09/11/2015

Download Subtitles

Transcript

:00:00. > :00:00.Calls for Russia's athletes to be suspended

:00:07. > :00:11.from all international competition by the World Anti-Doping Authority.

:00:12. > :00:14.It names five Russian athletes it says should be banned for life

:00:15. > :00:19.and accuses the Kremlin of state-sponsored doping.

:00:20. > :00:31.We found destruction of samples in the laboratories, we found payments

:00:32. > :00:33.of money in order to conceal doping tests.

:00:34. > :00:36.It claims London 2012 was sabotaged by cheating Russian athletes

:00:37. > :00:39.and attacks athletics' governing body for being too lax.

:00:40. > :00:41.The scathing criticism of Russia and its athletes has sent shockwaves

:00:42. > :00:51.A warning the climate is moving into unchartered territory

:00:52. > :00:58.David Cameron defies hecklers, to tell business leaders he's

:00:59. > :01:04.deadly serious when he says the UK could leave the EU.

:01:05. > :01:06.And lurking behind the hay bales - the dream home built out

:01:07. > :01:12.Now its owner is told, tear it down or face jail.

:01:13. > :01:16.The arguments continue at Westminster as the Scotland Bill

:01:17. > :01:20.makes its final journey through the Commons.

:01:21. > :01:22.And the discovery of a woman's remains in Montrose.

:01:23. > :01:42.a man and a woman appear in court charged with her murder.

:01:43. > :01:45.Good evening and welcome to the BBC News at Six.

:01:46. > :01:48.The world of athletics is in crisis tonight.

:01:49. > :01:51.The World Anti-Doping Authority has called for all Russian track

:01:52. > :01:54.and field athletes to be suspended from all international competition,

:01:55. > :02:00.It's accused Russian athletes of widespread doping and says

:02:01. > :02:09.the Russian government not only knew about it, but conspired in it.

:02:10. > :02:14.It also points the finger at athletics' governing body,

:02:15. > :02:16.the IAAF, currently headed by Lord Sebastian Coe,

:02:17. > :02:18.claiming the London 2012 Olympics were sabotaged by an extraordinarily

:02:19. > :02:20.laissez-faire attitude by the IAAF and Russia towards doping.

:02:21. > :02:24.Our sports editor, Dan Roan, is live in Geneva.

:02:25. > :02:26.The extent of the corruption exposed there by

:02:27. > :02:31.the World Anti-Doping Authority is staggering.

:02:32. > :02:41.It is. Sport and scandal seem to have gone hand in hand in recent

:02:42. > :02:46.times. Federation Micro, the most obvious example, football's world

:02:47. > :02:50.governing body brought to its knees thanks allegations of corruption.

:02:51. > :02:55.Today, it was the turn of athletics. The signature event of

:02:56. > :03:00.the Olympic movement and got in deplete the most serious doping

:03:01. > :03:04.scandal sport has ever seen. -- engulfed. Sport has been no

:03:05. > :03:09.stranger to controversial reports but today in Geneva we were handed

:03:10. > :03:12.something akin to a crime novel, shocking revelations of

:03:13. > :03:16.state-sponsored cheating along with bribery and extortion at the very

:03:17. > :03:19.top of athletics. How would you feel personally about what you have

:03:20. > :03:23.discovered during this investigation and where do you think it ranks in

:03:24. > :03:29.the history of sports scandals? It is worse than we thought. It has

:03:30. > :03:35.the effect on like other forms of corruption of actually affecting the

:03:36. > :03:40.results on the field of play and athletes both in Russia and abroad

:03:41. > :03:45.are suffering as a result of that. In a damning report, a world

:03:46. > :03:49.anti-doping agency Commission found in widespread and deeply rooted

:03:50. > :03:54.culture of cheating in Russia involving athletes, coaches, doctors

