". Many of America's past presidents have also been extremely wealthy, of course. Recent estimates say George Washington's estate would be worth half a billion in today's dollars. Donald Trump has said he will take only a dollar in salary - like former governor of California Arnold Schwarzenegger (L) Before his 1963 assassination, JFK reportedly lived off a $10m trust fund thanks to the vast wealth of his father - investor and alleged bootlegger Joseph P Kennedy, Sr. Mr Trump will be following in the footsteps of former California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger by taking just a symbolic dollar as a salary. When Mr Trump began unveiling his cabinet picks, the number with fat wallets quickly drew the scorn of Democrats. "Donald Trump's administration: of, by and for the millionaires and billionaires," tweeted Vermont Senator and Democrat presidential contender Bernie Sanders. For better or worse, this will be the wealthiest administration in modern American history. According to the Washington Post, commerce secretary nominee Wilbur Ross is worth around $2.5bn on his own - roughly 10 times what George W Bush's first cabinet were worth in 2001, when the media branded them an assembly of millionaires. Treasury appointee Steven Mnuchin quite literally bought a bank after 17 years at Goldman Sachs, and reports put his wealth at over $40m. It has been estimated that the cabinet could be good for an eye-watering $35bn, all told. As Quartz pointed out, this is more than the annual gross domestic product of Bolivia. Mr Trump's triumph is also significant because, until now, no-one has been elected president in more than 60 years without experience as a state governor or in Congress. The last president with no political experience, Dwight Eisenhower, was Supreme Commander of Allied Forces in World War Two, before he was elected to office in 1953. Some Trump voters saw his lack of political experience as a guarantee of authenticity But as Mr Trump tells it, his lack of links to the Washington establishment is an asset not a flaw - and more than made up for by his experience as a deal-maker. Mr Trump has named his son-in-law, real estate developer Jared Kushner, as a senior adviser - prompting cries of nepotism from opponents. Some claim the appointment makes the 36-year-old the most powerful presidential son-in-law in US history. He isn't the first to fit that profile, however. President Woodrow Wilson's Treasury Secretary, William Gibbs McAdoo, was also married to his daughter, Eleanor. First Daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner are set to wield considerable clout That said, their case pre-dates America's 1967 anti-nepotism statute, and Mr McAdoo was already a cabinet secretary when he wed. Ivanka Trump, Mr Trump's elder daughter and wife of Mr Kushner, is also being spoken of as the most influential "First Daughter" ever. So much fuss has been made of what Donald Trump owns that you might have missed one glaring absence - a pet. It looks likely that he'll be the first US President in over a century not to have an animal pal in the White House, after plans to have him adopt a goldendoodle dog reportedly fell through. According to the Presidential Pet Museum, almost every commander-in-chief has had a pet, and some had a virtual menagerie. John F Kennedy stands out for owning a veritable Noah's Ark - everything from a rabbit named Zsa Zsa to a canary called Robin - but the crown belongs to Calvin and Grace Coolidge (White House occupants from 1923-1929), who the museum says "quite literally had a zoo". Barack Obama's Portuguese Water Dog, Bo, is among the more traditional pets to live at the White House Their animal companions included at least a dozen dogs, a donkey named Ebenezer, and various creatures presented as gifts by foreign dignitaries - among them lion cubs, a wallaby, a pygmy hippo named Billy, and a black bear. Donald Trump won the presidency on a pro-job platform, and has blamed free-trade policies for the collapse of the US manufacturing industry. This is a rare stance for a US president, probably last seen in his fellow Republican Herbert Hoover in the 1930s. In September 2015, Mr Trump told the Economist China is "killing us", and that millions of Americans are "tired of being ripped off". He said that as president, he would consider a 12% import tax to make the Chinese "stop playing games". During his election campaign, Mr Trump also threatened to rip up Nafta, the free trade agreement between Canada, the US and Mexico, which has been in place for 23 years. The Republican has long been opposed to the TPP, which he views as a poor deal for the US He also vowed that the US would quit the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal, a 12-nation agreement, on his first day in the White House. Former model Melania Trump is as trailblazing as her husband. She will be the first presidential spouse from Slovenia, and the first non-native English speaker. She is only the second FLOTUS born outside the US, though - the first being Louisa Adams, wife of the sixth US President, John Quincy Adams (1825-1829), who was born in London. As Mr Trump has been married twice before, Melania will also be the first third wife to reside in the White House. The only other US president to have divorced was Ronald Reagan, who split from his first wife, actress Jane Wyman, long before leading the nation. Melania speaks Slovenian, English, French, German, and Serbian, and may be the most competent linguist to hold the role of FLOTUS. Melania Trump will be the first non-native English speaker to be FLOTUS She is the first president's wife to have posed nude, for GQ magazine in 2000 among others. Mr Trump is no stranger to men's magazines either. He appeared on the cover of Playboy in March 1990 with the tag-line: "Nice magazine, want to sell it?"
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38637123
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…trumpspeech2.jpg
#WomensMarch against Donald Trump around the world - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
A day after his inauguration, women around the world march to protest at Donald Trump's election.
In Pictures
President Obama may have been out of office for only one day, but it was enough for this woman to express her loss in London
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/in-pictures-38703840
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…item93729176.jpg
World landmarks recreated with Lego - BBC News
2017-01-21
null
An artist has recreated more than 70 global landmarks using Lego bricks.
null
More than 70 famous world landmarks have been recreated with Lego. The models were put together by professional Lego builder Warren Elsmore and feature a new exhibition at The Harley Gallery in Nottinghamshire. Mr Elsmore said each creation could take several months to build.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-nottinghamshire-38697427
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…466_p04q61nn.jpg
Bulls and bullying: the fight over animal rights and tradition - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
Animal rights activists caught in social media cross-fire regarding banned bull-taming tradition.
BBC Trending
Tamil actress Trisha Krishnan deleted her Twitter account as a result of a row over bull-taming A ban on the ancient practice of bull-taming has spurred thousands to protest in the southern Indian state of Tamil Nadu. While the demonstrations have been mostly peaceful, the argument over the festival has turned ugly online. This week around 4,000 protesters camped out on a beach in the state's capital, Chennai (Madras) - with hundreds more gathering in other parts of the state. The crowd, who are mostly students, are against India's ban on Jallikattu, a 2,000 year old bull-taming tradition, which takes place as part of an annual harvest festival. Bull-taming involves men chasing and removing prizes tied to the bull's horns. Animal rights activists argue it's abusive and results in mistreatment of the animals, but protesters contend the practice central to Tamil identity and that the bulls are rarely harmed or killed. The men participating in Jallikattu attempt to grab prizes attached to the bull's horns Jallikattu was banned by India's supreme court in 2014, a ruling that was upheld in 2016. The lawsuit that led to the ban was filed by animal rights groups including People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA). And as protests against the ban have spread, PETA activists and supporters have found themselves targeted on social media. "I have been threatened with rape I'm called all sorts of names which I can't repeat," says Poorva Joshipura, CEO of PETA India. "The general public are being incited and influenced through lies and online bullying and fake news which has unfortunately become so common in our world today," Joshipura tells BBC Trending radio. She takes particular issue with memes containing false personal information which have been shared online. "One is a picture of me wearing my vegan boots (footwear made without leather or any animal ingredients), boots that I really like a lot. The meme falsely says that the boots are made of leather," Joshipura says. "I have been campaigning against the leather industry for years." Hear more on this story on the BBC World Service. The Indian film actress Trisha Krishnan has also been caught up in the debate. In 2010, Krishnan worked on a PETA campaign. Reports on social media suggested that she had tweeted, and then deleted, her support of a Jallikattu ban. One of the social media posts spreading about the actress was a fake obituary claiming she had died of HIV. The faked obituary poster of Trisha Krishnan lists cause of death as "HIV affected" - insinuating that the actress is sexually promiscuous. It also calls her father a "poramboku" (wastrel) and her mother a "peethasirukki" (boastful woman). In response, Krishnan first denied that she supported the ban and later deactivated her Twitter account, releasing a statement saying: "I'm a proud Tamilian by birth and I believe and respect the Tamil culture and tradition and I will never go against the sentiments of my own people who have been instrumental in my growth and stature." Krishnan declined a request by BBC Trending for an interview. Her spokesperson told us that "PETA and Trisha are separate", stressing that the actress had only collaborated with the group on one campaign. Bull tamers must hold on to the animal's hump for about 15-20 metres or three jumps of the bull to win a prize Krishnan wasn't the only high profile person targeted on social media. The actor Vishal also received online backlash for being a supporter of PETA, and subsequently deactivated his Twitter profile. False allegations that the PETA India CEO Poorva Joshipura wears leather boots have been circulating online The pictures and rumours have been spread by groups such as Chennai Memes, a politically active viral marketing agency which made up the leather boots rumour about Poorva Joshipura. Gautam Govindaram, one of the founders of Chennai Memes, defended the group's decision in creating the meme, telling BBC Trending: "I'm sure she has at least one product that is made of leather. She can't say that she has never used any product in her lifetime that has not been made of leather. I can be 100% sure I mean if she's born and she's one year old or two years old she must have come across with something made of leather." Operating primarily on Facebook, Chennai Memes create around 20 memes a day, often referencing local and national political and social issues. The group were cited by local media as being key to galvanising and mobilising the youth-led protests over the Jallikattu ban - creating shareable posters and spreading information on dates and timings of events through their Facebook page, which has more than 600,000 fans. Govindaram added that the group was not behind the memes targeting the actress Trisha Krishnan. "It's not exactly only us, it's the entire people here in the state of Tamil Nadu who are making a stand," he says. "Why should an organisation from another country come here, tell us about our traditions and why do they have the government of India in the palm of their hand?" A number of villages in Tamil Nadu are reported to have defied the Jallikattu ban and held bull-taming events this week. And other prominent South Indian film stars, like Rajinikant and Kamal Haasan, have expressed their support of the sport. Next story: The Instagram star who cuts Michelle Obama's hair Johnny Wright has several celebrity clients but perhaps none is as famous as the former First Lady. READ MORE You can follow BBC Trending on Twitter @BBCtrending, and find us on Facebook. All our stories are at bbc.com/trending.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-trending-38656721
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…ba2cb1f36270.jpg
Australian Open 2017: Rafael Nadal beats Alexander Zverev in five sets - BBC Sport
2017-01-21
null
Rafael Nadal beats German teenager Alexander Zverev in five sets in the third round of the Australian Open.
null
