:00:08. > :00:13.The biggest reform to GCSEs in England for a generation, starting
:00:14. > :00:16.with maths and English. The traditional grades will be scrapped
:00:17. > :00:29.and replaced by a numbered scale from one to nine. The biggest reform
:00:30. > :00:48.to GCSEs in England for a The changes will come in from 2015.
:00:49. > :00:52.We'll be looking at them in more detail. Also tonight: what The phone
:00:53. > :00:56.hacking trial - the prosecution claims voicemails left by Prince
:00:57. > :00:59.Harry were hacked by the News of the World. We want is for teachers to
:01:00. > :01:01.Barclays suspends six traders as an official investigation is launched
:01:02. > :01:04.into rigging the foreign currency markets. Focus on the core skills.
:01:05. > :01:27.Coming up on BBC News: Joe Hart is dropped Manchester City.
:01:28. > :01:36.Good evening. The biggest shake-up of GCSEs in England in a generation.
:01:37. > :01:47.The main changes are the current eight grades which currently go from
:01:48. > :01:53.A-star to G will be replaced by grades from 1-9. There will be extra
:01:54. > :02:02.marks for spelling, punctuation and grammar. Sarah Campbell reports.
:02:03. > :02:10.Challenging, ambitious and rigorous. A description the government has
:02:11. > :02:14.given to the new GCSE exams. What we want to do is encourage schools and
:02:15. > :02:18.teachers to focus on core skills which teachers really want. That is
:02:19. > :02:27.what will help our children get good jobs when they leave school. Back in
:02:28. > :02:32.1988, the GCSE heralded a shift away from exams to more coursework. It
:02:33. > :02:38.seems like we have gone full circle, back to exams, but with a different
:02:39. > :02:45.grading system. What do those who think they who are going to be first
:02:46. > :02:49.to sit the exam thing? You are more likely to get a better grade because
:02:50. > :02:54.coursework is more of an individual thing. You have got more time to
:02:55. > :02:58.revise. You will be more confident in the exams than you would if you
:02:59. > :03:08.were doing coursework throughout. You have got up your whole timings
:03:09. > :03:12.Gaul -- your whole time in school aiming for A-star but now they have
:03:13. > :03:17.changed it and it is completely different. I am not comfortable with
:03:18. > :03:21.it. The new exams are designed to be more challenging so content will
:03:22. > :03:25.change as well. In English literature there will be an emphasis
:03:26. > :03:29.on classic addition of lists and poets. Shakespeare will be studied
:03:30. > :03:35.but set texts will also include at least one romantic poet and one
:03:36. > :03:40.19th-century novel. Changes as well to the maths syllabus. There will be
:03:41. > :03:45.more content, probably requiring more teaching time. Remember these,
:03:46. > :03:55.formulas will have to be learned by heart. We go back to this poem...
:03:56. > :03:58.The year after the English and maths exams Orange reduced there are plans
:03:59. > :04:07.for the rest of the syllabus to follow suit. -- after English and
:04:08. > :04:10.maths are introduced. Having change can be effective but it is how that
:04:11. > :04:14.change is managed and the consultation that expose with the
:04:15. > :04:20.teaching profession is a concern of mine. GCSEs are taken in Wales and
:04:21. > :04:25.Northern Ireland but these will not be affected. Scotland has a
:04:26. > :04:29.different exam system. It is only pupils in England who will have to
:04:30. > :04:36.be prepared for change. Sarah is with me now. Where has the push to
:04:37. > :04:40.change GCSEs come from? Originally, Michael Gove the
:04:41. > :04:50.education Sarah Terry wanted to scrap -- secretary wanted to scrap
:04:51. > :04:56.GCSEs altogether. They have tried to portray this as a new qualification.
:04:57. > :05:04.The obvious change is the grading. And also the exams which will be
:05:05. > :05:09.taken in Wales and Northern Ireland. The government says the
:05:10. > :05:14.reason these are being changed is to make people more employable. On top
:05:15. > :05:17.of the changes which are happening to new A-levels, the new primary
:05:18. > :05:21.curriculum and the academies programme, you can understand why
:05:22. > :05:25.teachers are saying this is more change. Michael Gove's answer is
:05:26. > :05:31.there is only one chance children have that education and they are
:05:32. > :05:35.trying to get it right. Thank you. In the phone hacking trial, jurors
:05:36. > :05:41.have heard how the former News of the World editor Andy Coulson had
:05:42. > :05:51.told people working on a story about a TV celebrity to do his phone.
