Browse content similar to 18/02/2016. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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The headlines on BBC Newsline: One day on from 1,000 job | :00:14. | :00:17. | |
losses at Bombardier, we'll be hearing about the effect | :00:18. | :00:20. | |
A stand-off between police and environmentalists | :00:21. | :00:25. | |
What effect could a landmark ruling from the UK's highest court have | :00:26. | :00:32. | |
Also on the programme tonight: We sent our reporter to check out | :00:33. | :00:38. | |
There's no doubt it's great fun, even for adults, but is there a | :00:39. | :00:50. | |
danger that young people can come to something like this have a good time | :00:51. | :00:58. | |
but learned nothing? We meet the county Antrim man getting ready to | :00:59. | :01:00. | |
welcome Northern Ireland's footballers to the Euros. | :01:01. | :01:02. | |
And potential for frost and ice for a time tonight. | :01:03. | :01:04. | |
Less cold tomorrow but breezy with some rain. | :01:05. | :01:10. | |
The First Minister says she will make every effort to soften | :01:11. | :01:15. | |
the blow of 1,000 job losses announced at Bombardier. | :01:16. | :01:18. | |
It's emerged the company is also suspending recruitment | :01:19. | :01:21. | |
But first a company which is one of Bombardier's biggest local parts | :01:22. | :01:28. | |
suppliers says it's saddened by the cuts. | :01:29. | :01:32. | |
The firm though is confident about its own future | :01:33. | :01:34. | |
Our business correspondent Julian O'Neill reports. | :01:35. | :01:41. | |
A section of the new Bombardier C Series aircraft being made in county | :01:42. | :01:49. | |
Londonderry. This is precision engineering, it is one of their main | :01:50. | :01:55. | |
local parts suppliers and hear any setback at the Canadian aerospace | :01:56. | :02:00. | |
giant, especially one which costs jobs, is followed closely. Saddams. | :02:01. | :02:05. | |
It's a major thing losing those jobs. Its organs be easy to get | :02:06. | :02:12. | |
employment. For as they company where quite confident we will still | :02:13. | :02:15. | |
be going forward. It is a global business here so... Bombardier help | :02:16. | :02:22. | |
support thousands of jobs in its Northern Ireland supply chain. | :02:23. | :02:26. | |
Dozens of small to medium-sized firms are watching developments and | :02:27. | :02:30. | |
now more than ever chasing new customers. Yesterday was bad news. | :02:31. | :02:35. | |
There is hope on the horizon that those companies that have grown and | :02:36. | :02:42. | |
built from support from Bombardier can win other contracts with other | :02:43. | :02:46. | |
companies. That is exactly what they have been doing here. It's branched | :02:47. | :02:50. | |
out using its expertise for Bombardier to win business with | :02:51. | :02:55. | |
Airbus whose plane production is enormous by comparison. Bombardier | :02:56. | :03:00. | |
have the new C Series but it's yet to get off the ground. The Airbus | :03:01. | :03:04. | |
has the new products that are growing exponentially year-on-year | :03:05. | :03:08. | |
and for any manufacturing company wishing to grow their business they | :03:09. | :03:13. | |
have to be on the programmes. 115 people were clear, the plant is | :03:14. | :03:18. | |
busier than ever. Across the local aerospace sector, there is on | :03:19. | :03:22. | |
average a 25% reliance on Bombardier. Diversifying the order | :03:23. | :03:29. | |
book is seen as being key going forward. Spreading its wings beyond | :03:30. | :03:33. | |
Bombardier has helped this company grows a business. Very soon, it will | :03:34. | :03:40. | |
double the size of its reduction base, moving into what was once an | :03:41. | :03:42. | |
old shirt factory next door. Individual workers at Bombardier | :03:43. | :03:46. | |
expect to learn about their future Understandably, they have been | :03:47. | :03:48. | |
reluctant to speak in advance Today, one worker spoke to us | :03:49. | :03:54. | |
on the condition we wouldn't identify him and he told us | :03:55. | :03:59. | |
of the atmosphere of uncertainty. He explained how he was facing an | :04:00. | :04:11. | |
uncertain future. We're shocked at the situation. Start later came to | :04:12. | :04:20. | |
