'నవరత్నాలతో ప్రతి పేదోడికి న్యాయం చేస్తా'
పార్టీ విజయం కోసం రాష్ట్రవ్యాప్తంగా విస్తృత పర్యటన చేస్తున్న జగన్ ఇవాళ కర్నూలు జిల్లా నంద్యాల రోడ్షోలో పాల్గొన్నారు. నవరత్నాలతో ప్రతి పేదోడికి న్యాయం చేస్తానని హామీ ఇచ్చారు.
నంద్యాల రోడ్ షో లో వైకాపా అధినేత జగన్
RESTRICTION SUMMARY: NO ACCESS BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG
SHOTLIST:
SKY - NO ACCESS BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG
Brussels - 4 April 2019
1. SOUNDBITE: (English) Elmar Brok, German MEP for the European People's Party and chairman of the European Parliament Committee on Foreign Affairs:
"First of all in order to avoid hard Brexit on the 12th of April means that the deal has to be positively voted in the House of Commons before the 12th of April. And I think what was voted was only the first step. If Theresa May does not find a majority for her deal or if she is not able to find a compromise with the Labour Party which we watch very hopefully, then we have another problem again and this vote in the House of Commons does not change anything. Then a hard Brexit might happen immediately. Otherwise, Britain has the possibility to withdraw the letter of Article 50 or call for a longer extension, voting for European Parliament and going for a longer extension which includes for example general elections, let the people speak. I think that such a conditions must be fulfilled for a longer extension."
++BLACK FRAMES++
SKY - NO ACCESS BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG
Brussels - 4 April 2019
2. SOUNDBITE: (English) Elmar Brok, German MEP for the European People's Party and chairman of the European Parliament Committee on Foreign Affairs:
"It's clear, we cannot continue this way. The House of Commons and the government are not able to deliver a solution. Then normally the people have to speak but the best thing would be if there would be now an agreement between Labour and Conservatives. We can vote this week or next week to ratify the deal, have changes in the political declaration where we are open, for example put customs union or whatever in it, we would accept that, and then such a decision could mean that you can leave orderly the European Union and we have not the consequences of hard Brexit especially for your country."
++BLACK FRAMES++
SKY - NO ACCESS BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG
Brussels - 4 April 2019
3. SOUNDBITE: (English) Elmar Brok, German MEP for the European People's Party and chairman of the European Parliament Committee on Foreign Affairs:
"If the longer extension, not just until October, until next year or even a little bit longer, and this term Britain makes up her mind and has general elections or a referendum and then comes back to the European Union, then I think we might have a chance to do so, but not a short extension until October. Vote for the European elections, take part in the decisions in the European Union about the future commission and our financial structure and then leave. And I do not believe that until October the United Kingdom will able to come out of their own deadlock. They seem to need more time. This is not an agreement between Tories and Labour today or tomorrow."
++BLACK FRAMES++
SKY - NO ACCESS BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG
Dublin- 4 April 2019
4. SOUNDBITE: (English) Patrick O'Donovan, Irish Minister of State for Public Procurement, Open Government and eGovernment:
"Today's visit really can't be understated from an Irish government point of view and we really welcome the opportunity to sit down with the chancellor and with people from the border areas both north and south, for them to give the opportunity of just expressing their concerns as ordinary people that are living along the border communities, business people, farmers and citizens who are, you know, really concerned about what's going to happen."
++BLACK FRAMES++
SKY - NO ACCESS BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG
Dublin- 4 April 2019
5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Patrick O'Donovan, Irish Minister of State for Public Procurement, Open Government and eGovernment:
"Well we've maintained first of all that there is an opportunity still within the next few days over the weekend and running up to the EU Council next Wednesday, we hope there's a, you know, at the EU Council on Wednesday that there can be a conclusion to this and that there is a way to move forward. But we've always maintained as a government from the very start of this process over two years ago now, that at maintaining a borderless island of Ireland is absolutely critical to the Irish government. We have maintained that position and you know we have done that because of the hard won peace that we have on this island and the Good Friday agreement of which the British and Irish government are co-guarantors. The British government acknowledges that as well, has has always maintained that and Prime Minister May has always said that maintaining a frictionless border on the island of Ireland is critical to peace."
