For the first time in 20 years britain has four players through to the third round at wimbledon and kyle edmund is on Court Bidding to make it five. And coming up in the sport theyve been chasing him all summer and now Manchester United have agreed a fee of around £75 million for everton striker romelu lu ka ku. Good afternoon and welcome to the bbc news at one. Donald trump has described russias behaviour as destabilising and said that the United States is working to combat it. In a speech in poland in advance of the 620 summit in germany, President Trump also declared he was considering a very severe response to north Koreas Nuclear weapons programme. And he questioned whether the west has the will to survive the dire threats of terrorism, extremism and government bureaucracy. 0ur correspondent wyre davies reports. It is only the briefest of visits but as the trump motorcade rolled into poland, the american president found the country where his populist views on energy, immigration and little correctness are widely admired and shared. Political correctness. After talks with the polish President Donald Trump hailed the first export of American Natural Gas to poland, a deal which could reduce polands dependency on russian energy, and there was rare direct criticism of moscow over tensions in eastern europe. America is committed to maintaining peace and security in central and eastern europe. We are working with poland in response to russias actions and destabilising behaviour. But as many as 5000 american troops based in poland, donald trump repeated his demand that it was past time for other members of the Nato Alliance to get going, as he put it with their financial obligations. To get going, as he put it with theirfinancial obligations. But to get going, as he put it with their financial obligations. But his most direct comments were again reserved for north korea, the american leader calling on all nations to confront what he said was the global threat after pyongyangs latest missile test. It is a shame they are behaving this way but they are behaving in a very very dangerous manner. And something will have to be done about it. The Polish Government is done i did that donald trump chose here to set out his vision for americas relations with europe is delighted. The president will have been sued by his enthusiastic reception in poland, when his style and leadership is often ridiculed elsewhere on the continent will have been soothed. The crowd chance in his name as donald trump began one of the most important speeches of his presidency so important speeches of his presidency so far, warning about the threat of extremism to western civilisation. Chanting. Extremism to western civilisation. Chanting. Today we are in the west and we have to say there are dire threats to our security and to our way of life. You see what is happening out there, they are threats. We will confront them, we will win. But they are threats. Donald trump can expect a more hostile reception when he arrives in hamburg later for the 620 summit, anti globalisation and environmental demonstrators will be kept at bay but the american president may face tough questions from his fellow leaders on issues like Global Warming and protectionism. And we can speak to our correspondent adam easton whos in warsaw for us. Looking at those scenes, the president will have been pleased at the reception he got. He will have been very pleased about his reception. He got a Standing Ovation and it was a very enthusiastic crowd here in warsaw. The government did get in people from the countryside, the government says happens in many countries, they said, but having said that it was a very enthusiastic response and there was repeated people chanting usa, usa, and it is no surprise that he chose poland as the place in europe to deliver his first Keynote Speech will stop he was pretty much guaranteed that he would get a very warm welcome. Significantly a warmer welcome than he might have got in germany, perhaps. Not only have the people turned out to see him, but the Polish Government are very supportive and they like donald trump very much because there are many shared similarities and viewpoints against the little correctness and against liberalism political correctness. And against the establishment. There are many things they share in common. Adamant, thanks for joining many things they share in common. Adamant, Thanks Forjoining us. Adam. A quarter of Adult Care Services in england are not safe enough, according to the watchdog. The Care Quality Commission says most services are good, but the quality of some is Fragile And Precarious. In some cases, people are not getting enough to eat and drink, and not being given the right medication. This report by our social affairs correspondent, alison holt contains some distressing images. Mum, can you open your eyes just a little . Bernie jarvis carefully gives her mother lunch. The front room of the familys birmingham home has become 78 year old bettys bedroom. They want her close by after discovering the sort of poor care highlighted in todays report. Betty, who has dementia and heart problems, was in a nursing home. The family had concerns, so put in a secret camera. It soon showed a care worker pushing the chair betty was slumped in sharply towards a