:05:52. > :05:56.Andy Coulson, along with seven other defendants deny all the charges
:05:57. > :06:00.against them. Tom Symonds reports. Phone hacking, illegal payments to
:06:01. > :06:05.public officials and a cover-up. Rebekah Brooks is being accused of
:06:06. > :06:10.being involved in or three. Today, the prosecution set out in detail
:06:11. > :06:14.the evidence against her and the other defendants, including Andy
:06:15. > :06:17.Coulson. For the first time, the detail of how the private affairs of
:06:18. > :06:24.Princes William and Harry were allegedly targeted by phone
:06:25. > :06:27.hacking. While doing his homework at Sandhurst, Harry left this message
:06:28. > :06:37.for his private secretary who had served in the SAS.
:06:38. > :06:45.News of the World's Royal editor Clive Goodman turned that into a
:06:46. > :06:52.story that the Prince was getting his aids to do his homework for him.
:06:53. > :06:57.Andy Coulson was aware of how that story had been sourced. The court
:06:58. > :07:02.heard there was a problem with phone hacking. If stories like this were
:07:03. > :07:05.challenged, the paper could not get the evidence to back this up because
:07:06. > :07:11.they had been obtained illegally. The fact they came from voicemails
:07:12. > :07:15.might be spotted. The prosecutor, Andrew Edith, said important
:07:16. > :07:19.evidence would centre on e-mails between Andy Coulson and the News
:07:20. > :07:25.editor Ian Edmondson. They were trying to break a story about Calum
:07:26. > :07:28.Best, the son of footballer George Best, and they were worried he might
:07:29. > :07:42.find out and leak it to a rival newspaper.
:07:43. > :07:48.The prosecution said this was a clear sign that Andy Coulson knew
:07:49. > :07:54.about and ordered hacking. More evidence to come that MoD sources
:07:55. > :07:57.were leaking stories for money, including news of the death of
:07:58. > :08:02.active service personnel. Rebekah Brooks is charged with agreeing the
:08:03. > :08:10.payments while editor of the Son. It is claimed the legal sources were
:08:11. > :08:18.paid by cash transfers to branches of Thomas Cook. The prosecution will
:08:19. > :08:22.continue its case next week. After that the jury will begin hearing
:08:23. > :08:29.detail in a case which will last five months. The defendants have
:08:30. > :08:32.pleaded not guilty to all charges. Barclays has suspended six traders
:08:33. > :08:35.following an investigation into foreign exchange markets.
:08:36. > :08:40.The bank is one of seven which have been contacted by financial exchange
:08:41. > :08:45.regulators. They are looking at whether currency markets could have
:08:46. > :08:51.been rigged. London is the most important hub account for 40% of all
:08:52. > :08:58.foreign exchange trading. Hugh Pym is in the city. Potentially, this
:08:59. > :09:01.sounds rather serious? This is an investigation which has been running
:09:02. > :09:06.for a few weeks but it has hit the headlines this week following the
:09:07. > :09:10.revelation that Barclays has suspended six foreign exchange
:09:11. > :09:14.traders. RBS has suspended two. Three other banks have sent traders
:09:15. > :09:18.home on extended leave. There is no evidence of wrongdoing at this
:09:19. > :09:22.stage. The investigation is at a very early stage. Regulators are
:09:23. > :09:28.looking at suggestions that the setting of a key exchange rate every
:09:29. > :09:31.day at four o'clock was vulnerable for manipulation with dealers trying
:09:32. > :09:37.to get that fixed at a rate which suited their own trading position.
