18/10/2014
Morning news and current affairs. Including Yesterday in Parliament, Sports Desk, Thought for the Day and Weather.
Last on
Clips
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Disability and the minimum wage
Duration: 08:01
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90 years on: First UK-New Zealand radio link recreated
Duration: 03:22
Today's running order
0722
One of the most important moments in the history of radio is about to be re-created in the science block of a school in north London. Sima Kotecha is there.
0732
Senegal has been declared free of Ebola -- they had a case at the beginning of the outbreak but the managed to stop it spreading. Aboubakry Tall is Oxfam regional director for West Africa.
0734
What's happening with the financial markets? They've been all over the place these last weeks... mostly down. There was a big rally yesterday but shares are worth less at the end of the week than they were at the beginning. Much less. So much so that even the head of the International Monetary Fund, Christine Lagarde, went public on it all. Jim Rogers is one of the world's most influential investors - he was the co founder with George Soros of the Quantam fund.
0748
There was an almighty political row when Ed Miliband ambushed David Cameron in the House of Commons on Wednesday with comments that one of ministers, Lord Freud, had made some weeks ago. He'd been recorded secretly saying that some disabled people were not worth the full wage (the minimum wage) and suggesting that if someone wanted to work for 拢2 an hour that might be worth thinking about. Labour demanded his resignation and so did some disability rights campaigners. But then a backlash set in and many people - including parents with disabled children - said Lord Freud was right. Candice Baxter's 33 year old daughter Annabel has Downs Syndrome. Sue Bott is Policy Director at聽Disability Rights UK.
0810
Labour says it will spend three quarters of a million pounds on improving early diagnosis for cancer patients if it wins the next General Election. The measure would be paid for out of the extra 拢2.5bn a year extra funding for the NHS which Ed Miliband promised in his speech at the Labour party conference. So do the party's figures add up, and should this be a priority for the NHS? Suzy Lishman, Vice-President and President Elect of the Royal College of Pathologists and Liz Kendall, shadow health minister.
George Weah, is regarded as one of the greatest African footballers of all time. He ran for the presidency of Liberia in 2005 and as Vice President in 2011 on a ticket against the current president, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. His country is now at the centre of the Ebola crisis. More than half of the 4,5000 people killed so far by this outbreak were Liberian. Our reporter Zoe Conway spoke to George Weah about the mistakes made in handling the disease and what more needs to be done to help.
0820
She's vowed to get the German army into shape and step up it's involvement in military action overseas. Ursula Von der Leyen is Germany's first female defence minister. She's also been widely tipped to become Germany's next chancellor. Jenny Hill reports from Berlin.
0831
The family and friends of at least seven Britons trekking in the Himalayas - who still haven't made contact since snowstorms hit mountain ranges there on Thursday - are appealing for information. They've posted their names on a Facebook page set up by a group trying to find those who are missing. Andrew North, the 91热爆's South Asia correspondent reports.
0837
Remarks by a Bank of England policymaker this week put a new cast on then seemingly rosy state of the UK's economic recovery. The "agony and ecstacy" of a very strong economic recovery - which is essentially leaving millions of people worse off. It's a narrative that plays into the hands of both UKIP, who point out how immigration has suppressed pay at the bottom end of the income scale, and Labour, who continue to highlight a cost of living crisis. Nicola Smith is chief economist at the TUC and Tim Congdon, a former UKIP spokesman, is director of the Institute for monetary research at Buckingham University.
0846
On Friday the military in Nigeria said it has agreed a ceasefire with the Islamist group, Boko Haram, which will lead to the release of the 219 schoolgirls kidnapped by the group six months ago. The military has in the past released statements about the conflict in north east Nigeria that have turned out to be false, so many Nigerians remain to be convinced that these latest claims of a ceasefire are true. We hear from Oby Ezekwesili, a former Nigerian government minister and one of the organisers of the Bring Back Our Girls protests, and Dr Doyin Okupe, senior special adviser on public affairs to Nigerian President Goodluck Jonathan.
0853
If you're blind or visually impaired you may well use a cane or "white stick" to get around. But not everyone who is blind feels the same way. Many feel there's a stigma attached to it. One woman wants to start a campaign to make the white stick acceptable- and to take away what she sees as the stigma of walking with a cane. Laura Westcott (who is fully sighted) from SoundforSight.com, a charity raising awareness of the genetic eye disorder Retina Pigmentosa explained why it was important. Rachael Stevens, from charity RP Fighting Blindness, who has Retinitis Pigmentosa and started using a white cane a month ago, and Joe Rizzo-Naudi, who is partially sighted and doesn't use a cane, discuss.
Broadcast
- Sat 18 Oct 2014 07:0091热爆 Radio 4