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 | Choose an audio clipÌýyou would like to listen to from the most recent programme.
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 |  0607 | We'll know how hospital doctors have voted in the ballot on a new national contract today. |  |
 |  0612 | Cigarettes in France are going up by 20% a packet today, and there's a row. |  |
 |  0615 | Greg Wood with the Business News. |  |
 |  0630 | The Prime Minister is resting on doctors orders today after his heart scare. |  |
 |  0635 | Ernst and Young Item club - which uses the Treasury's economic model for its forecasts - has come up with some worrying figures for the Chancellor. |  |
 |  0640 | Asian leaders are having their summit in Bangkok, with President Bush in their midst. |  |
 |  0643 | A swing to the right, it seems, in Switzerland's parliamentary elections. |  |
 |  0645 | A review of today's papers with Peter Donaldson. |  |
 |  0650 | Sarah Rainsford in Moscow with the world papers review.
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 |  0655 | The watchdog for gas and electricity services says too many customers are waiting too long for refunds due to them. We speak to Energywatch. |  |
 |  0658 | The Â鶹Éç has established that some of the police records of rape claims by Kenyan women against UK soldiers are genuine. Our correspondent Andrew Harding reports. |  |
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 |  0709 | The PM is resting today after his five hours in hospital yesterday.Ìý We speak to Dr Duncan Dymond, consultant cadiologist at Barts Hospital in London.
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 |  0715 | Is the Chancellor wrestling with some difficult sums in the Treasury?Ìý Peter Spencer from the Item Club believes so. |  |
 |  0718 | We report onÌýthe British diplomat inÌýUzbekistan who has spoken out aboutÌýhuman rights abuses in the country. |  |
 |  0721 | Princess DianaÌýbelieved there was a plot to kill her.Ìý We speak to the editor of the Daily Mirror, Piers Morgan, who is running the story. |  |
 |  0732 | Shareholders atÌýCarlton want to get rid of their chairman Michael Green.Ìý We speak to John Mcgrath, a non-executive director of the Carlton board. |  |
 |  0742 | Andrew Hosken reports on theÌýrelease of David Blaine from his perspex box. Was it magic? |  |
 |  0745 | We ask Ken Livingstone if the London Underground is safe. |  |
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 |  0810 | How far will the budget deficit rise? We talk to Ruth Kelly, financial secretary to the Treasury.
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 |  0820 | Andrew Marr on the implications of Tony Blair's heartÌýscare. |  |
 |  0825 | The National Art Collections Fund is celebrating a hundred years of saving treasures for the nation.Ìý Rebecca Jones reports. |  |
 |  0831 | Children's writer Philip PullmanÌýargues all children should have the chance to enjoy live theatre as a right, not a luxury.
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 |  0840 | We follow the progress of Hooper Swans migrating from Arctic Russia back to Britain. |  |
 |  0847 | The French government is raising tobacco prices by 20 per cent today.Ìý Caroline Wyatt reports. |  |
 |  0850 | Nato will be holding a meeting on European Union defence today. We speak to Jacques Myard from the National Assembly in Paris. |  |
 |  0852 | Can the press damage the cause of peace? We speak to Prof Gadi Wolfsfeld from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem & Roy Greenslade, a former editor of the Daily Mirror. |  |
 |  0855 | Michael Cockerell and Anthony Howard discuss the implications of Tony Blair's recent heart trouble. |  |
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