Browse content similar to 25/02/2016. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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Sexual abuse at the BBC - a report describes the monstrous | :00:00. | :00:00. | |
behaviour of Jimmy Savile and Stuart Hall. | :00:07. | :00:11. | |
The report blames a culture of fear for allowing the two men to go | :00:12. | :00:15. | |
Celebrities were treated with kid gloves and were virtually | :00:16. | :00:19. | |
Savile alone raped and assaulted 72 people. | :00:20. | :00:27. | |
Many have been left scarred for life | :00:28. | :00:30. | |
There were people there, and they saw and did nothing, | :00:31. | :00:34. | |
Separately, the DJ Tony Blackburn is sacked by the BBC in a dispute | :00:35. | :00:45. | |
We'll be hearing about the missed opportunities to expose the abuse. | :00:46. | :00:53. | |
Another missed target on immigration. | :00:54. | :00:56. | |
The latest figures are seized on by both sides in the referendum debate. | :00:57. | :01:01. | |
BT is told to open its cable network to rivals. | :01:02. | :01:08. | |
The Flying Scotsman's inaugural journey, | :01:09. | :01:10. | |
Police identify a woman from London whose remains were found on a golf | :01:11. | :01:20. | |
course on the outskirts of Edinburgh last month. | :01:21. | :01:25. | |
A Conservative MSP becomes the first Holyrood politician to back | :01:26. | :01:27. | |
Good evening and welcome to the BBC News at Six. | :01:28. | :01:51. | |
The long awaited report into the activities of Jimmy Savile | :01:52. | :01:53. | |
at the BBC was published today and it makes for | :01:54. | :01:56. | |
Dame Janet Smith's review, which also includes the activities | :01:57. | :02:01. | |
of the broadcaster Stuart Hall, describes a culture at the BBC | :02:02. | :02:04. | |
in which their "monstrous behaviour", those are her | :02:05. | :02:07. | |
Here are some of the most important points as they relate to Savile. | :02:08. | :02:19. | |
In all, 72 victims have been identified. | :02:20. | :02:28. | |
During that time more than 100 people at the BBC heard | :02:29. | :02:30. | |
Dame Janet believes there were several missed | :02:31. | :02:33. | |
Our first report is from Lucy Manning. | :02:34. | :02:41. | |
While millions were watching the BBC, no one was keeping and I on | :02:42. | :02:48. | |
Jimmy Savile. The BBC created him and allowed a paedophile to prey on | :02:49. | :02:53. | |
viewers and staff for decades. And in the north, Stuart Hall was using | :02:54. | :02:57. | |
his fame to sexually assault young girls. It makes sorry reading for | :02:58. | :03:03. | |
the BBC, Savile assaulting girls on Top of the Pops, raping children and | :03:04. | :03:08. | |
never stopped because he was viewed as untouchable, yet many staff aware | :03:09. | :03:15. | |
of rumours about him. Both of these men used their fame and position as | :03:16. | :03:19. | |
BBC celebrities to abuse the vulnerable. They must be condemned | :03:20. | :03:28. | |
for their monstrous behaviour. But the culture of the BBC is certainly | :03:29. | :03:33. | |
enabled both Savile and Stuart Hall to go undetected for decades. I have | :03:34. | :03:41. | |
identified five occasions when the BBC missed an opportunity to uncover | :03:42. | :03:49. | |
their misconduct. Usain no senior managers knew what Savile was up to. | :03:50. | :03:54. | |
Isn't this, as some of the victims think, a whitewash. -- you say | :03:55. | :04:00. | |
that... It certainly is not a whitewash. | :04:01. | :04:07. | |
Kevin was just nine when Savile assaulted him after a visit to | :04:08. | :04:11. | |
Jim'll Fix It, one of 17 victims from the show. They seem to be | :04:12. | :04:15. | |
laying the blame at the feet of the junior managers. I cannot believe | :04:16. | :04:23. | |
that it has got no further up the chain. Do you think people at the | :04:24. | :04:30. | |
BBC could have stopped Savile? My personal case was in 1976, and as I | :04:31. | :04:35. | |
understand it, there were accusations with Savile in the early | :04:36. | :04:44. | |
70s, 72, or 73. So I feel that I shouldn't | :04:45. | :04:48. | |