Last updated on .From the section Tennis Coverage: Daily live commentary on BBC Radio 5 live sports extra; live text on selected matches on the BBC Sport website; TV highlights on BBC Two and online from 21 January. Former champion Rafael Nadal overcame rising star Alexander Zverev in a gripping contest to reach the fourth round of the Australian Open. The Spaniard, who won the title in 2009, came through 4-6 6-3 6-7 (5-7) 6-3 6-2 in four hours and six minutes. Zverev, 19, had recovered a break early in the final set before requiring treatment for cramp. Nadal, 30, goes on to face France's Gael Monfils, who beat German Philipp Kohlschreiber 6-3 7-6 (7-1) 6-4. Canadian third seed Milos Raonic made it through to the last 16 with a 6-2 7-6 (7-5) 3-6 6-3 win over Frenchman Gilles Simon. • Watch highlights of day six on BBC Two from 15:05 GMT on Saturday. Zverev has long been touted as a future world number one and it appeared as though he would make his Grand Slam breakthrough against Nadal. The teenager's big serve and brilliant backhand earned him a 2-1 lead after three sets, only for ninth seed Nadal to battle his way back in characteristic fashion. It is almost three years since Nadal won his 14th major title at the 2014 French Open, and that was the last time he got past the quarter-finals at a Grand Slam. Injuries have taken their toll, but it was Zverev whose fitness failed him in the closing stages on Rod Laver Arena. • None How to follow the Australian Open on the BBC The German won a gruelling 37-shot early in the final set but the damage was done as he could not recover fully, despite treatment from the trainer. "I won by fighting and running a lot," said Nadal. "I think everybody knows how good Alexander is. He's the future of our sport and the present too. "It's been a very tough match for me. I didn't start playing my best and I was not feeling very well because I was losing too much court. When I felt I was feeling better I had more time to control from the baseline. "It was a close one but he deserved to play a little more aggressive than me. I had to fight for every point." Denis Istomin, the qualifier from Uzbekistan who stunned Novak Djokovic in round two, produced another superb effort to beat Spanish 30th seed Pablo Carreno Busta 6-4 4-6 6-4 4-6 6-2. He will next play 15th seed Grigor Dimitrov after the Bulgarian produced a stunning performance to beat French 18th seed Richard Gasquet 6-3 6-2 6-4. Belgian 11th seed David Goffin impressed with a 6-3 6-2 6-4 win over Croatia's Ivo Karlovic, setting up a clash with Austrian eighth seed Dominic Thiem, who beat Frenchman Benoit Paire 6-1 4-6 6-4 6-4. Thirteenth seed Roberto Bautista won the all-Spanish battle with 21st seed David Ferrer 7-5 6-7 (6-8) 7-6 (7-3) 6-4 and next faces Raonic.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/tennis/38702869
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…63_037407894.jpg
Global protests on Donald Trump inauguration day - BBC News
2017-01-21
null
Protests were held around the world as Donald Trump became the new president of the United States.
null
Protests were held around the world as Donald Trump became the new president of the United States.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38699844
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…464_p04q6hhr.jpg
T2 Trainspotting: Critics praise film sequel - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
Critics broadly praise T2 Trainspotting, but many note it will not have the same impact as the original.
Entertainment & Arts
This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. T2 Trainspotting: What would you choose? T2 Trainspotting has received broadly positive reviews from critics, although many noted it will not have the same impact as the original. The sequel to 1996's Trainspotting sees most of the original cast reunited with director Danny Boyle. Kate Muir of The Times said the film was "like riding a tragi-comic wave". "The original actors have matured well, and while the lunatic enthusiasm of their youth has disappeared, they give their nuanced all here," she added. Based on the Irvine Welsh novel Porno, T2 Trainspotting is set in the present day with the main characters now in middle age. Ewan McGregor, Jonny Lee Miller, Robert Carlyle and Ewen Bremner have all reprised their roles for the new film. Writing in The Guardian, Peter Bradshaw said: "Reuniting the cast of Trainspotting for a new adventure 21 years on could have gone badly. "But Boyle and his four musketeers give it just the right frantic, jaded energy and manic anxiety." He added that while "T2 isn't as good as T1", it "has the same punchy energy, the same defiant pessimism, and there's nothing around like this". Danny Boyle (far right) directed both the original Trainspotting and the sequel Boyle's masterstroke is to tackle the passing of time head-on. Where the characters in the original film were blissfully insouciant about their self-destructive hedonism, they are here all too aware of the cul-de-sacs and dead ends at which they've now arrived. They are, to quote T2's most striking line, "tourists in their own youth" - a description that applies just as much to the audience member who goes to the film hoping to have the same giddy high they experienced two decades ago. Overall, is it as good as the original? The answer is no - but it comes pretty darn close. However, The Scotsman's Alistair Harkness was less positive about the film, awarding it three stars. "The best that can be said about the new film is that it hasn't completely tarnished the original," he wrote. "Boyle's frenetic, collage-like directing style gives the film a trying-too-hard feel and even though some of it does jolt T2 to life, the cast doesn't always have the emotional range to make it cohere." The original cast have reunited for T2 Trainspotting The Telegraph's Robbie Collin also gave the movie three stars. "There's no chance of its successor matching that legacy, but it won't tarnish it either. Though the film feeds on its forerunner, it's worthwhile on its own terms," he said. The Hollywood Reporter's Neil Young wrote: "T2 never threatens to find its own distinctive voice." He also pointed out the female characters "are very much on the sidelines, even more so than in Trainspotting". "Kelly MacDonald pops up for a one-scene, two-minute cameo (which nevertheless somehow nabs her fifth billing)," he said. But the Scottish Daily Record's Chris Hunneysett was more positive, calling the film "an addictive hit of pure cinema". He said that while it "won't capture the youthful zeitgeist the way Trainspotting did", Boyle "has created an unapologetically abrasive tale of longevity, loyalty and friendship". Follow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-38689704
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…_hi034046229.jpg
Donald Trump protests: 'Why I've decided to march' - BBC News
2017-01-21
null
As women globally take to the streets as part of a day of protests, Hannah tells us why she decided to march.
null
As women across the world take to the streets as part of a day of protests against Donald Trump, Hannah tells us why she decided to join them.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-38707101
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…521_p04q97g9.jpg
Ronnie O'Sullivan in 12th Masters final to play Joe Perry - BBC Sport
2017-01-21
null
Defending champion Ronnie O'Sullivan overcomes a split cue tip to beat Marco Fu 6-4 and reach the Masters final against Joe Perry.
null
Coverage: Watch live on BBC TV, Connected TV, Red Button, BBC Sport website and app from 13:00 GMT Defending champion Ronnie O'Sullivan overcame a split cue tip to reach his 12th Masters final with a 6-4 win over Marco Fu at Alexandra Palace in London. Fu hit 110 to lead 2-1 before O'Sullivan needed to repair his cue. The next four frames were shared with O'Sullivan knocking in breaks of 95 and 122 while Hong Kong's Fu hit 141, the highest of the tournament, and 89. O'Sullivan won the last three frames and will play Joe Perry in Sunday's final after he beat Barry Hawkins 6-5. "It is probably the best match I have won, given the circumstances," O'Sullivan told BBC Sport. "The tip was gone, completely gone. It just couldn't take any chalk. I mis-cued five or six times. It was like chalking a bit of slate. "I was going to wait for the interval but it was so gone and they said 'look, you can take the interval now' and that was sweet." The interval normally comes after four frames, but tournament officials allowed the Englishman to fix his cue after frame three. "I had my cue tip over a kettle because the steam softens it up but it had no effect. I just could not play any shots, I had no touch or feel, so I had to put a new tip on. I was lucky it was a decent tip," he said. The new tip seemed to galvanise him as he made frame-winning contributions at every opportunity following the interval, knocking in four half centuries in the last three frames. "If you're playing well you can get away with a new tip. If you're cueing badly and you put a new tip on, it's over," said O'Sullivan. "I fancied the job. Even with a new tip. I thought 'if I can get a feel of it'." Fu, runner-up in 2011, added: "It is better to lose like this than for me to collapse and miss easy shots with regret. If he plays like that in the end, you can't do anything. I am not too upset about it. It is just a joy to be involved in a match like this." O'Sullivan, who has been beaten in three finals this season, is aiming to win the Masters for a record seventh time but when he was told he was in his 12th final, he replied: "I've only won six though so it's not a very good strike record is it?" Perry was trailing 5-2 in his semi-final against last year's runner-up Barry Hawkins but won the eighth frame despite needing a snooker. He followed that up by winning the next three, including a break of 70 in the decider, to take the match. Perry said: "I really can't believe it. When Barry potted the ball to leave me a snooker, I was thinking about what to say to him and wish him all the best for Sunday. This game is mad, it never ceases to amaze. "It is the best win of my career. I have to go out against O'Sullivan and play to the best of my ability. You don't know what can happen. From the go, I will go out there to win and not just enjoy the occasion." Hawkins said: "I am devastated. After the eighth frame he started playing better and made an unbelievable break in that last frame." Marco knows how good a performance has beaten him. You can only be admiring of that. We have seen Ronnie O'Sullivan produce something special on a number of occasions but from the adversity of having to change his tip halfway through, against a player who was playing so well, that is just a magnificent performance. Ronnie has to be very proud of himself. Sign up to My Sport to follow snooker news and reports on the BBC app, or if you want to get involved yourself, read our Get Inspired guide.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/snooker/38705567
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…llivan_getty.jpg
A message of hope at Washington march - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
More than half a million people demand to be heard a day after Donald Trump is elected.
US & Canada
For such a divisive figure, Donald Trump managed to unify hundreds of thousands of Americans at the Women's March on Washington. Moments after Mr Trump was sworn in as the 45th president on Friday, he delivered a thundering speech in which he promised to improve the lives of millions of Americans. A day later, throngs of women, men and children streamed into the same area where he made that pledge, in order to take a stand for gender and racial equality. Though Mr Trump's named was mentioned frequently, the march, which organisers estimate attracted more than half a million, was not only about the new US president. Messages ranged from "Thank you for making me an activist Trump" to "We will not be silenced," but the common thread throughout the patchwork of signs was hope. "It's about solidarity and visualising the resistance," said Jonathon Meier, who took a bus from New York. "And I think it not only helps with the healing process, but it gives me hope for the next four years." This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. Washington DC is leading anti-Trump protests around the world. A sea of activists, some clad in knitted, pink "pussy" hats and others draped in American flags, ambled about the National Mall, stopping to catch a glimpse of some of the high-profile speakers and singing along to songs like "This Little Light of Mine". Peppered among the many protest signs were images of ovaries and female genitals, a nod to concerns over losing access to birth control and abortion care under a Trump administration. Jellema Stewart, who travelled from Buffalo, New York, said she was marching for her grandmother, who died at age 38 during an illegal abortion in the 1950s. "I'm here to make sure her voice is heard," she said. "I marched in 2004 for reproductive rights and it's now 2017 and we're still fighting for the same thing." Ms Stewart also said she was energised by thousands at the rally, insisting that it sends a message to the new president. "He gave racism a voice again," she said of Mr Trump. "So we have to be louder than the racism and discrimination that came out of this election and show him that we are definitely a force. To show him that we count and we will be watching." This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. All eyes across the world seemed to be watching, not only the march in Washington, but the dozens of other sister marches that took place in more than 60 countries. Aerial images showed thousands massing in so-called "solidarity marches" in the UK, Canada, and Australia as well as in US cities including New York, Chicago, Denver and Los Angeles. For demonstrator Chrystian Woods, the marches signalled that the US would not be defined by who was in White House. "It's not about being anti-Trump," she explained. "It's letting the world know that America is more than just that. America is love, inclusiveness and unity and that America is accepting people who are not like us." "I believe deeply this country is for all of us," said Brooklyn resident Amy Briggs. "I would have been very dejected yesterday if I wasn't able to be here and experience this solidarity," she said as a young female approached her to sign a rainbow flag. The mood was festive among the peaceful protesters, but some were cautious about what comes after the pink hats come off. Leigh Caputo, a Baltimore public school teacher, said she did not want people to think a march was the only solution. "I'm hopeful that this [march] mobilises people because there's a lot of work to be done," said Ms Caputo. In the months leading up to the event, the organisers faced intense scrutiny over claims that the name exploited past African-American movements and catered to white women. Critics on Facebook told white women to "check their privilege", leading to heated discussions about racial divisions and what the march could achieve. It is difficult to ignore the fact that 53% of white women did vote for Mr Trump while the female half of more than 90 million eligible voters did not cast a ballot at all. So what about the sea of white women at the march? Lesley Mansfield, who travelled from Sante Fe, New Mexico, agreed that it was puzzling that so many women voted for Mr Trump. "It's a reality we have to be aware of," she said. "But being here reminds us that there are people who think like we do - like the majority who voted for Hillary Clinton." Those sobering statistics did not seem to loom over those in attendance on Saturday, and like the Trump supporters who stood in the same spot 24 hours earlier, they were full of hope for America's future.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38707986