desk. Then, when betty objects to her top being changed, her head is slammed back into the chair. No, i dont want to. Ahh last february in court, the care worker accepted her actions were reckless rather than intentional. She was given a 12 Month Community order. Query everything. Dont let them dismiss you. Because they did with us for about eight months. And i wish we had pursued it a lot quicker than we did, because mum probably wouldnt have suffered the way she did. Todays report by inspectors says most care in england is good or outstanding. Even so, a quarter of all Services Including home care and Residential Homes failed on safety, and 37 of Nursing Homes were not safe enough. Also, when reinspected, quality of care in some good homes had deteriorated. What were seeing in these services that are deteriorating is how Fragile And Precarious quality in Adult Social Care is. Thats the reason why we have to make sure that everybody understands that quality matters. Providers have got to focus on that, and commissioners and funders have to make sure funding is available to ensure that people get the quality of care they deserve. Campaigners say the report is an indication of the pressure that social care is under because of increasing demand and underfunding. For individual older people and their families that means they are facing a degree of russian roulette. Will they get good care, will they get any care . Will it be affordable . Will the carer turn up . Will the care, if they get it in a care home, be safe . Will there be a nurse in a nursing home . These are such fundamental questions and its unfair to expect older people to be facing them at their most vulnerable time in their lives. The government says the poor care experienced by some families is completely unacceptable, and that as well as putting in more money, it will be consulting on how to play social care on a more secure footing for the future. And alisons here now. How surprising are these findings . dont think many people will that be that surprised if they work in the ca re that surprised if they work in the care sector, because we know that the number of older people needing support is increasing and it is worth saying there is an increase in the number of younger adults with disabilities who also need support. There is pressure from there. Adding to that pressure on the finances, enough money to pay for care. Those pressures a re enough money to pay for care. Those pressures are still there even though government money, extra government money, has been allocated, so that is creating problems. Whilst most of the care is good and most of the care homes are managing home Care Services under those circumstances, there is a large meant that if you have Difficulty Recruiting People and you have difficulty keeping people, especially nurses, the quality of your ca re especially nurses, the quality of your care is going to be affected that there is an argument. How fragile is this . Last autumn they said the Social Care Sector was at a tipping point. They looked at a wider range of measures, but on quality they used that phrase, the Chief Inspector described it as Fragile And Precarious and what they are worried about is specially, those services which were good and now deteriorating. It is worth drawing out the fact that if you are the one person, who doesnt get the visit they expected and whose medication is wrong, you are in a dire situation and you may not be able to speak up for yourself. Thanks forjoining us. An unemployed man from west sussex who killed two of his former girlfriends five years apart has been sentenced to life imprisonment. Robert trigg was convicted of the manslaughter of Caroline Devlin in 2006, and the murder of Susan Nicholson in 2011. Both women were found dead at their homes in worthing after a night out drinking with trigg. Duncan kennedy reports. A convicted double killer, but even on his way to be sentenced Robert Triggs arrogance and contempt was today made clear. They should be here, not me. His victims were Caroline Devlin and Susan Nicholson, both killed by robert trigg and he nearly got away with it. He claimed he had accidentally rolled over on to Susan Nicholson as they slept in their home in worthing, but he never called 999 leaving it to a neighbour to talk to the operator as he lurks in the background. Could you ask him to tell you why he thinks it looks like she is dead . Why do you think she is dead . I think the suffocation. But susans elderly pa rents suffocation. But susans elderly parents have used to accept it was an accident and hired their own pathologist who found susan had in Fa Ct Pathologist who found susan had in fact been suffocated by robert trigg and they say it has been a six year fight forjustice. It is a disgrace, really, the way we were treated, absolute disgrace. They treat it susan as if she didnt matter. Treated. As if she was of no consequence. Five years earlier there were no suspicions either about the death of Caroline Devlin but she had also been killed by trigg. Thejudge said he but she had also been killed by trigg. The judge said he was responsible for these senseless and brutal deaths and jailed him for a minimum of 25 years and the judge also praised the womens families for what she called their quiet and patient behaviour. Sussex police have now admitted that they made m ista kes have now admitted that they made mistakes in the initial investigation. Sussex police are very sorry that we didnt previously present those facts to the court but what they gave us was new evidence that we did not have at the time. Two deaths, five years apart, but no coincidence, and now the man responsible is beginning a life sentence. Duncan kennedy, bbc news. President trump will be at the summit of the 620 nations tomorrow where he and Vladimir Putin are expected to be holding their first face to face meeting. 