the fact the likes of mortgage payments, car payments, the money | :04:21. | :04:28. | |
issue comes through the mind. Never faced redundancy before. And the | :04:29. | :04:33. | |
deer is a good employer that pays good wages so how do you go from | :04:34. | :04:37. | |
earning a good wage to earning near nothing? I miss second generation | :04:38. | :04:43. | |
Bombardier worker, my father worked there and my uncles are employed | :04:44. | :04:52. | |
there. You do think about other jobs and that you set. Even going as an | :04:53. | :04:58. | |
apprentice and you could raise all the way up to be a managing | :04:59. | :05:02. | |
director. It can go as high as you want and travel the world. That's | :05:03. | :05:06. | |
when I joined it and what I aspire to do. With my skill set, I believe | :05:07. | :05:13. | |
I'll be comfortable, confidence, of doing that move because and | :05:14. | :05:18. | |
confident in my own skills and their developed. It could be halfway | :05:19. | :05:24. | |
across the world. That will be the problem. | :05:25. | :05:25. | |
Our business and economics editor John Campbell is at Bombardier | :05:26. | :05:28. | |
The company's apprenticeship scheme cancelled, not entirely unexpected | :05:29. | :05:32. | |
This company is very firmly in cost saving mode and one of the things | :05:33. | :05:47. | |
they've done is decided to suspend that apprenticeship scheme. They | :05:48. | :05:51. | |
have a highly regarded it apprenticeship scheme, it takes and | :05:52. | :05:55. | |
40 young people every year, they do a four-year scheme working towards | :05:56. | :05:59. | |
altercations in aircraft fitting and aeronautical engineering but this | :06:00. | :06:03. | |
year the scheme is suspended taking no apprentices at all the | :06:04. | :06:08. | |
apprentices already here are continuing as normal. They will | :06:09. | :06:11. | |
continue to work towards their qualifications. Politicians have | :06:12. | :06:14. | |
been lining up to stress they will do all they can. All the political | :06:15. | :06:21. | |
parties were on the Nolan show last night and they were criticising the | :06:22. | :06:26. | |
enterprise minister asking if he had done enough to try and keep these | :06:27. | :06:30. | |
jobs here but he repeated that he has been in contact with one body | :06:31. | :06:33. | |
ache on numerous occasions in the last few months and asked them if | :06:34. | :06:38. | |
they can do anything. The company have said no, they have to go | :06:39. | :06:41. | |
through restructuring, they have to go through pain and nothing Stormont | :06:42. | :06:46. | |
can do to stop it. He said Bombardier will continue to get | :06:47. | :06:49. | |
support from the executive and that was echoed by his First Minister. | :06:50. | :06:55. | |
Bombardier have provided us with many jobs and will continue to | :06:56. | :07:00. | |
providers with jobs into the future and we understand that they have had | :07:01. | :07:04. | |
to take this step in terms of global restructuring, 7000 jobs across the | :07:05. | :07:08. | |
world, but we also understand that it is a very worrying time for many | :07:09. | :07:13. | |
of the staff in Bombardier and we will support them and do whatever we | :07:14. | :07:17. | |
can to help them at this time. The company has had more to say about | :07:18. | :07:24. | |
potential orders. Bombardier have been out at the Singapore airshow. | :07:25. | :07:28. | |
They are is an big international event for the air cover companies. | :07:29. | :07:32. | |
They were able to announce yesterday they have 45 orders for C Series | :07:33. | :07:39. | |
from Air Canada and their headers sales taught up the prospect of more | :07:40. | :07:42. | |
orders. He says they are talking to United Airlines, a big American | :07:43. | :07:46. | |
carrier and are hopeful they will have another order before the | :07:47. | :07:52. | |
airshow. All this positivity and momentum around the C Series has to | :07:53. | :07:56. | |
translate into sales and sales quickly for the future of the | :07:57. | :07:57. | |
company. And there'll be more | :07:58. | :07:59. | |
on the situation at Bombardier on the View this evening | :08:00. | :08:01. | |
where we'll hear from Invest NI That's at 10:45pm after our late | :08:02. | :08:04. | |
bulletin here on BBC One. Coming up before seven, | :08:05. | :08:10. | |
