10/02/2016 Reporting Scotland


10/02/2016

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and on BBC One we now join the BBC's news teams where you are.

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Police fear a return to the football casual culture of the '80s.

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They say two thirds of clubs have organised hooligan gangs

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Child abuse survivors accuse the Education Secretary of "becoming

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complicit" in the cover-up of offences, for failing to widen

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We had no consent as children. We have no consent now. They are

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ignoring this now as they did when we were children.

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Riding high - stunt cyclist Danny MacAskill helps

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Pitch imperfect - are artificial surfaces really so bad?

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And a sprinkling of fairy dust - and ?5 million - to save the house

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Organised hooligan gangs have attached themselves to over half

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of Scotland's 42 football clubs, according to Police Scotland,

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An investigation by BBC Scotland has also found the police fear

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a resurgence of the so-called casual culture of the 1980s and '90s.

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Here's our senior football reporter, Chris McLaughlin.

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These pictures from the 1980 Scottish cup final between Celtic

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and Rangers are a reminder of Scottish football pars violent past.

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Today, there are more police on duty as well as better segregation but,

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despite that, there is growing concern that so-called organised

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football violence like this, caught on camera over a decade ago, is

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back. In the last couple of years, we have seen a research and is of

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the kind of casual hooligan element. We have had a couple of very high

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profile incidents where fans have clashed a mile from the stadium,

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where they have clashed before the match. In this season alone, the

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police say large-scale organised violence has taken place around

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fixtures such as Hearts against Motherwell, Hamilton against Dundee

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and Airdrie against Ayr. Scotland has 42 football clubs falling under

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the SPL manager -- banner. The police say of those 28 have issues

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with organised hooligan groups. A further seven clubs have individuals

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who have engaged in violence, leaving just seven clubs in the no

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risk category. This man was a key figure in the hooligan scene in the

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80s and 90s. He now helps kids fight legally, but he isn't convinced

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there is a new problem. In the 80s there were young men coming from

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urban areas and causing large-scale destruction involving petrol bombs,

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knives, huge gang culture. Now you have got a bunch of young

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middle-class lads wearing designer clothes going around and seeking

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high jinks and self-esteem. Tonight, the league responded saying that

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anyone who isn't well-behaved is not welcome at or around the stadiums

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and these people are not entitled to call themselves football supporters.

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The vast majority of football matches in this country are

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trouble-free. People go and enjoy the atmosphere and they go home

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safely. For now, it is the few who are causing trouble and causing

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concern. People who've suffered child abuse

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have accused the Scottish government of "becoming complicit"

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in the cover-up of offences. They're to demand ministers change

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the remit of an extensive inquiry established to

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investigate allegations. But as our Social Affairs

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Correspondent, Reevel Alderson, reports, the government says it's

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already done that and is continuing When should Child abuse being

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investigated? The questions at the heart of a fierce row between

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survivors of the abuse and the Scottish Government. Allegations of

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abuse at residential institutions like this one will be investigated

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by the independent enquiry set up by the government. Ministers say it is

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the widest ever. But Father Gerard Magee, a campaigner for justice for

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victims, says abuse within the Catholic Church will not be heard

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within the enquiry. The Catholic Church is one of the biggest

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perpetrators and therefore it needs to be investigated, the same as

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institutions. Without including everybody in the enquiry, the

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Catholic Church and other institutions like it, the enquiry

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probably is not worth the paper that the report will be written on. Abuse

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survivors like Andi Lavery say they have called for the government

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repeatedly to widen the remit of the enquiry but it hasn't listened. We

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had no consent as children and we have no consent now. They are

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ignoring us now. Are they complicit? I don't know, but this is unlawful

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and discriminatory and the effect of us is devastating. Ministers insist

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widening the enquiry would take longer and that is exactly what

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survivors don't want. We are determined to shine a light on past

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injustice. What many survivors are saying to me is that they want an

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enquiry which covers all important issues, but will also report back in

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a reasonable timescale, with practical stoop gesture and is --

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practical suggestions to address past injustice. Campaigners say

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restricting the remit of the enquiry means that a light would be shone on

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all of Scotland's corners. -- will not be shone.

