See Radio 5 Live it's 4 o'clock here with the news is Alex Ross and there's more problems for our politicians and in sports heroes a Marine years 1st home game as Tottenham manager sees them pull off a comeback win in the Champions League this is b.b.c. 5 life. Jeremy Corbin has insisted there's no place whatsoever and Semitism in labor but refuse to apologize for his record on tackling it he was asked to say sorry 4 times in a b.b.c. Interview after the chief rabbi criticized how the party had dealt with the issue our political correspondent is nakedly this is an issue that has plagued the Labor party for outwards of 3 years now is not a new one yet there is a feeling within the Jewish community that the Labor leadership has just been unable to deal with if you take the words the chief rabbi they are scathing settling there's any doubt this will damage Jeremy Coren we just can't be sure of the extent of that the s.n.p. Lead in Nicholas their moons the party's election manifesto later with a warning that Bracks it is nowhere near should also say there's worse to come if Boris Johnson wins a majority and correspondent is James Shaw all of which means the s.n.p. Will be willing to support a minority Labor government but only at a price $1.00 part of that price will be an independence referendum another will be a big increase in spending on the n.h.s. Across the United Kingdom that they say will amount to $4000000000.00 pounds extra within 5 years in Scotland alone Donald Trump has been invited to next week's public impeachment hearings in Congress all to send a lawyer to ask questions on his behalf Democrats say he should either take part in the process or stop complaining about how it works fresh talks will be held later today to try to prevent a strike at one of Britain's biggest rail companies members of the r. And. Te union working for Southwestern railway edgy to walk out for $27.00 days in December and a long running dispute about guards on trains new research suggests more than half of parents with children under the age of 5 experienced loneliness at least some of the time the figures from the charity Corum family and child care also show twice as many parents on the lowest incomes often feel isolated Harding is from the charity we know that in large parts of the country best really good activities already available but sometimes that just they just not accessible to pets so sweet example in one more look malaria we found that while their worst day in plays and wine times and most activities going on in the town the buses will be places that haven't they were just saying they couldn't afford to go Twitter is to begin deleting accounts that haven't been active for at least 6 months as part of a huge hole the site says it's because users who do not logon can't agree to it updated previously policies users have until the 11th of December show has the support Josie Marino's Tottenham produced a thrilling fall to victory over m.p.r. Course in the Champions League in the manager's 1st home game in charge Tottenham were 2 nil down until just before half time that when put them through to the last 16 elsewhere Manchester City drew 11 at home with Chuck Todd on the ask to qualify as group winners Leeds United needed a Jack Harrison header in the 87th minute to win one Miller reading takes leads back up to the top of the championship the England cricket head coach Chris Silverwood will return home after day 2 of the 2nd Test match in New Zealand following a family bereavement assistant coaches Graham Thorpe and Paul Collingwood as well as Test captain Joe Root will take charge for the remainder of the New Zealand tour and bath will miss England back Antony Watson with a knee injury until at least Christmas club captain Charlie Ewell's who also has a knee problem will be out for a minimum of several weeks as well while in the pro 14 Alan Clarke has lost his job as Ospreys head coach that follows their poor start to the season this. Space b.b.c. Radio 5 Live on digital b.b.c. Sallis. The well to do in mild unsettled for many of us we shall is in some longer spells of rain windy in the south Northern Ireland in 7 Scotland will see the best of any dry weather highs of 9 in Edinburgh and 10 in them in him . That still leaves clear position in the Champions League places since 8 it's a double from $555.00 against Chelsea and from 8. Feet is your station this is 5 life. Good morning on. The u.k. On digital and on like a mirage all night more than 30 years ago scientists discovered the ozone hole over the Antarctic and its connection to C.F.C.'s which those days were used as an air assault for Palin thanks to a concerted campaign the use of C.F.C.'s was curbed and it tried to 16 the journal Science reports of the bay or so on the whole has become to feel there is no such good news about the concentration of c o 2 in the street 10000 he'll missions cop report of the un and fireman program says there's no sign of c o 2 emissions peaking harder to hear the gap between actual emissions and target emissions is still huge still rising by one percent. Where last week in Malta there were so and the rest very high profile arrest of a businessman in connection with the murder of a journalist. That's make her. Killed by a car bomb and 2017 as she researched corruption the country's political establishment Well this week 2 cabinet ministers step down while a prime minister's chief of staff has had to resign both the tourism minister Conrad Mysie and the economy minister Christian Cardona have denied involvement in the death of Muscovites the main kill Arctic scenes in The Maltese pollen as police investigation Gallus pace rival M.P.'s clashed in Parliament on Tuesday and opposition members shouted mafias prime minister Joseph Muska walked 10 Kevin Corley reports the dramatic developments in Malta suggest that the investigation into the murder of Daphne Corona glitzier has taken a step closer to the halls of power she made her name exposing corruption and organized crime in the state and its links to powerful political figures police have now made 5 arrests among them you're going Fenech will be businessman with links to members of the government who was detained as he attempted to leave Malta on a yacht as a result Keech the chief of staff of the prime minister Joseph most got resigned and has been questioned by police his resignation was 50 followed by that of the tourism minister Conrad Mitzi and the so-called self suspension from office of the economy minister Chris Cardona. Well the anger in Parliament was virtually unprecedented the editor in chief of The Times