It was the new city of the '70s, now Craigavon has | :08:11. | :08:16. | |
inspired a concerto. One man has been arrested | :08:17. | :08:26. | |
for causing an obstruction during a stand-off between police | :08:27. | :08:28. | |
and environmentalists at a forest near Carrickfergus where an oil | :08:29. | :08:31. | |
company plans to drill a well. Protestors have been blocking | :08:32. | :08:33. | |
access to Woodburn Forest. Our environment correspondent | :08:34. | :08:35. | |
Conor Macauley has more. The work could threaten the public | :08:36. | :08:47. | |
water supply. The company says it will be done with the protection of | :08:48. | :08:49. | |
the environment to the fore. Tractors turned up this morning to | :08:50. | :08:58. | |
begin preparatory work on the site, they found their way blocked by | :08:59. | :09:02. | |
protesters opposed to the exploratory well. A woman who parked | :09:03. | :09:06. | |
car in the middle of was removed by police. | :09:07. | :09:13. | |
Look, lads, were not doing anything wrong. This is your vehicle. That | :09:14. | :09:22. | |
being on the back of the low loader, it doesn't matter. That being cut | :09:23. | :09:28. | |
down, that is a disgrace. This project has proved controversial | :09:29. | :09:31. | |
because campaigners say it could threaten the water supply for | :09:32. | :09:35. | |
thousands of homes in Belfast and Carrickfergus. The site is in the | :09:36. | :09:38. | |
catchment of a reservoir, the land has been leased to the oil company | :09:39. | :09:44. | |
by Northern Ireland water. They say the project is not pose a risk. | :09:45. | :09:49. | |
We're been here for 24 hours and we will stay here as long as we have | :09:50. | :09:55. | |
two. A second vehicle was blocking access to the site and it is being | :09:56. | :09:58. | |
moved after an intervention by the police but as you can see this | :09:59. | :10:02. | |
trailer is parked in the access route and it will be some time yet | :10:03. | :10:08. | |
before anyone gets onto the site. Would you believe that? One man was | :10:09. | :10:11. | |
arrested as part of a police operation. The inspector is doing | :10:12. | :10:20. | |
Infrastrata work. Later a senior police officers suspended a | :10:21. | :10:23. | |
right-of-way through the forest as people protested his writer power to | :10:24. | :10:26. | |
do so and this afternoon the man arrested return to the protest where | :10:27. | :10:31. | |
supporters had a rip around to reimburse him for the ?85 find he | :10:32. | :10:32. | |
had been hit with. -- whip round. This evening, the trailer which have | :10:33. | :10:43. | |
been blocking the access all day was finally moved. Concrete bollards | :10:44. | :10:50. | |
were put in place by contractors. There is a suggestion protesters | :10:51. | :10:55. | |
could seek an injunction to stop further work, a matter for the | :10:56. | :10:56. | |
courts to decide. The oil companies as work was being | :10:57. | :11:08. | |
done with measures in place to protect the water table. It added | :11:09. | :11:11. | |
that if it wanted to do a commercially for oil it would need | :11:12. | :11:14. | |
to make a full planning application. It said the current work would see | :11:15. | :11:19. | |
three acres of the 1800 acre forest temporarily closed. | :11:20. | :11:21. | |
A ruling by the Supreme Court means hundreds of people in prison | :11:22. | :11:24. | |
for murder or assault could challenge their convictions. | :11:25. | :11:26. | |
Judges in England, Wales and Northern Ireland have been told | :11:27. | :11:28. | |
that for more than 30 years they have wrongly interpreted | :11:29. | :11:31. | |
the law relating to joint enterprise. | :11:32. | :11:34. | |
That has allowed people to be convicted even if they did not | :11:35. | :11:37. | |
The legal expert Joshua Rozenberg joins us live from London. | :11:38. | :11:42. | |
Joint enterprise means that two people in the crime together. It | :11:43. | :12:00. | |
doesn't matter too much what they did, if one person fires the weapon | :12:01. | :12:04. | |
and the other person drives the getaway car they are both guilty of | :12:05. | :12:08. | |
the attack. If one person encourages another person to commit a crime, | :12:09. | :12:12. | |
they are both guilty and those cases are not affected by today's ruling | :12:13. | :12:16. | |