0ur Diplomatic CorrespondentJames Robbins is there in hamburg. There could be a cooler reception both in the summit and outside . I think it will be a pretty testing few days for President Trump. Here in hamburg. I cant remember the build up to one of these Global Summits where the atmosphere has been so fractured between the leaders. That is inevitable when you acknowledge that President Trump is shedding some of americas leadership role, talking about America First and moving away from a global rules based system. His first test will be a meeting with chancellor angela merkel, shes very angry with him, frankly, for americas decision to walk away from the paris Climate Change agreement. She will insist to him that Climate Change remains one of her absolute priorities for this meeting, so that will be a testing start. And then reflect on what we have been hearing from poland, tomorrow, President Trump will have his first ever encounter as president with Vladimir Putin and i think that will be the prizefight of this summit. I say that because President Trump has today been talking about russia as being disruptive especially in the ukraine and he has been at knowledge in more openly than ever before that russia may have been responsible for intervention in the american elections. So that will be a real humdinger of a clash. James, many thanks. Our top story this lunchtime. Donald trump lashes out at both russia and north korea ahead of a meeting of a 620 summit. Following in the footsteps of gary lineker. The city striker is off to barcelona, tony duggan. Coming up in sport englands cricketers lose early wickets in the opening test of their series against south africa at lords, asjoe root leads out the team as captain for the first time. The bbc has found that more than 100 people in the uk have now been convicted of terrorism offences relating to syria and iraq. The director of Public Prosecutions has warned that would be extremists may try to carry out attacks in britain if theyre unable to travel abroad to join the Islamic State group. Our Home Affairs Correspondent june kelly reports. The face ofjihad in the uk. Over 100 people jailed for offences linked to so called Islamic State. The oldest, a Driving Instructor of 63 from luton. The youngest, a schoolboy, just 1a when he incited a Terrorist Act overseas. And a growing number of women and girls have also been drawn in. The Terror Attack on london bridge, one of three islamist inspired atrocities in recent months. Two of the men responsible are said to have wanted to go to syria tojoin is, but were unable to travel. They are among the rising ranks of thwarted foreign fighters, and the director of Public Prosecutions told me that could increase the Terrorist Threat here. We need to be acutely aware that if people cant go to syria, and we have seen this in some of the cases that we have prosecuted, they may plan an attack here, instead. Or they may do more to radicalise other people to attack. At this youth centre in east london they use activities like boxing to try to engage young people and fight the extremist ideology which they can be exposed to. Here they have years of experience in tackling radicalisation head on, and theres concern that government attempts to clamp down on extremism could end up alienating muslim communities. Going into communities, penetrating the wall of silence, having the credibility, having the trust without the community trust, without the community engagement, we cant have conversations, we cant have effective programmes. But especially since the attacks in london and manchester, there is a premium on community involvement, according to ministers. We have to work with the communities to deliver counter terrorism. Thats where we get information from. Diversions for young people if theyre being groomed, so we are incredibly alert to those issues. We do make sure to remind people that its really about safeguarding people from being exploited. Some of the hundred plus convicted have now served their sentences and are back in the community. 