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…es-632303936.jpg
Trump inauguration speech: 'Angry', 'authentic', 'primal' - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
Conservative commentators react to Trump's speech online.
US & Canada
Donald Trump campaigned on becoming a president unlike any Washington has ever seen. With his inauguration speech, he's already set the tone. Earlier this week, Trump posted a photo of himself sitting at a desk at Mar-a-Largo, a permanent marker hovering over a notepad. "Writing my inaugural address at the Winter White House, Mar-a-Lago, three weeks ago. Looking forward to Friday," he tweeted. It's unclear whether the president-elect actually wrote the speech himself, but the content was pure Trump: the same populist message that resonated throughout the primaries and the campaign. "Today, we are not merely transferring power from one administration to another, or from one party to another, but we are transferring power from Washington, DC, and giving it back to you, the people," he said at the beginning of his remarks. For some on Twitter, it bore an eerie similarity to the Batman villain Bane's speech in The Dark Night Rises, so much so that someone posted a 10-second mash-up of the two. But such snarky reactions, warned Fox News commentator Guy Benson, underestimate how popular his rhetoric is with Trump supporters. "People panning the speech still don't seem to understand how resonant the 'I will never ignore you' theme has been, and still is," he wrote, referencing Trump's many callouts to those who feel left out of American progress. Trump spoke of a country whose citizens had too long been ignored by the coastal elite: "Their victories have not been your victories. Their triumphs have not been your triumphs. And while they celebrated in our nation's capital, there was little to celebrate for struggling families all across our land." He painted a picture of a broken and damaged country, dotted with rusting-out factories "like tombstones", city streets plagued with "crime and the gangs, and the drugs that have stolen too many lives," and the wealth of the middle class "ripped from their homes and then redistributed all across the world". It was an unusually bleak speech for an inaugural address. According to MSNBC host Joe Scarborough, the speech was not intended to follow tradition: "Donald Trump's speech was not an inaugural address. It was a primal scream aimed at Washington, DC." Author Hugh Hewitt called it "authentic, determined, almost grim". He wrote, "I expected more joy, but it cannot be said that POTUS @realDonaldTrump said anything he hasn't said before. He has a plan and it's going to roll out fast." Others were sceptical of the breadth of those plans. Trump said the country was poised to "free the earth from the miseries of disease, and to harness the energies, industries and technologies of tomorrow", as well as "eradicate from the face of the Earth" radical Islamic terrorism. Writer Ben Shapiro expressed doubt about Trump's plans to both take power away from DC, and use his position as President to steer trade and create jobs. "These cannot both be true," he wrote. Many also noted that it's easy to campaign as an outsider, railing about America's problems, but harder to lead, when one must find solutions. "After three months in which Trump is president and it's still the same Washington, that speech is going to seem wildly imprudent," wrote Noah Rothman, assistant editor at Commentary Magazine. Commentator Mary Katherine Hahn thinks voters aren't interested in sweeping rhetoric. "I am unabashedly ideological. The country is not. His message is populist & popular. His opponents dismiss that at their political peril." Pollster Frank Luntz said President Trump seemed to pivot, if not in tone then at least in substance: "President Trump's inaugural speech was the best delivery I've ever seen from him." A more well-known conservative kept mum on his opinion. When the Washington Post asked George W Bush what he thought of the speech, he merely replied, "Good to see you." One high-profile Twitter user was an unabashed fan. Former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke tweeted multiple times in favour of Trump's speech.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38697908
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…-632196052-1.jpg
Manchester City 2-2 Tottenham Hotspur - BBC Sport
2017-01-21
null
Tottenham recover from two goals down to snatch a point from Manchester City, as Gabriel Jesus is denied a goal on his debut.
null
Last updated on .From the section Football Son Heung-Min earned Tottenham a point in controversial circumstances as they came from two goals down to earn a draw at Manchester City. Pep Guardiola's side, looking to bounce back from a 4-0 loss at Everton, had swept into that commanding advantage courtesy of two uncharacteristic errors from Spurs keeper Hugo Lloris. France international Lloris headed an attempted clearance straight at Leroy Sane four minutes after half-time to allow the City attacker a simple finish, then dropped Raheem Sterling's routine cross straight at Kevin De Bruyne's feet five minutes later. Spurs responded swiftly through Dele Alli's header before they were the beneficiaries of a decision that left Guardiola raging and paved the way for the visitors to scramble a point. Referee Andre Marriner ignored Kyle Walker's push on Sterling as he raced into the area - and seconds later Son swept a low finish past City keeper Claudio Bravo with 13 minutes left. City pressed for a winner but were frustrated once more when Brazilian teenager Gabriel Jesus, on as for his debut as a substitute for Sterling, saw an effort ruled out for offside. The result means Man City remain fifth, three points off second-place Tottenham and nine away from leaders Chelsea, who play Hull City on Sunday. City boss Guardiola will have few complaints about the manner of their performance but they were let down by the familiar failing of a lack of ruthlessness in front of goal. City played with verve and intensity as they penned Spurs back, but Sergio Aguero was frustrated on several occasions by Lloris, Pablo Zabaleta shot inches wide, Sterling missed that vital opportunity after he was fouled. New boy Jesus also headed inches wide. Guardiola's animated body language spoke of his frustration - but there was also fury at the key incident - Sterling was shoved by Walker in the area seconds before Spurs attacked for Son to equalise. He had every right to be angry. City deserved victory and for all the justified criticism aimed in their direction, there was not too much wrong with this performance. Manchester City's Bravo provided the pre-match narrative with his growing reputation as the goalkeeper who rarely makes a save - but it was the man regarded as one of Europe's finest who was almost the real villain of the piece here. Bravo was again the goalkeeping bystander as he extended his miserable recent sequence, but Tottenham's Lloris suffered a rare nightmare display and takes responsibility for both City goals. He should have done better than head a routine long ball against Sane for the opener, while his fumble that led to De Bruyne's second was the sort of work he would normally complete without a second thought. Bravo was powerless for the Spurs goals - although today's two goals make it 16 from the last 24 attempts on target against him - but Lloris' misfortune was proof of how matches, and the the reputation of even the best goalkeepers, can be decided by the finest margins. Lloris has saved Spurs on many occasions but today he was saved by his colleagues. Mauricio Pochettino's side would not put this display anywhere near the top of any list of their best performances this season - but they may come to regard this as a priceless point earned without playing well. Spurs were over-run for much of the game, unsettled in possession by the pressure applied by City, but showed resilience and determination to get a draw they barely deserved. They were also grateful for City's generosity in front of goal as they wasted as succession of chances, and to referee Marriner for refusing what appeared to be a clear penalty when Walker shoved Sterling as he raced clear in what proved to be a decisive moment. Spurs' travelling fans celebrated as if this was a victory at the final whistle. Some days you just take the point and get home - to be able to do that at the home of close rivals will make it taste even sweeter. Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola told BBC Sport: "We played good, it was an outstanding performance but it's a pity what happened. All you can do is create and play better and better but it is the same for the whole season. We are upset, sad at what happened but I am so proud about what we did and the players don't deserve that again. Tottenham manager Mauricio Pochettino told BBC Sport: "It was a tough game for both sides. It is true, they were better in the first half and maybe deserved more, it was lucky for us to be 0-0 but in the second half the game was more balanced. We conceded two and it was difficult to come back but they always believed, that is important. It's a massive point for us. • None Manchester City failed to win a Premier League game they were two or more goals ahead in for the first time since December 2014 against Burnley. • None Six of Son Heung-min's seven Premier League goals this season have been scored away from home. • None Dele Alli has scored more Premier League goals this season (11 in 21 games) than he had in the whole of last season (10 in 33). • None Hugo Lloris made two errors leading to goals in the match - the first goalkeeper to do so in a Premier League match since Joel Robles in May 2016. Tottenham return to league action on 31 January against Sunderland, after their FA Cup fourth-round tie with Wycombe next Saturday. Manchester City travel to Crystal Palace in the FA Cup on 28 January before meeting West Ham on 1 February. • None Offside, Tottenham Hotspur. Moussa Sissoko tries a through ball, but Harry Kane is caught offside. • None Offside, Manchester City. Leroy Sané tries a through ball, but Sergio Agüero is caught offside. • None Victor Wanyama (Tottenham Hotspur) is shown the yellow card for a bad foul. • None Attempt missed. Gabriel Jesus (Manchester City) header from the left side of the box misses to the left. Assisted by Aleksandar Kolarov with a cross following a set piece situation. • None Offside, Manchester City. Kevin De Bruyne tries a through ball, but Gabriel Jesus is caught offside. • None Attempt missed. Kevin De Bruyne (Manchester City) right footed shot from the right side of the box misses to the left. Assisted by David Silva. • None Attempt missed. Gabriel Jesus (Manchester City) header from the centre of the box is just a bit too high. Assisted by Kevin De Bruyne with a cross. Navigate to the next page Navigate to the last page
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/38620041
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…es-632304194.jpg
France's Socialists open battle for party's future - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
France picks its Socialist presidential nominee in a fight for the party's direction, even its survival.
Europe
Seven candidates are vying for the Socialist nomination, including one woman, Sylvia Pinel France is choosing its left-wing presidential candidate this weekend, in what is seen as a crucial test for the direction - even the survival - of the governing Socialist Party. Six men and one woman are competing for the nomination, with former Prime Minister Manuel Valls currently seen as the frontrunner. But will this contest go any way to uniting a Left bitterly divided by five years in power, and a president too unpopular to seek a second term? With the tide out, the muddy inlet of Saint-Brieuc seems to sleep in the watery afternoon sun. Its shore deserted but for two Portuguese men picking their way along the sand, looking for worms. The northern coast of Brittany has until recently been a staunch Socialist area Above them, a small, green-topped lighthouse sits on the rocks, and basking in the wan sunlight at its foot is a local pensioner, Patrick Labbe. "This is a left-wing stronghold," Patrick told me. "But that's less and less the case. The Socialist Party has been a disaster on social issues - just look around Saint-Brieuc and you'll see so much destitution." Saint-Brieuc sits on the northern coast of Brittany; one of the most reliably Socialist regions in France, and a source of support for left-wing candidates seeking to win the first round of the primary contest on 22 January. This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. But Patrick says attitudes are changing: "I voted for [President] Hollande, and like a lot of French I'm disappointed." "The Socialist Party will struggle to pick itself up. There's a lot of abstention. People are turning to the extremes, in particular Marine Le Pen. Those who are really disappointed want a big change." Sparking interest in this primary is seen as crucial to reviving the chances of France's governing party, and uniting a scattered field of candidates on the left. As Patrick Labbe headed home on his bicycle, Manuel Valls was arriving at a local factory a few kilometres away, to drum up some support. Peering into the cabs of armoured cars, as men in blue overalls applied the finishing seals, Mr Valls seemed as coolly polite as the atmosphere itself, the workers barely glancing up as their former prime minister passed by. Manuel Valls (R) is currently favourite but Arnaud Montebourg (L) is seen as one of his two main challengers Mr Valls is the favourite to win the left-wing nomination - seen as more authoritative and experienced, according to one poll, if a little remote. But after serving as prime minister to France's least popular post-war president, and forcing through some of the government's most hated liberal reforms, his challenge has been to reinvent himself as a unifier of the Left. Since launching his campaign, the former prime minister has reversed his position on key issues like labour rights, and the government's use of the constitution to bypass parliament. One opinion poll suggested Benoit Hamon (R) could win the nomination if he went through to the run-off Perhaps it's no surprise, given the strong competition from party rebel Arnaud Montebourg, who has been snapping at his heels for weeks. A former industry minister, who was sacked after refusing to support Mr Valls's liberal reforms, he's promised an end to austerity and more investment. And in the past couple of days, hard-left candidate, Benoit Hamon, has surged from behind to challenge Mr Montebourg for a place in the primary run-off on 29 January. Among his core proposals are a monthly payment of €750 (£650; $800) to every French citizen, regardless of income; and the legalisation of cannabis. A fourth Socialist party candidate and former education minister, Vincent Peillon, is trying to catch up with them with plans to revamp Europe, lower taxes on the poor and invest in green technology. Three hopefuls from other left-wing parties are currently trailing well behind: Sylvia Pinel (Radical Party of the Left), Jean-Luc Bennahmias (Democratic Front) and Francois de Rugy (Ecology party). Far-left Jean-Luc Melenchon (L) and Emmanuel Macron are both polling ahead of all the Socialist candidates But the real competition could come from outside the primary itself, because two of the Left's most popular politicians aren't even taking part. Jean-Luc Melenchon is running for the presidency on his own, far-left ticket, and could pose a real challenge to candidates like Mr Montebourg or Mr Hamon, should they win. And then there's Emmanuel Macron, the renegade protege of President Hollande, who resigned from his ministerial post to launch a new political movement called En Marche, promising liberal values and a fresh approach to politics. His growing appeal among young voters has surprised many sceptics who initially wrote him off as a "champagne bubble" that would quickly burst. These days his presidential campaign attracts crowds in their thousands, where the leading primary candidates manage only hundreds. Mr Macron classes his movement as "neither left nor right" but his centrist agenda is attracting many formerly Socialist voters. The truth about this primary contest is that whoever wins the nomination could quickly find themselves face to face with the real battle for the Left. Follow BBC News coverage on the French presidential election campaign here The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-38676370