from the Supreme Court here in London. What is concerned with is an | :12:17. | :12:21. | |
unusual set of circumstances where a group of people go off intending to | :12:22. | :12:25. | |
create some sort of trouble and one of them unexpectedly has a knife and | :12:26. | :12:30. | |
stab somebody commits a crime. The question is, should the other people | :12:31. | :12:35. | |
on the periphery of the crime be convicted and the question is really | :12:36. | :12:41. | |
what they foresaw? The trouble is in the past the court said, they ought | :12:42. | :12:45. | |
to have foreseen that this would happen and they were guilty of | :12:46. | :12:48. | |
murder even if they didn't intended. The court saying now that you have | :12:49. | :12:53. | |
to look at the intentions, foresight may help you to understand the | :12:54. | :12:56. | |
intentions but just because they foresaw something it doesn't mean | :12:57. | :12:59. | |
they are guilty of a crime like murder. Can you envisage a Ross of | :13:00. | :13:05. | |
people going to court to appeal the conviction is? A lot of people will | :13:06. | :13:08. | |
try to appeal but the courts have made it clear that those people are | :13:09. | :13:13. | |
not necessarily going to get very far. If they are one of the first | :13:14. | :13:17. | |
two cases I spoke about, to people commit a crime together, no chance, | :13:18. | :13:22. | |
if they are maybe part of a gang, a group and somebody has been swept up | :13:23. | :13:25. | |
in that group and they think they may be part of it, the first problem | :13:26. | :13:29. | |
is if this happened a long time ago it may be too late, the appeal may | :13:30. | :13:33. | |
be out of time and then only in those circumstances if the court | :13:34. | :13:38. | |
agrees that there were some serious injustice, they will allow the case | :13:39. | :13:41. | |
to go ahead and then even then it might be that the evidence was | :13:42. | :13:44. | |
enough to support murder under the new rules so it isn't going to be a | :13:45. | :13:49. | |
large number of people succeeding in getting their convictions | :13:50. | :13:53. | |
overturned. What about non-jury terrorist cases? Will they be | :13:54. | :13:58. | |
different? I don't think the fact they were conducted without juries | :13:59. | :14:01. | |
will be different. The crucial question is what happened. If you | :14:02. | :14:06. | |
have two people getting involved and if the rubble on the edge you said | :14:07. | :14:09. | |
they were wrongly convicted, maybe that's is the sort of case where | :14:10. | :14:15. | |
there will be the possibility of an appeal but if the person has been | :14:16. | :14:19. | |
released already is in many cases they had the court may say there is | :14:20. | :14:23. | |
no particular need to deal with it, it is academic. I don't think there | :14:24. | :14:27. | |
will be a lot but I can see that the courts will be bothered and the | :14:28. | :14:31. | |
people that a review cases to see whether by they will go to court | :14:32. | :14:34. | |
will be bothered with a large of cases people who say their case or | :14:35. | :14:36. | |
to to appeal. I'm in Paris to meet the county | :14:37. | :14:45. | |
Antrim groundsmen whose cut his way to the very top of his profession. | :14:46. | :14:49. | |
An Orange Hall in County Tyrone has had windows and door panels smashed. | :14:50. | :14:52. | |
The damage to Strawletterdallon Orange hall near Newtownstewart | :14:53. | :14:55. | |
The police are treating it as a hate crime. | :14:56. | :15:00. | |
The same hall was damaged five years ago in an arson attack. | :15:01. | :15:06. | |
This is a community facility. It is an Orange Hall on the local lords | :15:07. | :15:15. | |
use it but it is widely used by families and friends and | :15:16. | :15:19. | |
organisations other than the Lords itself. Young and old. | :15:20. | :15:21. | |
The annual science festival kicked off today with an exhibition | :15:22. | :15:23. | |
in Belfast about the appliance of science in sport. | :15:24. | :15:25. | |
BBC Newsline's Mark Simpson went along to take a closer look. | :15:26. | :15:33. | |
Making science interesting to young people can be hit and miss. The | :15:34. | :15:42. | |
latest experiment is to throw in a bit of sport to see if that captures | :15:43. | :15:47. | |