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The Prime Minister has warned the First Minister that the Scottish

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government must give ground if there is to be a deal on future

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In a letter to Nicola Sturgeon, seen by BBC Scotland,

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David Cameron says he finds it "surprising" that Scottish ministers

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apparently lack confidence in attracting people to Scotland

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More on that in a moment - but first here's what David Cameron

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had to say on the issue in the Commons today.

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No one is keener on agreement than me. I want the Scottish national

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party, here and in Holyrood, to have to start making decisions. Which

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taxes are you going to raise? What are you going to do with benefits? I

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want to get rid of this grievance agenda and let you get on with a

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governing agenda and then we can see what you are made of. I'm joined by

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our political editor. What can you tell us about this letter? This is

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the letter to Nicola Sturgeon. You heard their bejewelled tone of the

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Prime Minister, stressing his determination to strike a deal on

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the issue of how much the block grant is cut to make up for new tax

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powers, but also chiding the SNP in the Commons. That continues here. On

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the one hand, he says he has listened to the concerns put forward

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by Nicola Sturgeon and put forward a number of alternatives but he wants

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the Scottish Government to be prepared to look at moving in the

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wake of the Treasury. He also says it is disappointing that he feels

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there is a lack of ambition on the part of Scottish ministers to be

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able to increase the population in Scotland, attract more people and

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thereby enhance the economy and the tax take. The Scottish Government

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say that they find the remarks patronising but nonetheless they say

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they will continue to seek a deal with the UK Government.

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You're watching Reporting Scotland from the BBC.

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Still to come on tonight's programme:

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We're out and about on the A9 - with the team who keep Scotland's

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longest road free of snow and ice through the winter.

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In sport, the players' union calls for further research into the safety

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of artificial football pitches. And we have some signing news ahead of

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the Ross County against Hearts match.

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A multi-million pound global campaign designed to boost

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investment and tourism has been unveiled at Edinburgh Castle.

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Visit Scotland argues its Scot Spirit initiative heralds

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It's enlisting public help too in a new social media movement,

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Bringing Scotland's new campaign. The public is being enlisted to help

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in a social media initiative to share what is special about

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Scotland. There are some iconic spots which I haven't been to. The

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Forth Bridge is one of them. But I don't know if I will ever get access

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to the top of it. Maybe doing a bit more in the woodlands of Scotland as

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well. That is something I would like to promote. It is in our stories...

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The landscapes and landmarks of familiar but visit Scotland insists

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it is a new, global campaign, the start of a new era. Focusing on key

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markets across the UK, France, Germany and New York City, the

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campaign is costing over ?4 million. Tourism is going from strength to

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strength. We have seen great bushes. Expenditure by businesses is up by

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8% in 2015 and we want to accelerate that. The national tourism

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organisation says it is changing the way it promotes Scotland to the

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world. With finite resources, in an increasingly big -- increasingly

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digital age, it needs to be more collaborative. But will the approach

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work? Social media is great for us expressing the love of our country.

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The downside is we could see really sarcastic traits come out and people

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looking at it from abroad might go, what is so great about this country,

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if that is what people who live here are saying? Here, I found mixed

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opinion. It is full of Scottish spirit. That just makes me think of

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traditional Scottish things. It makes it sound like it is for an

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alcoholic beverage. It is not always this sunny, but Visit Scotland hopes

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this sparkling start will help to get ?1 billion of growth by 2050.

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The campaign to keep the UK in the European Union has officially

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Stronger In will be chaired by the Islamic Studies

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The non-party campaign is also backed by the chief executive

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of Virgin Money, Jayne Ann Gadia, and by the former chief medical

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An umbrella group for leave campaigners has yet to emerge here.