70s, 72, or 73. So I feel that I compensation from the BBC and does | :04:49. | :04:49. | |
accept its compensation from the BBC and does | :04:50. | :04:56. | |
protected you. I am deeply sorry for the hurt caused to each and | :04:57. | :05:01. | |
protected you. I am deeply sorry for you. One casualty of this | :05:02. | :05:05. | |
protected you. I am deeply sorry for the DJ Tony Blackburn, sacked by the | :05:06. | :05:09. | |
BBC. He said he had been hung out to dry after his evidence to the | :05:10. | :05:14. | |
enquiry was rejected. He was the DJ behind headlines about a 15-year-old | :05:15. | :05:20. | |
girl's suicide in 1971, after allegations she was seduced by a | :05:21. | :05:25. | |
celebrity. Today, he denied any inappropriate conduct and said, they | :05:26. | :05:28. | |
are destroying my career and reputation because my version of | :05:29. | :05:33. | |
events does not tally with theirs. The BBC have decided to make me a | :05:34. | :05:38. | |
scapegoat. Tony Blackburn fell short of the standards of evidence such an | :05:39. | :05:44. | |
enquiry demanded. I am making no judgment or accusations about the | :05:45. | :05:49. | |
events or behaviours in the past. As for Stuart Hall, the report found | :05:50. | :05:54. | |
senior managers knew about his inappropriate sexual behaviour. | :05:55. | :05:59. | |
Amanda was assaulted by him after filming a programme. The BBC are | :06:00. | :06:03. | |
still guilty for the fact that they knew and no one came out with it. | :06:04. | :06:10. | |
Over the time, 40 years, I have thought to myself, should I have | :06:11. | :06:14. | |
done something about it? I don't feel now that I am guilty. It's the | :06:15. | :06:22. | |
BBC that's guilty. It's all about the missed opportunities to stop | :06:23. | :06:24. | |
BBC that's guilty. It's all about Savile and Hall. There is a | :06:25. | :06:27. | |
recurrent theme into the reports about Savile's abuse. Despite 41 | :06:28. | :06:33. | |
investigations into hospitals, 14 into schools and care homes, and now | :06:34. | :06:38. | |
this BBC report, with all the victims over all the years, it seems | :06:39. | :06:44. | |
no one in charge at any organisation seemed to know what Savile was up | :06:45. | :06:50. | |
to. This is the last major report into Savile. The days of victims | :06:51. | :06:55. | |
being told, keep your mouth shut, he is a BIP, hopefully over. | :06:56. | :07:00. | |
-- VIP. The report doesn't apportion blame | :07:01. | :07:03. | |
to any individual within the BBC but Dame Janet Smith highlighted | :07:04. | :07:06. | |
what she called a "culture of fear" David Sillito has been looking | :07:07. | :07:08. | |
at how Jimmy Savile got away His report contains flash | :07:09. | :07:12. | |
photography and some disturbing It's Top of the Pops. I think we | :07:13. | :07:32. | |
were deluded. Deluded by celebrity, and possibly by reputation. Jimmy | :07:33. | :07:40. | |
Savile! Radio 1 was chaos, Top of the Pops was chaos, because in those | :07:41. | :07:46. | |
days, disc jockeys were stars. Top of the Pops, described today as a | :07:47. | :07:50. | |
moral danger, in a report that reveals what people inside sore and | :07:51. | :07:57. | |
new. He was with a girl, a prepubescent girl. I remember she | :07:58. | :08:01. | |
was completely flat chested, wearing a little grey T-shirt. I remember | :08:02. | :08:06. | |
that. Don't look so shocked. This was what he was like, you know. | :08:07. | :08:15. | |
Wilfrid was, in the 60s, a BBC Radio producer. He says Savile and his | :08:16. | :08:19. | |
very young companion met him in a restaurant before a radio interview. | :08:20. | :08:25. | |
Did he say anything, report it? No. There was never any question you | :08:26. | :08:29. | |
would have gone to the police over anything like that? Unthinkable, | :08:30. | :08:34. | |
beyond the pale. It was not a moral issue. Just thought, good luck to | :08:35. | :08:38. | |
him. Some people thought, good luck to him. It was not just that he was | :08:39. | :08:44. | |
not stopped. This was the point when his career blossomed. He presented | :08:45. | :08:48. | |
