19/10/2012

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:00:08. > :00:12.The government chief whip quits after weeks of controversy over his

:00:12. > :00:15.row with police officers. Andrew Mitchell was accused of calling

:00:15. > :00:18.officers plebs when they refused to let him cycle through the Downing

:00:18. > :00:21.Street Gates. He denied that but said in his resignation letter it

:00:21. > :00:28.was not fair to put colleagues and family through such damaging

:00:28. > :00:33.publicity. The Police Federation welcome his departure. We are

:00:33. > :00:37.pleased that he has taken the right decision. He has not come out with

:00:38. > :00:40.a full explanation of what his version of events are. We will be

:00:40. > :00:44.assessing how damaging the whole affair has been to the government

:00:44. > :00:47.and the Prime Minister. Also tonight: A man who confessed to two

:00:47. > :00:52.murders is jailed for one that cannot be prosecuted for the other

:00:52. > :00:54.because the police failed to follow correct procedure. Christopher

:00:54. > :00:57.Halliwell has been jailed for killing Sian O'Callaghan but the

:00:57. > :01:06.case against him for the murder of Becky Godden has been dropped, to

:01:06. > :01:12.the anguish of her mother. Sian's family have today had the justice

:01:12. > :01:18.for the murder of their beautiful daughter. However, our family's

:01:18. > :01:28.fight for justice, for Becky, has only just begun.

:01:28. > :01:29.

:01:29. > :01:35.A a huge car bomb explodes in a week. -- a huge car bomb exploded

:01:35. > :01:41.in Beirut. The inquiry into Jimmy Savile widens to a criminal

:01:41. > :01:51.investigation into allegations of child abuse by people still living.

:01:51. > :02:04.

:02:04. > :02:08.John Terry's future is still Good evening. The government chief

:02:08. > :02:13.whip Andrew Mitchell has resigned after weeks of criticism and

:02:13. > :02:17.speculation about his row with police officers in Downing Street.

:02:17. > :02:22.The officers allege that Mr Mitchell had abused them and called

:02:22. > :02:30.them Peps after they refused to allow him to cycle out of the main

:02:30. > :02:34.gate of Downing Street -- plebs. Mr Mitchell denied that.

:02:34. > :02:43.Are the armed police, the Ahmed Gate's stand at the end of Downing

:02:43. > :02:47.Street to protect ministers of the Crown -- the armed Gates. The Chief

:02:47. > :02:52.Whip has lost his job thanks to what happened here a month ago.

:02:52. > :02:58.Andrew Mitchell, the man appointed by David Cameron took instil

:02:58. > :03:02.discipline amongst MPs showed very little of it himself. He shouted at

:03:02. > :03:06.a police officer who did not allow him to cycle through the main gate

:03:06. > :03:12.as he normally did. In a letter to the Prime Minister, Andrew Mitchell

:03:12. > :03:14.wrote of his enormous regret, saying over the last two days it

:03:14. > :03:18.has become clear to me that whatever the rights and wrongs of

:03:18. > :03:22.the matter, I will not be able to fulfil my duties as we both would

:03:22. > :03:27.wish. He goes on to respond to what he

:03:27. > :03:37.was alleged to have set according to an official report leaked to the

:03:37. > :03:55.

:03:55. > :04:00.When the Prime Minister returned home from the EU summit in Brussels,

:04:00. > :04:04.he found Andrew Mitchell waiting for him at Chequers, his official

:04:04. > :04:09.country retreat. Andrew Mitchell has decided that this point to

:04:09. > :04:15.resign. He is a man of honour and he recognises that other people

:04:15. > :04:19.were damaged, the government was damaged as a result and he felt the

:04:19. > :04:23.right thing to do was to remove himself from the picture.

:04:23. > :04:30.perhaps his fate was sealed two weeks ago, when looking ashen-faced

:04:30. > :04:37.and having lost a stone in weight, he was at Prime Minister's

:04:37. > :04:40.Questions. If a member of the public appears to police officer

:04:40. > :04:44.they would be placed in a police van. What the chief whip said and

:04:44. > :04:48.did was wrong and that is why it is important that he apologised and

:04:48. > :04:53.apologised probably. Whether apologising in public or in private,

:04:53. > :04:57.Andrew Mitchell refused to spell out what he had actually said.