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I don't know what coming out looks like. It is kind of a scary world,

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what it looks like. It is easy to say, let's walk away from the

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problems at brussels, but the EU isn't just brussels, it is a project

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which has been to an extent successful over the years and our

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job is to make it more successful. The farming union NFU Scotland

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will meet retailers to discuss promoting Scottish pork,

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as the price pig farmers receive has With almost three decades of

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experience, robin has learned to whether the ups and downs of the

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industry. The current challenge is the sliding price of pork. Robin has

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gone from getting ?124 per pig to ?85 in just two years. It is a

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classic case of supply and demand. We don't get any government subsidy

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so you have to just rough it out. It means at some point the product in

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the shop is extremely good value at the moment but, in time to come, it

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will go up again. The main reason for the fall in price is oversupply

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in Europe. A trade ban with Russia means there is too much pork on the

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market. Production costs went up when this company went -- closed and

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some had to pay more to transport pigs to slaughterhouses in England.

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NFU Scotland say the opening of a new abattoir this month will help

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the industry and the union is due to meet retailers to discuss promoting

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the industry and the union is due to Scottish pork products to shoppers.

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We would like a higher price so we'd like to promote our product to

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supermarkets and hopefully get more space on the shelves for British and

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Scottish as opposed to European. There are only 100 pig farmers left

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in Scotland and they say, if prices don't pick up by the summer, we

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could see more leaving the industry. A gas leak has caused the shutdown

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of a Highland village. Residents were told to stay indoors after the

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gas main was ruptured. Emergency services were put on stand-by while

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engineers plugged the leak. Roads have reopened and railway services

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have returned to normal. A look at other stories

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from across the country. Police in Fife have released CCTV

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images of two men they want to trace Money was stolen from the TSB bank

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on Dunearn Drive in Kirkcaldy Both men were seen riding bicycles

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on the town's Alford Avenue around A hillwalker had a lucky escape

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after falling around 100 feet while ice climbing

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in the Cairngorms yesterday. The man suffered

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a serious leg fracture. He was located by helicopter but had

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to be carried off the mountain by members of the Cairngorm mountain

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rescue team in whiteout conditions. Harris tweed has been

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awarded its own coat of arms, It was officially approved

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by the Lord Lyon, who's in charge The industry hopes it will offer

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further protection from copycats. He explained how a coat of arms is

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regarded as more than a trademark, almost, so it might bring Harris

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Tweed to a wider audience. A community project for affordable

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housing on the Isle of Mull is in danger of failing if it

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doesn't raise the last ?45,000 Mull and Iona Community Trust, along

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with the Ulva Ferry Housing Project, are asking people to make donations

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to raise the last 10% It is about so much more than just

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building two houses. It is about keeping the local school open and

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making this community sustainable. A statue is planned

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to honour Black Bob, one of Selkirk's most

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famous fictional heroes. The border collie spent almost four

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decades coming to the rescue of people in the pages

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of the Dandy and Weekly News. It's the brainchild of the artists

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behind last year's yarn This week we are talking

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to the people who work on, and alongside, one of

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the UK's longest roads. The A9 is one of the artery routes

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that runs through the heart of Today our reporter Ian Hamilton has

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been speaking with the people My name is Mark Marshall and I

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worked as a supervisor on the A9. This is a giant JCB FastTrack. As

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there is not a lot of snow on the A9 at the moment, it gave Mark an

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opportunity to show us the kind of equipment they use. A smaller plough

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for smaller roads. It works for a company responsible for keeping the

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roads clear in the north-west and north-east of Scotland, including

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the A9. We were one of the highest roads on the network. It can be

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quite a challenging route. We have seen a lot of snow in the last 20

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years I have been in this industry. The technology they use today is

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very different from 40 or 50 years ago. Things have changed

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dramatically. Compared to what we have today. The ploughs swing left

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to right. Everything is computerised as well. It works really well.

