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| 0607 | The attorney-general Lord Goldsmith says American prosecutors will not seek the death penalty for two British suspects held at Guantanamo Bay. Iain Watson reports. | |
| 0610 | Laura Trevelyan, travelling with the Prime Minister, reports on Tony Blair's reaction to Saddam's sons' deaths. | |
| 0615 | Rebecca Marston has the business news. | |
| 0630 | Johnny Dymond in Baghdad on the deaths of Saddam's sons, Uday and Qusay, who've been killed by the US military. | |
| 0634 | The talks to sort out the mess at Heathrow Airport have broken down. Stephen Cape explains. | |
| 0638 | The Guardian newspaper is reporting that the 大象传媒 has a tape recording of the weapons expert Dr David Kelly expressing serious concern about the way intelligence information was presented in the Government's Iraq dossiers. Torin Douglas reports. | |
| 0642 | Tom Symonds is at Network Rail's AGM. | |
| 0651 | The goverment's Children and Family Court Advisory and Support Service - known as CAFCASS - is a failure and needs to be overhauled, that's according to a report by MPs that's being published today. | |
| 0653 | Are the American forces in Iraq riding roughshod over the human rights of the Iraqi people? We talk to the director of Amnesty International in the US, Kurt Goering. | |
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| 0709 | Saddam Hussein's two sons Uday and Qusay were killed yesterday in a shoot-out with US forces. Michael Ancram talks to us from Iraq. | |
| 0714 | The dispute that's kept travellers stranded at Heathrow broke down during the night. Why? We ask the GMB union's Alan Black and BA's Mervyn Walker. | |
| 0721 | The father of a British detainee at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba tells of his relief that his son won't face execution even if found guilty. | |
| 0732 | The killing continues in Monrovia. Liberia's Acting Ambassador to London, Jeff Dowana, joins us in the studio. | |
| 0742 | A man has been arrested on suspicion of murder following the discovery of two bodies - both prostitutes - cut up and placed in bin bags in an alley in the Everton area of Liverpool. Our reporter Angus Stickler talks to a friend of one of those killed. Jo, 24, is still working the streets close to the murder scene. | |
| 0749 | It's Network Rail's AGM today. But are things getting better? We ask chairman Ian McAllister. | |
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| 0810 | Amnesty International is presenting the authorities in Iraq with a report alleging human rights abuses by the occupying forces. Jack Straw responds. | |
| 0825 | Mark Coles finds that Cherie Blair isn't the first politico to break into song - and regret it. | |
| 0844 | The former Ugandan dictator Idi Amin is critically ill in hospital in Saudi Arabia. During his rule in the seventies hundreds of thousands of Ugandans died. There were even lurid claims of cannibalism.听So what's he really like? | |
| 0850 | The National Gallery will find out this morning if it's been successful in听gaining Lotto cash to save Raphael's Madonna of the Pinks from going to the US. | |
| 0855 | Good news and bad news today for the occupying forces in Iraq. Time to take stock of how it's all going. | |
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