10/02/2014

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:00:09. > :00:13.highest they've been for decades. There are 16 danger to life warnings

:00:14. > :00:18.along the Thames and in the southwest. Rescue teams are taking

:00:19. > :00:22.an unprecedented number of emergency calls. With more rain and wind

:00:23. > :00:36.forecast, many are becoming desperate. We are just left to it

:00:37. > :00:39.now. Nothing else we can do. Sorry. David Cameron sees the damage for

:00:40. > :00:47.himself. He rejects accusations that the government is blaming others. I

:00:48. > :00:51.am only interested in one thing, and that is making sure that everything

:00:52. > :00:55.the government can do is being done, and will go on being done, to help

:00:56. > :00:58.people through this difficult time. Right now, as we go on air,

:00:59. > :00:59.ministers are at another emergency meeting.

:01:00. > :01:02.Also tonight: The debate over banning smoking in cars with

:01:03. > :01:10.children in England. MPs vote this evening.

:01:11. > :01:13.It's all too easy when you're given the answers. An undercover report on

:01:14. > :01:19.how foreign students cheat in their visa tests.

:01:20. > :01:24.Jenny Jones is still basking in her winter Olympic glory. She's got more

:01:25. > :01:33.to give she says, but that's after the celebrations. I celebrated with

:01:34. > :01:36.some champagne. And a bit of dancing!

:01:37. > :01:39.Tonight on BBC London. I'm live here in Berkshire, as flooding reaches

:01:40. > :01:43.record levels along the Thames. Tens of thousands of homes are affected.

:01:44. > :02:07.Police declare it a major incident. Good evening and welcome to the

:02:08. > :02:10.BBC's News at Six. River levels in the Thames Valley are already the

:02:11. > :02:17.highest they've been for decades, as families in the area prepare for

:02:18. > :02:18.another 24 hours of rain and wind. Tonight, the government's emergency

:02:19. > :02:21.committee is meeting, amidst accusations of in-fighting between

:02:22. > :02:27.ministers over how to handle the crisis. We have three reports - from

:02:28. > :02:32.the Thames Valley, where police have declared a major incident. Thousands

:02:33. > :02:37.of homes are at risk. We report on criticism of the Environment Agency.

:02:38. > :02:40.Today, its boss hit back. And we'll also be hearing from southwest

:02:41. > :02:44.England, where the Prime Minister got a first-hand view of the

:02:45. > :02:48.transport challenges. But first to the Thames Valley, where there are

:02:49. > :02:59.14 danger to life warnings. Duncan Kennedy is in Wraysbury now. Duncan.

:03:00. > :03:05.I have lost count of the number of times I have heard the phrase today,

:03:06. > :03:08.we've never seen anything like it. I am standing in the River Thames, and

:03:09. > :03:14.it isn't very often you can say that. The river its office 100

:03:15. > :03:20.metres that way. It has come surging up here all day, and is continuing

:03:21. > :03:23.to rise. The Environment Agency say something like 900 homes along the

:03:24. > :03:29.Thames Valley have been flooded, including these ones here. Today, we

:03:30. > :03:33.have been on a journey along the River Thames, visiting places like

:03:34. > :03:39.that chit and stains, and here in Wraysbury in Berkshire, to see how

:03:40. > :03:43.people have been coping with the flooding. The Thames Valley is

:03:44. > :03:48.starting to look like the Somerset Levels. This was Henley in

:03:49. > :03:53.Oxfordshire today. And this was stains in story, house after house

:03:54. > :03:59.inundated, just like Marlowe in Buckinghamshire, where there is now

:04:00. > :04:04.a blur between river and land. Our journey began in the pretty

:04:05. > :04:12.Berkshire village of Datchet. Its centre is now a lake. Have you ever

:04:13. > :04:20.seen it as bad as this? Never. The railway has never been flooded like

:04:21. > :04:26.this. How long have you lived here? About 30 years. No one can remember

:04:27. > :04:30.the Trainline being flooded. We are seeing the Thames gently rise up in

:04:31. > :04:38.response to the rainfall, not just in the last week, but over the last

:04:39. > :04:42.month. On one road here, we came across James, using buckets to bail

:04:43. > :04:48.out his entire front garden, including raw sewage. We have had

:04:49. > :04:53.friends and family over to help, but people have to work and do their own

:04:54. > :05:01.thing. We are just left to it now. Nothing else you can do. Sorry. This