:04:57. > :05:02.have apologised to the police officer involved on the gate and he

:05:02. > :05:06.has accepted my apology and I hope we can draw a line under there.

:05:06. > :05:11.the Police Federation, in effect to the police officers' Union never

:05:11. > :05:16.accepted that apology. He still has not come out with a full

:05:16. > :05:22.explanation of what his version of events are according to the report.

:05:22. > :05:26.It is quite right that he has gone. The new government chief whip is

:05:26. > :05:31.another keen cyclist, but the famously courteous Sir George Young

:05:31. > :05:35.is more likely to say please and thank you than his abrasive

:05:35. > :05:39.predecessor. By first refusing to resign, and then doing so after

:05:39. > :05:44.receiving his boss's full backing, Andrew Mitchell has damaged not

:05:44. > :05:48.just himself, but David Cameron, and all because he lost his temper

:05:48. > :05:52.with a police officer whose job it is to protect the home of the Prime

:05:52. > :05:56.Minister. Nick Robinson is that Downing

:05:56. > :06:00.Street now. The fact that Andrew Mitchell has chosen to resign now,

:06:00. > :06:04.why this time in? I spoke to Andrew Mitchell when he was still at

:06:04. > :06:10.Chequers, having told the Prime Minister that he had to go. The man

:06:10. > :06:15.I have always known as a fighter, a former soldier, the guy who loves

:06:15. > :06:20.political scrapping, the fight had gone out of him. He had fallen

:06:20. > :06:23.victim to the Labour Party who portrayed him as all that was wrong

:06:23. > :06:27.with this government, a man who symbolised that there was won well

:06:27. > :06:30.at the top and another one for everyone else. He was victim as

:06:30. > :06:35.well to the Police Federation, who are fighting this government over

:06:35. > :06:38.kerbs to their pay, cuts to their numbers and reforms to their

:06:38. > :06:45.pensions and working conditions. They were also determined not to

:06:45. > :06:48.give up until he went. And in the end, he fell victim to his own past

:06:48. > :06:51.behaviour. There were too few ministers, too few Conservatives

:06:51. > :06:57.willing to come up and say, I cannot imagine he would say

:06:57. > :07:02.anything like that. The tough guy paid in the end for being too tough.

:07:02. > :07:07.The problem for David Cameron is Andrew Mitchell, like all resigned

:07:07. > :07:11.ministers, will also be forgotten. What will not be forgotten is the

:07:11. > :07:15.Prime Minister tried to defend him and lost him. Once again, this will

:07:15. > :07:21.be added to the tally of those things described by Tory MPs and

:07:21. > :07:24.increasingly the Tory press, as examples of incompetence. Thank you.

:07:25. > :07:32.A taxi driver who admitted murdering two women has been jailed

:07:32. > :07:36.for life, but for only one of the killings. Christopher Hanrahan --

:07:36. > :07:39.Christopher Halliwell confessed to the murder of Sian O'Callaghan. He

:07:39. > :07:44.also confessed to the murder of Becky Godden but that case had to

:07:44. > :07:48.be abandoned because police failed to follow correct procedures.

:07:48. > :07:51.Taxi driver Christopher Halliwell. He confessed to a policeman that he

:07:52. > :07:57.killed both of these young women. But because of the way officers

:07:57. > :08:01.handled the case, only the family of Sian O'Callaghan has justice.

:08:01. > :08:06.She disappeared in March last year, after leaving a nightclub in

:08:06. > :08:10.Swindon. She got into Christopher Halliwell's cab. He sexually

:08:10. > :08:15.assaulted her and stabbed her in the head. Today he pleaded guilty

:08:15. > :08:21.to that murder. Christopher Halliwell has, by his genius

:08:21. > :08:26.actions, taken my vibrant young daughter's life and caused

:08:26. > :08:36.unimaginable distress -- his penis actions. However, just as has been

:08:36. > :08:47.