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Everything is done from inside the cab. What would happen if you guys

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were not here? Well, you can imagine the chaos if somebody wasn't here to

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do what we do. The public wouldn't get to where they have to go. The

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place would just cease. At the end of the day, if the roads are not

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cleared, nobody goes anywhere. From October to May, Mark and his

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colleagues are on stand-by, monitoring the weather to make sure

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the A9 stays open. The chairman of one Premiership club

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says the standard of playing surface at some of our stadia

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is unacceptable. He says a Players Union call

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for a moratorium on the installation of any more synthetic

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pitches is shortsighted. If this is the future, it is already

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here. The artificial surface at Hamilton, one of 12 in the SPF fell

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and one of two in the premiership. The players union are not keen on

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any more. We want to make sure that the pitches have a uniformity, there

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is a standard, and they are safe and you can play a very similar game on

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3G as you can to grass, but the members do not feel that is the

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case. COMMENTATOR: There is the equaliser. Stephen McClane has a

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history of knee trouble and is forbidden on... Smack orders from

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playing on artificial services for risk of another injury -- on

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doctor's orders. Is his case you need? We looked at all the kinds of

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injuries and there were no obvious impairments to play on the

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synthetic, and I would implore them to have a look at what we are doing

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to measure grass, because many of the grass pitches are not

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acceptable. Cab drivers normally have opinions, and so do football

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pundits. I've no problem with the art and four artificial surfaces,

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they are getting better all the time and they are improving massively --

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with the argument for artificial services. I can understand the

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reasoning financially, but the problem is, it is a different game

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when you play on that surface. It might not be the age of the

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artificial surface just yet, but whatever the players union thinks,

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synthetic surfaces are likely to become more common.

:19:40.:19:48.

The Ross County captain has signed a new contract.

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Tonight it's fourth versus third in the Scottish premiership

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as Ross County host Hearts in Dingwall.

:19:55.:19:56.

One man hoping to make his first Jam Tarts start

:19:57.:19:58.

is John Souttar, who joined from Dundee United earlier this

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month and is glad to be working under new head coach Robbie Neilson.

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He has given me encouragement and he believes in me which is a massive

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thing. It's a pathway for May, which may has not been the case in the

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last wee while -- for me. The next few weeks is crucial for us in terms

:20:14.:20:17.

of our aspirations, the cups have been put to one side and we have got

:20:18.:20:20.

to focus fully on trying to get as many points in the next month as

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possible. There is live coverage of that game

:20:23.:20:39.

on BBC radio. Graham Alexander has been interviewed for the vacant

:20:40.:20:44.

manager's job at Marnoch. -- Kilmarnock.

:20:45.:20:46.

Wales fly-half Dan Biggar could be fit to train on Thursday ahead

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of Saturday's visit of Scotland - just four days after limping off

:20:50.:20:51.

Dan Biggar was part of the side which was victorious at Murrayfield

:20:52.:20:57.

last year, but he has been wearing a protective boot. Regarding his

:20:58.:21:04.

progression, he is out of the protective boot and he is working

:21:05.:21:06.

with the medics around the clock to give him every chance.

:21:07.:21:09.

The house and garden in Dumfries - which JM Barrie claimed inspired

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Peter Pan - is to be transformed into a national

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It's taken campaigners - who include the actress

:21:20.:21:22.

Joanna Lumley - six years to raise the ?5.3 million required

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to restore Moat Brae House and its gardens.

:21:26.:21:27.

Our arts correspondent Pauline McLean reports.

:21:28.:21:34.