:09:38. > :09:40.It affect pension funds, and other investments out there. The city will
:09:41. > :09:45.hope this will not turn into a repeat of last year's LIBOR scandal
:09:46. > :09:51.with all those damaging revelations about alleged rigging of interest
:09:52. > :09:55.rates. Thank you. In the last few minutes, the BBC broadcaster Paul
:09:56. > :09:57.gamba genie has been arrested following allegations of historic
:09:58. > :10:12.sexual abuse. It follows revelations following the
:10:13. > :10:17.Jimmy Savile scandal. Full. Paul Gambaccini is the latest person to
:10:18. > :10:24.be arrested under operation you chew. We are told he comes under the
:10:25. > :10:29.category of others which meant he had no link to Jimmy Savile --
:10:30. > :10:35.operation you to. He spent the day answering questions about historic
:10:36. > :10:39.sexual allegations. He has been bailed until January. There has been
:10:40. > :10:44.no statement from him or his lawyer. We have not heard from his agent
:10:45. > :10:49.either. He has a show on Radio 2 tomorrow which we have been told has
:10:50. > :10:56.been pre-recorded. We think we will get a statement from the BBC later
:10:57. > :11:03.tonight. Thank you. Our top story this evening: The
:11:04. > :11:07.exams regulator announces the biggest reform to GCSEs for a
:11:08. > :11:13.generation. And she disappeared without trace ten years ago, now
:11:14. > :11:16.police in Lancashire are two review the case is of 14-year-old Charlene
:11:17. > :11:22.Downes. Coming up in Sportsday, Kimi
:11:23. > :11:29.Raikkonen says Lotus have not paid him this season. He has considered
:11:30. > :11:36.not racing in the Abu Dhabi Grand Prix.
:11:37. > :11:40.The Royal Bank of Scotland has announced it will not split its
:11:41. > :11:45.business in two as it tries to recover from the financial crisis,
:11:46. > :11:49.but instead has created a separate internal bank to deal with bad
:11:50. > :11:54.debts. It will ring-fenced the 88 Ilium pounds worth of bad assets
:11:55. > :12:06.such as loans it does not expect to be repaid -- 30 ?8 billion. Shares
:12:07. > :12:10.in the bank fell by 7.5%. Our business editor Robert Peston
:12:11. > :12:14.reports. The Royal Bank of Scotland, a bank
:12:15. > :12:20.still in need of mending, unveiling a plan today to quarantine ?38
:12:21. > :12:25.billion of poisonous radioactive loans with the hope of getting rid
:12:26. > :12:31.of all of them over three years. Chancellor, given that this ?38
:12:32. > :12:36.billion of toxic debt is absolutely the most poisonous that RBS has, it
:12:37. > :12:40.is the stuff they simply cannot shift, wouldn't it be better to
:12:41. > :12:48.extract it and put it on the taxpayers' balance sheet? The best
:12:49. > :12:53.advice I got was the internal bank so we are splitting RBS into the
:12:54. > :13:03.good bank and the bad bank. A new chief executive at RBS, breaking
:13:04. > :13:08.with tradition. A former deputy governor of the Bank of England
:13:09. > :13:12.savaged its small business lending. This report is shocking. It says
:13:13. > :13:18.your people have not got the right skills, the targets the bank set
:13:19. > :13:21.were inappropriate, there has been fragmentation of the management of
:13:22. > :13:27.this business, you did nothing right in that area, did you? Five years
:13:28. > :13:31.ago we were broke. Because you have lent money to the wrong people and
:13:32. > :13:34.cannot get it back, you tighten an organisation up and that is what we
:13:35. > :13:40.did five years ago. What is showing in that report is we probably
:13:41. > :13:45.tightened up too much. We need to get the bank back to normal and how
:13:46. > :13:50.it works with customers. Chums again, the Chancellor and bank boss
:13:51. > :13:55.visiting a small business customer, in agreement that RBS should give up
:13:56. > :14:04.its global ambitions and become focused on being a mainly UK focused
:14:05. > :14:10.retail bank. Mending the bank is plainly a big job, is there any
:14:11. > :14:15.chance that we will begin to get some of the ?47 billion that we as
:14:16. > :14:19.taxpayers have invested in it before the general election? Frankly, I
:14:20. > :14:22.think it is unlikely that we will be able to sell RBS before the general
:14:23. > :14:27.election, just because there is a lot of work to be done to make sure
:14:28. > :14:31.RBS cleans up the mistakes of the past, gets out of its big American
:14:32. > :14:37.operations and focuses on Britain. Five years of low, RBS was the
:14:38. > :14:41.biggest ranking the world and the most dangerous to taxpayers' well.
:14:42. > :14:49.Now just wants to get act to the basics of British banking.