:08:47. > :08:51.His heinous actions.And an actress It all came down to when

:08:51. > :08:57.Christopher Halliwell was arrested in a supermarket and his cab was

:08:57. > :09:02.towed away. Whenever officers make an arrest, they are meant to follow

:09:03. > :09:09.strict national guidelines, take a suspect to a police station and

:09:09. > :09:12.speak to a lawyer but that did not happen. Instead, they drove

:09:13. > :09:18.Halliwell into the countryside for nearly four hours, hoping they

:09:18. > :09:24.would keep him talking and Torquay did. Taking them, not only to

:09:24. > :09:29.Sian's body but also the body of her Becky Godden who disappeared

:09:29. > :09:34.eight years earlier. Because police broke the rules of arrest, none of

:09:34. > :09:38.that was admissible in a court of law. In the case of Sian there was

:09:38. > :09:44.enough forensic evidence to press ahead but in Becky's case there was

:09:44. > :09:49.nothing else so that case has been dropped. Sian's family have today

:09:49. > :09:57.had the justice for the murder of their beautiful daughter. However,

:09:57. > :10:02.our family's fight for justice, for Becky, has only just begun. Of his

:10:02. > :10:06.in Sydney, come to Swindon, commit a murder and you will get away with

:10:06. > :10:11.it. -- it seems to me, come to Swindon, commit a murder and you

:10:11. > :10:16.will get a way that. I will never put my trust in the police again.

:10:16. > :10:19.The detective who led the case has been suspended. He has always

:10:19. > :10:25.denied taking Halwell to the police station that day because it might

:10:25. > :10:27.have stopped him talking. The case has been investigated by the

:10:27. > :10:32.Independent Police Complaints Commission.

:10:32. > :10:38.One person has been killed and 12 others, many of them children have

:10:38. > :10:46.been injured in a series of hit and run accident in Cardiff. Police

:10:46. > :10:51.arrested a 31-year-old man tonight. Tonight, the police investigation

:10:51. > :10:55.uncovers the length and breadth of this city as officers tried to map

:10:55. > :11:00.out the route taken by a lone van driver. One woman has lost her life.

:11:00. > :11:06.We understand she has been named locally as Karina Menzies. There

:11:06. > :11:09.are another dozen people, seven of them children who are seriously ill.

:11:09. > :11:14.As forensic teams continue to gather evidence, tonight, Cardiff

:11:14. > :11:20.has become a city of crime scenes, with people struggling to

:11:20. > :11:25.comprehend what they have seen. Police finally tracked the driver

:11:25. > :11:32.of this than to a pub to the south of the city. His victims had

:11:32. > :11:37.seemingly been chosen at random. As a result of the incident that

:11:37. > :11:40.has occurred, a 32-year-old female has lost her life. Our thoughts are

:11:40. > :11:44.with her family and our family liaison officers are with the

:11:44. > :11:49.family at the moment. They are first victims were hit

:11:49. > :11:53.just as the school day came to an end. The driver left children and

:11:53. > :11:58.adults lying in the street. Bystanders watched as a helicopter

:11:58. > :12:03.flew in to try and move the injured to hospital. There were police,

:12:03. > :12:09.ambulance, fire engines, crowds of people around the little girl. She

:12:09. > :12:16.only looked about seven. It looked as if they were just coming back

:12:16. > :12:21.from the shop. He just hit them. the injured started to arrive,

:12:21. > :12:26.Cardiff's largest accident and emergency unit was closed to all

:12:26. > :12:31.other patients. One woman was known to be dragged underneath a van.

:12:31. > :12:36.Others are known to be seriously ill. Detectives are trying to

:12:36. > :12:44.workout what could have triggered such a trail of destruction.

:12:44. > :12:47.Government borrowing fell last month to �12.8 billion, compared

:12:47. > :12:52.with 13.5 billion last year. It is the lowest September borrowing

:12:52. > :12:58.figure since 2008. Despite the improvement, it is unlikely the

:12:58. > :13:01.government will meet the target of wiping out the deficit by 2015. A

:13:01. > :13:11.European Union leaders have taken another step towards forming a

:13:11. > :13:11.

:13:11. > :13:18.banking union in the eurozone. A legislative framework is to be in

:13:18. > :13:21.place by 1st January. There is concern this will lead to the UK

:13:21. > :13:26.being outvoted on the EU banking decisions.

:13:26. > :13:31.Etude car bomb has exploded in Lebanon's capital, Beirut.

:13:31. > :13:36.Opposition leaders have accused the Syrian government of being behind

:13:36. > :13:41.the murder of General Wissam Al- Hassan. It is feared that the

:13:41. > :13:51.conflict in neighbouring Syria is destabilising Lebanon. The bomb

:13:51. > :14:01.