:03:55. > :03:57.and laboratory personnel. The Russian government was accused of

:03:58. > :04:00.direct intimidation of anti-doping officials by the country's Secret

:04:01. > :04:05.Service. And the wrongdoing also went to the highest levels of the

:04:06. > :04:10.governing body of athletics, the IAAF charged with corruption and

:04:11. > :04:17.bribery. But 2016, our recommendation is that the Russian

:04:18. > :04:21.Federation be suspended. The Commission investigated allegations

:04:22. > :04:24.made in a German documentary last December accusing Russia of

:04:25. > :04:30.state-sponsored doping. Earlier this year, the most powerful man in the

:04:31. > :04:36.sport, Lamine Diack, said the governing body had not been

:04:37. > :04:45.complicit. I did not make a cover up of the doping case. So no cover-up

:04:46. > :04:48.of the IAAF? No. But last week, he was arrested by French police

:04:49. > :04:53.investigating allegations of money-laundering. The man who

:04:54. > :04:56.replaced him as the President of the IAAF, Lord Coe, has been criticised

:04:57. > :05:01.for being too dismissive of media exposes into doping but tonight said

:05:02. > :05:05.he would push for Russia to be punished. The enquiry recommended

:05:06. > :05:11.five Russian athletes should be banned for life and said that London

:05:12. > :05:15.2012 had been sabotaged. I feel devastated to think that our medals

:05:16. > :05:19.I could have been awarded in my career and for all clean athletes

:05:20. > :05:22.out there who work so hard at training and you want to feel you

:05:23. > :05:27.are standing there on the start line and a level paying field.

:05:28. > :05:32.The world's largest country has established itself as a powerhouse.

:05:33. > :05:35.Its team among the most successful at the last Olympics. Whether

:05:36. > :05:38.Russia's athletes will be allowed to compete at next year's games in Rio

:05:39. > :05:41.is now in grave doubt. More from Dan in a moment, but first

:05:42. > :05:44.to Sarah Rainsford in Moscow. Pretty vigorous rebuttal

:05:45. > :05:54.from the Kremlin. That is right. Russian officials

:05:55. > :05:57.have even busy defending their reputation ever since the report's

:05:58. > :06:00.findings were announced. We have heard from the sports Minister

:06:01. > :06:05.tonight who has that this report will need to be studied but he has

:06:06. > :06:09.also dismissed any suggestion that the government was implicated in the

:06:10. > :06:13.scandal. We have also heard from the director of the laboratory at the

:06:14. > :06:16.centre of the scandal, which is alleged to have been handling fake

:06:17. > :06:20.test results. He said that he will not be resigning despite the fact he

:06:21. > :06:24.is accused of eliminating key evidence. And there has been a

:06:25. > :06:27.stream of commentators on Russian state television tonight painting

:06:28. > :06:32.all of this as an anti-Russian campaign. Patriotically instincts

:06:33. > :06:36.here kicking in. But the strength and the detail of the claims we have

:06:37. > :06:39.been cleaning -- we have been hearing is such that the sporting

:06:40. > :06:44.world here is shaken and the suggestion Russia's athletics team

:06:45. > :06:48.could be prevented from taking part in the Rio Olympics is something

:06:49. > :06:49.that people are very worried about because that would be really quite

:06:50. > :06:51.devastating. And the remit of this report was

:06:52. > :06:55.very narrow, but people may well be wondering, does the doping spread to

:06:56. > :07:08.Russian athletes in other sports The enquiry had, Dick Pound, said in

:07:09. > :07:12.that press conference in Geneva that we had not heard all of it yet.

:07:13. > :07:15.Certain findings have not been revealed because they have now been

:07:16. > :07:20.passed to Interpol, they are the subject of criminal investigation.