programmes for the religious department. 40 years on, one | :08:49. | :08:54. | |
question is asked. How? I think for quite I have wished, looking back, | :08:55. | :09:03. | |
that I had been more suspicious. He was a night of the realm in Britain. | :09:04. | :09:10. | |
He was a personal friend of Margaret Thatcher. A house guest at Christmas | :09:11. | :09:17. | |
with her. Even Mary Whitehouse gave him an award for wholesome | :09:18. | :09:21. | |
programmes for young people. If you think it is right to make love | :09:22. | :09:24. | |
before you get married, put your hands in the air. I think at that | :09:25. | :09:33. | |
time he was untouchable. If you want to understand untouchable, try this. | :09:34. | :09:39. | |
His phone number. Other DJs gave 24-hour contact details. Nothing for | :09:40. | :09:46. | |
Jimmy Savile. If you wanted Jimmy Savile, contact Leeds infirmary. And | :09:47. | :09:49. | |
then there are the extraordinary public moments. This on a tea-time | :09:50. | :09:56. | |
show. The only time you punish yourself is when you are with the | :09:57. | :10:00. | |
young ladies, and then you punish yourself because you are such a | :10:01. | :10:04. | |
villain. You should be caring to them and you are not, but you | :10:05. | :10:07. | |
squeeze them and make them go out and things like that. What does this | :10:08. | :10:14. | |
mean for people like Jane? In 1973, a 15-year-old assaulted at Top of | :10:15. | :10:18. | |
the Pops. She thinks people at the top did know but she is also | :10:19. | :10:22. | |
thankful for a personal apology, and also that the truth is out. The | :10:23. | :10:27. | |
enormity of what happened to so many people is out there. And if it | :10:28. | :10:37. | |
stops, you know, a celebrity or any other person in a position where | :10:38. | :10:42. | |
they take advantage of somebody, and hopefully it will give other people | :10:43. | :10:48. | |
who are experiencing similar things the courage to speak. | :10:49. | :10:52. | |
Well, Lucy Manning has been talking to the BBC's boss, Lord Hall. | :10:53. | :10:55. | |
She quizzed him about the sacking of Tony Blackburn and put it to him | :10:56. | :10:58. | |
that Savile's victims found it difficult to believe that senior BBC | :10:59. | :11:01. | |
managers did not know what was going on. | :11:02. | :11:09. | |
What we have got to do is to learn the lessons of how an organisation | :11:10. | :11:19. | |
should operate. But do you think senior managers did know? I think | :11:20. | :11:24. | |
there was enough out there, as Dame Janet says, for an organisation that | :11:25. | :11:31. | |
was attuned to listening to people, that was scanning the press outside, | :11:32. | :11:36. | |
scanning what was being said, I feel there was more to be done. Tony | :11:37. | :11:40. | |
Blackburn was not found guilty of any misconduct in this report, so | :11:41. | :11:46. | |
why sack him? We have parted company because Dame Janet made clear that | :11:47. | :11:49. | |
the investigation, which he was asked about, was really important to | :11:50. | :11:57. | |
her investigation into the BBC. Tony Blackburn was interviewed, according | :11:58. | :12:00. | |
to the records, according to her belief, by two people. She says she | :12:01. | :12:06. | |
doesn't believe his evidence. He says you have made him a scapegoat | :12:07. | :12:12. | |
and this is a cover-up. This is not about allegations about what might | :12:13. | :12:15. | |
have happened in the past. Dame Janet rejects his evidence to the | :12:16. | :12:19. | |
enquiry. That is serious, when you are having an enquiry you want to be | :12:20. | :12:23. | |
open and to lead to proper conclusion is that people and the | :12:24. | :12:26. | |
organisation can learn from. It is important everyone behaves in a | :12:27. | :12:30. | |
proper way, and she finds she did not. But it is fair for him to have | :12:31. | :12:33. | |
a different recollection, isn't it, without | :12:34. | :12:49. | |
losing his job? I point you to the paragraph in the report where she | :12:50. | :12:52. | |
says that his solicitor said, you should believe the documents in | :12:53. | :12:54. | |