++BLACK FRAMES++
SKY - NO ACCESS BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG
Dublin- 4 April 2019
6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Patrick O'Donovan, Irish Minister of State for Public Procurement, Open Government and eGovernment:
"Of critical importance is our obligation as a co-guarantor to the Good Friday Agreement and to the people in Northern Ireland who are ultimately and this is independently verified by numerous organizations within the United Kingdom, Northern Ireland looks to be the area of the United Kingdom that is potentially going to be the worst affected. And so as a government here we are very concerned not only in relation to the future impact if any, and we hope it doesn't happen to the Good Friday agreement, but what happens to people that lived both north and south of the border and how any Brexit will impact on their daily life."
STORYLINE:
European Union leaders, exasperated by the chaos in London, say they will only grant a delay to Brexit if Britain comes up with a workable new plan.
In Brussels, a German MEP for the European People's Party and chairman of the European Parliament Committee on Foreign Affairs said that to avoid a hard Brexit Britain needed to ratify a deal agreed with the EU or face a damaging sudden exit from the bloc.
Elmar Brok said Britain could revoke Article 50 or call for a longer extension which would include a general election to avoid such a scenario and added that the EU was open to changes in the political declaration portion of the deal that could include adding a customs union to it.
But Brok cautioned that a short extension to Article 50 was not foreseeable.
"If a longer extension, not just until October, until next year or even longer, and this time Britain makes up her mind and has general elections or a referendum, then comes back to the European Union, then I think we might have a chance to do so," he said, adding "but not a short extension until October, vote for the European elections, take part in the decisions in the European Union (...) and then leave."
Brok said he did not believe that Britain could break the Brexit deadlock by October. "They seem to need more time," he added.
The British government and senior opposition figures were meeting on Thursday in search of a new plan on how the country leaves the European Union as Prime Minister Theresa May tried to stop her shift toward compromise from splitting her Conservative Party.
Worries about a no-deal Brexit are especially acute in Ireland, the only EU member state to share a land border with the UK. Any customs checks or other obstacles along the currently invisible frontier would hammer the Irish economy, and could undermine Northern Ireland's peace process.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel was visiting Dublin on Thursday for Brexit talks with Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar.
Patrick O'Donovan, the Irish Minister of State for Public Procurement, Open Government and eGovernment, said Merkel's visit, which followed on from Varadkar's meeting earlier in the week with French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris, could not be understated in importance.
O'Donovan said the government would be again stressing its position on the critical importance of maintaining a borderless island of Ireland.
"As a government here we are very concerned not only in relation to the future impact if any, and we hope it doesn't happen, to the Good Friday agreement, but what happens to people that lived both north and south of the border and how any Brexit will impact on their daily lives," he said.
===========================================================
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: info@aparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.
SHOTLIST:
SKY - NO ACCESS BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG
Brussels - 4 April 2019
1. SOUNDBITE: (English) Elmar Brok, German MEP for the European People's Party and chairman of the European Parliament Committee on Foreign Affairs:
"First of all in order to avoid hard Brexit on the 12th of April means that the deal has to be positively voted in the House of Commons before the 12th of April. And I think what was voted was only the first step. If Theresa May does not find a majority for her deal or if she is not able to find a compromise with the Labour Party which we watch very hopefully, then we have another problem again and this vote in the House of Commons does not change anything. Then a hard Brexit might happen immediately. Otherwise, Britain has the possibility to withdraw the letter of Article 50 or call for a longer extension, voting for European Parliament and going for a longer extension which includes for example general elections, let the people speak. I think that such a conditions must be fulfilled for a longer extension."
++BLACK FRAMES++
SKY - NO ACCESS BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG
Brussels - 4 April 2019
2. SOUNDBITE: (English) Elmar Brok, German MEP for the European People's Party and chairman of the European Parliament Committee on Foreign Affairs:
"It's clear, we cannot continue this way. The House of Commons and the government are not able to deliver a solution. Then normally the people have to speak but the best thing would be if there would be now an agreement between Labour and Conservatives. We can vote this week or next week to ratify the deal, have changes in the political declaration where we are open, for example put customs union or whatever in it, we would accept that, and then such a decision could mean that you can leave orderly the European Union and we have not the consequences of hard Brexit especially for your country."
++BLACK FRAMES++
SKY - NO ACCESS BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG
Brussels - 4 April 2019
3. SOUNDBITE: (English) Elmar Brok, German MEP for the European People's Party and chairman of the European Parliament Committee on Foreign Affairs:
"If the longer extension, not just until October, until next year or even a little bit longer, and this term Britain makes up her mind and has general elections or a referendum and then comes back to the European Union, then I think we might have a chance to do so, but not a short extension until October. Vote for the European elections, take part in the decisions in the European Union about the future commission and our financial structure and then leave. And I do not believe that until October the United Kingdom will able to come out of their own deadlock. They seem to need more time. This is not an agreement between Tories and Labour today or tomorrow."
