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 | Choose an audio clip you would like to listen to from the most recent programme.
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 |  0610 | A high profile death row case in California is entering its final stages. |  |
 |  0614 | A man wanted as a war criminal in Croatia has been arrested in the Canary Islands. |  |
 |  0620 | The business news with Rebecca Marston. |  |
 |  0628 | The sports news with Steve May. |  |
 |  0631 | David Cameron will make his first policy announcement as leader of the Conservative Party today. |  |
 |  0635 | Hear the latest news from the Montreal conference where negotiations have been something of a roller coaster. |  |
 |  0640 | The kidnappers in Iraq say they have killed their American hostage. The British man, Norman Kember, is believed to be alive. |  |
 |  0642 | The paper reviews from Britain and Nairobi. |  |
 |  0644 | A look at the events of Yesterday In Parliament. |  |
 |  0650 | We speak to Claude Mandil, the Chairman of The International Energy Agency, about how ideas for cleaner energy are progressing. |  |
 |  0655 | A new report suggests that the number of donations needed to set up a stem cell research bank is much smaller than had been thought. We talk to Professor Roger Pedersen, of Cambridge University, who wrote the report. |  |
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 |  0709 | We take a look at some of the pressure groups protesting at the Montreal conference. |  |
 |  0715 | Croatia wants to join the EU but their failure to arrest the men suspected of war crimes is stopping them. Now one of these men has been arrested. |  |
 |  0720 | A group of US mayors are in Montreal in support of the Kyoto targets. We speak to Greg Nickels, the mayor of Seattle. |  |
 |  0723 | The business news from Rebecca Marston. |  |
 |  0725 | The Government will now have to prove that intelligence obtained under torture has not been used in cases in which foreign suspects are being held. We speak to the Labour MP Andrew Dismore, the chairman of the All-Party Group on Human Rights. |  |
 |  0730 | An American hostage in Iraq has been murdered. Four others are still held by another group of kidnappers, one of them is Norman Kember. |  |
 |  0731 | The first collection of Harold Lloyd's photography opens in London today. |  |
 |  0740 | Thought For The Day with Sir Jonathan Sacks, The Chief Rabbi. |  |
 |  0745 | In Montreal the Americans are reported to be extremely irritated by public criticism from the Canadian Prime Minister. We speak to the Environment Secretary, Margaret Beckett, and play what was said to give such offence. |  |
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 |  0810 | We speak to David Cameron who will be making his first policy announcement as leader of the Conservative Party today. |  |
 |  0825 | The sports news with Steve May. |  |
 |  0830 | We look at the science underpinning the campaign to control greenhouse gas emissions. We talk to Professor Richard Lindzen, from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and Dr Peter Frumhoff from the Union of Concerned scientists. |  |
 |  0838 | The business update with Rebecca Marston. |  |
 |  0838 | Today is the last day that the red double-decker busesknown as the Routemaster will be on the streets of London. Stephen Pound, a Labour MP who used to be a bus conductor, contributes to our report. |  |
 |  0841 | American environmentalists are a big presence in Montreal. Prominent in their ranks is Ross Gelbspan, author of two books on climate change, who gives us his personal reflections. |  |
 |  0850 | How will cartoonists and satirists approach David Cameron? We talk to Rory Bremner and the cartoonist Steve Bell. |  |
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