the imagination. The science Festival is about encouraging the | :15:48. | :15:50. | |
next generation to take up science. We face an increased problem across | :15:51. | :15:54. | |
the world where most of the big jobs are in science and technology and | :15:55. | :15:57. | |
engineering but we don't have enough young people studying it. We want to | :15:58. | :16:01. | |
grow the economy and it's important we have a pipeline of people coming | :16:02. | :16:07. | |
through. There's no doubt it's great fun even for adults but is there a | :16:08. | :16:12. | |
danger that young people could come to something like this have a good | :16:13. | :16:17. | |
time but learned nothing? Goes deeper. There is fun to be had and | :16:18. | :16:21. | |
that's it's about and enjoy having fun you are more likely to learn | :16:22. | :16:26. | |
than being taught on a blackboard. We have the guys from Queens who've | :16:27. | :16:29. | |
created the rugby simulator which can take part in. The science of the | :16:30. | :16:34. | |
golf swing, you can talk to them about momentum. With the racing | :16:35. | :16:37. | |
cars, we have students who bought this car is to talk to people and | :16:38. | :16:41. | |
explain the engineering and the science. As far as the scientist are | :16:42. | :16:47. | |
concerned, this is not just another video game. Its research. It's a way | :16:48. | :16:52. | |
to monitor physical and mental reactions. The cable is a static | :16:53. | :16:58. | |
thing. You're in control when you time your action, whereas if you | :16:59. | :17:01. | |
tackling someone they are running and making a decision to move as | :17:02. | :17:05. | |
well so there is a different interplay. It's something new and | :17:06. | :17:11. | |
unique. As with all experiments, the advice is to try, try and try again. | :17:12. | :17:17. | |
Till you get it right. It was planned as a new and gleaming | :17:18. | :17:20. | |
modern city for over 100,000 people. 50 years on, Craigavon hasn't quite | :17:21. | :17:24. | |
lived up to those early ambitions. But our arts correspondent | :17:25. | :17:28. | |
Robbie Meredith reports it's getting An unlikely source of musical | :17:29. | :17:46. | |
inspiration, perhaps but now Craigavon has its own Concerto. It's | :17:47. | :17:51. | |
the work of this man. One of a leading composers. Beauty is in the | :17:52. | :17:57. | |
eye of the beholder. I find this place fascinating and I'm from this | :17:58. | :18:01. | |
place. Where are we now? We are in an area of Craigavon called | :18:02. | :18:06. | |
Brownlow. This was all part of the grand stream. Back then, there | :18:07. | :18:12. | |
wasn't just a plan for Craigavon, more a vision. When people hear it, | :18:13. | :18:20. | |
what you want them to visualise? This? Is not the most attractive | :18:21. | :18:25. | |
part of the world. What you trying to get them to imagine? I suppose it | :18:26. | :18:31. | |
is like if you say Gershwin rights against the backdrop of New York, | :18:32. | :18:36. | |
he's not writing about taxis. It's about you being from that place and | :18:37. | :18:42. | |
that being in your DNA. To Connor, it's still a place of strange | :18:43. | :18:47. | |
beauty. Roundabouts and all. There are other parts of Craigavon which | :18:48. | :18:54. | |
are beautiful. The hospital is a huge industry in the area that can't | :18:55. | :19:01. | |
be dismissed. Do you think people are misguided about Craigavon? I | :19:02. | :19:07. | |
think it is easy to look at failures in something like this and it's easy | :19:08. | :19:12. | |
because it's a visual thing to see something in your minds eye. It's | :19:13. | :19:16. | |
easy to see that boarded-up houses or roundabouts. It's not easy to see | :19:17. | :19:25. | |
ethic and I think it is to be applauded. Unfortunately for locals, | :19:26. | :19:31. | |
they'll have to travel down the road to Portadown to hear the Concerto | :19:32. | :19:33. | |
premiered on Saturday night. There was more good news | :19:34. | :19:37. | |
for Northern Ireland football fans today ahead of the European | :19:38. | :19:40. | |
Championship finals this summer. UEFA has agreed to give more tickets | :19:41. | :19:42. | |
to Northern Ireland supporters following complaints over how | :19:43. | :19:48. | |