++BLACK FRAMES++
SKY - NO ACCESS BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG
Dublin- 4 April 2019
4. SOUNDBITE: (English) Patrick O'Donovan, Irish Minister of State for Public Procurement, Open Government and eGovernment:
"Today's visit really can't be understated from an Irish government point of view and we really welcome the opportunity to sit down with the chancellor and with people from the border areas both north and south, for them to give the opportunity of just expressing their concerns as ordinary people that are living along the border communities, business people, farmers and citizens who are, you know, really concerned about what's going to happen."
++BLACK FRAMES++
SKY - NO ACCESS BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG
Dublin- 4 April 2019
5. SOUNDBITE: (English) Patrick O'Donovan, Irish Minister of State for Public Procurement, Open Government and eGovernment:
"Well we've maintained first of all that there is an opportunity still within the next few days over the weekend and running up to the EU Council next Wednesday, we hope there's a, you know, at the EU Council on Wednesday that there can be a conclusion to this and that there is a way to move forward. But we've always maintained as a government from the very start of this process over two years ago now, that at maintaining a borderless island of Ireland is absolutely critical to the Irish government. We have maintained that position and you know we have done that because of the hard won peace that we have on this island and the Good Friday agreement of which the British and Irish government are co-guarantors. The British government acknowledges that as well, has has always maintained that and Prime Minister May has always said that maintaining a frictionless border on the island of Ireland is critical to peace."
++BLACK FRAMES++
SKY - NO ACCESS BBC, ITN (INCLUDING CHANNEL 4 AND 5), AL JAZEERA, BLOOMBERG
Dublin- 4 April 2019
6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Patrick O'Donovan, Irish Minister of State for Public Procurement, Open Government and eGovernment:
"Of critical importance is our obligation as a co-guarantor to the Good Friday Agreement and to the people in Northern Ireland who are ultimately and this is independently verified by numerous organizations within the United Kingdom, Northern Ireland looks to be the area of the United Kingdom that is potentially going to be the worst affected. And so as a government here we are very concerned not only in relation to the future impact if any, and we hope it doesn't happen to the Good Friday agreement, but what happens to people that lived both north and south of the border and how any Brexit will impact on their daily life."
STORYLINE:
European Union leaders, exasperated by the chaos in London, say they will only grant a delay to Brexit if Britain comes up with a workable new plan.
In Brussels, a German MEP for the European People's Party and chairman of the European Parliament Committee on Foreign Affairs said that to avoid a hard Brexit Britain needed to ratify a deal agreed with the EU or face a damaging sudden exit from the bloc.
Elmar Brok said Britain could revoke Article 50 or call for a longer extension which would include a general election to avoid such a scenario and added that the EU was open to changes in the political declaration portion of the deal that could include adding a customs union to it.
But Brok cautioned that a short extension to Article 50 was not foreseeable.
"If a longer extension, not just until October, until next year or even longer, and this time Britain makes up her mind and has general elections or a referendum, then comes back to the European Union, then I think we might have a chance to do so," he said, adding "but not a short extension until October, vote for the European elections, take part in the decisions in the European Union (...) and then leave."
Brok said he did not believe that Britain could break the Brexit deadlock by October. "They seem to need more time," he added.
The British government and senior opposition figures were meeting on Thursday in search of a new plan on how the country leaves the European Union as Prime Minister Theresa May tried to stop her shift toward compromise from splitting her Conservative Party.
Worries about a no-deal Brexit are especially acute in Ireland, the only EU member state to share a land border with the UK. Any customs checks or other obstacles along the currently invisible frontier would hammer the Irish economy, and could undermine Northern Ireland's peace process.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel was visiting Dublin on Thursday for Brexit talks with Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar.
Patrick O'Donovan, the Irish Minister of State for Public Procurement, Open Government and eGovernment, said Merkel's visit, which followed on from Varadkar's meeting earlier in the week with French President Emmanuel Macron in Paris, could not be understated in importance.
O'Donovan said the government would be again stressing its position on the critical importance of maintaining a borderless island of Ireland.
"As a government here we are very concerned not only in relation to the future impact if any, and we hope it doesn't happen, to the Good Friday agreement, but what happens to people that lived both north and south of the border and how any Brexit will impact on their daily lives," he said.
===========================================================
Clients are reminded:
(i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: info@aparchive.com
(ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service
(iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory.