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Choose an audio clip you would like to listen to from the most recent programme.
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 0607 |
Yet another bomb in Baghdad last night: Barbara Plett is in Baghdad. |
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 0610 |
Will new changes to the way farm subsidies in England operate mean some farmers get less? Tim Hirsch. |
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 0615 |
The Business News with Greg Wood. |
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 0633 |
Scientists have successfully cloned human embryos: Pallab Ghosh reports. |
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 0637 |
The Government will discuss how it is planning to protect workers' pensions today. Richard Scott. |
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 0640 |
Will the weekly Cabinet meeting today try to shift the political focus back to domestic matters? Norman Smith is our political correspondent. |
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 0641 |
A look at today's papers both at home and in Vietnam. |
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 0646 |
Will there ever be regional governments? That's debated, in Yesterday in Parliament. |
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 0652 |
A report published today claims people from ethnic minorities who are receiving psychiatric care face institutional racism. The sister of Rocky Bennett who died whilst receiving treatment shares her views. |
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 0710 |
Are our elderly at risk due to the inadequacies of the Criminal Records Bureau? Hear from the Public Accounts' Committee and the Home Office. |
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 0715 |
Are the latest attacks in Iraq caused by Islamic militants from outside the country trying to ignite a civil war between Sunni and Shia Muslims? Barbara Plett is in Baghdad. |
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 0721 |
Can Tony Blair deter Eastern European migrants from taking advantage of the British welfare state from May 1st? The Shadow Home Secretary David Davis plus Dr Heaven Crawley discuss. |
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 0733 |
How is the Government going to replace the farm subsidies which will disappear under European Union reforms? Hear Sir Don Curry, chairing an inquiry into farming's future. |
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 0745 |
Is home educating the new independent school? Sarah Nelson reports. |
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 0751 |
The new Pensions Bill has been published. Director General of the British Chamber of Commerce and Andrew Smith MP give their reaction. |
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 0810 |
The first established case of a cloned human embryo has been announced in Seattle. Suzi Leather, chair of the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority gives her views. |
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 0822 |
For the first time in this country two South African actors, one black, one white, will take to the stage this evening in a new production of Othello: Our arts Correspondent Rebecca Jones. |
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 0832 |
It's been 25 years since the Islamic revolution in Iran. Academic Dr Azar Nafisi recalls her experiences. |
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 0838 |
Should building societies give their members a vote on the pay of their directors and chief executives? Greg Wood gives us a Business Update. |
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 0842
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Will the policital cabinet meeting this morning be able to discuss domestic issues? Our political correspondent is Iain Watson. |
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 0845
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Who is behind the latest violence in Iraq and where will it lead? Barbara Plett is in Baghdad. |
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 0848 |
Did President Bush serve all of his military duties in Vietnam? Hear from the Washington Post columnist Richard Cohen and Vietnam veteran Michael Uhl. |
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 0850
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Hear Carolyn TRY to get a response from a bullfinch that can supposedly talk. |
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 0853 |
How has South Africa changed since its first democratic elections? Barnaby Phillips is in Richmond, KwaZulu Natal. |
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 0855 |
What does this latest cloning result mean? Dr Helen Watt Director of the Linacre Centre for Healthcare Ethics, plus Dr Robin Lovell-Badge, head of genetics at the National Institute for Medical Research discuss. |
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