front of you, rather than what my client has said. You are the head of | :12:55. | :12:57. | |
an organisation that has harboured two paedophiles. How does that make | :12:58. | :13:00. | |
you feel? This is a bad day for us, because we could have known, in my | :13:01. | :13:02. | |
view, and we could have done something to stop this. That is why | :13:03. | :13:05. | |
I think today is about apology to the victims, survivors I call them, | :13:06. | :13:10. | |
of Savile and Hall. That was Lord Hall speaking to Lucy | :13:11. | :13:12. | |
Manning. And for details of organisations | :13:13. | :13:14. | |
which offer advice and support on sexual abuse you can go online | :13:15. | :13:17. | |
to bbc.co.uk/actionline, or call the BBC Action Line to hear | :13:18. | :13:19. | |
recorded information Net migration to the UK, | :13:20. | :13:21. | |
that's the difference between the number of people coming | :13:22. | :13:35. | |
into and leaving the country, It means the Government is a long | :13:36. | :13:39. | |
way off its promised target of cutting the figure to the tens | :13:40. | :13:48. | |
of thousands by 2020. Most towns experienced some | :13:49. | :14:02. | |
immigration, and Preston is no exception. In recent years, | :14:03. | :14:06. | |
Lancashire has seen growing numbers coming here from Central and Eastern | :14:07. | :14:11. | |
Europe. Down the road at an Aerodrome, the Prime Minister | :14:12. | :14:14. | |
insisted his plans to curb the benefits of EU migrants would bring | :14:15. | :14:17. | |
down the numbers, numbers that he admitted were too high. Now we've | :14:18. | :14:23. | |
got this agreement that people cannot get ?10,000, sometimes even | :14:24. | :14:27. | |
more, the minute they arrive in the UK and work, that will have an | :14:28. | :14:31. | |
impact. So the best answer is to stay in a reformed European Union, | :14:32. | :14:36. | |
put in place those welfare restrictions which will make a | :14:37. | :14:39. | |
difference, and do everything we can in the other areas to bring down the | :14:40. | :14:43. | |
excessively high rate of immigration into our country. Today's figures | :14:44. | :14:49. | |
show that in the year to September, 323,000 more people came to live in | :14:50. | :14:55. | |
the UK than the number who left. Of that total, 172,000 came from the | :14:56. | :15:01. | |
European Union. 49,000 of those came from Romania and Bulgaria, a rising | :15:02. | :15:05. | |
number since restrictions against those countries were lifted. | :15:06. | :15:11. | |
Ministers campaigning to leave the EU say this shows their government, | :15:12. | :15:17. | |
yes, their government's targets of getting net migration below 100,000 | :15:18. | :15:21. | |
cannot be met, when the numbers have been three times as much for almost | :15:22. | :15:27. | |
two years. Having targets to say we are bringing down and driving down | :15:28. | :15:30. | |
immigration will not work when we have no control over the number of | :15:31. | :15:33. | |
people leaving other European Union countries to come to the UK. The | :15:34. | :15:38. | |
problem for the Government is that they | :15:39. | :15:38. | |
problem for the Government is that campaign on the economic | :15:39. | :15:41. | |
problem for the Government is that leaving the EU. They don't want to | :15:42. | :15:47. | |
be on the defensive over immigration which their critics claim cannot be | :15:48. | :15:51. | |
controlled unless we leave the EU. And that task will not be made | :15:52. | :15:55. | |
easier by the migration crisis in Europe, which will get worse before | :15:56. | :15:59. | |
the referendum in June, and keep ministers busy in Brussels. Europe | :16:00. | :16:03. | |
is dealing with a migration crisis and that would be the same whether | :16:04. | :16:08. | |
the UK was in the European Union or outside of the European Union. As | :16:09. | :16:12. | |
members of the EU, we are able to work with others to strengthen | :16:13. | :16:18. | |
Europe's external borders. Those who want to campaign on immigration say | :16:19. | :16:22. | |
today's figures prove their point. I look at the eurozone, the migrant | :16:23. | :16:27. | |