tickets for the three Euro group Almost 100 more tickets have been | :19:49. | :19:51. | |
made available for the game against Germany and more than 500 | :19:52. | :19:57. | |
for the match against Ukraine. Last week, UEFA provided an extra | :19:58. | :20:01. | |
1,200 for the Poland game. The IFA's chief executive told | :20:02. | :20:04. | |
a Stormont committee today that he will keep the pressure | :20:05. | :20:06. | |
on UEFA for even more tickets. The showdown with world champions | :20:07. | :20:09. | |
Germany is NI'S final game One local man who is guaranteed | :20:10. | :20:11. | |
to be on the pitch is Jonathan Calderwood from just outside | :20:12. | :20:16. | |
Ballymena. He's not a player or part | :20:17. | :20:17. | |
of the Northern Ireland backroom team but he will play a key role | :20:18. | :20:19. | |
when it comes to match day Paris, it's a long way from county | :20:20. | :20:32. | |
Antrim but one man from the area has made a will name himself in the | :20:33. | :20:39. | |
capital. The pitches ready. Jonathan Calder would, star of a French | :20:40. | :20:44. | |
television advert is the head groundsman at the park to prance. | :20:45. | :20:49. | |
Home of Paris St Germain. It started in east Belfast. When I went to the | :20:50. | :20:55. | |
high school in Ballymena, in your last year at school you had to do a | :20:56. | :20:59. | |
weeks work experience. Being a football fanatic and a big Glentoran | :21:00. | :21:05. | |
fan, it was only right I should go to Glentoran and see if they would | :21:06. | :21:10. | |
take me as a groundsman. From the Taoiseach next up was the old | :21:11. | :21:14. | |
Wembley Stadium in London. Then to Aston Villa where he won the Premier | :21:15. | :21:19. | |
League groundsman of the year twice. And ability met on the game 's most | :21:20. | :21:23. | |
respected managers, Gerard Houllier. The Frenchman recommended him to his | :21:24. | :21:28. | |
current employers. The Premier League pitches in England are known | :21:29. | :21:31. | |
to be the best in the world so normally if you have one of the best | :21:32. | :21:35. | |
pitching England you have the best pitching the world. Gerard said | :21:36. | :21:39. | |
straightaway, I think the best grounds man in the world is Jonathan | :21:40. | :21:42. | |
Calderwood so those recommendations, the club said we want this guy. | :21:43. | :21:49. | |
Jonathan's expertise and pitcher Management has helped craft one of | :21:50. | :21:53. | |
the best playing services in Europe and as luck would have it at Euro | :21:54. | :21:57. | |
2016 in June Northern Ireland will play Germany in their final group | :21:58. | :22:00. | |
game in Paris and Jonathan's passage. When the draw was taking | :22:01. | :22:07. | |
place, I was talking about four weeks and weeks living Lydiate to | :22:08. | :22:12. | |
draw and when the draw came I had to say was an adapted and when it was | :22:13. | :22:18. | |
unbelievable for me. The move to Paris and Northern Ireland to play | :22:19. | :22:24. | |
Germany in Paris and my pitch, doesn't get better than that. It | :22:25. | :22:27. | |
drink come true. If Northern Ireland can topple world champions do know | :22:28. | :22:32. | |
who to thank for the pristine playing surface. | :22:33. | :22:36. | |
Ulster Rugby's Jared Payne has signed a two-year contract | :22:37. | :22:38. | |
which will keep him in Belfast until the summer of 2018. | :22:39. | :22:42. | |
Payne, from New Zealand, made his debut for Ulster back | :22:43. | :22:46. | |
in 2011 and won his first international cap three years later | :22:47. | :22:50. | |
Payne is part of the current Ireland squad for the Six Nations. | :22:51. | :22:56. | |
As part of the current BBC One series In the Mind, | :22:57. | :22:59. | |
which is exploring mental health issues, we've been speaking to local | :23:00. | :23:02. | |
He has battled depression and anxiety issues to emerge as NI | :23:03. | :23:08. | |
and All-Ireland champion, as well as an ambassador for a local | :23:09. | :23:13. | |
On the face of it, immensely successful, talented, is usually | :23:14. | :23:26. | |
strong but behind the facade of bulging muscles and success and | :23:27. | :23:32. | |
illness and an unseen one. Rory was drinking excessively, 17 stone and | :23:33. | :23:35. | |