:14:50. > :14:54.The head of Pakistan's Taliban has been killed in a US drone strike in
:14:55. > :14:59.the region of North Waziristan. Hakimullah Mehsud, who the BBC
:15:00. > :15:03.interviewed five weeks ago, was one of the most wanted men. James
:15:04. > :15:11.Robbins is here. This was a man America had had in its site for the
:15:12. > :15:18.last few years? That is right. The American government had a
:15:19. > :15:23.million-dollar bounty on his head. He was responsible for the deaths of
:15:24. > :15:28.thousands of Pakistanis. The Americans' particular interest in
:15:29. > :15:32.him was they blame him for the murder of seven CIA employees by a
:15:33. > :15:38.suicide or murder inside Afghanistan for 2009. It will be a very serious
:15:39. > :15:43.blow to the Pakistani Taliban. It looks like Taliban sources at have
:15:44. > :15:46.confirmed he is dead, they are announcing his funeral for
:15:47. > :15:50.tomorrow. He will be replaced quite quickly. Many of his predecessors
:15:51. > :15:55.have been killed and that has not been any trouble in finding a
:15:56. > :15:58.replacement. The Taliban in Pakistan has been responsible for training
:15:59. > :16:03.many militants which have gone out there, including for Britain. Not
:16:04. > :16:12.just Washington but London will be quietly pleased by this news if it
:16:13. > :16:16.is confirmed. Thank you. Ten years ago, a 14-year-old called Charlotte
:16:17. > :16:26.Downes has appeared in Blackpool. Two murder trials followed. Now the
:16:27. > :16:29.case is being reviewed. Ten years ago, a schoolgirl vanished
:16:30. > :16:36.from the streets, never to be seen again. Lee said Charlene was groomed
:16:37. > :16:40.for sex by older men in Blackpool, then murdered to protect the
:16:41. > :16:45.abusers. Today, her parents remembered their daughter. They
:16:46. > :16:50.prayed for answers, and detectives said they are launching a new appeal
:16:51. > :16:58.to find the killers. We know Charlene was a vulnerable young
:16:59. > :17:02.girl. She was exploited in Blackpool. The disappearance of
:17:03. > :17:08.Charlene Downes exposed the darker side of Blackpool. Her family
:17:09. > :17:11.believe she was groomed by takeaway workers, but new information
:17:12. > :17:15.suggests a different story. Today, the lease sources confirmed that up
:17:16. > :17:18.to 100 men from all backgrounds could have abused Charlene. They
:17:19. > :17:24.said she was exposed to paedophiles from birth. Some were friends of her
:17:25. > :17:30.family, and one met the 14-year-old on the night she disappeared. All
:17:31. > :17:39.claims denied by Charlene's family. They say a grooming gang in
:17:40. > :17:44.Blackpool killed their daughter. My daughter was abused by grooming
:17:45. > :17:50.gangs. I live to get her killers behind bars, and I pray that one
:17:51. > :17:55.day, that will happen. Two men were charged with Charlene's murder, a
:17:56. > :18:00.Jordanian kebabs shop owner and an Iranian, but the courts decided
:18:01. > :18:04.there was no case to answer. Whoever is responsible remains free. I was
:18:05. > :18:09.not aware she was sleeping with older guys. This woman says she was
:18:10. > :18:16.Charlene's friend from school and is also a victim of grooming. How bad
:18:17. > :18:21.is the problem now? Really bad. Some of my vulnerable friends still do
:18:22. > :18:26.it. They just go with them for beer and sleep with them. Police believe
:18:27. > :18:29.someone here knows who killed Charlene Downes. Their message to
:18:30. > :18:36.them is that ten years on, they are not giving up.
:18:37. > :18:39.Police investigating the murder of a graduate working as a pizza delivery
:18:40. > :18:44.man in Sheffield have arrested a 25-year-old man and a 17-year-old.
:18:45. > :18:47.Thavisha Peiris, who was 25 and from Sri Lanka, was stabbed on Sunday
:18:48. > :18:51.night. He was working his final shift for starting a new job as an
:18:52. > :18:54.IT consultant. A lorry driver has been arrested for
:18:55. > :18:59.suspected dangerous driving following a crash that closed the
:19:00. > :19:02.M25 in both directions near Potters Bar in Hertfordshire this morning.
:19:03. > :19:06.The motorway was closed between junctions 24 and 25 after a lorry
:19:07. > :19:10.overturned across the central reservation. Four people were
:19:11. > :19:13.injured, with the accident causing long delays.