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…_037238949-1.jpg
Presidential inaugural ball: Trumps enjoy first dance - BBC News
2017-01-21
null
President Donald Trump and First Lady Melania Trump have the first dance at the inaugural ball.
null
President Donald Trump and his wife First Lady Melania Trump have the first dance at the inaugural ball.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38702978
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…995_p04q7qb3.jpg
Trump's @POTUS Twitter account used Obama crowd image - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
Donald Trump's account is rapidly evolving after using an image of Barack Obama's 2013 inauguration
US & Canada
Donald Trump changed the image at the top of his new @POTUS account after Twitter users spotted it was from Barack Obama's 2009 inauguration. Mr Trump inherited the official presidential account as he was sworn in as America's 45th president. The original image showed flag-waving crowds in front of the US Capitol. But it was changed about an hour later, amid claims from Mr Trump's opponents that crowds at his inauguration were not as large as in 2013. Trump supporters on social media branded claims Mr Trump was trying to make his inauguration appear better-attended "pathetic" and a "non-story". The header image has since changed again from a stock picture of an American flag to an image of the new president gazing out of a window. Mr Trump's @POTUS account has gained millions of followers since its launch, as all 13.6m followers of Barack Obama's account - now archived at @POTUS44 - are in the process of being ported over to the new Trump account. The new president's first tweet was a link to a Facebook post of the full text of his inauguration address. His former twitter account still has more than 20m followers. The header image was changed again shortly afterwards Speaking ahead of the event, Mr Trump said his inauguration would have "an unbelievable, perhaps record-setting turnout". But the number of people who turned out to view his midday swearing-in appeared to be smaller than the estimated two million who turned out for Obama. Images of the National Mall, taken from the top of the Washington Monument, showed sections of the white matting laid down to protect the grass were largely empty. There will be no official estimate of the crowd's size to settle the issue. Obama's 2009 inauguration (top) appeared to be better attended For decades, the US National Park Service provided official crowd estimates for gatherings on the National Mall. But the agency stopped providing counts after organisers at 1995's Million Man March threatened a lawsuit. They complained that the National Park Service undercounted attendance at the march. More people turned out to witness Mr Trump and his entourage travelling along Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House on Friday afternoon.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38698837
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…item93722198.jpg
Melbourne car deaths: Mobile footage shows driver - BBC News
2017-01-21
null
A bystander films the driver of a car arrested in Melbourne in connection with the death of three pedestrians struck by a vehicle.
null
Three people, including a young child, have died after a car deliberately hit pedestrians in central Melbourne, police say. At least 29 people were injured, among them a baby who is in a critical condition after the car hit a pram. Police have arrested the driver but say the incident was not terror-related. Footage filmed by a bystander showed a maroon car driving in circles in front of nearby Flinders Street railway station.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-australia-38688521
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…054_p04q4mz1.jpg
Chapecoense: Brazilian team prepare for first game since plane crash - BBC Sport
2017-01-21
null
Those closely affected by the Chapecoense tragedy speak to the BBC on the eve of the club's first match since the fatal plane crash.
null
Last updated on .From the section Football Sirli Freitas took one, final phone call from her husband Cleberson Silva before he had to switch off his phone. "There was so much background noise," she said. "So much laughter and fun. "I said, 'are you really on a plane, or in a bar?'" Journalist Silva was on a plane that went down in the Andes on 29 November. He was one of 71 people who died along with almost the entire Chapecoense football team. The players were en route to the biggest match in the club's 43-year history, the final of the Copa Sudamericana against Colombia's Atletico Nacional. On Saturday, Chapecoense will play their first match since the crash - a friendly against defending Brazilian league champions Palmeiras. The people of Chapeco will, once-again, fill the small Arena Conda to see some of the 22 new players who make up the squad. Three of the six survivors were players, including central defender Neto, who was one of the team's leaders. He lay for six hours, trapped beneath the fuselage and trees, before being the last to be pulled out. "I remember the lights went out suddenly, then I started praying, asking God to help us," he said. "But a lot of people thought the plane was just landing, because it was not an abrupt fall. "I remember the moment that I couldn't hear the plane engine anymore. It was just the wind, and then an alarm. "But no-one got desperate, there was a lot of people praying. These are the last memories I have." When Neto woke up in hospital, he was told he had been injured in the match because nobody knew quite how to break the news to him. But the truth dawned on him when there were no video clips of the match or evidence of his injury. Chapeco is a quiet, unassuming city with an air of settled contentment. Its population of about 209,553 is only slightly higher than the number of people who crammed into the Maracana Stadium to watch the 1950 World Cup final between Uruguay and Brazil. But they form a tight-knit community, and a major part of that is the Chapecoense football team. Club flags and signs adorn shops and bars all over the city. The relationship between citizens and club is one of mutual and humble respect and affection, according to 41-year-old Karina Dini. "It was a strong bond, we were all a family," she said, sitting in the office of the language school she runs with her husband. "There weren't any players who were going to parties or anything. Most of them were very committed. We could meet them in restaurants or the supermarket. "It was amazing because players from the first division don't get that contact with people. They have big cars, they can't talk to people." Like Karina, whose husband's uncle died in the crash, most people here know someone who was on the plane, or someone, like Sirli Freitas, who's been affected directly. "My eight-year-old son understands [what happened], but his sister, who's three, still asks for her dad even though she knows he's not here any more," she said, through tears. "If you ask her about him, she says that he was on the plane that crashed, but but at other times she'll say, 'let's call daddy'." Outside the Arena Conda, there's a message to the world: "We were looking for a word to say thanks for all the love we've received, and we found several." Around the stadium, the streets have been painted green and white, in the club's colours. There has been a steady procession of press conferences, introducing some of the 22 new players. Rui Costa was brought in from Brazilian club Gremio and made director of football a week after the tragedy. Costa is adamant that Saturday's match is far more than a friendly. "When I got here we had four players and a devastated dressing room. It was all about sadness and silence," he said. "A dressing room should never be silent and here, it was. So we have accomplished our first goal - you can see a football team training here." "We had a list with 90 names that we were interested in," he said, as he explained how he assembled the squad in less than two months. "We were choosing based on technical characteristics, then behaviour, then salary. "We were working almost 24 hours a day because we knew it was not about just putting them on the pitch to play together. "We had to respect the culture of the club. That's what they hired me for." The last time the people of Chapeco went to the Arena Conda, it was on a day of torrential rain, to receive the bodies of their players, directors and journalists. On Saturday, they will return, to honour the city's fallen, and to meet their new family.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/football/38695490
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…_simifreitas.jpg
Us/Them play revisits Beslan school siege - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
The Belgian creators of a play, Us/Them, which relives the Beslan killings through the eyes of two children, say recent attacks have brought the story closer to home.
Entertainment & Arts
The 2004 Beslan school siege is remembered for the deaths of more than 330 people including 186 children, after a Russian school was seized by Chechen rebels. But the Belgian creators of a play, Us/Them, which relives the atrocity through the eyes of two children, say recent attacks have brought the story closer to home. The actress Gytha Parmentier has now played Us/Them in three languages. When the play opened in 2014 she was speaking in her native Flemish. Later she had to translate into French the words of her character - a young girl who dies in the Beslan siege. Now she's making the one-hour piece work in English opposite Roman Van Houtven, the only other member of cast. Last year the play was a hit at the Edinburgh Festival and it has now arrived at London's National Theatre. "Acting in English, Roman and I had to learn to move our mouths in a very different way," she said. "But acting in a different language gives a new juiciness to what's in the script." That script is by Carly Wijs, who also directs. She recalls the spark for the play came when her eight year-old son mentioned news coverage he'd just seen of the terror attack at the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi in 2013. "Godfried had been watching the report on the children's news and I was struck by the way he described it. He spoke in a way which was almost aloof - at eight you're just becoming aware of things which are on your planet but not really of your own world of home and family. "Then Bronks, which is a fantastic production company in Brussels, asked me for a theatre idea for children. So I thought I would break a taboo by writing about Beslan while borrowing Godfried's tone and his very objective manner." In Belgium Wij/Zij has been listed as suitable for children of nine and above; in London the National Theatre pitches Us/Them for young people aged 12 and over. The highly physical production is made for touring and the Dorfman stage at the National is almost bare apart from balloons and string. The production avoids the off-putting cuteness which can trip up adult actors impersonating young children. The result is heart-breaking yet somehow heart-warming too. The show may not strike theatregoers in advance as an obvious excursion for kids. But it's an unexpectedly charming hour in the theatre perfect for family viewing. However, the National has mainly programmed performances late in the evening which may be a bad call. Wijs says her view of the events of 2004 was influenced by one TV documentary in particular. "There was a beautiful BBC programme called Children of Beslan which was helpful: they spoke to many survivors. But our play isn't a documentary. It has to work for children who know nothing of Beslan and also for their parents who remember all that went on." Parmentier says there are clear differences between how children and grown-ups react. "Adults tend to laugh and cry in a different way: often the laughter is in relief when they think something horrible is about to happen on the stage and it doesn't. "I think parents automatically work out a narrative arc in their minds but children are happy to switch their attention from one thing to another." Wijs thinks for children almost the most horrifying thing is when the girl has to undress to her underwear because it's getting hot and stuffy in the school gymnasium. "To them it's a nightmare but I suspect adults barely register the moment." The play pre-dates last March's terror attacks in Brussels in which a total of 35 people died and hundreds were injured. Wijs lived in the Molenbeek district, a focus in the city of Islamist radicalisation. "We haven't changed the play because of those bombings but if the Brussels attacks had come first I wonder if I could have created the play. I've just done another play in Brussels which is full of light and comedy - it's a reaction to the depressing times we live in. But both women say they haven't ignored recent violence closer to home. "In 2015 in Belgium we had a performance in Namur in (French-speaking) Wallonia, a few days after the Bataclan attack in Paris", says Parmentier. "We and the theatre thought hard about whether we should cancel: would it be too hard to watch a play about so many people being killed? But instead the theatre arranged an audience discussion after the show and people were full of questions about what they had just seen. I think the play helped some of them process what had happened in Paris." Us/Them is playing at the National Theatre until 18 February.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-38695475