crisis, the fact that the European Union wants to admit Bosnia and | :16:28. | :16:30. | |
Turkey within five years as full members. Only one thing will happen, | :16:31. | :16:35. | |
numbers coming to Britain will go up. We will find out if he is right | :16:36. | :16:37. | |
when the next figures A report into the activities | :16:38. | :16:41. | |
of Jimmy Savile at the BBC blames a culture of fear which allowed | :16:42. | :16:46. | |
his abuse to go unchallenged. I've been travel on one of the | :16:47. | :16:51. | |
world's I've been travel on one of the | :16:52. | :17:02. | |
back in business. And coming up on Reporting | :17:03. | :17:06. | |
Scotland at 6.30: Scotland's rugby players head | :17:07. | :17:09. | |
for Italy hoping to avoid another And after the problems that marred | :17:10. | :17:15. | |
last year's T in the Park, will this summer's | :17:16. | :17:18. | |
festival be a success? How many times have you been left | :17:19. | :17:27. | |
exasperated when you're trying Now Ofcom, the communications | :17:28. | :17:30. | |
watchdog, It's told BT that it must allow more | :17:31. | :17:35. | |
access to its network and allow At the moment, over two million | :17:36. | :17:41. | |
homes and small businesses cannot Our technology correspondent, | :17:42. | :17:48. | |
Rory Cellan-Jones reports. Along the streets of York, a new | :17:49. | :18:01. | |
ultra fast broadband network is arriving. It's not BT which is | :18:02. | :18:07. | |
laying the fibreoptic cable but rival firms unhappy with the service | :18:08. | :18:13. | |
it offers them and their customers. They're convinced people like | :18:14. | :18:15. | |
Jessica North and her young family have a need for speed. My husband | :18:16. | :18:20. | |
goes on his computer games. That will benefit loads for him. With the | :18:21. | :18:27. | |
technology going up now, the speed needs to get faster and faster. You | :18:28. | :18:32. | |
think you're future-proofed now? Definitely. There's a big debate | :18:33. | :18:38. | |
about how far you need to take fibreoptic cable. BT takes it to a | :18:39. | :18:44. | |
street side cabinet and joins it with an old fashioned copper wire. | :18:45. | :18:48. | |
Its rivals say that's no good, you have to take fibre right into the | :18:49. | :18:53. | |
home. It's BT's open reach division which is behind most of Britain's | :18:54. | :18:58. | |
new faster connections. Today, Ofcom said it must open up its network to | :18:59. | :19:05. | |
rivals if the UK is to perform better in fibre broadband. We have | :19:06. | :19:11. | |
the highest take-up of super fast broadband, the lowest prices and | :19:12. | :19:15. | |
highest coverage. For me, we need to build on that rather than criticise | :19:16. | :19:20. | |
it. Three years ago, a Lancashire community group gave up on waiting | :19:21. | :19:25. | |
for BT to offer fast broadband and laid their own fibre Cabs across the | :19:26. | :19:30. | |
fields. That's how Christine gets a fast enough connection to make a | :19:31. | :19:35. | |
video call. If BT do not get their act together soon and stop Pratting | :19:36. | :19:40. | |
about with the copper, we'll end up as a Third World nation. We need | :19:41. | :19:47. | |
fibre and we need it now. BT's promising to invest in fibre but it | :19:48. | :19:51. | |
could orderser the break-up of the company. | :19:52. | :19:55. | |
A brief look at some of the day's other news stories. | :19:56. | :19:59. | |
The owner of Alton Towers will be prosecuted | :20:00. | :20:02. | |
in connection with the rollercoaster crash in June last year | :20:03. | :20:04. | |
in which five people were seriously injured. | :20:05. | :20:07. | |
Two women had to have their legs amputated after their carriage | :20:08. | :20:09. | |
collided with a stationary carriage on the same track. | :20:10. | :20:12. | |
with breaching health and safety laws. | :20:13. | :20:18. | |
Three care home workers, described as evil and ruthless, | :20:19. | :20:20. | |
have each been jailed for four months. | :20:21. | :20:22. | |
Anita Ray, Lorna Clark and Adeshola Adediwura admitted assaulting | :20:23. | :20:26. | |