:07:21. > :07:26.He said it was the tip of the iceberg in his opinion. The Fort

:07:27. > :07:30.this was restricted merely to Russia and buttocks was naive. -- the

:07:31. > :07:36.thought. Cheating, doping, systematic cheap is nothing new in

:07:37. > :07:41.sports -- systematic cheating. It happened with East Germany in the

:07:42. > :07:44.Cold War and we saw in cycling with Lance Armstrong's team more

:07:45. > :07:49.recently. What makes this so shocking as it did not just involve

:07:50. > :07:53.cheating through doping, it also involved the very people at the top

:07:54. > :07:57.of the sport whose job it was to protect clean athletes. It appears

:07:58. > :08:05.they profited by blackmailing Lopez and taking payments from them to

:08:06. > :08:09.cover up the cheating. It is shocking for athletics and sport as

:08:10. > :08:14.well, and the way athletics response to this crisis will be how Lord Coe,

:08:15. > :08:20.the man who now runs the sport, is judged in the future. He has taken

:08:21. > :08:24.criticism in recent weeks and months, Lord Coe. He now meets the

:08:25. > :08:26.sport and he must decide how on Earth he repaired the damage with

:08:27. > :08:30.its credibility lying in damage. Global average temperatures are set

:08:31. > :08:31.to cross a significant threshold this year,

:08:32. > :08:34.rising by 1 degree Centigrade since the Industrial Revolution,

:08:35. > :08:37.according to the Met Office. It says the Earth's climate is now

:08:38. > :08:40.moving into unchartered territory. And the UN has warned that

:08:41. > :08:43.the level of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere has reached

:08:44. > :08:46.a new high and is rising Our Science Editor, David Shukman,

:08:47. > :08:54.reports. Icebergs in the waters off

:08:55. > :09:02.Greenland. The Arctic is one of the fastest

:09:03. > :09:05.forming regions on the planet. The first sign, say scientists,

:09:06. > :09:07.of the impacts climate change could And today came news

:09:08. > :09:12.of another milestone. A news conference in London

:09:13. > :09:17.confirmed that the global average temperature has

:09:18. > :09:19.risen one Celsius over the past So this is really reinforcing

:09:20. > :09:24.the scientific conclusion that as we increase carbon dioxide

:09:25. > :09:26.concentrations in the atmosphere, So this is another piece of evidence

:09:27. > :09:34.that that is happening right now. These latest figures show how much

:09:35. > :09:36.temperatures have risen since Victorian times, in the heyday

:09:37. > :09:40.of the Industrial Revolution. So this graph from the Met Office

:09:41. > :09:44.tracks the global average And it's now on the point of

:09:45. > :09:56.reaching an increase of one Celsius. That's significant because it is

:09:57. > :09:59.halfway to the two-degree threshold of warming that's widely accepted

:10:00. > :10:02.as a relatively safe limit. But even that is likely to

:10:03. > :10:09.bring all kinds of impacts. More flooding is one possible

:10:10. > :10:11.effect and researchers say even what sounds like mild warming

:10:12. > :10:17.could prove very serious. So two degree world would mean more

:10:18. > :10:19.floods, more heatwaves, less land that's available

:10:20. > :10:23.for crops, more water stress, the drying of areas that we

:10:24. > :10:26.currently use for growing food. Even two degrees would impact

:10:27. > :10:30.hundreds of millions of people. Warmer air can hold more moisture,

:10:31. > :10:37.so rainstorms may well become more But there are, of course,

:10:38. > :10:41.a lot of uncertainties about exactly It feels like a long time ago now,

:10:42. > :10:48.but last summer in Britain saw That doesn't prove anything

:10:49. > :10:51.on its own. But scientists say there is

:10:52. > :10:57.a pattern of rising temperatures. Four government departments have

:10:58. > :11:03.provisionally agreed to spending cuts of about 30% over

:11:04. > :11:06.the next four years, according to It's part of his bid to bring the

:11:07. > :11:12.country's budget back into surplus. But one council has told the BBC