:05:02. > :05:05.was James' first time, a property he only bought a week ago. His dad is

:05:06. > :05:13.there to help shoulder the draining and the despair. We then moved up

:05:14. > :05:21.stream, where they are pumping out their own homes. Others are breaking

:05:22. > :05:24.up furniture to keep the water back. This family is going further,

:05:25. > :05:32.building a dam in front of their house. The bricks are carried by the

:05:33. > :05:39.family's 50-year-old mother. We have to do it, just in case it gets too

:05:40. > :05:44.bad with all the water. Our final stop was Wraysbury, where the water

:05:45. > :05:51.was the deepest. Annabel decided it was time for her and her pets to get

:05:52. > :05:56.out. So many houses lost, so many people'slives ruined. As long as

:05:57. > :06:08.everybody is safe, that's all that's important. We also waded through to

:06:09. > :06:14.George's house. He has been here 13 years, and now has the Thames

:06:15. > :06:18.sloshing around his lounge. It was my dream to live on the river, and I

:06:19. > :06:24.have achieved that, but it has taken a lot out of my wife this time. They

:06:25. > :06:29.tried to escape it by whatever transport system would take them. Up

:06:30. > :06:34.and down these communities we found some resilient, others challenged,

:06:35. > :06:39.as this iconic British river flows and floods its way through thousands

:06:40. > :06:42.of lives. The Prime Minister says Environment

:06:43. > :06:45.Agency staff on the ground are doing an amazing job and deserve support

:06:46. > :06:49.and thanks. That's despite criticism of the agency by one of his most

:06:50. > :06:55.senior ministers over the weekend. The agency says it's under financial

:06:56. > :06:58.pressure. Spending on new defences in England and Wales will total ?2.3

:06:59. > :07:06.billion over the four years up to 2015, but it claims budget cuts mean

:07:07. > :07:09.it is losing staff and expertise. How much is spent on flood defences

:07:10. > :07:12.and where they should go is now under intense scrutiny, as our

:07:13. > :07:22.science editor, David Shukman, reports.

:07:23. > :07:25.The flooding is so serious, so widespread and so long-lasting that

:07:26. > :07:30.it has opened up divisions within government about how to respond. The

:07:31. > :07:34.Somerset Levels are at the centre of the dispute, with questions about

:07:35. > :07:38.what went wrong. Should the Environment Agency have invested

:07:39. > :07:43.more in clearing the rivers of silt, or was it held back by tough

:07:44. > :07:50.government restrictions on spending. We perhaps relied too much on the

:07:51. > :07:54.Environment Agency's advice. Yesterday the Communities Secretary

:07:55. > :07:58.Eric Pickles was highly critical of the Environment Agency, and why it

:07:59. > :08:04.hasn't done more in Somerset. Today, the agency Pulse head hit back. He

:08:05. > :08:13.is wrong. Our agency were following government rules and guidelines.

:08:14. > :08:18.Then Eric Patterson waded in to defend the Environment Agency. This

:08:19. > :08:24.afternoon in the Commons, Eric Pickles seems to have changed his

:08:25. > :08:29.tune. My admiration for the work of the Environment Agency exceeds no

:08:30. > :08:34.one, and I believe it is time for us to work together. All this as down

:08:35. > :08:38.the river at the Thames barrier, everyone was waiting for the record

:08:39. > :08:43.flows causing so many problems upstream. A tense backdrop to a

:08:44. > :08:47.political storm. At the heart of the dispute is the question of who gets

:08:48. > :09:02.defended and who doesn't, because the fact is, there's never been

:09:03. > :09:05.enough money to help everyone. So there is a system for calculating

:09:06. > :09:07.whether cash gets spent. Every pound must produce at least ?8 of economic

:09:08. > :09:10.benefit. That is a Treasury rule, and it is why London gets the most

:09:11. > :09:12.protection. Second, you count all of the households at risk. Clearly,

:09:13. > :09:18.cities will do better than the countryside. Third, you add up

:09:19. > :09:23.deprived households. Again, urban areas will come up with a higher

:09:24. > :09:26.rating. Add that together, and you can see why regions like the

:09:27. > :09:32.Somerset Levels have not been getting the investment that people

:09:33. > :09:37.there feel they deserve. Since the 1500s, there have been arguments