an elderly resident at the Old Deanery Care Home | :20:27. | :20:29. | |
The resident was suffering from dementia, cancer, | :20:30. | :20:33. | |
diabetes and was partially paralysed. | :20:34. | :20:38. | |
A man accused of murdering 29 people in the Real IRA bombing in Omagh | :20:39. | :20:41. | |
in 1998 has appeared in court in the town for the first time. | :20:42. | :20:45. | |
Seamus Daly, here in the light coloured top, | :20:46. | :20:48. | |
A judge is deciding if there's enough evidence for the case | :20:49. | :20:53. | |
against him to go to a crown court trial. | :20:54. | :20:59. | |
Greece has recalled its ambassador to Austria amid growing divisions | :21:00. | :21:03. | |
between EU states over the migrant crisis. | :21:04. | :21:06. | |
Thousands of people are now stranded in Greece after other countries | :21:07. | :21:09. | |
began to implement strict border controls. | :21:10. | :21:12. | |
Our correpsondent Danny Savage reports from a migrant camp | :21:13. | :21:15. | |
At the main migrant camp on Greece's border with Macedonia, | :21:16. | :21:22. | |
3,000 people are on a site built for half that number. | :21:23. | :21:27. | |
Moving along the migrant trail has slowed to a crawl. | :21:28. | :21:31. | |
This is the one gate that migrants going from Greece to Macedonia have | :21:32. | :21:35. | |
But, for much of the last three days, it's stayed shut. | :21:36. | :21:40. | |
The authorities say that's because the next border going north | :21:41. | :21:46. | |
between Macedonia and Serbia is closed for much | :21:47. | :21:48. | |
Borders further north close so this one stays shut too. | :21:49. | :21:55. | |
Five days coming here, we wait six or seven hours | :21:56. | :21:59. | |
Sometimes they close the border and the people go to the camp. | :22:00. | :22:07. | |
Just over the border, a train was stuck for hours | :22:08. | :22:10. | |
So, a backlog of coaches and communities is building | :22:11. | :22:20. | |
This is a service station just short of the border. | :22:21. | :22:25. | |
Greece is in danger of becoming a warehouse of souls, | :22:26. | :22:28. | |
There's been a sharp rise in the number of children on the move. | :22:29. | :22:36. | |
These Iraqi twins were born in Turkey and have been travelling | :22:37. | :22:39. | |
We've an increased concern for unaccompanied children | :22:40. | :22:43. | |
who at the moment, at Greek level, there is not sufficient | :22:44. | :22:46. | |
capacity to shelter them, to protect them or to give | :22:47. | :22:50. | |
I also talked to these Afghans and Pakistanis. | :22:51. | :22:54. | |
They won't be allowed to cross the border because they're not | :22:55. | :22:57. | |
They'll probably make for the hills and turn to people smugglers. | :22:58. | :23:04. | |
In the last three days, 8,000 people have arrived | :23:05. | :23:09. | |
And they will try to push north by whatever means, | :23:10. | :23:15. | |
The Flying Scotsman, one of the world's most famous steam | :23:16. | :23:25. | |
locomotives, has made its historic return to the tracks. | :23:26. | :23:28. | |
Thousands turned out to watch its journey | :23:29. | :23:30. | |
following a decade-long, ?4 million restoration. | :23:31. | :23:35. | |
Our transport correspondent Richard Westcott was on board. | :23:36. | :23:45. | |
That four million restoration was fraught. Think of it like buying | :23:46. | :23:51. | |
your old dream home. Every time they stripped something away they found | :23:52. | :23:53. | |
another problem underneath. They've got there. Flying Scotsman is back | :23:54. | :23:55. | |
in business. It's been quite a day. It's not a locomotive, | :23:56. | :24:00. | |
it's a celebrity. Flying Scotsman, back centre-stage | :24:01. | :24:01. | |
on its old stomping ground, For the crew, it's a tough, | :24:02. | :24:06. | |
filthy, rewarding job. This very cramped passage is just | :24:07. | :24:14. | |
one of the things that makes It meant that drivers could change | :24:15. | :24:19. | |
over whilst the train That made this the first service | :24:20. | :24:24. | |
that went from London This engine has had | :24:25. | :24:28. | |
