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 | Choose an audio clip you would like to listen to from the most recent programme.
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 |  0607 | The man accused of being behind the Bali nightclub bombings last October has gone on trial. Rachel Harvey is our correspondent there.
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 |  0609 | Will David Beckham go to Barcelona? Our correspondent there is Danny Wood.
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 |  0611 | A look at this morning's papers. |  |
 |  0613 | Business news with Greg Wood. |  |
 |  0626 | Sport with Steve May. |  |
 |  0632 | Our local government correspondent John Andrew on referendums for Northern regional assemblies. |  |
 |  0633 | Torin Douglas on the Commons committee report into media intrusion published today. |  |
 |  0636 | Figures for the performance of Network Rail are out today. John Moylan has the details.
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 |  0638 | David Trimble will face a challenge at a meeting of Ulster Unionists this evening. Kevin Connolly has more.
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 |  0644 | It's a hundred years today since Henry Ford set up the Ford Motor Company. Stephen Evans speaks to the founder's great grandson Bill Ford at the firm's birthday party in Detroit.
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 |  0650 | A new study out today says if the government reduced fuel taxes and introduced more congestion charging, traffic would be cut. One of its authors is Professor Stephen Glaister of Imperial College.
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 |  0653 | The criminal justice bill arrives in the Lords today. Peter Rook QC chairs the Criminal Bar Association. |  |
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 |  0709 | Transport Secretary Alistair Darling on figures out today detailing the performance of Network Rail and increasing costs on the railways. |  |
 |  0717 | The Americans in Iraq have launched what they're calling Operation Desert Scorpion, to root out Saddam loyalists and win the support of the Iraqi people. Jim Muir reports from Falluja.
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 |  0723 | Mediators at peace talks for Liberia say that they are confident that a ceasefire will be signed today between the government and two rebel movements. Our West Africa Correspondent Paul Welsh reports from Monrovia.
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 |  0733 | The United Nations High Commission for Refugees believes Government plans for processing asylum seekers outside the EU could recreate the problems seen at Sangatte. Rupert Colville is a spokesman for the Office of the UNHCR.
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 |  0743 | Badgers seem to be causing chaos around the countryside, as people report violence by badgers against other animals - and people. Irene Brierton is chair of the Mid Derbyshire Badger Group. |  |
 |  0750 | The Chairman of the Press Complaints Commission Sir Christopher Meyer on the Culture Select Committee report into privacy and media intrusion published later today.
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 |  0810 | Local government minister Nick Raynsford on the prospect of new regional assemblies in the North of England.
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 |  0823 | A new film called 'Max' focuses on Hitler's life after the first World War when he was a struggling artist. Its director Menno Meyjes and the writer Julia Pascal debate whether its portrait of Hitler is too sympathetic. |  |
 |  0832 | Iran has criticised the US for interfering in its internal affairs after President Bush welcomed pro-reform demonstrations in Tehran. Zubeida Malik spoke to Mahmood Ali Najid, a political analyst based in the Iranian capital. |  |
 |  0840 | Mike Thomson reports from Rome on the fresh debate about the spectacular controversy surrounding the Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. |  |
 |  0846 | British film director Marc Evans and critic Mark Kermode on the revival of the horror genre.
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 |  0854 | Zaab Sethna of the Iraqi National Congress and Adel Darwish, writer on Middle East affairs on the continuing trouble in Iraq.
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