I've got it streaming now, no link to embed the BBC video feed but it might be better to watch from site as they have a live text running from changing reporters as well as a number of links, right now the video feed is giving backround reports on the ever growing scandal.
Visit the BBC Site
These are the latest feeds to that live feed:
1106:
About 50 people are queuing to see the home affairs select committee's hearing, while about 40 photographers are waiting outside the Palace of Westminster.
1104: Dave Turner in London
emails: This isn't about Tories or Labour - it's about the power of press organisations and unelected individuals that have more power than the politicians. The very fact that this is threatening to bring a government down is proof that this is beyond party politics.
1103: Guy Kennaway in Somerset
emails: When people dismiss phone hacking as frivolous they need to reflect on how divisive and destructive secret surveillance, for any motive, always is. I have acquaintances who appeared in the Murdoch gossip columns and I always felt that all of their friends were under suspicion of having leaked stories. It definitely spoiled friendships and sewed doubts about people's integrity - mine included. Now we know that no-one was selling stories - they were being secretly and illegally stolen by journalists. Many friendships have been probably irreparably damaged.
They also have some links to join into the discussion, not sure if not in the country whether we can, haven't tried
Here's what leads:
Key points
Rupert and James Murdoch face questions from the Commons culture committee on News International's role in the phone-hacking scandal, starting at 1430 BST.
Ex-News International chief executive Rebekah Brooks to be questioned from 1530 BST.
Former Metropolitan Police commissioner Sir Paul Stephenson - who quit on Sunday - answers questions from the Commons home affairs committee from 1200 BST.
John Yates, the former assistant chief constable at the Met, will speak to MPs at 1315, following his resignation on Monday.
Ex-News of the World journalist Sean Hoare, who made allegations of phone hacking by the newspaper, is found dead at his home.
David Cameron is cutting short a trip to Africa to address MPs on the phone-hacking scandal on Wednesday, as Parliament is reconvened. Visit Site to Follow
Latest Live Feed Update:
1113:
One MP on the culture committee has said the questioning of the Murdochs and Rebekah Brooks could be "forensic" and a "little bit plodding", BBC political correspondent Laura Kuenssberg says.
1111:
The Global Times continues: "This has fostered professional conceit and a moral sense of superiority among media people from the UK, US as well as the Western powers. Any unsupervised power will be abused easily... The UK tabloids should not be the only ones reflecting on the News of the World scandal. The Western media should also draw lessons from this.''
1110:
Several Chinese papers have been commenting on the hacking scandal, including Beijing's Global Times, which says: ''The Anglo-American media are at an absolute advantage in global opinion. They have the freedom to disclose, the authority to criticise, yet they themselves have not been monitored for a long time."
UpDate:
The Hearings Start: Strange the BBC is still not streaming live but the Telegraph has a stream going that looks like it's the hearing now going on!
BBC is Streaming Live needed to refresh the page, whoops!