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| 0607 | Justin Webb in Washington tells us what's planned for Saddam Hussein. | |
| 0610 | Mohamed Al Fayed taking case for inquiry into Diana and Dodi's death to the Scottish courts: Colin Blane updates us. | |
| 0615 | The Business News. | |
| 0632 | With Saddam in custody, we hear from Caroline Hawley in Baghdad and our Diplomatic Correspondent Bridget Kendall on what the future holds for Iraq and its former leader. | |
| 0638 | Our correspondent in Westminster Norman Smith on the domestic political implications of Saddam's capture. | |
| 0641 | A look at how this morning's papers, both at home and in Paris, are covering the capture of Iraq's former dictator. | |
| 0646 | How legitimate is the Loya Jirga, or grand assembly, process meeting to ratify Afghanistan's new constitution? Crispin Thorold's report from Kabul. | |
| 0650 | Can听the Government do more to听ensure drug development听is geared more towards helping the public than making profits? | |
| 0653 | The trade in bush-meat in Africa threatens the livelihoods of millions: a conference will be told today. | |
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| 0709 | What next for Iraq? Nabeel Musawi, a deputy on the Iraqi Governing Council, plus we gauge the reaction from Washington. | |
| 0714 | Our reporter Iain Watson has been finding out what Labour backbenchers think of the Iraq war, now that the Ace of Spades is behind bars. | |
| 0720 | Rural Britain suffering due to the closure of banks and post offices: so says a new report from The New Economics Foundation. | |
| 0725 | More people sleeping rough on the streets of Britain as a result of new measures demanding people claim asylum as soon as they arrive, or have benefits withheld. Matthew Grant investigates. | |
| 0730 | Saddam Hussein, the POW: Former prosecutor at the UN International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda, Justice Richard Goldstone ... plus Ann Clwyd MP on the former dictator's future. | |
| 0745 | We're at the re-opening gala for Venice's Fenice Opera House. | |
| 0752 | Vice President of the European Commission Neil Kinnock on what happens next with the proposed EU Constitution, after the failure of the Brussels summit. | |
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| 0810 | Britain's top representative in Iraq, Sir Jeremy Greenstock, on what the future holds for the Iraqi people and coalition troops now that Saddam's in custody. | |
| 0825 | Former Australian rugby international David Campese will do a walk of shame down Oxford Street today, admitting 'the best team won' the World Cup. | |
| 0832 | Mohamed Al Fayed tells Sarah why he's continuing to fight for an inquiry into the deaths of his son and Diana. | |
| 0839 | Larger Safeway stores to get a name change, as Morrison's officially tables its bid: The Business News. | |
| 0842 | How to make money publishing poetry? Answer: publish very very thin anthologies. | |
| 0850 | Saddam, WMD, justice, plus the battle for 'hearts and minds': hear from Al Jazeera's general manager, an expert on US studies and the International Institute of Strategic Studies' expert on biological weapons. | |
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