:09:38. > :09:41.about the flooding of land that produces food compared with

:09:42. > :09:46.protecting urban areas. We know the science, we know how to deal with

:09:47. > :09:51.this, but you have to make decisions about the economics. At this pub,

:09:52. > :09:55.people are feeling the effects of the rivers rising. Major floods

:09:56. > :09:57.usually force the government to think again, and we are seeing that

:09:58. > :10:00.happen now. With the row about flood defences

:10:01. > :10:02.continuing in the Commons, David Cameron left Westminster to visit

:10:03. > :10:07.parts of the south-west badly affected by the recent heavy rain

:10:08. > :10:10.and devastating storm surges. His trip has taken in Devon, Dorset and

:10:11. > :10:13.Cornwall, all of which have been badly affected, and he's been

:10:14. > :10:19.talking to business leaders and rail bosses. He's just arrived in the

:10:20. > :10:29.Cornish town of Newquay. Our correspondent Jon Kay is there. It

:10:30. > :10:33.is a sign of The Times that the Prime Minister has flown into

:10:34. > :10:38.Newquay tonight. All kinds of problems on the trains after the

:10:39. > :10:42.line collapsed at Dawlish in Devon last week. This one is revving up.

:10:43. > :10:47.They have doubled the number of flights today between Cornwall and

:10:48. > :10:52.London, to try to keep the economy operating. The Prime Minister's

:10:53. > :10:57.message tonight is that the place is still open for business, but that is

:10:58. > :11:01.easier said than done. Water shouldn't be a problem for an

:11:02. > :11:07.aquarium, but this attraction on the Atlantic coast is another victim of

:11:08. > :11:14.the winter storms. Normally these doors are pulled back. Smashed up by

:11:15. > :11:18.the tide, closed for a week, it finally reopened today. Lots of

:11:19. > :11:23.people were staying away, quite sensibly. They were heeding the Met

:11:24. > :11:28.Office warnings to not travel unless they had to, and keep away from

:11:29. > :11:43.dangerous areas, like sea fronts. The impact is that we have lost

:11:44. > :11:47.quite a lot of business. The damage needs to be repaired, transport

:11:48. > :11:51.links need to recover, head of the busy holiday seasons. With Network

:11:52. > :11:57.Rail saying disruption to the Lions could take months to sort out, the

:11:58. > :12:01.Prime Minister came to see how the south-west's railways are coping.

:12:02. > :12:05.The collapse of the track at Dawlish means Cornwall is currently cut off,

:12:06. > :12:11.but Mr Cameron said he wanted to show that the region's economy is

:12:12. > :12:15.still open for business. I am interested in making sure that

:12:16. > :12:21.everything the government can do is being done and will go on being

:12:22. > :12:26.done. For some industries, fixing the railway is little use.

:12:27. > :12:30.Newquay's fishermen need a better spell of weather. There might have

:12:31. > :12:35.been sunshine today, but stormy seas have kept them in port since

:12:36. > :12:40.Christmas. Barry has never known anything like it in 40 years. With

:12:41. > :12:47.fishing, you can never play catch up. A day lost is a day lost. We are

:12:48. > :12:53.now into two months, and at least another fortnight. The crews just

:12:54. > :12:56.are not earning any money. The Harbour Master told me that all

:12:57. > :13:03.those who rely on the seas for their livelihood are suffering. They are

:13:04. > :13:09.struggling financially. They cannot get on with their livelihoods. Some

:13:10. > :13:15.mornings, I have dreaded walking into work, through fear of what I'm

:13:16. > :13:18.going to find. The south-west is determined to get back on its feet,

:13:19. > :13:23.but the latest forecasts are not helping.

:13:24. > :13:26.Another government emergency meeting is just getting under way. Let's

:13:27. > :13:33.speak to our political correspondent, Vicki Young, who's

:13:34. > :13:38.outside that meeting in Whitehall. We have seen the Prime Minister out

:13:39. > :13:43.and about. The allegation is his ministers are busy fighting each

:13:44. > :13:48.other. That's right. We are told the Prime Minister will be dialling into

:13:49. > :13:52.this latest emergency meeting from the south-west of England. He is

:13:53. > :13:57.keen to focus on the practicalities and move away from those rows that

:13:58. > :14:01.we saw at the weekend. The intervention from Eric Pickles

:14:02. > :14:05.yesterday is being seen as a miscalculation, because in the

:14:06. > :14:18.future there may be questions for the Environment Agency to answer,