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…urdo_macleod.jpg
Bake Off: Angus Deayton to present Creme de la Creme - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
Angus Deayton will take over from chef Tom Kerridge as host of the Bake Off spin-off.
Entertainment & Arts
Deayton previously hosted Have I Got News For You Angus Deayton is to host Great British Bake Off spin-off Creme de la Creme. The show, for professional pastry chefs, is staying on the BBC despite the main show moving from BBC One to Channel 4. The first series, broadcast on BBC Two in 2016, was hosted by chef Tom Kerridge. Deayton is best known as a former presenter of topical quiz Have I Got News For You. He was sacked from the show in 2002. The show will see 10 teams of chefs competing in tasks to make perfect pastries and spectacular showpieces. Deayton will be joined on the Love Productions show by judges Benoit Blin, chef patissier at Raymond Blanc's Le Manoir aux Quat'Saisons in Oxfordshire, and Cherish Finden, executive pastry chef at The Langham, London. Tom Kerridge had taken on presenting duties for the debut series Love Productions' executive producer Kieran Smith said: "We're delighted Angus has taken up the baton to host the new series. "His distinct humour and presenting style brings a fresh dynamic to the show." The show will return to BBC Two later this year. Follow us on Facebook, on Twitter @BBCNewsEnts, or on Instagram at bbcnewsents. If you have a story suggestion email entertainment.news@bbc.co.uk. • None Bake Off format 'to stay the same' The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-38688912
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…3_deayton_pa.jpg
One solution to two big social problems - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
In France, some students are snapping up cheap rents in exchange for helping old people out in their homes
Magazine
Here's a solution that could tackle two of the West's most urgent problems: a young generation priced out of affordable housing, and the loneliness and isolation of a rapidly ageing population. For so-called millennials, like Mikyoung Ahn, a large home is a seemingly unattainable dream. She could not imagine living in a spacious detached house on the leafy outskirts of Paris, just half an hour from the Arc de Triomphe. She definitely couldn't imagine paying just 120 Euros (£100) a month to live there. Yet, with the help of an innovative housing scheme, that idea is no longer a fantasy for the 25-year-old student from Seoul, South Korea. An aspiring architect, she wanted to live and study in one of the world's cultural capitals. To realise her dream, she turned away from traditional student accommodation. Instead of moving in with other young people, Mikyoung chose as a landlady and housemate a 78-year-old widow with a passion for patchwork. "I knew I was going away from home for university, and that I wouldn't have any family or any friends," she says. "But after the first meeting her, I knew it was going to be perfect." Mikyoung and her landlady, Monique, have been living together since October, after they were matched by an organisation called Ensemble2Generations. This organisation and others like it pair elderly people with students, in an arrangement called homeshare. The concept is simple, yet it attempts to bridge an intergenerational divide that exists in many parts of the world. On one side are older people, who own properties that were purchased when house prices were comparatively cheap, but who may now need some help with daily activities like shopping and cleaning. On the other side are young people, who cannot afford to rent a decent flat, but who may have some time to spare. Monique has got Mikyoung into her hobby, quilting Mikyoung helps Monique with a range of everyday tasks. She carries Monique's shopping in the supermarket, washes up, and has even created an instruction sheet to help Monique understand all the buttons on her TV remote. "It's not a big deal," she says. "It's just life, you know. If I lived here, I would have to clean the dishes or take the trash out. I feel really this is my home - this is our home. "Every night when I come back, I prepare the dinner and I put on the music that I have learned today. For example, Champs-Élysées or something like that, and we sing together." Monique, who is a retired schoolteacher, is now an avid fan of Downton Abbey, after being introduced to the programme by Mikyoung. "We have very good moments together, because we share a lot," says Monique. "We often sit together and watch TV programmes. Everything is simple between us." Turning to Monique, she adds: "You are like a granddaughter to me." Homeshare is not a new idea - it was first trialled in the USA and Spain during the 1980s. However, experts have recently started to view it as a scalable solution to two problems that continue to cause social problems. While young people are migrating to cities, pushing up the price of rent, many populations in the developed world are ageing. Meet the people fixing the world in the new World Service programme, World Hacks Homeshare schemes are now active in 16 countries across the world. Since 1999, an organisation called Homeshare International has acted as a network for homeshare schemes. "The benefits to the householder are they feel much safer at home because of having someone else in the house," says Elizabeth Mills, the organisation's director. "They're happier, incidents of accidents and falls go down, and the reassurance for the householder's family is absolutely enormous." Most programmes offer two homeshare arrangements for prospective participants. The first allows the student to live in an elderly person's home rent-free in exchange for help around the house. The second requires the student to contribute money to household bills, but places fewer burdens on their time. It costs roughly 900 Euros a month for a student to live in the centre of Paris So will schemes like this help solve the housing crises of millenials - and the problems of the elderly? Research into homeshare projects in Spain and the USA indicates that participants are overwhelmingly satisfied by the arrangement. The Spanish study, for example, reported that 93.2% of elderly people had benefitted in some way from the programme, while 98.7% of students had benefitted. The organisation that paired Monique and Mikyoung, Ensemble2Generations, conducts face-to-face interviews before placing people together. Students even have to put pen to paper to explain why they want a placement, so that their application can be examined by a handwriting expert. Despite this, some partnerships simply do not work out. A major issue is that people of different generations may not always get on. Monique's previous housemate was a young gardener who spent a lot of time out of the house. When they did occasionally eat together, the gardener did not want to have a conversation. Instead, according to Monique, he just stared vacantly at his phone. But that did not shake Monique's confidence in homeshare. "I never doubted whether I wanted to homeshare. I knew there were other people out there… It is a good solution for me." And although the gardener did not provide much companionship for Monique, experts widely acknowledge that homeshare is an effective antidote to loneliness - a problem that affects over one million elderly people in Britain, according to Age UK. Helen Bown, a policy expert who specialises in social isolation, says that the emotional support provided by a homeshare relationship often exceeds its financial advantages. "People talk about not feeling so lonely anymore, particularly people who are single, " she says. "People have talked about having a safety net, particularly at night. "I think one of the most compelling things that people have talked about, consistently, is the impact emotionally for people - the positive relationship. The feeling that people are contributing; that they are part of a mutually beneficial relationship, not just a transaction of care and support." This is certainly the case for Armelle, a 64 year-old woman living in Cergy, northwest of Paris. Eighteen months ago, Armelle's husband died of cancer. Devastated, and fearing loneliness, she got in touch with Ensemble2Generations. Since then, she has housed a 19-year-old student called Blandine, from Versailles, who is studying engineering at a local university. "If my husband had been here, I would never have thought of accommodating a student," says Armelle. "But she's like a companion. It's so good to have a presence in the house. I enjoy Blandine's company a lot." Armelle and Blandine have an easygoing friendship Armelle and Blandine's relationship is like a casual friendship. They relax together in the evenings and chat about their lives. While she was away from the house for a few days, Armelle even allowed Blandine to have a house party. "Though her contract says that she's not allowed to have friends over, I know that I can trust her," says Armelle, laughing. "I even helped her organise it." The house has a large fireplace and a spectacular view over the lakes of Cergy. Unsurprisingly, Blandine is fond of these home comforts, and is not keen on moving into a cramped student flat for the next academic year. "In student accommodation everything is in the same room, except for the bathroom," she says, wrinkling up her nose. "I have a few friends who are offering to flat-share next year. I tell them, "Why not?" but I'm actually very comfortable here - I'm not sure I'm going to leave." Join the conversation - find World Hacks on Facebook, and follow the BBC World Service on Twitter.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-38399246
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…3072522_m-m1.jpg
Newspaper headlines: President Trump's 'message to the world' - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
US President Donald Trump's inaugural address comes under focus on Saturday's front pages.
The Papers
The papers are dominated by coverage of the US presidential inauguration - with every front page featuring a picture of Donald Trump. Mr Trump, says the Times, unveiled a new era - but it notes that the imagery was unusually dark for an inaugural address, with the president describing crime-ridden inner cities, catastrophic levels of drug addiction, and rusted-out factories. The Daily Mirror describes it as a "chilling inaugural speech" in which Mr Trump vowed to put the United States first - "and to hell with every other country". The Daily Mail says it was an incendiary speech, that both electrified and divided his nation. It points out the the new president had been expected to finally go easy on the vitriol and enjoy the pomp and ceremony of the event. But it says he used the speech to fire both barrels at the political establishment. In the view of the Financial Times, the new president made a defiant and uncompromising address, in which he promised to revive the country with an aggressive rejection of globalisation. The paper says his inauguration marked the end of an incredible journey that was propelled by a groundswell of populism. The Sun says more than a billion people watched the swearing in of the new president on TV, with 900,000 spectators on the National Mall in Washington to witness Mr Trump give a thumbs up and fist pump. However the paper notes that the crowd in Washington was only half of that which saw Barack Obama become the first black president in 2009. Writing in the Guardian, Gary Younge says there was no higher calling, no sense of a greater purpose, and no impassioned idealism. He describes the first words of Mr Trump's presidency as a "crude and unapologetic appeal to nationalism". In the i, Michael Day describes the address as "lousy" and says "it hardly made the heart soar". The editorials have mixed messages for President Trump. The Sun says that now he is in the Oval Office, he may be stunned by the complexity of many of the problems he faces. It notes that plenty of people will write him off - but says that President Reagan was written off too - before he changed the world. The Daily Mail claims his speech was "truly astonishing" - as he tore up the rule book and delivered an inauguration address unlike any heard before. The Daily Express asserts that the progressive left-leaning programme, which seemed woven into Western democracy, is now being unravelled. It says this is a profound change, which will affect us all. According to the Daily Telegraph, the inaugural address was what Mr Trump's supporters had gathered in their thousands to hear. But it says that for outsiders, it was an unsettling speech that seemed to presage the emergence of an inward-looking, isolationist America. The Daily Mirror says the US and the rest of the world should be "very afraid" following what it describes as the new president's "rambling, pugnacious and protectionist speech". The Guardian is equally horrified, saying his America First nationalism was both "crude and shameless". It concludes the reality of a Trump presidency is a "terrifying prospect". A number of papers also leave space to comment on the person whose day it could have been: Hillary Clinton. The Daily Mail says protocol demanded she attended the inauguration with her husband - and her solemn face showed the strain as she arrived at the US Capitol. The Daily Express observes the former first lady looked more like she was attending a funeral. For the Guardian, Mrs Clinton stood stoically as chants of "lock her up" emanated from the crowd. However, on a more positive note, it adds that she left the ceremony waving to supporters and smiling broadly. Finally - despite their disagreements about President Trump - the papers all seem united on one point. The Daily Mirror,Daily Express and the Sun all declare that the stand-out person at Friday's events was the new First Lady, Melania Trump. Many commentators, including the fashion director of the Daily Telegraph, compare her to Jackie Kennedy. The Guardian says she wore a sleek ice blue dress and jacket, which was custom-made by US designer Ralph Lauren. For the Daily Mail, she did not put a foot wrong, describing her as the "dazzling new First Lady".