:19:14. > :19:15.Firefighters in England and Wales are about to go on strike in a
:19:16. > :19:20.dispute with the government over jobs and pensions. This is of course
:19:21. > :19:27.the weekend when most Bonfire Night displays will be taking place. Sian
:19:28. > :19:29.Lloyd is at a display in Stoke. Firefighters say that by holding
:19:30. > :19:34.their dispute this evening and for two hours on Monday, they hope it
:19:35. > :19:40.will have less impact on the public. This is of course traditionally
:19:41. > :19:45.their busiest weekend of the year, when the night sky is lit up by
:19:46. > :19:50.bonfires and fireworks. These performers are the warm up act here
:19:51. > :19:52.before the bonfire is lit at 6:30pm. At is exactly the same time as
:19:53. > :19:57.thousands of firefighters across England and Wales will go on
:19:58. > :20:01.industrial action for four and a half hours. It is part of a
:20:02. > :20:07.long-running dispute with the government over pensions. They
:20:08. > :20:10.object to proposals to raise the pension age to 60. They say many
:20:11. > :20:13.members will be physically unable to do the work at that age. The
:20:14. > :20:18.government is warning people to take special care this evening for those
:20:19. > :20:21.for the half hours when there is a reduced service. So whether you are
:20:22. > :20:28.cooking the dinner or lighting a fire work, and firefighters say it
:20:29. > :20:31.is safer to come to an organised display like this.
:20:32. > :20:35.The Welsh government is to get a bit more powerful. David Cameron was in
:20:36. > :20:39.Newport and Cardiff today to give its assembly more control over its
:20:40. > :20:43.own finances, including plans to let it control the money it raises in
:20:44. > :20:47.stamp duty on house sales. There could even be the chance to raise
:20:48. > :20:50.different rates of income tax, subject to a referendum on the
:20:51. > :20:56.issue. Building a new housing estate in
:20:57. > :21:00.Newport. When these plots are ready to be sold, the buyers will have to
:21:01. > :21:04.pay stamp duty. But rather than being set in Westminster, in future,
:21:05. > :21:11.it will be set down the road in Cardiff. The Deputy Prime Minister
:21:12. > :21:15.Nick Clegg today made it one of the taxes that will be controlled by the
:21:16. > :21:18.Welsh government. It has also been given borrowing powers for the first
:21:19. > :21:23.time. A few miles away, David Cameron was shown the area where a
:21:24. > :21:29.new ?1 billion relief road could be built with that money. At a news
:21:30. > :21:36.conference in Cardiff, he said it was all part of developing a strong
:21:37. > :21:41.Wales in a strong UK. It is good for a government to be responsible for
:21:42. > :21:44.raising the money it spends -- at least some of the money it spends.
:21:45. > :21:49.That leads to better conversations about how to spend the money. The
:21:50. > :21:54.First Minister, Carwyn Jones, has been calling for Wales to have
:21:55. > :21:58.parity with Scotland, which already has these powers, and Northern
:21:59. > :22:03.Ireland, which has some powers over borrowing, but not over taxes. The
:22:04. > :22:08.announcement today shows that we are being treated as equal partners in
:22:09. > :22:12.the UK both as a government and a people. The Welsh government is also
:22:13. > :22:16.being given the power in the future to a referendum on gaining some
:22:17. > :22:20.control of income tax. At the moment, it does not want that
:22:21. > :22:25.control. If it does in the future, the test it will have is persuading
:22:26. > :22:28.the Welsh public that it can trust the politicians here with a chunk of
:22:29. > :22:33.their earnings. On the streets outside the Welsh assembly, there
:22:34. > :22:40.were mixed thoughts. I would not be happy about it. I would feel happier
:22:41. > :22:46.the way they are. They control Wales, and they should control what
:22:47. > :22:50.the Welsh people do. A significant milestone for devolution in Wales.
:22:51. > :22:54.The challenge now is for the Welsh government to make the best use of
:22:55. > :22:59.it. England face Australia at Wigan
:23:00. > :23:02.tomorrow in the first of their autumn rugby internationals.
:23:03. > :23:05.England's Geoff Parling will miss the game because of concussion. It
:23:06. > :23:16.is now the main reason why players mismatches. There is growing concern
:23:17. > :23:19.about the impact of head injuries. They are the head-on collisions that
:23:20. > :23:24.are making rugby stop and think. The sport is currently trialling a
:23:25. > :23:26.policy that will allow players who suffer head injuries to return to
:23:27. > :23:36.the field of play after a five-minute medical assessment. Some
:23:37. > :23:38.are angry. For 15 years, Barry O'Driscoll was medical adviser to
:23:39. > :23:45.rugby's world governing body, the IRB. But he resigned after watching
:23:46. > :23:48.his own nephew, Irish legend Brian Driscoll, being cleared to play on
:23:49. > :23:55.in this match despite signs of concussion. I don't think anyone has
:23:56. > :24:00.given us a mandate to experiment on players' brains like this,
:24:01. > :24:05.especially when the arena they are going into is to talk. It is not
:24:06. > :24:11.just an issue at the elite level. Here at the sport's grassroots, an
:24:12. > :24:15.awareness campaign is being launched, but currently, there is no
:24:16. > :24:19.mandatory concussion awareness training for junior rugby coaches.
