Plus, have voters changed their minds on Brexit?
| Brexit: Talks in final day, ahead of key summit |
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| Harry Dunn crash: Trump rules out suspect's return |
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| The parents of Harry Dunn, the 19-year-old who died in a road crash in Northamptonshire in August, have met US President Donald Trump at the White House. Charlotte Charles and Tim Dunn want Anna Sacoolas, reportedly the wife of a US intelligence officer, to return to the UK to answer questions from police about her suspected role in what happened. But Mrs Sacoolas, who claimed diplomatic immunity and left the UK without letting police know, will not do so, Mr Trump said. "We still want justice for Harry and we will take it as far as we possibly can to ensure that that's done," Ms Charles said. The BBC looks at how diplomatic immunity works. | |
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| Turkey-Syria offensive: Erdogan rejects US ceasefire call |
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| Turkey has rejected the US's call for a ceasefire in northern Syria, with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan insisting its offensive against Kurdish fighters there will continue. "We are not worried about any sanctions," he said. US Vice-President Mike Pence and US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo are preparing to go to Turkey to try to broker a truce. And Russia, an ally of Syria - which itself has agreed a deal with Kurdish forces - has said it will not allow clashes to take place between Turkish and Syrian troops. The fighting began last week after Donald Trump decided to remove US soldiers from northern Syria. It's a complex and fast-moving situation. Here we explain why Turkey's offensive is happening, and what could happen. | |
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| | | | | "This is not a story about the Yorkshire Ripper," says the website for a new play called There Are No Beginnings. That is to let people know the play sort of does have something to do with the serial killer - but that he's not in it, nor are his victims, and it's certainly not the well-told story of the police's long, flawed hunt for him in the late 1970s. It tells a different story, about the fear his five-year reign of terror instilled among women - who effectively found themselves under a curfew - and how those women ultimately pulled together and stood up to the impact it had on their lives. | |
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| | | | The possibility of a Brexit deal leads most of the papers. The Guardian says Boris Johnson is "close" to agreeing one, while the Financial Times reports that the EU is pushing for more concessions. The Times says any deal reached might not actually be finalised by the 31 October Brexit deadline, with "technical details" possibly delaying it until 1 January. Elsewhere, Metro leads on charges against the Bulgarian Football Association following the racist abuse of England players on Monday. And the Daily Mail reports on calls for cervical cancer tests to be made more convenient. | |
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| If you watch one thing today |
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| If you listen to one thing today |
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| If you read one thing today |
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| | | 09:30 The Consumer Price Index rate of inflation for September is revealed. |
| | | | 10:30 A symposium at Arsenal's Emirates Stadium looks at health challenges in professional football. |
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| | | | 1978 Polish Cardinal Karol Wojtyla becomes the first non-Italian Pope in more than 400 years, taking the name John Paul II. |
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