of Malta Hammond Gretsch says the anger was really remarkable given the Prime Minister's widespread popular support Joseph must cost is a very popular prime minister he has won successive elections which is slights his extremist charming you know his is very popular with which his supporters what I'm seeing tonight at least. Where people were even throwing eggs at his car I mean this is quite unprecedented full time especially for a country which doesn't really do protests well as Kevin said the whole things even became tof by the arrest of a businessman called the organ Fenech detained by armed officers after his yacht was intercepted we reached Corrine Vella she is the sister of the investigative journalist who was assassinated that snake. And I asked Corrine if she could bring us up to date on happenings since last week since Mr Fenech was arrested there have been 2 resignations that the prime minister's chief of staff Keech Kendry and his minister to Risen convent Mitzi both men had been named in the Panama papers both name had come both men had companies in Panama which were meant to receive money from a company called $17.00 black and that company is owned by your gun Fenech that this company was and was secretly set up in the United Arab Emirates. And the money going through it seems to be have been connected to a big project. Involving a power station which was a key platform for Wisconsin lection in 2013 so what we're looking at is very likely a conspiracy to get into government and turn Morton to a laundromat for money goodness me it puts a maze pressure on the prime minister doesn't yes it does because he cannot get out of this without you know he can't get out of it on tainted he should go he should have gone years ago he has protected both men while he was in office and now are in this absurd situation where a sitting prime minister has spent the last few years protecting his chief of staff who is now implicated in an assassination investigation and the person who was killed Stephanie Khurana Gullit Sarah was I'm sure covering corruption at the heart of government people have asked me many times you know about what she white how did she do this she wasn't covering crime she wasn't covering corruption she was covering politics if you arrive at corruption and crime from covering politics that tells you everything you need to know about why she was killed. How do you view this investigation I mean now it things really seem to be moving why why do you know why things are suddenly moving so fast I don't know why things are moving fast I do realize one thing however that what we're seeing today could and should have happened much sooner I'm only speculating here I don't know for certain because I don't have 1st hand mation but it looks very much like it was direct interference in the investigation from an xterm assertion. Well given the recent arrests it would have not been an external source necessarily it would have been the very people who have we had we now know are implicated in the murder. We spoke to a journalist last week who was a colleague of yours you have your sister and who has continued investigating after her death and she talked about a climate of fear start that situation that she herself has faced you would you would you say that there is a climate of fear in Malta right in this investigation. I mean look we once lived in a country with someone could be careless and now we live in a country with someone who has been killed for exposing corruption so anybody following following on from that news work is going to be working in an environment where you we know know for certain you will be killed for exposing corruption so yes of course there is a climate of fear today's resignations haven't have you know are an improvement of what we had before but we are not necessarily living in a safer place we're living in a place where a prime minister retains his position even though his chief of staff is a murder suspect is implicated in a murder investigation something is very wrong in the country it's situations are not working individuals are quite obviously because investigations will not have come this far if there weren't individuals pursuing the cause but institutionally mortar has serious problems and the prime minister is one of them and he has to go . Koren Vella whose sister the journalist stuff a car one ugly c.e.o. Was murdered in 2017. Well there is another climate report out as pretty as pretty here Carling stuff it calls for deeper and faster cuts in our emissions of go of greenhouse gases and finds that 3 quarters of the world's 20 while his countries have no timeline for a target of Net 0 Emissions the un Environment Programme in its annual emissions GAAP Reports says global fossil fuel emissions need to fall by nearly 8 percent a year over the next decade Secretary-General of the un and Tonio good terrace it's absolutely essential to for Will Germany example and to achieve common Alternately if you buy 2050 governments must adopt commitments that are much stronger than those in the pennies agreements and Climate Action offers long term economic and financial advantages for those that will seize the opportunity while I was on a spike a little bit take a little bit slower and find out what the u.n. Environment Program report actually says about the gap between aspiration and reality and we're joined by Mae Bovey who is the chairman of the Climate Campaign street $50.00 or it funded by the traffic journalist Bill McKibben and she joins us from Los Angeles hello made Hello there well this this u.n. Environment Program report emissions cop report is known its 10th year and a basic level at reports the difference between what we say we want to do and what we do don't do what I do do I say but we got that their own way right and. Completely her and we're seeing right now report after report that is making the same statement very clear from scientists that we need rapid transformative change that's going to keep fossil fuels in the ground in order to slow the climate crisis and the question we're asking is how many reports will it take to say what social movements young people organizations like 350 dot org have been saying for years and years and this report is yet another stark reminder of how far we have yet to go what is different this year is we are seeing incredible surging momentum from young people who are so impacted who are seeing their future on the line and who in September rose up in historic numbers to say enough is enough so that has the potential we believe to help turn this around. Talk about China