:14:19. > :14:21.but to attack them at the height of this crisis, when thousands of their

:14:22. > :14:23.workers have been trying to sort these problems out for weeks, that

:14:24. > :14:26.was always going to provoke a pretty furious backlash. The line from the

:14:27. > :14:28.Prime Minister today is to focus on the job in hand. He knows that

:14:29. > :14:31.people are seeing their businesses and homes go underwater, and the

:14:32. > :14:36.last thing they want to hear is ministers squabbling amongst

:14:37. > :14:43.themselves. Thank you. You can find out more about the flooding on our

:14:44. > :14:46.website. There are updates on all BBC local radio and TV stations as

:14:47. > :14:48.well. MPs are debating whether to ban

:14:49. > :14:51.people in England from smoking in cars when children are present.

:14:52. > :14:54.Hundreds of health professionals support the move, but critics say it

:14:55. > :15:04.would be almost impossible to enforce. Our health correspondent,

:15:05. > :15:10.Branwen Jeffreys, reports. A cigarette on the go, a dummy and a

:15:11. > :15:16.detector in the back. This is how you measure second-hand smoke in

:15:17. > :15:21.cars, using volunteer smokers and nonsmokers, windows closed and

:15:22. > :15:27.windows open. The monitor picks up tiny particles in smoke. Researchers

:15:28. > :15:36.say there's as much in cars as pubs before the smoking ban. And children

:15:37. > :15:40.are more vulnerable. It can cause respiratory problems, things like

:15:41. > :15:48.asthma. We know that second-hand smoke for very small children is

:15:49. > :15:52.linked to cot death as well. The government should intervene in what

:15:53. > :15:56.happens in your family car, but how far do you take the argument? What

:15:57. > :16:01.about smoking in your living room or pregnant women who smoke? This

:16:02. > :16:07.lifelong smoker is among those who is fired up by the idea of a band.

:16:08. > :16:11.In terms of civil liberties and how far the government encroaches on

:16:12. > :16:16.your life, there is a line, and a ban in the car is over that line. I

:16:17. > :16:22.do believe that if the government does that, people will ignore it

:16:23. > :16:26.because they have had enough. Parents already have two strap

:16:27. > :16:32.younger children in safely. It has become accepted as sensible. What do

:16:33. > :16:38.they make of the idea of a law to ban smoking in cars? If there are

:16:39. > :16:43.children involved, you should not be allowed to smoke, it is to confine.

:16:44. > :16:50.They do not get the choice. I do not think it should be brought into law.

:16:51. > :16:58.The evidence is strong that it is not healthy for children to be

:16:59. > :17:04.exposed to smoke in the car. Wales and the rest of the UK is holding

:17:05. > :17:09.off a ban, trying to persuade families to keep their car smoke

:17:10. > :17:15.free. Everybody will be watching how MPs vote in Westminster this

:17:16. > :17:20.evening. Our top story this evening: Hundreds

:17:21. > :17:26.of people are forced out of their homes along the Thames in Berkshire

:17:27. > :17:29.as the flood waters rise. And still to come... On target or wide of the

:17:30. > :17:39.mark? Mixed fortunes at the Olympics for the GB curling team. Later on

:17:40. > :17:45.BBC London: Caught red-handed - we expose the pay-tv fraudsters. And

:17:46. > :17:47.the London woman facing prison in Dubai as she's accused of

:17:48. > :18:00.'kidnapping' her son following a custody battle.

:18:01. > :18:04.The Home Secretary to Reza May has said she is shocked after a BBC

:18:05. > :18:08.Panorama investigation found evidence of systematic fraud in the

:18:09. > :18:11.student visa system. Each year, around 100,000 non-EU students get

:18:12. > :18:13.their visas to stay in the UK extended but they must pass a

:18:14. > :18:19.government approved English test first. But Panorama saw some

:18:20. > :18:23.candidates for tests being replaced by "fake sitters" and others who

:18:24. > :18:27.were simply given the answers. The Home Office has now suspended exams

:18:28. > :18:34.set by the American company ETS. Richard Watson has this report. It

:18:35. > :18:50.is the sort of multiple-choice test that students dream of. Unbelievably

:18:51. > :19:00.the invigilator is simply reading out the answers. Balfour means a,

:19:01. > :19:07.the term means he, and so on. A two hour test takes just seven minutes

:19:08. > :19:11.to fake. Panorama has been filming undercover following a network of

:19:12. > :19:16.crooked immigration agents who helped students extend their visas.

