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Jane McDonald says 'I'm sorry' as BBC The One Show host shares huge 'cruising' news

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Jane McDonald says 'I'm sorry' as BBC The One Show host shares huge 'cruising' news


Loose Women star and singer Jane McDonald appeared on The One Show on Monday to discuss her new book but conversation later turned to her big "cruising" anniversary

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Birmingham Mass Shooting. Here’s What We Know

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Birmingham Mass Shooting. Here's What We Know

Authorities are offering a reward of up to $100,000 in exchange for more information about multiple shooters who opened fire in Birmingham, Alabama, over the weekend in a mass shooting that left four people dead and 17 others injured.

The shooting took place on Saturday night in Birmingham’s Five Point South neighborhood when officers responded to reports of shots fired and found multiple victims. Five of the 17 injured still remain in the hospital as of Monday, according to authorities.

Birmingham Police Chief Scott said some of the deceased have “extensive criminal histories” and “because of that, there’s often times motivation from others and there’s people who are willing to pay to have them killed.” 

Authorities theorize that the shooters initially sought to harm one person, but bystanders were also injured. The FBI and Crime Stoppers are each offering $50,000 for tips that lead to an arrest or conviction of those involved. “If you, or you know someone, who has information about those involved in Saturday’s mass shooting, know that you can remain anonymous,” FBI Birmingham Special Agent in Charge Carlton Peeples said at the news conference.

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There are currently no suspects in custody. 

What happened? 

Officers first received calls alerting them to the shooting at Five Points South, an entertainment district in the city, around 11 p.m Saturday, Birmingham police officer Truman Fitzgerald said during Monday’s press conference. Sources on scene say that multiple people pulled up in a vehicle, got out, and shot the victims before fleeing the site in the same vehicle. Investigators said during Sunday’s press release that they believe that shooters used gun conversion devices, or illegal items that can be applied to firearms to turn them into fully automatic weapons that discharge all bullets in seconds.

More than 100 shell casings were found at the shooting site, according to Thurmond. 

Officers say that when they arrived they found several victims, three of which were “unresponsive” —two men and one woman—that were later declared dead, according to authorities. A fourth victim was transported to the hospital, where they later died.

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Who are the victims? 

 The victims include: Anitra Holloman, 21; Roderick Lynn Patterson Jr., 26; Tahj Booker, 27; and Carlos McCain, 27.

So far in 2024, there have been 404 mass shootings in the U.S., per the Gun Violence Archive. U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek Murthy declared firearm violence a public health crisis in June.

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KKR wins EU approval for Telecom Italia deal 

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Telecom Italia (TIM) logo is seen displayed in this illustration taken, May 3, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/Files

Deals

Reuters exclusively reported that U.S. investment firm KKR was set to secure unconditional EU antitrust approval for its up to 22-billion-euro ($24 billion) acquisition of Telecom Italia’s (TIM) fixed-line network. The story was later confirmed by the European Commission. The deal is significant as it marks the first time that a former phone monopoly in a major European country is divesting its landline grid. 

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Market Impact

The deal is significant as it marks the first time that a former phone monopoly in a major European country is divesting its landline grid.

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Topics of Interest: Deals

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Sectors: Telecommunications

Regions: Europe

Win Types: Exclusivity

Story Types: Exclusive / Scoop

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Customer Impact: Important Regional Story

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Fear and tension in Lebanon under deadly Israeli bombardment

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Fear and tension in Lebanon under deadly Israeli bombardment
EPA civil defense employee comforts woman who fled southern lebanon, in beirutEPA

A Lebanese civil defence member comforts a woman who arrived in Beirut after fleeing the south

Across southern Lebanon, families scrambled together belongings and headed north in cars and trucks and on motorcycles as the Israeli military struck targets it said were linked to the Lebanese Shia armed group Hezbollah.

Some residents reported receiving warnings in the form of text messages and voice recordings from the Israeli military to leave areas near the Iran-backed group’s positions.

Zahra Sawli, a student in the southern town of Nabatieh told the BBC’s Newshour programme the bombardment was intense.

“I woke up at 6am to the sound of bombing. By noon it started to get really intense and I saw a lot of strikes in my area.”

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“I heard a lot of glass shattering.”

Unlike many, she and those she was with did not leave the house – they didn’t dare, she said.

“Where are we supposed to go? A lot of people are still stuck on the streets. A lot of my friends are still stuck in traffic because a lot of people are trying to flee,” she said.

By the middle of the day roads north towards Beirut were clogged with traffic, with vehicles heading towards the capital on both sides of a six-lane coastal highway.

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Other images showed people walking along the beach in the southern city of Tyre as smoke rose from air strikes in the countryside inland.

The BBC spoke to one family of five who had arrived in Beirut on a single motorbike.