:14:01. > :14:04.went off at rush hour in Sassine The bomb went off in the mainly

:14:04. > :14:08.Christian district of the city and local TV stations were soon

:14:08. > :14:12.broadcasting images of burned cars, damaged buildings and dozens of

:14:12. > :14:20.wounded people. Eight people were killed, and as many as 100 were

:14:20. > :14:25.injured. But the main target was Lebanon's chief security official.

:14:25. > :14:29.He had recently implicated Syria and its Lebanese ally, Hezbollah,

:14:29. > :14:33.in the killing of a former Prime Minister, Rafiq Hariri. He was a

:14:33. > :14:37.fierce critic of the Assad regime in neighbouring Syria, and his

:14:37. > :14:41.death will not only throw Lebanese politics into turmoil, but will

:14:41. > :14:45.create shockwaves in the entire region. After a long period of

:14:45. > :14:48.relative calm, this is the first big bomb attack in the Lebanese

:14:48. > :14:52.capital in four years, but many had feared something like this would

:14:52. > :14:56.happen sooner or later and that Lebanon would be inevitably dragged

:14:56. > :15:00.into the conflict in neighbouring Syria. Some Lebanese political

:15:00. > :15:03.leaders have already accused the Assad regime in Syria of being

:15:03. > :15:07.behind the attack. Coming up:

:15:07. > :15:15.A year after the death of Colonel Gaddafi we investigate who's filled

:15:15. > :15:17.The inquiry into the late BBC presenter Jimmy Savile has now

:15:17. > :15:23.widened into a criminal investigation into allegations of

:15:23. > :15:27.child abuse by other individuals still living. Scotland Yard says it

:15:27. > :15:31.has so far identified 200 potential victims. Today, the children's

:15:31. > :15:34.charity the NSPCC said it was possible that Jimmy Savile was one

:15:34. > :15:43.of the most prolific sex offenders the charity had ever come across.

:15:43. > :15:46.Nick Higham reports. Police investigating Jimmy Savile

:15:46. > :15:51.say that they are dealing with allegations of abuse on an

:15:51. > :15:54.unprecedented scale. Their inquiries have now developed into a

:15:54. > :15:59.formal criminal investigation. That means not just Jimmy Savile, but

:15:59. > :16:03.people still living are now under scrutiny. In the past fortnight,

:16:03. > :16:11.police have assessed over 400 lines of inquiry and over 200 potential

:16:11. > :16:14.victims have been identified, most complaining of abuse by other

:16:14. > :16:18.people. Scotland Yard says the operation has empowered a

:16:18. > :16:22.staggering number of victims to come forward, and many are only now

:16:22. > :16:27.feel confident enough to speak out. The NSPCC says that Jimmy Savile

:16:27. > :16:31.may have had accomplices. He is one of the most prolific sex offenders

:16:31. > :16:36.that we have actually come across in our service. You can either do

:16:36. > :16:40.that on your own, or you may well have some assistance, so it is not

:16:40. > :16:44.surprising on our part that the police are now investigating other

:16:44. > :16:48.individuals. Jimmy Savile's activities to come to locations

:16:48. > :16:53.across the country where he was trusted and, in many cases, given

:16:53. > :16:57.his own room more special status. They included the BBC, an approved

:16:57. > :17:01.school in Staines, Leeds General Infirmary, Stoke Mandeville

:17:01. > :17:05.Hospital, and the Broadmoor secure psychiatric hospital. Police have

:17:05. > :17:09.also looked into allegations that he abused inmates at a children's

:17:09. > :17:13.home in Jersey. He also owned at least seven properties of his own,

:17:13. > :17:18.plus a motor home, and abused victims in many places and over

:17:18. > :17:23.many years. Yet no one spotted the pattern of behaviour. He worked in

:17:23. > :17:27.hospitals, he worked with children constantly. He created these

:17:27. > :17:32.programmes where he could get close to children. When I think of him, I

:17:32. > :17:37.think of a perfect pattern of behaviour that would take all the

:17:37. > :17:42.boxers, really, to highlight the behaviour of a sex offender.

:17:42. > :17:45.BBC confirmed today that a Panorama investigation into Jimmy Savile's

:17:45. > :17:50.activities will be transmitted on Monday, possibly as an hour-long

:17:50. > :17:53.special. It has also been given the go-ahead by police to stop an

:17:54. > :17:57.internal inquiry, headed by a former judge, Dame Janet Smith,

:17:57. > :18:03.into Jimmy Savile's conduct and the custom and practice as at the BBC

:18:03. > :18:06.at the time. The day after the Panorama programme, the Director-

:18:06. > :18:12.General will give evidence to MPs, in a scandal that just keeps

:18:12. > :18:16.growing. The energy regulator, Ofgem, has

:18:16. > :18:20.announced measures to simplify gas and electricity bills. They include

:18:20. > :18:24.having one unit charge for gas and electricity, reducing the number of

:18:24. > :18:28.available tariffs, and making energy firms tell you what their

:18:28. > :18:30.cheapest tariffs is on your bill. It comes after David Cameron

:18:30. > :18:35.appeared to go even further earlier this week, saying the Government

:18:35. > :18:38.would compel energy firms to offer customers their lowest tariffs.

:18:38. > :18:40.Tomorrow it will be exactly a year since Colonel Gaddafi was captured

:18:40. > :18:43.and killed by Libyan revolutionaries. Libya had

:18:43. > :18:46.democratic elections this summer, but it's still struggling to

:18:46. > :18:50.overcome its past, with evidence that torture is still being used by

:18:50. > :19:00.Gaddafi supporters. Our Middle East editor reports from Libya, and you

:19:00. > :19:04.may find some images in his report distressing.

:19:04. > :19:11.Omran Shaaban captured the dictator. His parents are proud and they miss

:19:11. > :19:14.him, because he is dead now, too. A year ago their son, here in the

:19:14. > :19:24.brown leather jacket, was the one who found Colonel Gaddafi hiding in

:19:24. > :19:29.a drainage pipe. As a revolutionary hero, he posed with the gun that he

:19:29. > :19:33.took from Gaddafi. His parents still have it at their house in

:19:33. > :19:41.Misrata, but their son died last month after being captured and

:19:41. > :19:48.tortured by men still loyal to their dead leader. At the same time,

:19:48. > :19:53.this man was tortured for about 60 days, he says, by Gaddafi's people,

:19:53. > :19:57.hung upside down, whipped, burned and given electric shocks. He says

:19:57. > :20:04.female nurses cut his ankles with scalpels and said it was the flesh

:20:04. > :20:09.of Misrata's rats. Both tortured men were held in the old regime's

:20:09. > :20:14.last refuge, Bani Walid, near Misrata. This week, it has been

:20:14. > :20:18.attacked by fighters loyal to the new order. During the civil war

:20:18. > :20:22.last year, Bani Walid helped to prosecute the siege of Misrata. Its

:20:22. > :20:28.defenders never cracked, and now Misurata feels like a city state.

:20:28. > :20:34.Tripoli Street was the centre of Misrata's war. Steadily, it is

:20:34. > :20:39.being rebuilt. Their victory Museum is here, but winning the peace,

:20:39. > :20:43.unravelling Gaddafi's legacy, is taking time. Someone here told me

:20:43. > :20:48.that when Gaddafi was killed, Libya was like a bottle of cola that had

:20:48. > :20:52.been shaken for 42 years. When the top came off, everything overflowed.

:20:52. > :20:56.Certainly a lot of old grievances are still coming out. There have

:20:56. > :21:02.been armed clashes and people have been killed, but the civil war has

:21:02. > :21:06.not restarted. It could have been much worse. Back in Tripoli,

:21:06. > :21:10.Colonel Gaddafi's bold leadership compound is being used as a rubbish

:21:10. > :21:14.dump. The power vacuum he left has been filled not by politicians,

:21:14. > :21:23.even though they have been democratically elected, but by

:21:23. > :21:28.tribes and armed men. These guards the new parliament as it struggles

:21:28. > :21:35.to former -- a functioning government. But there are dozens of

:21:35. > :21:38.militia, with their own agendas. TRANSLATION: I do not believe the

:21:38. > :21:46.situation will deteriorate. If it did, Libya could always go back to

:21:46. > :21:51.tribal rule, which solves problems easily. If Libya's Democrats cannot

:21:51. > :21:56.start to govern soon, the divisions in this country might have on them.