:19:17. > :19:21.The Home Office rules are crystal clear. Non-EU students have to pass

:19:22. > :19:29.an accredited exam or they do not get a Visa. Only last year we heard

:19:30. > :19:35.of an agency in West London which could guarantee an exam pass for a

:19:36. > :19:45.price. Our undercover researcher was told how to fall the exam board. --

:19:46. > :19:51.fool. The agency which arranged our exam denied any wrongdoing. After

:19:52. > :19:56.paying the agency ?500, we were sent to this approved test centre in East

:19:57. > :20:04.London for an exam. In the exam hall, an invigilator logs into a

:20:05. > :20:08.secure or terminal but neither she nor any of the other candidates will

:20:09. > :20:17.have to do the test themselves. Moments before the exam starts, new

:20:18. > :20:23.people arrived to take their places. While the fake sitters answer

:20:24. > :20:26.questions in perfect English, the applicant stands in the aisle,

:20:27. > :20:32.waiting to have their photo taken to show they have taken part in the

:20:33. > :20:37.exam. A few days later, our undercover reporter got her

:20:38. > :20:40.certificate. This agency strongly denies any complicity in the fraud

:20:41. > :20:47.and they said that after conducting their own investigation they had not

:20:48. > :20:49.renewed the contracts of three freelancers and had improved their

:20:50. > :20:55.monitoring systems. The company which sets the exams told us that

:20:56. > :21:02.they do everything they can to detect and prevent rare instances of

:21:03. > :21:06.this happening. We showed the footage to the Home Secretary. We

:21:07. > :21:13.have done a lot over the last three years. The number of student visas

:21:14. > :21:16.has gone down and the number of abuses has gone down but it is clear

:21:17. > :21:21.people are finding ways around the system. Our investigation shows that

:21:22. > :21:26.the student Visa system is still an easy target. And you can see Richard

:21:27. > :21:39.Watson's full report on Panorama - tonight at 8.30pm on BBC One. The

:21:40. > :21:41.Labour leader Ed Miliband will this evening lay out his plans to improve

:21:42. > :21:44.schools hospitals and other public services. He's expected to argue

:21:45. > :21:47.that the public sector should be accountable to parents, patients and

:21:48. > :21:50.anyone who uses them. Let's speak to our deputy Political Editor James

:21:51. > :21:55.Landale who's in King's Cross where Mr Miliband is speaking later.

:21:56. > :22:02.James. What is the message he is trying to get across? For a long

:22:03. > :22:08.time, if you asked Labour what they would do about schools and

:22:09. > :22:10.hospitals, you did not get a full and detailed answer. The party is

:22:11. > :22:15.struggling with a question. How do you improve public services with no

:22:16. > :22:20.money to spend? Mr Miliband will say that the answer is not state

:22:21. > :22:25.intervention or more choice and competition in the way services are

:22:26. > :22:29.delivered. He will say that there should be new mechanisms to make the

:22:30. > :22:35.state more responsive to our needs. He will promise to give parents new

:22:36. > :22:40.powers to send inspectors into schools and impose new standards,

:22:41. > :22:48.and also, potentially, SAC headteachers. He will promise

:22:49. > :22:51.automatic rights to pensioners in the decisions they make. He will

:22:52. > :22:55.promise more information in the way we engage with the state. One

:22:56. > :23:03.question he will not answer is the one facing all parties. How much

:23:04. > :23:08.money will you cut from public service budgets and where will the

:23:09. > :23:10.axe fall? It's day three of the Winter Olympics in Sochi, and bronze

:23:11. > :23:15.medallist Jenny Jones has been reflecting on her success. Yesterday

:23:16. > :23:18.she won Great Britain's first ever Olympic medal on the snow. Today she

:23:19. > :23:25.has become something of a media star, as Andy Swiss discovered when

:23:26. > :23:32.he went to meet her. She is the woman that everybody wants to talk

:23:33. > :23:37.to. Jenny Jones is in the Sochi Spotlight, the morning after the

:23:38. > :23:46.incredible day before. The journey to Olympic bronze medallist is as

:23:47. > :23:50.unlikely as it is unforgettable. As watched by her parents, she dazzled