From a village in the south, they were heading to Tripoli in the north. They were exhausted.

“What do you want us to say? We just had to flee,” the father said.

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Hassan Harfoush family of five arrived in Beirut on a bikeHassan Harfoush

“What do you want us to say? We just had to flee,” this man told the BBC

By Monday evening the Lebanese health ministry reported that 492 people had been killed and more than 1,600 injured in the bombardment. It said at least 35 children were among those killed. The Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it had carried out 1,100 strikes over the previous 24 hours.

That included an air strike in southern Beirut that the IDF said had targeted a senior Hezbollah commander.

In Beirut too there was widespread anxiety. As people from the south arrived in the capital in cars with suitcases strapped to the top, some of the city’s residents were themselves leaving.

Israel has warned people to evacuate areas where it says Hezbollah is storing weapons – but it also sent recorded warnings to people in Beirut districts not considered Hezbollah strongholds including Hamra, an area home to government ministries, banks and universities.

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Parents rushed to pick up their children from school after receiving more warnings to leave the area.

One father, Issa, took his son out of school, telling Reuters news agency: “[We’re here] because of the phone calls.

“They’re calling everyone and threatening people by phone. So we’re here to take my boy from school. The situation is not reassuring,” he said.

Reuters People carry their belongings across a beach as they leave Tyre - one of the southern Lebanon cities hit on MondayReuters

People carry their belongings as they leave the beachside city of Tyre – one of the southern Lebanon cities hit on Monday

Mohammed, a Palestinian man on the road with his wife, spoke to the BBC on the way out of Beirut.

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When asked if he would stay in the capital he said: “In Lebanon nowhere is safe, Israel is saying they are going to bombard everywhere. Now they threatened this neighbourhood, so where should we go?”

“It’s scary, I don’t know what to do – work, go home, no idea what to do.”

Meanwhile as a BBC crew set up on one side of the road, a taxi driver called out asking if they knew of a fuel crisis unfolding. “Too many people are coming to Beirut,” he said.

Schools have been hastily converted into shelters for the streams of evacuees coming from the south. On a government order, schools in Beirut and Tripoli as well as eastern Lebanon were established as shelters.

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The BBC was at a classroom at a public school in Bir Hasan, west Beirut on Monday which was being prepared for people coming from the Bekaa Valley – a Hezbollah stronghold in north-eastern Lebanon which Israel said it was targeting too.

The classrooms were stacked with mattresses but would be fully occupied by the end of the day, workers said.

EPA Vehicles queue to get fuel at a gas station in BeirutEPA

There have been long queues at petrol stations in Beirut

Meanwhile Lebanon’s hospitals were also ordered to cancel all non-elective surgeries on Monday as physicians braced for a wave of casualties and injuries.

Despite the tense and uncertain atmosphere in Beirut, some people were defiant.

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“If a total war happens, we should stand as Lebanese people together regardless of our political affiliations because at the end of the day, our country is getting bombed,” one man told the BBC.

Others were simply resigned to the violence.

“If they want war, what can we do? It was imposed on us. We cannot do anything,” shop owner Mohammed Sibai told Reuters.

Mohammed, a 57-year-old in the southern Beirut suburb of Dahieyh – Hezbollah’s main power base in the capital – told the BBC he had “survived all the wars since 1975” so “it’s normal for me”.

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“I will not leave, I will be in my house,” he said.

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Keir Starmer to argue tough decisions needed for UK ‘national renewal’

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Sir Keir Starmer will warn that difficult times lie ahead for the UK as he tries to tackle an array of deep-seated challenges facing his government, but will insist that tough decisions taken now will lead to “national renewal”. 

He will say on Tuesday there are “no easy answers” and “no false hope” as he issues a stern message in his first speech as UK prime minister to the annual Labour party conference in Liverpool. 

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Starmer will describe a country in which there are “decimated public services leaving communities held together by little more than goodwill”.

But he will argue that despite tight public finances his government can deliver a brighter future and “open the door to national renewal”, enabling the rebuilding of Britain.

Starmer has enjoyed only a brief honeymoon as the UK’s first Labour prime minister since 2010 and now faces falling poll ratings and infighting within his administration.

Last week saw damaging revelations about donations of clothing worth thousands of pounds made to Starmer, his wife, deputy leader Angela Rayner and chancellor Rachel Reeves during a cost of living crisis.

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Starmer will try to reassure delegates in Liverpool — and the wider public — that the government is already taking steps to change the country.

He will cite planning reforms, settling the doctors’ strike, new solar projects, new offshore wind farms, an end to one-word Ofsted judgments, a ban on MPs’ second jobs, a new “border security command”, a ban on no-fault evictions and legislation to nationalise the railways. “And we’re only just getting started,” he will say.