all the ups and downs Then shipped off to the United | :24:29. | :24:33. | |
States, shipped off to Australia. It's caused heartache, heartbreaks, | :24:34. | :24:41. | |
heart attacks and bankruptcies. I think many people believed it | :24:42. | :24:46. | |
would never again, NEWSREEL: The beautiful engine eased | :24:47. | :24:52. | |
out of platform 10. Flying Scotsman's always made | :24:53. | :24:56. | |
headlines. It was the first train | :24:57. | :25:02. | |
officially clocked at 100 mph. Today, the only delays were down | :25:03. | :25:07. | |
to train-spotters on the line. At its birthplace in Doncaster, | :25:08. | :25:12. | |
they can still pull the crowds. Journey's end in York and the crew | :25:13. | :25:17. | |
are stars for the day. The enthusiasm, people coming out | :25:18. | :25:21. | |
on to the tracks to see It's brilliant to see | :25:22. | :25:26. | |
everyone lineside. Great to see everyone's | :25:27. | :25:30. | |
supporting the engine. Flying Scotsman's going | :25:31. | :25:33. | |
to be touring again. So thousands more can | :25:34. | :25:38. | |
revel in this sight. The Afghan boy who became an online | :25:39. | :25:48. | |
sensation after wearing a homemade shirt bearing Lionel Messi's famous | :25:49. | :25:52. | |
number 10 has finally received the real thing from the Argentine | :25:53. | :25:56. | |
footballer himself. The photo of five-year-old | :25:57. | :26:01. | |
Murtaza Ahmadi wearing the striped plastic bag became a hit online | :26:02. | :26:05. | |
and sparked a worldwide search Eventually Murtaza was found | :26:06. | :26:08. | |
in a remote region Messi's management team confirmed | :26:09. | :26:13. | |
today that Murtaza has been sent a signed Argentina shirt | :26:14. | :26:18. | |
and football from the Barcelona forward who's been crowned | :26:19. | :26:21. | |
the world's best player five times. I'm not sure this is a dream come | :26:22. | :26:39. | |
true, this weather forecast. We've had some beautiful weather today. | :26:40. | :26:44. | |
The sunshining hered today at the Mumbles. It is the time of year when | :26:45. | :26:48. | |
you see that cloud bubbling up inland. The sunshine not as abundant | :26:49. | :26:53. | |
this afternoon. A few wintry showers. By and large, it has been | :26:54. | :26:57. | |
dry and cold. Again, overnight, the frost will return. Not as widely and | :26:58. | :27:03. | |
not as hard as last night, we've more cloud coming from the south and | :27:04. | :27:07. | |
some showers. Still cold enough for a frost and any showers as at the | :27:08. | :27:11. | |
fall on to a frozen surface to form to ice. Could be freezing fog over | :27:12. | :27:16. | |
north-eastern areas. Another cold start, a day of scraping ice off the | :27:17. | :27:21. | |
cars first thing tomorrow morning. More cloud around. Particularly for | :27:22. | :27:24. | |
Northern Ireland. Some sharpish showers. Could be wintry. For the | :27:25. | :27:29. | |
west of Cornwall and Wales, more cloud generally. Further east, | :27:30. | :27:32. | |
perhaps a rogue shower but here we'll enjoy the best of the sunshine | :27:33. | :27:37. | |
once isolated fog clears. 4-5 Celsius. Not too bad in the | :27:38. | :27:40. | |
sunshine. It is all change as we head into the weekend. We've the | :27:41. | :27:47. | |
rugby match taking place in Cardiff. The weather shouldn't interfere | :27:48. | :27:50. | |
here. We get a nagging easterly wind. They say that's no good to man | :27:51. | :27:56. | |
nor beast. Though we've hee pressure it will feel colder in southern | :27:57. | :28:00. | |
areas. It should be largely dry for the weekend. High pressure bringing | :28:01. | :28:04. | |
us some fine and very useable weather and light winds in the | :28:05. | :28:08. | |
north, so not too bad. A few wintry showers. It will feel different in | :28:09. | :28:15. | |
the south despite being dry with some sunshine, a nagging easterly | :28:16. | :28:16. | |
wind. George. A highly critical report into the | :28:17. | :28:30. | |
activities of Jimmy Savile at the BBC blamed a culture of fear which | :28:31. | :28:34. | |
allowed his abuse to | :28:35. | :28:40. |