because in China there were a lot of protests by by young people you know a few years ago who were really fed up with the air quality that they were being made to put up with and it did look as if China was doing some remarkable things but we're now going to report that in all the provinces the construction of coal fired power stations continues virtually unabated in that commit more coal fired power stations in China than ever just how much of this is is now if you like out of our control as citizens of Britain or the United States for example. Well it's a really important question because it is absolutely still something that people in the United States and Britain have much much to do about and our country are very much heading in the opposite direction we have in the United States a climate denier in chief in the person of Donald Trump who doesn't even acknowledge the issue is happening and has rolled back countless regulations and opened up the coasts to drilling among many many other things so there's no question that it is a tough competition for which country and the g 20 is doing the worst when it comes to the climate crisis and so while there's no question that each country situation is different everyone has to be taking this issue of board much much differently than we are seeing you know what's happening next week is that the annual u.n. Climate talks will take place in Madrid and this is an opportunity for countries to revise upward what they committed to in the Paris agreement we know that Paris was a 1st step it was a very significant agreement but when you add up all of the pledges that countries made it was not enough to limit warming below one and a half to Greece Celsius you have this report today saying we're looking at 3.2 degrees Celsius by 2100 which is a completely unmanageable situation so here is another opportunity to see the right kinds of decisions taken with all countries needing to step up their game. This. This report comes out of a hamster my on a day when when China and. The European Union are in a bit of a row about something called a carbon barter time x. Which is on a guess is a carbon tax on on stuff that crosses international borders. Carbon tax a good way to go I would think from your point of view is it well there's a lot of different things that have to happen but the primary thing we track is is it in line with the science and is it going to make sure that climate change is not going to make existing inequalities worse so we're paying attention to that and any number of different policy measures could get us on that track if they are ambitious enough but without a doubt climate change is back on the global agenda and there's a lot of reasons for that and more and more people are standing up to the vested interests of the fossil fuel industry that is a good thing of course many people are witnessing the devastating impacts of climate breakdown on a daily basis so there there is a lot happening and the current debate about border taxes is evidence of that what is really important for everyone to understand is as we talk about the role of governments in this crisis which is enormous We have to talk about governance role in stopping the expansion of coal oil and gas around the world that's really one of the main themes underscored in these reports that fossil fuel use is on the rise that coal oil and gas are by far the largest contributor to climate change and despite what countries may have said they want to do. They are still permit ing new fracking wells and pipelines and that is inconsistent with what the reports are saying so we can talk about any number of policy measures we might like but as long as fossil fuel expansion and extraction is part of the plan we are not going to limit warming to one and a half to Greece and we're going to continue to see these and packs get worse and I'm just to kind of go back to what you were saying about extinction rebellion and groups like that. That a lot of this is on our main We feel that you know we feel the need to fly less of a tall and and to be very careful by what we burn but but in terms of the relationship between the individual and governments. Where disembowelled sly I mean where does the power really lie here to change things. It's such an important question because when people start to understand what the climate crisis is about they begin to think well what can I do about this problem this seems so much bigger than me and my individual choices and as long as people think that their own individual actions alone will get us out of this mess people will consistently feel that they cannot do enough and that there is not a part for them in the movement to stop climate change but in fact when we actually think not only as individuals but how are we as individuals representatives of communities who help create the pressure for new laws and new accountability for companies that are causing this problem that's when we're going to start to see the change we need so it's really both things together at an individual level there are a lot of practical steps we can take and I would imagine many people listening are doing those things and should continue we also have the power to take on these systems by particularly looking at where is our money going are we banking with banks that are lending to fossil fuel expansion our pension funds or university endowment funds invested in fossil fuels when we start to ask those questions then we begin to make change at a different scale and climate change is a problem all about scale so we have to be acting at that level maybe movie thank you very much for talking to us thank you. A couple from West Sussex who won 105000000 pound euro millions jackpot say they plan to spend their fortune on new homes a family and a pink i Phone for their daughter Mr or Mrs Steve Thomson Steve and Lenka Thompson live in a 120000 pounds 3 bedroom bungalow in the seaside town of sell say and they bought the ticket on November 19th they become the U.K.'s 9th biggest ever lottery winners life changing its life. Family and a cool yeah I think you're going to look at with us. Just too much for us. All see Thompson says he's had trouble explaining the scale of this wedding to his son I says are kind and way Richard and Harry kind and he's always. So he's Googled how which is Harry Carry and he said Carry kinds on the west for you know a 1000000 of them a simple way double that Jamie. Well how does it change your life or did what difference does it make Susan crushed one from West Yorkshire won a 1000000 and a quarter pones in the National Lotter