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Choose an audio clipÌýyou would like to listen to from the most recent programme.
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0607 |
A procession of leaders has been passing through the general assembly chamber here: each prime minister or president putting a personal stamp on these summit discussions. |
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0609 |
We'll hear today the date of the planned switchover from analogue to digital television. |
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0615 |
Business News fromÌýGreg Wood. |
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0625 |
Sports News from Steve May.Ìý |
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0632 |
Prince Harry is 21 today. And he's given his first proper interviews.Ìý |
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0635 |
Tony Blair has been speaking to theÌýUnited Nations about development, and arguing that it has taken significant steps to help fight terrorism. |
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0637 |
We'll hear about the government's plans for newÌýanti-terror laws when it sends more details of its proposed new bill to the opposition parties later this morning.Ìý |
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0640 |
Todays Newspaper review comes from the UK and Baghdad. |
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0642 |
AÌýfascinating survey of people around the world about the way they are governed has been done by 91Èȱ¬ World Service. |
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0648 |
Part time workers are only doing a fraction of what they're capable of because employers give more responsibility to their full time colleagues. |
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0708 |
Tony Blair has spoken to the UN about terrorism. Marianna Baabar, the Diplomatic Correspondent for the Pakistani newspaper, The News. |
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0714 |
The government's obligation onÌýpower companies to invest in renewables.The Energy minister Malcolm Wicks. |
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0718 |
Last week British Gas put up its prices. Today it's reported its latest profits. Greg Wood with the business news. |
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0720 |
Yesterday 180 people, mostly shias, were killledÌý in Bagdad.ÌýAli Al Bayati is a counsellor at the Iraqi embassy in London and a spokesman for the SCIRI, the supreme council for the Islamic revolution in Iraq. |
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0724 |
Steve May with the sports news. |
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0730 |
Time is running out for old analogue TV's. The Culture Secretary,ÌýTessa Jowell is expected to announce that the switch to digital-only television broadcasts will begin in 2008. Mike Thomson reports. |
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0739 |
We find out what's happened to theÌýSeven Up generation. Now they are forty nine.Ìý |
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0744 |
ThoughtÌýforÌýthe Day. The speaker is the Reverend Angela Tilby. |
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0747 |
The president of the World Bank, Paul Wolfwitz and the European trade commissioner, Peter Mandelson, on free trade. |
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0810 |
Prince Harry is 21 today. He tells us about his feelings about his Sandhurst training, his father's remarriage and that Nazi costume. |
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0822 |
A statue of Alison Lapper will be unveiled on the fourth plinth in Trafalgar Square today. Alison was born without arms and with stunted legs and is portrayed naked and pregnant in her statue. She joins us. |
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0825 |
Tony Blair has spoken with surprising modesty about his expectations for the summit.Ìý Bob Geldof is predictably optimistic while Kumia Naidoo of the Global Call to Action against Poverty refused to share that guarded optimism. |
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0831 |
Conservative party chairmanÌý Francis Maud talks about Michael Howard's proposed changes to the process of choosing a new leader for the party.Ìý |
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0833 |
Business news from Greg Wood.ÌýÌý |
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0840 |
Mark Sarwotka and Jim McAulsen review what has possibly been a rather disappointing conference for the TUC.Ìý |
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0850 |
SevenÌýforeign nationals have been detained on grounds of national security. |
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0850 |
It's now been a month since the Indonesian Government signed a peace deal with separatist rebels in the tsunami affected province ofÌýAceh . |
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0855 |
James Naugtie on the much anticipated face off between George Galloway and Christopher Hitchens. |
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