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-the-papers-38700109
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…rump_reuters.jpg
Donald Trump inauguration speech was ‘angriest ever’ - BBC News
2017-01-21
null
An expert in US politics has claimed President Donald Trump’s inauguration speech was the angriest he had ever heard.
null
An expert in US politics has claimed President Donald Trump’s inauguration speech was the angriest he had ever heard. Dr Mike Cornfield, associate professor of Political Management at the George Washington University, told BBC Radio 5 live's Anna Foster he thought President Trump's address was “extraordinary for a man who did not win the popular vote and who did not fill this mall”.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38699639
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…533_p04q6ssx.jpg
Anti-Trump protesters fill Trafalgar Square - BBC News
2017-01-21
null
Thousands of protesters in London fill Trafalgar Square as part of a Women's March on the first full day of Donald Trump's presidency.
null
Thousands of protesters in London fill Trafalgar Square as part of a Women's March on the first full day of Donald Trump's presidency.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-38704604
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…420_p04q8rtr.jpg
Picasso prints at Barnsley's Cooper Gallery - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
The 17 Picasso prints will be on show at a free exhibition until April.
Sheffield & South Yorkshire
Pablo Picasso visited South Yorkshire in 1950 for an international peace conference An exhibition of original prints by world-renowned artist Pablo Picasso are to go on show at a museum in Barnsley. The 17 linocut prints are on display from Saturday at a free exhibition at the town's Cooper Gallery. The valuable prints are out on loan from the British Museum and were previously on display at the Lady Lever Art Gallery near Liverpool. Barnsley-born Ian Macmillan has written a poem about a previous visit by the artist to South Yorkshire. Mr Macmillan was inspired by Picasso's visit to Sheffield in 1950 for an international peace conference. The Spanish artist is acknowledged to be one of the most important artists of the 20th Century. He experimented with a wide range of styles and themes in his long career, most notably inspiring Cubism. The prints are on loan from the British Museum for the first time Picasso experimented with a wide range of styles and themes in his long career, most notably inspiring Cubism The artworks at the gallery include prints showing the development of key Picasso prints including Jacqueline Reading that depicts the artist's wife, Jacqueline Roque. Mr Macmillan said: "It shows the dynamic cultural times we're living through round here and that the town is becoming even more of an artistic and creative hub." The Picasso prints are on show until 29 April. Pablo Picasso died in 1973 at the age of 91 The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-south-yorkshire-38687986
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…ladylever038.jpg
World v Trump on global climate deal? - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
As the new president settles in, much of the world reaffirms its commitment to the Paris agreement.
Science & Environment
As a pro-coal president strides into the White House, the rest of the world is rallying in defence of the climate. Donald Trump has called climate change "a hoax" and filled his cabinet with representatives of fossil fuel industries. One of the world's leading climate scientists told me she was positively scared about his potential impact on the planet. But so far the leaders who joined with President Barack Obama in Paris in 2015 to sign the global climate deal are standing firm. As Mr Trump ponders pulling out of the UN climate deal, China, India, Germany, the EU and the UK have all reaffirmed their promise to curb CO2 emissions. And in the USA itself, moves have already been made to consolidate the low-carbon economy in a sign that fossil fuel companies will still face a battle over CO2 emissions, even with support from the White House. Only this week, China's President, Xi Jin Ping, warned Mr Trump that walking away from the Paris deal would endanger future generations. As Mr Trump promises to boost jobs by scrapping President Obama's clean energy plans, China is pushing on with a $361bn (£293bn) investment in renewable energy by 2020. China's Xie Zhenhua says the world will pressure the Trump administration over clean energy China's green aspirations are undermined by its expansion of coal-fired power stations, but this week it also suspended plans for 104 new coal plants. Xie Zhenhua, the veteran climate negotiator who forged a close partnership on clean energy between the two mega-powers, told China Daily that the global momentum behind low-carbon technology was unstoppable. He was quoted as saying: "Industrial upgrades aiming for more sustainable growth is a global trend… it is not something that can be reversed by a single political leader. "The international community and US citizens will pressure the Trump administration to continue clean energy policies." The State Department may not dismiss this flippantly: while US-Chinese relations may be increasingly frosty in many areas, climate change and clean energy remain a valuable sphere of co-operation. American politicians may also be wary of watching China seize the moral heights as world leader in tackling climate change. Its energy minister, Piyush Goyal, said this week: "We respect the fact that America has chosen its leader. "However, clean energy is not something that we are working on because somebody else wants us to do it - it's a matter of faith and the faith of the leadership in India. "Nothing on Earth is going to stop us from doing that." Solar energy prices are now on a par with coal in India, which boasts the world's biggest solar farm and the first chemical plant to eat its own CO2 emissions. It will continue to expand coal-fired generation for the next few years, but its National Electricity Plan projects no further increase in coal-based capacity after 2022 - much earlier than previously suggested. India's Tuticorin plant is the world's first zero-emission chemical facility Dollars, technology and jobs will pour into clean energy in these countries, and the USA will surely be keen not to miss out. Meanwhile, moves are being made to consolidate President Obama's climate legacy. The US previously pledged $3bn to the UN's green fund to help poor countries adapt to climate change and get clean technology. Mr Trump won support among some voters for promising to stop payments and spend the cash on American citizens instead. But this week President Obama slipped the fund a further $500m. And it won't just be on the international stage that Mr Trump's team will face fossil fuel battles. Some early skirmishes on American soil are already under way. This week, the Environmental Protection Agency cemented stricter efficiency standards for cars. Republicans will try to reverse this - but when carmakers previously resisted efficiency rules, they ended up producing such uncompetitive gas-guzzlers that the industry had to be bailed out. Even Republican plans to boost extraction of fossil fuels, while popular in some states because the industries create jobs, will provoke local resistance from people who don't want oil pipelines, or don't want the tops blown off their mountains to get to coal. It may be hard to persuade investors to put cash into coal anyway. Many states will resist fossil fuels, too. California has long led the way on car emissions and recently insisted it will keep its right to set its own tighter regulations for cars. Mr Trump's team may try to rescind this. The Paris climate agreement resulted in 195 nations pledging to reduce emissions There are already CO2 trading schemes between states on the east and west coasts, and last week New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced plans to build enough offshore wind capacity by 2030 to power 1.25 million homes. Here's the big picture: as the world moves together to tackle climate change, it is clearly problematic if the biggest historic polluter threatens to pull in the opposite direction. Will Angela Merkel, for instance, be so sanguine about Germany's controversial switch to renewables if the US forces its already-low energy prices even lower, triggering protests from German industry? In the words of Jo Haigh, professor of atmospheric physics at Imperial College, London: "If Trump does what he said he'd do, and others follow suit, my gut feeling is that I'm scared. Very scared." But he may not. And they may not.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-38676898
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…es-613835366.jpg
Theresa May congratulates Trump on taking office - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
Theresa May says she looks forward to meeting the new US president and expects "very frank" talks.
UK Politics
Theresa May has congratulated Donald Trump on taking office as US president - and says she looks forward to meeting him in Washington. The prime minister stressed her belief he was committed to advancing the "special relationship" with the UK. But Mrs May told the Financial Times she expects "very frank" talks on areas where their opinions seem to differ such as the EU and Nato. The PM said she hoped for early progress on a US-UK trade agreement. Mrs May said she believed Mr Trump "recognises the importance and significance of Nato", despite him being quoted earlier in the week as describing the military alliance as "obsolete". "I'm also confident the USA will recognise the importance of the co-operation we have in Europe to ensure our collective defence and collective security," she told the FT. Mr Trump also said recently he did not really care if the EU separated. Mrs May, who this week outlined for the first time her plan for Brexit, said: "The decision taken by the UK was not a decision about breaking up the EU. "I want the EU to continue to be strong and I want to continue to have a close and strategic partnership with the EU. It is important for security issues. With the threats we face it's not the time for less co-operation." Mr Trump was sworn-in as the 45th US president on Friday. In a statement issued after the inauguration, Mrs May said: "From our conversations to date, I know we are both committed to advancing the special relationship between our two countries and working together for the prosperity and security of people on both sides of the Atlantic. "I look forward to discussing these issues and more when we meet in Washington." In her FT interview, Mrs May said she was "confident we can look at areas even in advance of being able to sign a formal trade deal". This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. "We will determine the course of America and the world for many, many years to come", Donald Trump said But despite Mr Trump's indication he backed a quick post-Brexit trade deal, there was a heavily protectionist tone in the inauguration speech. Some Labour MPs questioned how the prime minister's aim of a free trade deal with the US would be possible given the "America first" strategy outlined by Mr Trump. David Lammy tweeted: "Every decision on trade will be made to benefit Americans. Hmm - looking forward to this trade deal, then." Chris Bryant said: "I'm not sure a UK trade deal with Trump will be very mutually beneficial." However, speaking to the BBC in Myanmar, also known as Burma, Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said there was every reason to "be positive and optimistic" about a trade deal. "I think the new president has made it very clear that he wants to put Britain at the front of the line... and obviously that's extremely exciting and important". Earlier Mr Johnson offered his own "warmest congratulations" to Mr Trump. He said the UK would "work hand in glove for the stability, the prosperity and the security of the world". Meanwhile, Thousands of women are expected to join a march in London later as part of an international protest campaign on the first full day of Mr Trump's presidency. Mr Trump has appeared to make good on a pledge to return a bust of Sir Winston Churchill to the White House's Oval Office. The bust of Sir Winston Churchill can be seen on the far left as Mr Trump prepares to sign his first orders in the Oval Office The sculpture of the World War Two prime minister's face is said to be a replica of one given to President Lyndon B Johnson in the 1960s and first appeared in the Oval Office during George W Bush's administration in 2001. It was replaced by a bust of civil rights champion Martin Luther King Jr during Barack Obama's presidency. The presence of the Churchill bust was noticed as Mr Trump signed his first orders as president. A report that the bust of Dr King no longer remained in the Oval Office was later found to be discredited.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-38702859
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…mp_may_getty.jpg
Who will succeed Sinn Féin's Martin McGuinness? - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
As Martin McGuinness steps down, who will take over as Sinn Féin's leader in Northern Ireland?
Northern Ireland