0n the battlefields of syria and iraq, is may be in retreat, but support for its ideology shows no sign of diminishing. June kelly, bbc news. And you can have a look at our database on the bbc website. Its the most comprehensive Public Record of its kind. Just go to bbc. Co. Uk news. The chairman of the iraq war inquiry, sirjohn chilcot, has told the bbc that tony blair was not straight with the nation in the run up to the war 1a years ago. Speaking a year after the report was published, sirjohn said mr blair was emotionally truthful in the evidence he gave the inquiry, but relied on beliefs rather than facts. A spokesperson for tony blair said sirjohn was clear that mr blair had not departed from the truth. Sirjohn chilcot spoke to our political editor, laura kuenssberg. Do you feel the politicians you dealt with were as straight with you as they ought to have been . I think id need to distinguish. They adopted different approaches. And i have to name names because these were public sessions. Tony blair is always and ever an advocate. He makes the most persuasive case he can. Not departing from the truth. But persuasion is everything. Advocacy for my position. Do you believe that tony blair was as straight with you and the public as he ought to have been . Can i slightly reword that to say, i think any Prime Minister taking a country into war has got to be straight with the nation and carry it, so far as possible, with him or her. I dont believe that was the case in the iraq instance. Do you feel he gave you the fullest version of events . I think he gave. I hesitate to say this, rather, but i think from his perspective and standpoint, it was emotionally truthful. I think that came out also in his Press Conference after the launch statement. I think he was under very great emotional pressure during those sessions, far more than the committee were. He was suffering. He was deeply engaged. In that State Of Mind and mood, you fall back on your instinctive skills and reactions, i think. But he was relying, you suggest, therefore on emotion, not fact . Both. Sirjohn chilcot speaking to our political editor, laura kuenssberg. Lets speak to our assistant political editor, norman smith. Do you think weve learned anything new . When it comes to iraq, nothing anyone said will probably change anyones views, so supporters of mr blair this morning again insisted there were nothing in those comments to suggest that mr blair had misled or lied to the British Public. Actually sirjohns comments were a bit more subtle than that. Hes suggesting that he was not straight with the British Public. What he means by that is once mr blair became convinced of the need for award and he sought to convince the British Public, regardless of the doubts, the difficulties, any counter arguments. He sought to almost bypassed the checks and bala nces almost bypassed the checks and balances in the political system, didnt involve the cabinet, he pushed to one side the legal advice, he sidelined the diplomats through his very, very close contact with 6eorge his very, very close contact with george bush, and in that sense sir john chilcot believes he wasnt straight with the British Public because in his view he became an advocate for war. Norman, thank you, norman smith. To lords now for the cricket and englands first test against south africa where the tourists have had a far better start than the home side. Englands new captain joe root won the toss, and, with promising conditions, elected to bat. But so far it hasnt gone the way he planned. Andy swiss is there for us. Yes, england arrived here with such high hopes. Their first yes, england arrived here with such high hopes. Theirfirst test yes, england arrived here with such high hopes. Their first test match in six months, and new captain, new optimism, but their batsmen have really struggled. 82 4 at lunch. Its been south africas morning. The first test of the summer and of an era, of englands fans were making their entrance at lords so was their new captain, joe root, all smiles at his first task proved a successful one. Tales, england. Root opted to the back row. Alastair cook, back in the ranks, soon back to the pavilion. Vernon philander with south africas breakthrough, cook gone for three. Moments later it got worse. Keatonjennings adjudged lbw, but was it . Jennings didnt review it and replays showed it was missing. He could have survived. But england were two down. How they needed a captains innings. Bruch emerging rather earlier than hed have liked and the nerves were jittering. Joe root emerging. Would he be caught . He should have been. An early let off and a rueful grin. There was no such reprieve for 6ary ballance, recalled to the team, trapped by morne morkel, england 393 trapped by morne morkel, england 39 3 and in a spot of bother. They needed to steady the ship and root was rediscovering his composure, leading by example at last a smattering of boundaries. But with lunch inside another setback and another lbw, Jonny Bairstow gone for ten, for england, and warning which promised so much has prop wood delivered only disappointed. Disappointment. 824 at 82 4 at lunch, england. Joe root is still there on 33. Hes beenjoined by vice captain ben stokes. A tough first morning for the new captain. England have some serious work to do this afternoon. Andy, many thanks. For the first time in 20 years, four british players are through to the third round of wimbledon andy murray, johanna konta, Heather Watson and Alijaz Bedene and kyle edmunds is on centre court right now trying to become the fifth player in that group with victory over frances 6ael monfils. 