:00:08. > :00:12.More violence in Afghanistan, just hours before its historic vote to
:00:13. > :00:16.choose a new president. Two western journalists are shot, one is killed
:00:17. > :00:20.- by a man wearing an Afghan police uniform. Security is extremely
:00:21. > :00:25.tight, after weeks of attacks by the Taliban. We'll be assessing the
:00:26. > :00:27.prospects for a free and fair vote. Also tonight:
:00:28. > :00:31.Controversial comments about the badger cull from Princess Anne - she
:00:32. > :00:34.tells the BBC gassing is the humane way to kill the animals to prevent
:00:35. > :00:37.TB. After damaging headlines, the Prime
:00:38. > :00:42.Minister again defends his Culture Secretary - ordered to repay
:00:43. > :00:45.thousands in expenses. Round the clock work gets Dawlish
:00:46. > :00:53.back on track - the vital southwest rail link reopens after the February
:00:54. > :00:54.storms. And "it's been nice to see ya" - Brucie announces he's stepping
:00:55. > :01:02.down from Strictly. And coming-up in Sportsday on BBC
:01:03. > :01:06.News: Andy Murray's Davis Cup quarterfinal
:01:07. > :01:32.rubber is stopped due to bad light. Great Britain trail Italy 1-0.
:01:33. > :01:38.Afghanistan is a few hours from its historic presidential election - but
:01:39. > :01:40.today saw more bloodshed. The Taliban has consistently threatened
:01:41. > :01:46.to disrupt the poll, and there are also anxieties about electoral
:01:47. > :01:49.fraud. Tomorrow, people vote in what should be the first democratic and
:01:50. > :01:54.free transfer of power in the country's history. Security is very
:01:55. > :01:59.tight, as voters prepare to elect a successor to Hamid Karzai who's been
:02:00. > :02:02.President for 13 years. After recent killings and bombings by the
:02:03. > :02:05.Taliban, every one of the country's 400,000 police and military has been
:02:06. > :02:11.deployed, in an effort to keep the ballot free and fair. But the
:02:12. > :02:24.increased security presence has seen two journalists shot today - one
:02:25. > :02:25.fatally - by an Afghan policeman. Dash-macro by a man dressed as an
:02:26. > :02:39.Afghan policeman. This was the bullet ridden car after
:02:40. > :02:42.a police officer opened fire on doss-macro reporters travelling
:02:43. > :02:46.together, as these doss-macro too often did. Anja Niedringhaus died on
:02:47. > :02:49.the scene, Kathy Gannon is being treated in the US military cost the
:02:50. > :02:55.tall dash-macro military hospital near Kabul. Anja Niedringhaus won a
:02:56. > :03:00.Pulitzer prize for photographs in Iraq, she had photographed conflicts
:03:01. > :03:14.with a passion and a deep sense of humanity. I do my job is simply to
:03:15. > :03:19.report with my camera and with my heart. The biggest military
:03:20. > :03:23.operation since the fall of the Taliban is underway. Afghanistan is
:03:24. > :03:27.locked down ahead of tomorrow's election, no traffic has been
:03:28. > :03:29.allowed into Kabul since noon. If anything, threats from the Taliban
:03:30. > :03:35.have made people more determined to vote. It doesn't only mean to elect
:03:36. > :03:39.a head of state, it is much more. They want to see a peaceful
:03:40. > :03:44.transition of power and to prevent a return to the bad days. I think the
:03:45. > :03:48.level of enthusiasm you see is a reflection of that realisation. The
:03:49. > :03:55.candidates have helped dozens of rallies across this rugged land. The
:03:56. > :04:01.campaign of the man resident cards I -- President Karzai is believed to
:04:02. > :04:04.favour is trailing in the polls. The former Foreign Minister Abdullah
:04:05. > :04:09.Abdullah is ahead in the race, he is strongly opposed to any concessions
:04:10. > :04:13.to the Taliban. Those who are massacring our people, those who
:04:14. > :04:17.violate the rights of the people of Afghanistan, those who want to take
:04:18. > :04:22.us back to the stone ages, the people of Afghanistan will not allow
:04:23. > :04:27.them to do that. Another leading candidate is Ashraf Ghani but this
:04:28. > :04:31.former World Bank economist has less credible at by having a former
:04:32. > :04:38.warlord, General Don Strong, as his running mate. The truth is that
:04:39. > :04:44.fraud could be the big winner in the Afghan campaign. Who pays for the
:04:45. > :04:47.most votes. However hard these candidates fight. A high turnout
:04:48. > :04:52.could be the best way to stop fraud and there is no doubting the users
:04:53. > :04:58.of a country where three quarters of the country are under 25. New voters
:04:59. > :05:05.are excited by the chance to have their voices heard. I feel in myself
:05:06. > :05:10.responsible that this vote is a power. I want to use my vote today
:05:11. > :05:18.for having a peaceful life in the future. The country, which saw the
:05:19. > :05:22.deaths of 448 British troops, could now be seeing its first peaceful
:05:23. > :05:23.transition of power for more than a hundred years.
:05:24. > :05:27.From Kabul our Our chief international
:05:28. > :05:33.correspondent, Lyse Doucet, joins us now from Kabul. What do you think
:05:34. > :05:40.the chances are of this vote progressing peacefully? No one wants
:05:41. > :05:44.to be in the business of predicting violence but sadly it is certain
:05:45. > :05:48.there will be violence today in Afghanistan. We know that from past
:05:49. > :05:53.practice. The last elections in 2009 saw hundreds of attacks across the
:05:54. > :06:02.country, all of them small, none of them begin us -- big enough to stop
:06:03. > :06:06.the process. It has been marked by far more attacks by the Taliban,
:06:07. > :06:09.even attacking the headquarters of the election headquarters in Kabul,
:06:10. > :06:14.even the interior ministry, the heavily guarded Interior Ministry.
:06:15. > :06:20.Senior intelligence sources tell us they are expecting spectacular
:06:21. > :06:24.attacks, they use this phrase. This is not just an election but a
:06:25. > :06:28.referendum on the Taliban and the defiance on Afghans as such is that
:06:29. > :06:31.every time is an attack, it strengthens their resolve, they want
:06:32. > :06:37.to go out and vote and they are expected to vote in large numbers.
:06:38. > :06:41.Thank you. Princess Anne has told the BBC she
:06:42. > :06:46.is in favour of gassing badgers as a more humane way of culling them, to
:06:47. > :06:49.limit the spread of TB in cattle. Yesterday, plans to extend the
:06:50. > :06:52.badger cull in England were halted by the Government, after a review
:06:53. > :06:54.found that shooting had been ineffective and sometimes inhumane.
:06:55. > :06:57.The Princess Royal made her remarks in an interview with the BBC's
:06:58. > :07:04.Countryfile programme. Tom Heap has this special report from Gatcombe
:07:05. > :07:07.Park Estate. Princess Anne has run the estate
:07:08. > :07:13.here in the heart of Gloucestershire for nearly 40 years. The main
:07:14. > :07:19.farming business is rearing rare breed sheep and cows. Like many
:07:20. > :07:23.farmers in this area, her cattle are frequently infected by TB and she
:07:24. > :07:26.thinks badgers on her land are largely to blame. Like the
:07:27. > :07:31.government, she thinks culling could combat the disease but favours using
:07:32. > :07:35.gas, not guns. Most of the people who did it in the pass will tell you
:07:36. > :07:41.that as is a much nicer way to do it, if that is not a silly
:07:42. > :07:47.expression as who did it in the past -- who did it in the past will tell
:07:48. > :07:53.you. It works because they go to sleep, quite simply. This will
:07:54. > :07:59.horrify many people and sparked heated debate. I think gassing is
:08:00. > :08:03.not the right way forward. I think it is not the right way forward for
:08:04. > :08:08.merrily because farmers deserve an effective solution to this problem.
:08:09. > :08:13.The evidence from the 1970s was begat Singh of badgers was not a
:08:14. > :08:18.very effective way of controlling badger numbers. -- degassing of
:08:19. > :08:24.badgers was not. An interest in agriculture stretches back to her
:08:25. > :08:26.youth. Spending time on the farm at Sandringham and Balmoral. Shared
:08:27. > :08:31.family experience does not mean shared views on the future of
:08:32. > :08:34.farming. Her brother, Prince Charles, is famously a to
:08:35. > :08:41.genetically modified cops but she isn't. -- famously opposed to. They
:08:42. > :08:46.allow us to be more efficient users of the land that is good. When you
:08:47. > :08:49.have the prospect of 9 billion to feed, you are going to need some
:08:50. > :08:57.help in doing that, and to do it well. Her other great passion is
:08:58. > :09:00.horses. She was European event in and competed in the Olympics.
:09:01. > :09:04.Eyebrows were raised when she suggested eating them. There are too
:09:05. > :09:10.many horses in Britain, thousands are neglected. An awful lot of the
:09:11. > :09:15.abandonments are because they don't perceive there to be any value in
:09:16. > :09:23.the animals. So OK, chuck them out, they will survive or die. But the
:09:24. > :09:27.meat trade adds value to the animal, so there is some point in keeping it
:09:28. > :09:37.healthy, if it has got an end point that it can go to. Have the ever
:09:38. > :09:41.eaten horse? Certainly. How was it? Very good. Princess Anne believes
:09:42. > :09:48.are experienced at Gatcombe gives the authority to speak out but that
:09:49. > :09:51.won't stop opponents being alarmed to hear such striking views from a
:09:52. > :09:54.senior member of the Royal Family. And you can see the full interview
:09:55. > :10:02.with Princess Anne on Countryfile, this Sunday evening at seven on BBC
:10:03. > :10:04.One. The Prime Minister has again
:10:05. > :10:08.defended the Culture Secretary Maria Miller over her expenses claims -
:10:09. > :10:16.after she was forced to apologise to the Commons and pay back thousands
:10:17. > :10:18.of pounds. Tonight the Daily Telegraph released a secret
:10:19. > :10:21.recording of a phone call which they say show Government advisers using
:10:22. > :10:24.the threat of press regulation to warn the newspaper against pursuing
:10:25. > :10:28.the story. Here's our political correspondent, Vicki Young.
:10:29. > :10:32.She is responsible for bringing in stricter controls on the press and
:10:33. > :10:36.she is embroiled in an expenses scandal. It made unpleasant
:10:37. > :10:40.headlines formerly a Miller. She has apologised but something she has got
:10:41. > :10:47.off lightly -- headlines for Maria Miller. Maria Miller should resign,
:10:48. > :10:51.she has failed to apologise or take responsibility for her actions and I
:10:52. > :10:55.think numbers of the cabinet should be halted the highest standards, and
:10:56. > :10:59.it is a standard she has not -- should be held to. The prime
:11:00. > :11:05.minister has tried to draw a line under the episode. It was found she
:11:06. > :11:08.has made mistakes, she apologised unreservedly to the House of Commons
:11:09. > :11:14.I think she should -- we should leave it there. The inquiry centred
:11:15. > :11:18.on her home which she shared with her parents. She was cleared on
:11:19. > :11:22.breaking rules on claiming expenses for relatives but she was ordered to
:11:23. > :11:30.repay almost ?6,000 she had over claimed four on the mortgage, much
:11:31. > :11:34.less than the 44,000 suggested by the independent watchdog. From the
:11:35. > :11:37.outside it still seems as if MPs are pleasing themselves when it comes to
:11:38. > :11:42.expenses and the system is not always transparent. There is another
:11:43. > :11:44.element to this. Maria Miller is overseeing a plan for tighter
:11:45. > :11:49.controls of the press following the Leveson Inquiry and that has put the
:11:50. > :11:55.government on a collision course with many newspapers. When Telegraph
:11:56. > :11:58.reporter 's first investigated Mrs Miller's expenses, they say senior
:11:59. > :12:07.government adviser 's expenses, they say senior government advisers's
:12:08. > :12:15.responsibility. -- senior government advisers phoned them. There was an
:12:16. > :12:20.anti-press is doing of the Leveson. When advisers warn up newspaper
:12:21. > :12:25.editors and warn them in that fashion, they are bound to take
:12:26. > :12:29.those threats seriously. The Telegraph released a recording of
:12:30. > :12:34.Maria Miller's adviser speaking to a reporter. Maria has been having a
:12:35. > :12:42.lot of editor's meetings around Leveson at the moment. I am going to
:12:43. > :12:46.flag up that connection for you to think about. That adviser, Joanna
:12:47. > :12:52.Hindley, said she was planing about the way the Telegraph had approached
:12:53. > :12:57.Mrs Miller's elderly father and was making it clear the culture
:12:58. > :13:00.secretary would raise this with the paper's bosses. Some colleagues at
:13:01. > :13:05.it the culture secretary could have handled this better crucially, she
:13:06. > :13:11.has support from the top -- some colleagues admit. Trains ran again
:13:12. > :13:15.today along the Devon coast after the line was closed for nearly two
:13:16. > :13:23.months because of extensive storm damage. Network Rail says it that
:13:24. > :13:29.taken 300 workers 54 days to rebuild the wall at Dawlish after a collapse
:13:30. > :13:34.which left the rails standing in mid air. This report contains flashing
:13:35. > :13:40.images. A railway re-opened, a region
:13:41. > :13:46.reconnected. Normal service resumed. 5. 00am and we were on the first
:13:47. > :13:50.journey across the route, with commuters who had waited two months
:13:51. > :13:54.for a train. I know you've got the roads and other forms of transport
:13:55. > :14:00.but the railway is the main link. We slow down the cross the new section
:14:01. > :14:06.of track. It has all cost ?35 million. Hard to believe this is how
:14:07. > :14:11.it looked eight weeks ago. The main line in and out of the West Country.
:14:12. > :14:17.Since then, hundreds of engineers have worked around the clock, often
:14:18. > :14:22.in terrible conditions, to fill in and then reenforce the embankment.
:14:23. > :14:25.It is only when you look at the Victorian sea wall there that you
:14:26. > :14:31.realise exactly what's happened here. There's a section which is
:14:32. > :14:35.modern, made of new materials. It's been bolstered and they say it is
:14:36. > :14:42.now stronger than when Brunel built it in the 180 #0s. Three cheers for
:14:43. > :14:46.the orange Army... Among the first passengers to arrive by train was
:14:47. > :14:53.the Prime Minister. It has been a Herculean effort, 56 days and 56
:14:54. > :14:58.nights, ten,000 tonnes of concrete, 150 tonnes of steel. A huge task
:14:59. > :15:03.carried out not on time but before time. So thank you for that. How
:15:04. > :15:08.much of a challenge has it been to get to this change? A tremendous
:15:09. > :15:13.challenge. We've had landslips, holes in the wall to repair, 650
:15:14. > :15:16.metres of track to replace. A tremendous challenge but I'm proud
:15:17. > :15:20.of the achievements of the whole industry. Business leaders say the
:15:21. > :15:25.closure cost the South West economy ?2 million a day, so relief as the
:15:26. > :15:30.tourist season gets under way. We're back on the map. We're back in
:15:31. > :15:36.business, and that's what's really important to us. And, of course, now
:15:37. > :15:39.you can actually get to Cornwall. But at Cornwall's biggest
:15:40. > :15:43.attraction, they say the region's infrastructure needs a bigger share
:15:44. > :15:48.of national funding. When I see the investment that's about to take
:15:49. > :15:53.place on HS2, we do say, give us a couple of billion, guys. ?50
:15:54. > :15:57.billion, do you want it all up there? How about us joining the
:15:58. > :16:02.human rice down here. Some say the time has come to reroute this line
:16:03. > :16:10.inland. For now, job done, but future uncertain.
:16:11. > :16:14.A look at some of today's other stories. A Chinese businessman faces
:16:15. > :16:18.extradition to the United States in connection with allegations that he
:16:19. > :16:23.tried to supply Iran with equipment for use in its nuclear programme.
:16:24. > :16:27.Sihai Cheng was arrested in the UK in February. He made a second court
:16:28. > :16:31.appearance today and has been remanded until June.
:16:32. > :16:34.The former Formula One champion, Michael Schumacher, has shown
:16:35. > :16:41.moments of consciousness after months in a coma. He suffered head
:16:42. > :16:45.injuries after a skiing accident in the French Alps last year.
:16:46. > :16:48.Tributes are being paid tonight to the Scottish politician Margo
:16:49. > :16:50.MacDonald, who's died at the age of 70. A committed supporter of
:16:51. > :16:53.independence, she came to prominence after a historic by-election win for
:16:54. > :16:57.the Scottish Nationalists in Govan in 1973. She had suffered from
:16:58. > :17:00.Parkinson's disease for nearly 20 years and campaigned for a change in
:17:01. > :17:12.the law to allow assisted suicide. Our Scotland Political Editor, Brian
:17:13. > :17:15.Taylor, looks back at her life. To the end Margo MacDonald was a
:17:16. > :17:19.committed campaigner for Scottish independence. And today that
:17:20. > :17:24.lifelong political effort drew praise. Over the last few years
:17:25. > :17:30.she's been at the centre of all the political developments of Scotland.
:17:31. > :17:33.Very much part and one of the great driving forces behind Scotland's
:17:34. > :17:38.home rule journey. She will be hugely missed. She had a spectacular
:17:39. > :17:42.political career and she will be greatly missed. So close to the
:17:43. > :17:48.referendum in September. Deeply serious, occasionally coquettish, a
:17:49. > :17:54.political partisan who chafed within party constraints. But above all
:17:55. > :18:01.charismatic and hugely popular. The SNP have won the constituency of
:18:02. > :18:06.Govan. In 1937 3 Margo MacDonald won Glasgow Govan. I'm the MP for Govan,
:18:07. > :18:12.can we get that straight first of all? She was to spend just 112 days
:18:13. > :18:17.in that role, ousted in the general election. Feisty ander energetic she
:18:18. > :18:21.was the SNP's deputy leader during the nationalist honeymoon of the
:18:22. > :18:25.1970s, but political divorce followed. She quit the party in the
:18:26. > :18:30.internal conflict which followed defeat in 1979. She built new
:18:31. > :18:35.careers in the voluntary sector and as a respected broadcaster. In 1999
:18:36. > :18:38.the rebirth of the Scottish Parliament brought her back to front
:18:39. > :18:42.line politics. Scotland seemed happy to see her and today her passing was
:18:43. > :18:47.mourned. While we disagreed profoundly on the question of the
:18:48. > :18:50.constitution, actually most of what motivated Margo seemed to be
:18:51. > :18:53.something that motivates most politicians, a desire to make a
:18:54. > :18:56.difference, to see a world where children can achieve their full
:18:57. > :19:01.potential, where people feel safe this their old age. In 2003 she quit
:19:02. > :19:07.the SNP again and triumphed as a party of one. More lately a new and
:19:08. > :19:12.controversial cause, backing assisted suicide for the terminally
:19:13. > :19:18.ill face tag intolerable strain. And it was personal. She coped with a
:19:19. > :19:21.degenerative disease. I don't want to burden any doctor. I don't want
:19:22. > :19:25.to burden any friend or family member. I want to find a way in
:19:26. > :19:30.which I can take the decision to end my life in case I'm unlucky enough
:19:31. > :19:34.to have the worst form of Parkinson's near the end of life.
:19:35. > :19:40.That rare being, a politician known to the public, simply by her first
:19:41. > :19:46.name. Intelligent, driven, witty, passionate. Just Margo.
:19:47. > :19:51.The politician, Margo MacDonald, who has died at the age of 70. The
:19:52. > :19:55.department store chain House of Fraser is set to be taken over by a
:19:56. > :20:01.Chinese company in a deal worth ?450 million. The company, Sanpower, will
:20:02. > :20:06.take on an 9% share, making the deal China's largest foreign retail
:20:07. > :20:10.investment in the UK. Hugh Pym is here. Part of a trend here with the
:20:11. > :20:14.Chinese? Indeed, Jane. House of Fraser is a really well known
:20:15. > :20:18.British name. More than 150 years old with 61 stores in the UK and
:20:19. > :20:24.Ireland. It has had a slightly difficult recent history. It was
:20:25. > :20:29.owned by an Icelandic group, which went under during the financial
:20:30. > :20:33.crisis. Half the shares are owned by Icelandic banks and the rest by
:20:34. > :20:39.British investors. The owners want to move it on and now we know who
:20:40. > :20:46.wants to buy it, Sanpower of China, taking 9% for ?450 million. We've
:20:47. > :20:50.seen Chinese businesses buy up Weetabix, Sunseeker, the yacht
:20:51. > :20:54.maker, and stake in Thames Water. It is a sign of the times. Here you
:20:55. > :21:01.have a Chinese business who wants to take a well known British brand and
:21:02. > :21:05.grow it outside the UK. Thank you. There is good luck and outrageous
:21:06. > :21:10.fortune. A scrap metal dealer in the American Midwest bought a gold egg
:21:11. > :21:15.for ?8,000, thinking he could sell it or melt it down. It was only
:21:16. > :21:20.after reading a newspaper article he discovered it was in fact an
:21:21. > :21:26.imperial Faberge Easter egg, one of just 50 made for the Russian Royal
:21:27. > :21:34.Family. It has just been sold to a private collector for ?20 million.
:21:35. > :21:41.A lost treasure, remarkably rediscovered. Set with diamonds and
:21:42. > :21:49.sapphires this sumptuous golden egg is among the rarest artworks in the
:21:50. > :21:55.world. Tsar Alexander III had money and Palaces in abundance but when he
:21:56. > :22:01.wanted to give something unique too his Empress, he turned to the most
:22:02. > :22:05.sought after jeweller of the day, Faberge.
:22:06. > :22:11.Many of the imperial treasures were sold to the West by the Bolsheviks.
:22:12. > :22:17.How rare sit? Is it is beyond rare, if you can say that. It is so
:22:18. > :22:22.unbelievable that this has been discovered and saved. It is a time
:22:23. > :22:30.capsule that we will never ever see again. The egg was last seen in
:22:31. > :22:33.public in 1902 at an exhibition of imperial Faberge treasures in St
:22:34. > :22:41.Petersburg. It wasn't seen again until 1964, when it was auctioned in
:22:42. > :22:44.New York for ?2,500, then ?870, but it wasn't identified as Faberge at
:22:45. > :22:50.the time. It reappeared last year when the egg was bought by a scrap
:22:51. > :22:54.metal dealer in a flea national in America's Midwest. He paid just
:22:55. > :23:01.?8,000 and cabinet it here in his kitchen. It was only when the new
:23:02. > :23:06.owner opened up the egg and found the inscription inside, the name of
:23:07. > :23:11.the watchmaker, he looked it up online. He found an article about
:23:12. > :23:15.the hunt for a missing Faberge egg and discovered this lump of gold was
:23:16. > :23:23.worth ?20 million. What was it like for this jeweller to verify the egg
:23:24. > :23:26.as Faberge? It was like Indiana Jones being presented by the lost
:23:27. > :23:31.ark. This is the high point. The man who discovered the ultimate golden
:23:32. > :23:36.egg wants to remain anonymous. It will soon disappear into the vaults
:23:37. > :23:41.of a private collector and this historic jewel may never be seen
:23:42. > :23:44.again. Sir Bruce Forsyth has announced that
:23:45. > :23:47.he's stepping down as the regular host of Strictly Come Dancing. The
:23:48. > :23:50.veteran entertainer, who's 86, has co-hosted the programme since it
:23:51. > :23:54.began a decade ago. Sir Bruce said it was the right time to withdraw
:23:55. > :23:58.from the rigours of presenting a live show. Here's our media
:23:59. > :24:04.correspondent, David Sillito. Sir Bruce first appeared on BBC
:24:05. > :24:13.television in 1939. 75 years on he's finally decided to give up on the
:24:14. > :24:18.rigours of live TV. It's sad. I've loved the show, I've loved doing it
:24:19. > :24:22.but there always comes a time when you have to look yourself in the
:24:23. > :24:28.mirror and say should you be doing this any longer? I will miss it but
:24:29. > :24:33.I will watch it intently. He's been part of our Saturday nights since
:24:34. > :24:41.the '50s. Nice to see you, to see you... Nice! However, the decision
:24:42. > :24:48.in 2004 to revive Come Dancing raised a few eye row rows --
:24:49. > :24:54.eyebrows. The question is the future without its now 86-year-old host.
:24:55. > :24:59.Who wants to follow a guy who's been at the top of his game for a long
:25:00. > :25:04.time at the BBC. I know what that's like. This is an important show. BBC
:25:05. > :25:08.has sold the format to 48 countries around the world. And also, if you
:25:09. > :25:13.want to justify the licence fee, you've got to be popular. Having the
:25:14. > :25:19.number one show on a Saturday night is really important. Hit shows often
:25:20. > :25:25.wilt after eight or nine years. Both Strictly and its arch-rival X Factor
:25:26. > :25:30.are into double figures. X Factor is hoping that Simon Cowell may perk up
:25:31. > :25:34.its ratings but execs hate messing with winning recipes. Shows this
:25:35. > :25:37.successful are rare. They are really hard to find these days. Really hard
:25:38. > :25:42.to achieve, so when you do come across one such as Strictly you want
:25:43. > :25:46.to look after it, cherish it and make sure you're keeping it as
:25:47. > :25:52.successful and the show that people enjoy. Sir Bruce's suggestion for a
:25:53. > :25:57.replacement is Boris Johnson. He will though still do a few one-off
:25:58. > :26:00.recorded shows. Even at 86, he says he's not yet walking into the show
:26:01. > :26:06.business sun set.