Sinn Féin's successor as Northern Ireland leader of the party will be announced next week Former deputy first minister Martin McGuinness has confirmed he will not stand in the Northern Ireland Assembly election. His successor as Sinn Féin's leader in Northern Ireland will be announced next week. So who will replace him? Three names are tipped as the most likely contenders - Finance Minister Máirtín Ó Muilleoir, Health Minister Michelle O'Neill and MLA and former MP Conor Murphy. Conor Murphy is a key member of the Sinn Féin negotiating team who has represented the party at the Hillsborough, Leeds Castle and St Andrew's negotiations as well as playing a key role in the Fresh Start agreement negotiated at Stormont House. Conor Murphy has represented the party at the Hillsborough, Leeds Castle and St Andrew's negotiations After his election to the assembly in 1998, he was the party's chief whip. In 2005, he became the first Sinn Féin member to be elected as MP for Newry and Armagh. Following Mr Murphy's re-election to the assembly in 2007, he was appointed minister for regional development, a position that he held until 2011. He was criticised for the NI Water crisis as minister during the winter of 2010/11. In 2012, ahead of a ban on double-jobbing, he left the assembly to concentrate on his role as an MP. He returned to the Assembly in 2015 when Mickey Brady was elected MP for the constituency. Since re-entering the assembly he has been a member of both the Enterprise, Trade and Investment Committee and the Public Accounts Committee. Health Minister Michelle O'Neill has held various senior positions within Sinn Féin. She has worked in the Assembly since 1998, initially as political adviser to MP and former MLA Francie Molloy, before being elected to Dungannon and South Tyrone Borough Council in 2005. As health minister since May 2016, tackling mounting hospital waiting lists has been a huge task for Mrs O'Neill Mrs O'Neill was elected to the assembly for the Mid Ulster constituency in 2007, sitting on the education committee and serving as Sinn Féin's health spokesperson. In 2011, she was appointed as minister for agriculture and rural development. The following year, she announced that the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (DARD) would move to a former British army barracks in Ballykelly, County Londonderry. Following the announcement, it came to light that Strabane had been chosen as a more suitable location by an internal DARD assessment, a decision that Mrs O'Neill then overruled. In February 2013, it was also revealed that the decision had been questioned by the Finance Minister Sammy Wilson. As health minister since 2016, tackling mounting hospital waiting lists have been a huge task for Mrs O'Neill. In October, she launched a 10-year plan to transform health service, saying it would improve a system that was at "breaking point". Opposition politicians questioned the lack of details in the plan, which was not costed. But it set out a range of priorities, including a new model of care involving a team of professionals based around GP surgeries. Máirtín Ó Muilleoir has previously been a writer, journalist and publisher of the Belfast Media Group newspapers and the Irish Echo in New York. Máirtín Ó Muilleoir became finance minister in May 2016 The former west Belfast councillor served as Lord Mayor of Belfast from June 2013-June 2014 and was broadly praised for reaching out to unionists, despite attacks by loyalist protestors. Mr Ó Muilleoir subsequently stood unsuccessfully as Sinn Féin's candidate for South Belfast in the 2015 Westminster election, but was returned in the Stormont Assembly election of May 2016. As finance minister, he was the first Sinn Féin minister to hold a major economic brief in the Northern Ireland Assembly. His role has included leading the implementation of the devolution of corporation tax, due to happen in 2018. However, he became embroiled in controversy in 2016 when news emerged about a back channel of communication between a Stormont committee chairman and a witness who was giving evidence on the Nama property loan sale. Mr Ó Muilleoir denied knowledge of alleged coaching of loyalist blogger Jamie Bryson by finance committee chair Daithí McKay before his appearance.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-38684941
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…3671320_team.jpg
Trump inauguration: Compare 2017 with 2009 - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
It's been eight years since a new president took the oath of office at the US Capitol. Here's some side by side comparisons of Barack Obama's inauguration in 2009 and Donald Trump's in 2017,
US & Canada
It's been eight years since a new president took the oath of office at the US Capitol. Here are some side-by-side comparisons of Barack Obama's inauguration in 2009 and Donald Trump's in 2017. App users should tap here to fully explore the interactive images.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-38682574
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…3718811_comp.jpg
Did ye get healed? - How Van Morrison's music helped me recover my life - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
The former Beirut hostage John McCarthy explains how Van Morrison's music helped heal his life and inspire other writers
Entertainment & Arts
I have a special connection to an enigmatic Belfast man whose music crosses jazz, blues, folk and rock. In the late 1980s, I was held hostage in Beirut. Of my five years in captivity, four were spent with the Irish writer Brian Keenan. Stripped of virtually all external stimuli, we had to keep our minds and hearts going with memories. Two lonely men, we shared things that had touched us - books, films and music. Our soundscape then was as blank and depressing as the concrete walls of our cells. But music would emerge from our memories and we would hum snatches of songs as they came to us. Brian talked of traditional Irish music and of the great Belfast musician Van Morrison. I had never seen Morrison in concert but knew some of his hits - Brown Eyed Girl, Gloria and Moondance. But as Brian spoke, I somehow I felt as though I had stood with him in a crowded Belfast concert hall watching Morrison leaning into the microphone as he sang one of his soulful ballads - or throwing himself about the stage like a wild man, overwhelmed by the power of the music. Morrison is only a few years older than Brian and was born only a few streets away in East Belfast. They went to the same school and came from the same modest backgrounds. Morrison's father had been a shipyard worker and they had grown up in near identical, small terraced houses. However, only a short walk away, was another world, a street lined with large villas called Cyprus Avenue. Morrison wrote about it on a track on his seminal album, Astral Weeks. Brian took me to these streets for the first time to record a BBC radio documentary, Van Morrison and Me. Two years ago, Morrison played a concert on Cyprus Avenue which Brian attended. He dedicated the song "Motherless Child" to Brian, something he has never forgotten and which deeply moved him. "It's a song which has a very special significance for me. Chained to a wall, never knowing if you were ever getting out, ever going home, your whole sense of who you were evaporated. And you felt lost and lonely, a bit like a motherless child," Brian said. When I was finally released in 1991, I strove to come to terms with what had happened with the help of my girlfriend Jill Morrell, who had been campaigning constantly for my release. We settled in a cottage in the Oxfordshire countryside and Morrison's music became a key part of our liberation soundtrack. Jill and I tried to make sense of those extraordinary times, writing a memoir of my captivity and her campaign. One song particularly touched us both, and that was Wonderful Remark. I remember one night getting a magnifying glass to read the lyrics crammed onto the cassette's sleeve notes. As I read, I was stunned. Morrison's words seemed to capture the emotional heart of our experience over the hostage years: "How can you stand the silence, that pervades when we all cry? How can you watch the violence that erupts before your eyes?" How did he come to write that? I had met Morrison once or twice since my release at charity events and hoped that personal connection might help persuade him to speak to me about his music. So I was delighted when he agreed to meet me at the Culloden Hotel, a beautiful former bishop's palace on the outskirts of Belfast. When I asked him about Wonderful Remark, he told me that it was a song about hard times he had suffered in New York. He was short of money and felt stranded, a situation which contrasts to mine. But we both experienced similar feelings of frustration and sadness, as Morrison explained: "It was a song about my circumstances but it was nothing compared to what you've been through. It was about people who were supposed to be helping you and they weren't there. "It was about the business I'm in and the world in general. A lot of the times you can't count on anybody." Brian took me from Cyprus Avenue to other locations which feature in Morrison's songs. Hyndford Street, where Morrison grew up and the nearby Beachie River. Brian told me he used to go there as a boy with his father: "If we missed school, we'd go round there and catch frogs and newts. And it was a place where you could go courting where nobody could see what you were up to." John McCarthy and Brian Keenan next to a mural celebrating Belfast's most famous musician Ian Rankin is another writer who says he has been influenced by Morrison's music at an important moment in his life. In his mid-20s he was living in London, frustrated that he was not making progress as an author. He told me how, after suffering panic attacks, his doctor advised him to rest. So he grabbed a handful of Van Morrison cassettes and caught a train up to Scarborough to reflect on his life. "It's very personal music and I thought here's someone who understands something of what I'm going through, they've seen highs and lows," he said. While Wonderful Remark is the stand-out Morrison song for me, Ian was most influenced at the time by tracks from Morrison's 1973 album Hard Nose the Highway: "What I learnt was something about ploughing your own furrow. Don't let the world get in the way, if you want to be a writer, be a writer." Ian decided to move to France to concentrate on writing novels. He has since written 21 Inspector Rebus books and become a world-famous author. Van Morrison - Sir Van Morrison now - is rightly regarded as one of the truly original songwriters and performers of his generation. His official accolades include two Grammys and an Ivor Novello award. One song - Someone Like You - has appeared in no less than seven Hollywood movies. But the real accolades are from the millions of people, like me, who have, time and time again, been moved by his songs. When I asked him how he had managed to touch so many people's lives, he said it was about working with the natural talent with which he had been born. "I think it comes from God, whatever that concept is. A lot of people are given gifts and they don't develop them. I thought because I was given this gift, I had to develop it." You can listen to John McCarthy reflect on Van Morrison's influence on his life on BBC World Service at 14:06 GMT on Saturday or on demand afterwards via iPlayer Radio.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-38601706
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…93684281_van.jpg
The policemen who dressed as women to hide from IS - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
When Islamic State seized control of his hometown and began killing his police colleagues, Iraqi officer Abu Alawi resorted to unconventional measures to stay alive.
Magazine
When the so-called Islamic State group seized control of a town near Mosul and began killing police officers, some of them resorted to unconventional measures to stay alive, reports John Beck. For more than two-and-a-half years it helped keep the middle-aged former police officer hidden from IS and safe from the bullets and knives that killed almost all his colleagues. When the jihadists arrived in his hometown of Hammam al-Alil in mid-2014, as they swept across northern Iraq, the first things they did was to round up police and army officers. They killed the higher-ranking men immediately, but eventually offered an amnesty of sorts to the rest. If they renounced the government in Baghdad and pledged to live under IS rules, then they'd go free. Abu Alawi stayed in hiding. At first in his home or a bolthole dug in his garden. But IS searches became more stringent and he realised that he'd have to move further afield. Ahmed, 22, from a pro-government militia, stands in a burnt-out building used by IS as a prison The solution, he decided, was a niqab - the black, face-concealing veil that IS forces all women under its rule to wear. From then on, when a sympathetic friend would tip him off about impending searches, he'd shroud his moustachioed face and portly figure and move somewhere safer, disguised as a woman. There was a thrill, he said, in "playing" with IS, but when he passed close by the black-clad militants it wasn't fun any more. Then he feared he'd share the fate of friends who'd donned the same disguise but been less lucky, or less convincing, and were arrested as a result. "They were near to me so many times and I was so afraid," he said, miming a heart pounding in his chest. "All the time I was thinking I was going to be checked and discovered." IS eventually left Hammam al-Alil, setting oil wells alight as it went Hammam al-Alil is a former spa town, once famous for the therapeutic powers of its thermal springs. It's hard to imagine holidaymakers visiting now. I met Abu Alawi there as he waited for a Danish non-governmental organisation to distribute blankets and solar heaters on a cold and damp winter morning. Men and women split into separate queues and stood patiently between the muddy puddles. After IS arrived, I was told, they gathered the former officers in the town's main square. Then they blindfolded them, loaded them on to trucks that drove a short way out of town, and shot or beheaded them. Federal police took me to one mass grave, a police shooting range turned rubbish dump. The awful smell was the first sign of what had happened there. Then came the clouds of flies and, lying amid the refuse, between discarded children's toys and food packaging, the badly decomposed remains of a man - his hands and legs bound and marked by signs of torture. "Under here it's all bodies," our escort said, gesturing towards a series of narrow trenches covered with bulldozed earth and he cautioned that the area was probably still booby-trapped with improvised explosive devices. He estimated there were at least 350 people buried in the area. Another man in the aid distribution queue, Abu Ali - younger, taller and thinner than Abu Alawi - produced his old police ID card. He'd buried it in his garden while IS was here, and he too had survived the massacre, in part thanks to a niqab. "All I did was hide, hide and wear the veil like this," he said, stooping over to minimise his stature. His brother, a fellow officer, was executed, leaving behind a wife and seven children. And when they left Hammam al-Ali, IS took Abu Ali's father with them to Mosul as a human shield. This was not a unique story. Everyone I spoke to in the town had lost someone, some entire families. One militia member in his early 20s said IS had killed his parents and murdered or captured seven of his brothers. But a semblance of normal life has in some ways returned to the town. At the dilapidated thermal baths near the banks of the Tigris, smiling children and soldiers played in the warm waters. Others collected grey mineral-rich mud in bottles and touted its therapeutic qualities. It may be the start of healing, but the scars of occupation by IS will last for some time yet. Join the conversation - find us on Facebook, Instagram, Snapchat and Twitter.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-38663595