:21:56. > :22:01.The traffic flows in Tripoli, and so does hope, but time is not

:22:01. > :22:05.elastic. A new search has begun on the Greek

:22:05. > :22:08.island of Kos for Ben Needham, the British toddler who went missing

:22:08. > :22:12.from his family's farmhouse over two decades ago. Police are

:22:12. > :22:20.focusing on a pile of rubble at a building site close to where he was

:22:20. > :22:24.last seen. Danny Savage is in Kos and has sent this report.

:22:24. > :22:28.Blue and white British police take cordons off a field on a Greek

:22:28. > :22:34.hillside. This may mark the spot where the body of a British toddler

:22:34. > :22:39.lies. Ben Needham vanished here in 1991, but was he abducted, or the

:22:39. > :22:43.victim of a tragic accident? Sniffer dogs have been driven here

:22:43. > :22:47.all the way from the UK to follow up long-running concerns that he

:22:47. > :22:53.was buried under soil and rubble being moved during building work at

:22:53. > :22:57.the time. We have access to better equipment, better facilities,

:22:57. > :23:04.better-trained staff. We are in a position where we can do a far more

:23:04. > :23:08.in-depth research today than what was available back in 1991. This is

:23:08. > :23:13.the spot where Ben Needham was last seen alive 21 years ago. For the

:23:13. > :23:16.first time in two decades, police have come to search the area in

:23:16. > :23:22.detail. He was with his grandparents, who were living on

:23:22. > :23:27.Kos. He was playing alone when, at 2:30pm, he went quiet and was never

:23:27. > :23:33.seen again. His mum was waitressing in a local restaurant. She was told

:23:33. > :23:37.by her mother later that night that he was missing. His grandfather was

:23:37. > :23:43.renovating the house he disappeared from, and this is where today's

:23:43. > :23:47.search is focused, even though the area was examined at the time. His

:23:47. > :23:52.mother was just 19 when her little boy vanished and ever since then

:23:52. > :23:56.she has been convinced he is still alive somewhere. He will come back.

:23:56. > :24:02.And I will watch him grow up for the rest of his life. That's the

:24:02. > :24:08.only thing I can do, keep waiting. This is an artist's impression of

:24:08. > :24:12.what Ben Needham could have looked like now. If this week's search

:24:12. > :24:15.finds his body, it will shatter the hopes of him still being out there

:24:16. > :24:20.somewhere. If it does not, everyone will still be baffled about what

:24:20. > :24:23.happened here. She's the star of a low budget film

:24:23. > :24:27.about the effects of a Hurricane Katrina-style storm. Quavenjanay

:24:27. > :24:32.Wallis was aged just five when she auditioned for the part in Beasts

:24:32. > :24:35.Of The Southern Wild. Now, at the ripe old age of nine, she's tipped

:24:35. > :24:45.to become the youngest actress ever to be nominated for an Oscar. Lizo

:24:45. > :24:49.Mzimba has been to meet her. day, the storm will come...

:24:49. > :24:56.Quvenzhane Wallis plays Hushpuppy, who has to care for herself and her

:24:56. > :25:00.father when their home is hit by natural disaster. It has been

:25:00. > :25:06.gathering rave reviews, with many predicting Oscar recognition for

:25:06. > :25:10.the nine-year-old. Do you think it might happen? I don't think. But if

:25:10. > :25:17.it happens, it happens. Lots of people have been talking such a lot

:25:17. > :25:23.about this film and about you. How does that feel? Kind of good. And

:25:23. > :25:27.it's fun to have that attention, but not too much, because I don't

:25:27. > :25:33.want to get, like, too excited, because I don't like getting too

:25:33. > :25:37.excited. What about being famous? don't like that either. She might

:25:37. > :25:40.not have a choice if she goes on to become the youngest person ever to

:25:40. > :25:45.win a competitive Oscar. She would be one year younger than Tatum

:25:45. > :25:51.O'Neal, who was 10 when she won Best Supporting actress for Paper

:25:51. > :25:57.Moon. But she would not beat Shirley Temple, who won her an

:25:57. > :26:01.honorary Oscar when she was just six. Quvenzhane Wallis was just

:26:01. > :26:06.five when she auditioned. Even at that age, the director says her

:26:06. > :26:12.talent stood out. We looked at 4000 kids and we had never seen anything

:26:12. > :26:17.like that from any kid at any age, never mind five years old. She

:26:17. > :26:21.could barely read the script, but she could perform it. Since then,

:26:21. > :26:24.the movie has surpassed expectations, and many believe the