The Labour leadership is drawing up a Budget and spending review next month, which are likely to include tax rises and continuing constraints on public spending given the country’s high levels of debt.

Starmer will say that ministers will have to rely on innovative reforms rather than turning on the spending taps.

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“I have to warn you, working people do want more decisive government. They do want us to rebuild our public services and they do want that to lead to more control in their lives. But their pockets are not deep — not at all,” he will caution. “So we have to be a great reforming government.”

Keir Starmer reheares his speech sitting on steps with Labour slogans and a British flag behind him
Starmer rehearses his keynote speech. which he will deliver to the Labour party Conference on Tuesday © Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire

The Labour leadership has been walking a tightrope between warning that public finances are eye-wateringly tight while also offering a glimmer of hope for the future.

Ministers have claimed to have found a fiscal “black hole” of about £22bn that needs to be plugged — leading to predictions of tax rises and spending cuts. 

“The politics of national renewal are collective. They involve a shared struggle. A project that says, to everyone, this will be tough in the short term, but in the long term, it’s the right thing to do for our country. And we all benefit from that,” Starmer will say. 

Labour delegates will on Wednesday vote on a motion calling for the government to reverse its cuts to the winter fuel allowance, an issue that has prompted criticism from unions, charities and many of the party’s own MPs.

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The prime minister will repeat his five priorities of higher economic growth, a better NHS, stronger borders, more opportunities for children and clean energy from low-carbon sources. 

He will also touch on how he dragged the Labour party towards the political centre ground from its previous, more left-wing incarnation under former leader Jeremy Corbyn.  

“I changed the Labour party to restore it to the service of working people. And that is exactly what we will do for Britain. But I will not do it with easy answers. I will not do it with false hope,” he will say. 

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Keir Starmer to promise ‘light at the end of tunnel’ in key speech

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Keir Starmer to promise 'light at the end of tunnel' in key speech

Sir Keir Starmer will warn of a “shared struggle” ahead but say there is “light at the end of the tunnel” for the country, in his first speech to the Labour Party conference as prime minister.

The PM will say “tough” decisions need to be taken now to “build a new Britain”.

Since winning power, the Labour government has painted a bleak picture of the public finances – but in his speech the PM will seek to present a more positive vision for the future.

However, he is facing anger from unions and many Labour members over the decision to cut winter fuel payments for millions of pensioners.

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A row over donations to Sir Kier and other Labour ministers has also dampened the mood of the conference in Liverpool – which is taking place less than three months after the party’s landslide election victory.

In his speech, Sir Keir will promise a future of “national renewal”.

“The politics of national renewal are collective. They involve a shared struggle,” he will say.

“A project that says, to everyone, this will be tough in the short term, but in the long term – it’s the right thing to do for our country.

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“And we all benefit from that.”

Echoing the message his Chancellor Rachel Reeves gave in her speech on Monday, Sir Keir will say that “if we take tough long-term decisions now” there will be “light at the end of the tunnel”.

However, he will warn against “easy answers” and offering “false hope”.

Labour has accused the previous Conservative government of leaving a £22bn “black hole” of unfunded spending commitments in the public finances – something the Tories have disputed.

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Sir Keir will repeat the claim in his speech, saying the Tories have also “decimated public services, leaving communities held together by little more than goodwill”.

But he will warn the pockets of working people “are not deep” and public services will need “reform” as well as investment.

“Just because we all want low taxes and good public services, does not mean that the iron law of properly funding policies can be ignored,” he will add.

Labour has repeatedly promised it will not raise taxes on “working people”, including VAT, National Insurance and income tax.

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However, the chancellor has already said she will have to raise some other taxes in October’s Budget because of the state of the public finances.

The government has also blamed the £22bn black hole for the decision to cut winter fuel payments.

A debate and non-binding vote on the issue had been expected on Monday but could now take place on Wednesday, when many activists will have left the conference.

Unite, which is among the trade unions calling for the cut to be reversed, branded the delay an “outrage”.

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Canadian lender BMO to wind down retail auto finance business 

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weekly_09.17.23_BMO-RESULTS

Business & Finance

Reuters was ahead in reporting that Bank of Montreal (BMO) is winding down its retail auto finance business and shifting focus to other areas in a move that will result unspecified number of job losses, Canada’s third largest bank.

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Market Impact

The move, applicable in Canada and the United States, comes after BMO’s bad debt provisions in retail trade surged to C$81 million ($60 million) in the quarter ended July 31 compared with a recovery of C$9 million a year ago, in a sign of growing stress consumers face from a rapid rise in borrowing costs. 

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Type: Reuters Best

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Sectors: Business & FinanceFinancial Services

Regions: AmericasNorth America

Countries: Canada

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Media Types: Text

Customer Impact: Significant National Story

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