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…ck-514281364.jpg
Could tuition fees really cost £54,000? - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
The headline cost of increased fees might be £9,250. But repaid with interest over 30 years it could be much higher.
Education & Family
The last time tuition fees were increased there were waves of student protests How much will it cost to get a degree in England when tuition fees increase to £9,250 in the autumn? If that seems high for a three-year degree, that's how much a think tank has calculated a student could have to pay back with interest. And that wouldn't be the full size of the debt. There could be another £40,000 still outstanding when fee loans are written off after 30 years. When fees start increasing from this autumn, it will mean borrowing about £28,600 for three years, with the amount then rising with inflation each year. But while students have battled for years over the headline figure of £9,000 and now £9,250, the Intergenerational Foundation says they're missing the much bigger picture of what it will really cost in repayments. And it's going to publish its findings in a report called The Packhorse Generation. These extra costs start to rack up while a student is still at university, because interest is charged as soon as students start their courses, adding thousands to the debt before students have even graduated. Students pay back fee loans from their earnings after graduation Students start paying back their fee loans once they earn more than £21,000 per year - and the more they earn the more they pay each month, until the debt, plus interest, is cleared. So this means total repayments can vary widely. The think tank, which campaigns for fairness between generations, forecasts that: A more likely scenario is that a graduate would start on a lower salary and gradually progress upwards. And the think tank gives an example of someone starting out on £22,000 and then rising over the years to £41,000, with the projection that they would pay back about £31,000 and leave a further £69,000 unpaid. These are not necessarily bad deals for students if it helps them into a good career. But Estelle Clarke, a former City lawyer on the advisory board of the Intergenerational Foundation, argues that we're failing to understand the "stranglehold" of debt that we're building up for young people. She also warns we should be looking nervously at the vast scale of write-offs in the current system. Would the sell-off of student loans mean tougher terms? At present the taxpayer picks up the tab for unpaid loans after 30 years, allowing graduates to walk away from tens of thousands of pounds of debt and interest charges. "Taxpayers end up paying for this system twice over. Firstly, they will shoulder the burden of an economy deprived of cash as millions of graduates' incomes are diverted to loan repayments," says Ms Clarke. "And secondly, they shoulder the burden of the non-repayment of most loans due to the extortionate ratcheting up of interest in spite of regular payments made." But the government has long considered selling off more of the student loan book to the private financial sector. Would a private operator, looking hungrily at monthly repayments from millions of graduates, want more favourable terms and a bigger slice of that unpaid debt? Ms Clarke warns that there is not nearly enough protection for students against future changes to repayment arrangements to "extract even more cash from graduates' pockets". "No other lending has so little protection," she says. New York plans to offer free tuition to middle-income families By international standards, the only real comparison for such levels of student borrowing is the United States. But as England is increasing the cost of tuition, the US has been trying to reverse out of a spiral of higher fees and higher debt. This month the governor of New York announced a plan to scrap tuition fees at state universities and colleges for families earning up to $125,000 (£102,000) per year, which would help 80% of households. It reflected deep-seated middle class anxieties about student debt - especially for families not rich enough to afford the fees and not poor enough to get financial support. This really can be a lifetime of debt, with warnings this month of aggressive tactics from lenders trying to recover student loans from pensioners, with the over-60s in the US still owing £55bn of student debt. Under the Obama administration there had been growing efforts to tackle student debt. But with the election of President Trump the future of student loans, now measured in the trillions, has become much less predictable. The Department for Education argues that England's system is already extremely accessible, because there are no upfront costs for any students. Instead the costs are backloaded to be paid after graduates are working. And since graduates are likely to earn more, they can afford the cost of repayments, which in turn supports the next generation of students. "The English system of student funding is sustainable, and has been recognised as such by the OECD," said a Department for Education spokeswoman. "Critically, our system removes financial barriers for anyone hoping to study - with record numbers of young people from disadvantaged backgrounds going to university last year." But this is something of a turning point - with fees and debts about to begin a long upward curve. And the Intergenerational Foundation's warnings cast a cold light on the scale of the escalating costs. Will this be the next stage of a sophisticated, self-funding, open-access, affordable university system, or unwitting steps towards a financial sinkhole? • None New York to scrap tuition fees for middle class
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-38651059
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…17_010815311.jpg
Brexit: Berlin business leaders unimpressed with UK's message - BBC News
2017-01-21
https://www.facebook.com/bbcnews
An appeal over a post-Brexit trade deal was met with sniggers in Berlin, Damien McGuinness writes.
Business
Two British officials failed to win favour from German business leaders in Berlin The distinguished audience members were too polite to heckle. But the eye rolling, frowns and audible tutting made it quite clear how the Brexiteers' message was going down with German business leaders. Owen Paterson, a former minister and Conservative MP, and John Longworth, co-chair of Leave Means Leave, came to Berlin on Saturday with a clear mission - to persuade German business leaders to lobby Chancellor Angela Merkel to give Britain a good trade deal. They should have been on safe territory. The two men are confident, witty speakers with impressive business and free-trade credentials. Mr Longworth is a former head of the British Chamber of Commerce. Mr Paterson's years spent trading in Germany meant he could open his address with a few remarks in German - which drew an appreciative round of applause - and a well-judged joke about multilingual trade. But it turned out they had entered the lion's den. The laughter from the audience quickly turned to sniggers as they heard the UK described as "a beacon of open, free trade around the world". Westminster's decision to leave the world's largest free trade area does not look like that to Germany. When Europe was blamed for spending cuts and a lack of British health care provision, there were audible mutters of irritation from the audience. The occasional light-hearted attempts at EU-bashing - usually guaranteed to get a cheap laugh with some British audiences - was met with stony silence. Brexiteers argue German manufacturers will want to still sell to UK customers In another setting - at another time - this gathering of the elite of Germany's powerful business community would have lapped up the British wit. Every ironic quip would ordinarily have had them rolling in the aisles. But British charm does not travel well these days. Rattled by the economic havoc Brexit could unleash, Germans are not in the mood for gags. Britain used to be seen by continentals as quirky and occasionally awkward - but reliably pragmatic on the economy. However, since the Brexit vote, Europeans suspect endearing eccentricity has morphed into unpredictable irrationality. The UK has become the tipsy, tweedy uncle, who after too much Christmas sherry has tipped over into drunkenly abusive bore. When the audience was asked how many of them welcomed Brexit, only one hand went up - and it turned out that belonged to a businessman who wanted more EU reform and was fed up with Britain slowing things down. Brexiteer rhetoric over the past year has often focused on the size of Britain's market and how keen German manufacturers are to sell to British customers. Many leave campaigners remain convinced that German business leaders will force Mrs Merkel to grant the UK a special free trade deal in order not to lose British trade. But that's not what's happening. Angela Merkel has said Britain will not be able to cherry-pick the best bits of the single market Instead German firms are remarkably united in their support of the chancellor in her rejection of British "cherry-picking" - even if it means losing business in the short-term. When you talk to German bosses they say their top priority is in fact the integrity of the single market, rather than hanging on to British customers. That's because their supply chains span across the EU. A German car might be designed in Germany, manufactured in Britain, with components made in various parts of eastern Europe, to be sold in France. This only works if there are no cross-border tariffs, paperwork or red tape. German companies - more often family-owned and with deeper connections to their regional heartlands - tend to look at the wider picture, sometimes thinking more long-term. They supported Mrs Merkel on sanctions against Russia over Ukraine, even though that meant a blow to trade. The financial hit was deemed less bad for business than worsening unrest in nearby Ukraine. The same calculations are being made over Brexit. Theresa May's speech on Brexit last week made front page news in Germany This doesn't mean German business is thinking politically, and not economically. But rather, it indicates a wider attitude towards how business can thrive long-term. German business leaders tell you that the British market may be important. But it is only one market, compared to 27 markets in the rest of the EU. Leave campaigners also still underestimate the political and historical significance of the EU for Germany, where it is seen as the guarantor of peace after centuries of warfare. It is tempting to see the clashes between Westminster and the EU27 as one big decades-long misunderstanding of what the EU is. An idealistic peace-project versus a pragmatic free-trade zone. This makes it even more ironic that London may reject the free-trade area it spent so much time creating. Germany was shocked and saddened by the UK's vote to leave the EU. But the decision was quickly accepted in Berlin. "The Brits never really wanted to be members of the European Union anyway," is something you often hear these days. Many Germans now want to just work out a solution that does the least amount of harm to the European economy. Hence the irritation in Germany when British politicians keep rehashing the pre-referendum debate. "It was frustrating to hear the same old arguments from the referendum campaign," one business leader told me when I asked him what he had thought about Saturday's discussion. Germany has moved on, he said. Maybe Britain should too. The Brexiteers might not have persuaded their audience in Berlin. But if they return to London with a better idea of the mood in Germany's business community, then the trip may well have been worthwhile.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-38707997
https://ichef.bbci.co.uk…item93731768.jpg

RealTimeData Monthly Collection - BBC News

This datasets contains all news articles from BBC News that were created every months from 2017 to current.

To access articles in a specific month, simple run the following:

ds = datasets.load_dataset('RealTimeData/bbc_news_alltime', '2020-02')

This will give you all BBC news articles that were created in 2020-02.

Want to crawl the data by your own?

Please head to LatestEval for the crawler scripts.

Credit

This is resources is created in this AAAI'24 paper: LatestEval: Addressing data contamination through dynamic and time-sensitive test construction.

If you find this collection helpful, please consider cite this paper:

@inproceedings{li2024latesteval,
  title={Latesteval: Addressing data contamination in language model evaluation through dynamic and time-sensitive test construction},
  author={Li, Yucheng and Guerin, Frank and Lin, Chenghua},
  booktitle={Proceedings of the AAAI Conference on Artificial Intelligence},
  volume={38},
  number={17},
  pages={18600--18607},
  year={2024}
}
Downloads last month
4,785
Edit dataset card

Data Sourcing report

powered
by Spawning.ai

No elements in this dataset have been identified as either opted-out, or opted-in, by their creator.

Space using RealTimeData/bbc_news_alltime 1

Collection including RealTimeData/bbc_news_alltime