JM Barrie used to play in this garden, in the 1870s when he was a

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schoolboy in Dumfries Academy, he described them as the happiest days

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of his life. This garden and an enchanted land and the genesis for

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his most famous creation, Peter Pan. Now the connection has come full

:21:53.:21:57.

circle. Moat Brae House and his garden are to be transformed into a

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centre for storytelling and children's literature. Is

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extraordinary to got to this stage, six years ago we were three days

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away from this house being bulldozed. Various court injunctions

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and we saved it for the community and we spent three quarters of ?1

:22:14.:22:18.

million on the first phase, so the building is wind and water tight

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with a new roof and new windows. He shouted, into the water. Take him,

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dead or alive. And now comes the next stage, transforming the house

:22:31.:22:33.

and gardens into Neverland, and there is no shortage of interest.

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The man who wrote this, JM Barrie, him and his friends used to play

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here, in the garden, it makes me feel special because I've played in

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that garden, as well. It is going to be a miniature version of Neverland

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with the Indian camp somewhere. And the lost boys house. There will be

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loads of activities, Peter Pan thing is, it will be very cool. Everyone

:23:02.:23:07.

will be running around having fun, children might be inspired to write

:23:08.:23:13.

their own stories like Peter Pan. It is a new chapter for the young and

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the young at heart. And with a little luck and a sprinkle fairy

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dust, the new centre should be open two years' time. -- in two years'

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time. Weather now and there's

:23:30.:23:34.

a distinct chill in the air. We did have some much-needed

:23:35.:23:42.

sunshine today at least. We have had many scenes like this, sent in by

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our weather Watchers, but we have a widespread frost tonight, and we're

:23:49.:23:51.

introducing a band of showers into the cold air from the north and they

:23:52.:23:55.

turn wintry, forming stone over the hills. This will mean some tricky

:23:56.:24:02.

conditions -- forming snow. Further south, mainly drive, apart from

:24:03.:24:05.

coastal showers, but it will be cold, temperatures down to freezing,

:24:06.:24:09.

if not below, and a risk of ice as we head into tomorrow morning.

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Especially where we have showers falling onto frozen surfaces. We

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have a band of cloud and showers working its way in the morning

:24:19.:24:25.

across some areas like central and southern Scotland, but there will be

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steady improvement as we go through the day. Some brightness coming

:24:29.:24:32.

through. A few showers hanging around for the Borders area, and

:24:33.:24:36.

some of those will be wintry over the high ground. It will feel cold,

:24:37.:24:42.

temperatures 5-6 and feeling very raw for the Northern Isles with a

:24:43.:24:51.

fresh north we -- easterly breeze. Temperatures will fall rapidly

:24:52.:24:56.

tomorrow evening, a sharp frost, and again we will start to introduce

:24:57.:25:00.

wintry showers into the North, the Highlands and the north-east by the

:25:01.:25:03.

end of the night and there will be snow in lower levels. We pick up the

:25:04.:25:07.

easterly airflow and it will feel cold in that wind, they will be

:25:08.:25:13.

strong at time, in the Northern Isles and down the east coast, but

:25:14.:25:16.

the showers will mainly be affecting eastern Scotland and again they will

:25:17.:25:21.

be wintry down to low levels. Dry and bright weather for Southern,

:25:22.:25:24.

Western and northern Scotland, but the temperatures only 4-5 Celsius.

:25:25.:25:30.

It is getting colder still at the weekend, winds becoming strong,

:25:31.:25:34.

feeling bitterly cold at times, wintry showers and affecting eastern

:25:35.:25:37.

Scotland and the best the sunshine in the Northwest. That is the

:25:38.:25:39.

forecast. Now, a reminder of

:25:40.:25:44.

tonight's main news: Organised hooligan gangs have

:25:45.:25:47.

attached themselves to over half of Scotland's 42 football clubs,

:25:48.:25:49.

according to Police Scotland - with only seven clubs

:25:50.:25:51.

being categorised as having An investigation by BBC Scotland has

:25:52.:25:53.

also found the police fear a resurgence of the so called casual

:25:54.:25:57.

culture of the 1980s and 90s. Until then, from everyone

:25:58.:26:01.

on the team - right

:26:02.:26:02.

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