:23:51. > :23:56.her way into sporting history. Even that was trumped by the most fearful

:23:57. > :24:01.of family reunions. This morning she told me that her mother and father

:24:02. > :24:05.had been the key to her success. To see them come forward at the end, I

:24:06. > :24:12.was holding it together, and then I saw my mother, and I lost it. I hope

:24:13. > :24:21.I made them proud. How did you celebrate? I celebrated with

:24:22. > :24:25.champagne. And a bit of dancing. In the 90 year history of the Winter

:24:26. > :24:32.Olympics, Britain has one medals in curling and ice hockey, but never in

:24:33. > :24:35.a snow sport, in now. How has Jenny Jones succeeded where so many have

:24:36. > :24:41.failed? This is where she learned to snowboard. This is Somerset.

:24:42. > :24:48.Slopestyle is about tricks and jumps. You do not need mountains for

:24:49. > :24:53.that. It is tailor-made for the UK. You do not need snow, you just need

:24:54. > :24:59.somebody with the ability and the gumption to slide down the slopes.

:25:00. > :25:05.These guys train on trampolines into pits of bone. Britain had another

:25:06. > :25:13.finalist today with Jack Welbourne and the speed skating, but this time

:25:14. > :25:20.it did not work out. He gained a painful ankle. The next medal

:25:21. > :25:23.celebrations are still on ice. Let's return to our main story this

:25:24. > :25:26.evening and the flooding in much of Southern England. Duncan Kennedy is

:25:27. > :25:37.in Wraysbury in the Thames Valley. Duncan. I am here at this home, and

:25:38. > :25:46.this is a garden but it resembles a swimming pool. Alan, what is the

:25:47. > :25:50.possibility of flooding in the home? We had an inch in the garden last

:25:51. > :25:58.night when we went to bed and we woke to find this. It has been

:25:59. > :26:04.rising all day. It is lapping around our feet, do you expect it in

:26:05. > :26:08.tonight? I fear it will. My wife has broken her ankle and is in a

:26:09. > :26:13.wheelchair. We will sit it out and wait for the best. You cannot move?

:26:14. > :26:21.We cannot move, there was nowhere to go easily. You lived in Datchet

:26:22. > :26:29.before? Have you seen anything like it? 2002 and 2007, but nothing like

:26:30. > :26:36.this. We are hoping for the best and if someone can tell us by telephone

:26:37. > :26:44.how long it will go... The best of luck, I hope it does not come into

:26:45. > :26:52.night. His home is one of 900 flooded tonight. Duncan, thank you.

:26:53. > :26:59.What does the next 24 hours hold? Time for a look at the weather.

:27:00. > :27:02.Here's Louise Lear. There are 16 severe flood warnings for southern

:27:03. > :27:09.England so pictures like this are a familiar sight. Severe gales are

:27:10. > :27:13.likely through the middle of the week and in the north, it gets cold

:27:14. > :27:23.with snow and ice around. Through this week, up till Friday, we could

:27:24. > :27:27.see 40 to 70 millimetres. Unfortunately, this will intensify

:27:28. > :27:32.the risk of flooding. Evening showers perhaps posing a risk for

:27:33. > :27:37.icy stretches in the North. More cloud, wind and rain is gathering in

:27:38. > :27:44.the West and that will gather at quite apace. A relatively quiet but

:27:45. > :27:48.cold start for Northern Ireland with showers to come. There will be snow

:27:49. > :27:54.on the hills of Scotland with rain towards the coast. Some rain towards

:27:55. > :28:03.East Wales. Some could be quite heavy. It is rattling through at

:28:04. > :28:06.quite apace with the 50 mile proud gusts of winds. The East of England

:28:07. > :28:14.will be dry but it will not last and by the middle of the morning, the

:28:15. > :28:17.rain will push in. Behind the rain, drier and brighter weather follows

:28:18. > :28:24.in behind, just a few isolated showers. We may see wet snow at

:28:25. > :28:32.lower levels as the cold day continues in the North. So, shower

:28:33. > :28:37.risks, icy patches likely on Tuesday night and into Wednesday. This low

:28:38. > :28:40.pressure moves in and brings a longer spell of heavy rain and

:28:41. > :28:47.severe winds with amber warnings already out for the south-west.

:28:48. > :28:50.Thank you. That's all from the BBC News at Six so it's goodbye from me,

:28:51. > :28:51.and on BBC One we