0ur Sports CorrespondentDavid 0rnstein is at wimbledon again for us. So often we get to this stage of wimbledon, with all home expectation shouldered by andy murray but yesterday, that changed. At last he has some company. First it was Heather Watson. Then came Alijaz Bedene. Johanna konta followed. And finally, andy murray. A day for british tennis to savour. Its obviously exciting for any tense fans in the country to have players going deep on, both the womens and the mens draw any tennis fans. It could get even better this afternoon when kyle edmund opens play on centre court against 6ael monfils, a huge occasion, a chance to cause a massive upset, but kyle edmund is refusing to get carried away. Its important not to get too high from the win and too low from the loss, its nice to win but its important not to get so emotionally attached to the event, its not the be all and end all as much as youd like to do well im sure if you asked lots of players you have to do your best, basically. Whether or not he wins today, this is the first time that four or more british singles players have reached round three of wimbledon since 1997 and the first time two women have made it there since 1986. One of them wasjo durie, and she welcomes the home Home Improvement after years of underachievement. Its nice to be talking about the brits, notjust winning one round but two or three rounds for a change. Weve got the structure much better now in british tennis. Tennis is available to play for everybody will stop you can get out there. Lets inspire a few more people to come and maybe end up on centre court. Elsewhere on day four the womens top seed Angelique Kerber continues her bid, as do seven time champion Roger Federer and mens second seed novak djokovic. Some of the games most established successful names and an example to the up and coming british contingent. Kyle edmund and 6ael monfils are on serve in the first set on centre court. Im delighted to bejoined by sam smith, former british number one. Is this genuine success we are seeing from the brits, genuine progress, or should we urge some caution . Winning makes everyone feel good. Of course they are not operating as team gb, but theyve all been very, very good players. They are all out there as individuals. They will push each other on. There is a great healthy rivalry between jo other on. There is a great healthy rivalry Betweenjo Konta and Heather Watson to see who can make it into the second week. This is very good for british tennis, isnt it . Much of the public will want to know how far they can go in the tournament. There are so many good players out there. The womens side is more open than ever before. Theres a great opportunity. But its really important to remember even just winning one match of the grand slam, just to get here to come win a match, is incredibly difficult. You cannot look too far ahead. What i would say isjo konta is a genuine contender, andy murray is the defending champion, and full Alijaz Bedene and kyle edmund and Heather Watson, its how far they can go, how far they can push into the second week and reassess from there. Its great. Thank you for your time, some. Kyle edmund is on court now. Hes trying to make it five britons in the third round for the first time in two decades. Tomorrow will see andy murray back in action. Romelu lukaku looks set to become the second biggest british transfer of all time, with a £75 million move from everton to Manchester United now on the cards. Hell be reunited with his former boss from chelsea, jose mourinho. 0n the other side of manchester, in the womens game, citys toni duggan has become the first english player since gary lineker in 1986 to move to barcelona. Shes been talking to our Sports Correspondent, natalie pirks. If you follow the womens game, you will be well aware of her name. Great header in will stop but now england striker toni duggans talent has been recognised on a truly global scale. Barcelona, the biggest clu b global scale. Barcelona, the biggest club in the world and the fact they even know my name is a massive honour. But to be going there to join them, to call it my club, to call it home, you know, im blown away by it. Barcelona doesnt tend to look to these shores for their players. Not since 6ary to look to these shores for their players. Not since gary lineker in 1986 has an english player signed for the catalan giants. Duggan is ready to shoulder the responsibility. To be the best you have to do that sometimes. Im not going therejust to have to do that sometimes. Im not going there just to live there, just to see the city, i want to be successful. I want to make my name at this club. I believe i will. After playing for england at the womens euros this summer she jokes shell focus on getting a new team mates to understand her accent. Fortu nately Football Team mates to understand her accent. Fortunately football is a universal language. Natalie pirks, bbc news. Time for a look at the weather. Heres sarah keith lucas. The main theme is heat and humidity. Theres a lot of sunshine around. Heres a Weather Watcher in merseyside. A bit of rain and cloud there. Theres some Cumulus Cloud bringing heavy downpours around the country. If we look at the Satellite Image we have more cloud towards the north west. Theres rain in merseyside, down towards willing in cambridgeshire, where the second weather watch picture comes from. Here we have some thunderstorms in the area. Some big threatening skies ca ptu red the area. Some big threatening skies captured in cambridgeshire. Well continue to see that threat of some heavy showers and sam saunders thunderstorms across east