:24:20. > :24:23.That is something Peter Robinson wants to change. His 14-year-old son
:24:24. > :24:30.Ben died after he was allowed to play on, despite concussion. Nobody
:24:31. > :24:35.wants to talk about it. If rules are changed at grassroots in schools,
:24:36. > :24:44.that can only be a good thing. I know Ben is gone and nothing will
:24:45. > :24:49.bring him back, but if one person is taken off on a Wednesday or Saturday
:24:50. > :24:52.afternoon, it has not been in vain. In other contact sports like
:24:53. > :24:59.American football, there is mounting evidence that repeated concussion
:25:00. > :25:03.and lifted -- lead to degenerative disease and neurological problems
:25:04. > :25:07.later in life. A settlement of ?500 million has just been reached after
:25:08. > :25:10.a player sued the NFL over it. So with the similarities to its
:25:11. > :25:14.American cousin, could rugby be next? With players bigger and
:25:15. > :25:17.heavier than before, it is no surprise that concussion is now the
:25:18. > :25:21.number one cause of missing matches through injury at the top level of
:25:22. > :25:27.the English game. Gone are the days when we could put player welfare at
:25:28. > :25:32.risk. The priority for any medical team is the player. We have to abide
:25:33. > :25:39.by that. The rugby union has taken a good stance on this. The IRB insists
:25:40. > :25:42.that player welfare is a priority and that their approach towards head
:25:43. > :25:46.injuries is not just backed by experts, but has in fact reduced the
:25:47. > :25:50.number of players staying on the field while concussed. But it is
:25:51. > :25:51.clear that rugby's big hitting culture is forcing the game to
:25:52. > :26:01.tackle some uncomfortable questions. Now the weather. Another buffeting
:26:02. > :26:05.this weekend. It will be windy once more. There will be heavy showers as
:26:06. > :26:10.well, but there will be some sunshine in between. There is a
:26:11. > :26:16.decent chance of seeing a rainbow or two. Today it was wet across
:26:17. > :26:20.Lincolnshire and the Midlands. That rain will stay overnight. The bulk
:26:21. > :26:27.of England will stay cloudy and mild. But the far north of England
:26:28. > :26:35.and Scotland have clear skies, meaning it will be cold. Some
:26:36. > :26:40.sunshine to start the weekend in the north-east corner, turning wet or
:26:41. > :26:44.across Northern Ireland. This arm of rain then moves across northern
:26:45. > :26:49.Wales, northern England and Scotland. The far north of Scotland
:26:50. > :26:55.may stay dry, but as the wet weather arrives, heavy snow is likely over
:26:56. > :26:59.the top of the Grampians. Showers for the afternoon across Northern
:27:00. > :27:05.Ireland after a wet morning. There will be sunshine between the showers
:27:06. > :27:08.across England and Wales. But those showers will zip through because of
:27:09. > :27:14.the strength of the wind, which will steadily increase, getting very
:27:15. > :27:20.lively through the evening, gusts of up to 50 mph, maybe more around the
:27:21. > :27:25.coast. Equates expected, to. Lots of celebrations are going on this
:27:26. > :27:30.weekend, so bear that in mind. Strong winds do not mix well with
:27:31. > :27:38.bonfires. Heavy showers, and it will feel on the cool side. It does not
:27:39. > :27:45.warm-up for Sunday either. Then more rain starts to spread from the south
:27:46. > :27:49.on Sunday evening. Could be a soggy one across parts of the South.
:27:50. > :27:56.The main news: While we have been on air, a man arrested earlier this
:27:57. > :27:59.week in relation to historical allegations of sexual abuse has been
:28:00. > :28:01.named as the BBC broadcaster Paul Gambaccini.
:28:02. > :28:05.And the exams regulator has announced the biggest change to
:28:06. > :28:12.GCSEs for a generation, with major changes to grading and assessment.
:28:13. > :28:13.That is all from the BBC news team. Now we go to our