fired from his job and suffering from depression. I've experienced it | :23:36. | :23:45. | |
as a teenager. Got bad when I went to university in my early 20s. Got | :23:46. | :23:50. | |
worse until I was desperate and reached out and spoke to doctors, | :23:51. | :23:54. | |
and different people and by taking that step and sharing with anyone | :23:55. | :24:01. | |
you're taking a leap forward. The most important thing here is done is | :24:02. | :24:05. | |
to do stigmatise talking about how we're feeling and struggles that we | :24:06. | :24:10. | |
may have as men. People who see him as a strong masculine man understand | :24:11. | :24:14. | |
that being a man is also about talking about your feelings and how | :24:15. | :24:18. | |
you're coping. Most importantly, asking for help. It's that word | :24:19. | :24:23. | |
talking that secures your step. Why's so important? Mental illness | :24:24. | :24:27. | |
can be treated but never fully cured. Mental health is something | :24:28. | :24:34. | |
that stays with you. If you've experienced difficulties with it | :24:35. | :24:37. | |
then you will continue to experience difficulties as I do, however if you | :24:38. | :24:43. | |
gain knowledge to modify your behaviour is and manage these things | :24:44. | :24:51. | |
it but comes a different situation. Knowledge is power and that journey | :24:52. | :24:54. | |
can start with something as simple as a chat. | :24:55. | :25:00. | |
And you can see more on that story on the BBC Get Inspired webpage. | :25:01. | :25:04. | |
Mark Allen is through to the quarter-finals | :25:05. | :25:05. | |
That get the weather. One word sums it up- coal. It will become less | :25:06. | :25:23. | |
cold over the next couple of days. Unfortunately bit more unsettled. | :25:24. | :25:30. | |
Cold. A chill in the air. After a frosty start and a gloomy start. | :25:31. | :25:34. | |
On-site gloom lifted, you can still see evidence of the cold, some snow | :25:35. | :25:41. | |
there. At least the wind turbine is not too busy. The winds have been | :25:42. | :25:45. | |
like. They will be easier over the couple of days. We have had showers | :25:46. | :25:51. | |
coming in today. Those were wintry. They are easing off so as we go | :25:52. | :25:54. | |
through the course of the evening we will find clear spells have a living | :25:55. | :25:58. | |
and the temperatures falling. Down to freezing or slightly below so we | :25:59. | :26:02. | |
are looking at frost, patches of mist and fog, after the showers | :26:03. | :26:08. | |
leaving wet surfaces ice could be an issue. There is a warning from the | :26:09. | :26:12. | |
Met office that it could be slippery and untreated roads and pavements. | :26:13. | :26:16. | |
The ice is likely to linger for a good part of the night but later in | :26:17. | :26:19. | |
the night temperatures will creep up with increasing cloud. Spells of | :26:20. | :26:26. | |
rain nudging into the West. That is setting the scene for tomorrow. It | :26:27. | :26:30. | |
will turn quite wet free time and breezy. Quite blustery and places, | :26:31. | :26:33. | |
particularly around the coast. We have to expect assistant spells of | :26:34. | :26:39. | |
rain working east through the morning. Once I get there, it can | :26:40. | :26:44. | |
stay damp into the afternoon in a few spots. Generally speaking for | :26:45. | :26:48. | |
many parts the rain clears away and leaves just a few showers behind in | :26:49. | :26:51. | |
the north and west, otherwise it's a dry into the day. You should see | :26:52. | :26:56. | |
bright intervals as well. Temperatures are better tomorrow, | :26:57. | :26:59. | |
eight or nine Celsius but with the breeze will be feeling quite cool. | :27:00. | :27:03. | |
We have that breeze with others as we head into tomorrow night. Showers | :27:04. | :27:08. | |
rattling through over central and northern areas. Not as cold tomorrow | :27:09. | :27:14. | |
night at 45 Celsius. Into the weekend, we're straddled by a | :27:15. | :27:18. | |
weather front, warm air to the south and cold to the north. There will be | :27:19. | :27:22. | |
rain at times, in particular on Saturday. Once that rinsing south, | :27:23. | :27:28. | |
sometime on Sunday, cold air will follow. | :27:29. | :27:30. | |
You can also keep in contact with us via Facebook and Twitter. | :27:31. | :27:35. |