:11:13. > :11:14.the cuts will mean the end of valuable services for some

:11:15. > :11:17.of the most vulnerable. Here's our Economics Editor,

:11:18. > :11:30.Robert Peston. Not the great Victorian building

:11:31. > :11:34.that these two, the Chancellor and Justice Secretary, normally get

:11:35. > :11:38.locked inside but Brixton prison, which may be one of the 19th-century

:11:39. > :11:42.jails to be redeveloped for housing and replaced by nine brand-new

:11:43. > :11:43.prisons which George Osborne said to be redeveloped for housing and

:11:44. > :11:47.replaced by nine brand-new prisons which George Osborne said today it

:11:48. > :11:52.would this show is not all spending cuts are about weakening the fabric

:11:53. > :11:56.of the state. I will be no opportunity if borrowing goes up and

:11:57. > :12:00.up, if debt goes up and up, businesses go bust, parents whose

:12:01. > :12:03.work and families whose homes, there will be no opportunity if we lose

:12:04. > :12:07.control of the public finances and have to cut the National Health

:12:08. > :12:11.Service. Where is the opportunity in spending the same on debt interest

:12:12. > :12:17.as we do on our schools? And today, the Chancellor boasted the Treasury

:12:18. > :12:19.was one of four departments, with transport, local government and

:12:20. > :12:23.environment, which have agreed a big 30% reduction in their day-to-day

:12:24. > :12:28.running costs, well ahead of the deadline for the big spending review

:12:29. > :12:32.later this month. Since George is on first took up residence at the

:12:33. > :12:36.Treasury in 2010, the curative cuts for the four departments that have

:12:37. > :12:41.settled including his own will be 50% or a half height 2020 which

:12:42. > :12:47.means either that there was grotesque waste in the public sector

:12:48. > :12:52.or that there will be massive deterioration in public services, or

:12:53. > :12:58.a bit of both. Trampoline therapy in Liverpool. A

:12:59. > :13:03.care centre for adults with physical or learning difficulties. Waiting to

:13:04. > :13:07.hear how it will be affected by this -- I expected cuts to local grounds.

:13:08. > :13:10.These cuts have not yet been announced and Liverpool rate is less

:13:11. > :13:16.from council tax than it spends just an adult social care, let alone the

:13:17. > :13:20.other services the Town Hall is expected to survive. So the Mayor of

:13:21. > :13:22.Liverpool is anxious. We expect the government to impose further cuts on

:13:23. > :13:27.you and other local authorities, what would that mean?

:13:28. > :13:29.Simple, but job losses, more service reductions, libraries and leisure

:13:30. > :13:35.centres closing, cleaning being reduced. But we having to move to

:13:36. > :13:41.monthly bin collections. All of those things are on the agenda. We

:13:42. > :13:45.have cut the fact, we have cooked flesh and we are now into cutting

:13:46. > :13:49.bone and that is just not acceptable and government have to wake up. A

:13:50. > :13:53.great Victorian city, Liverpool, proud of its past, hopeful it can be

:13:54. > :13:56.great again but nervous about how to support a population

:13:57. > :13:59.disproportionately disadvantaged and poor.

:14:00. > :14:01.The Prime Minister has told business leaders he has no emotional

:14:02. > :14:04.attachment to the EU and is deadly serious when he says

:14:05. > :14:08.David Cameron says the issue is not whether the UK could survive

:14:09. > :14:10.outside the EU, but whether it would be more successful.

:14:11. > :14:15.Here's our Deputy Political Editor, James Landale.

:14:16. > :14:17.David Cameron came to sell his EU reforms to British business today

:14:18. > :14:28.They were from a group campaigning to leave the EU and they don't

:14:29. > :14:32.like the Confederation of British industry, which wants to stay in.

:14:33. > :14:35.Come on, guys, if you sit down now, you can ask me a question.

:14:36. > :14:38.What he wants, he told them, is a flexible EU, one that protects

:14:39. > :14:42.countries outside the euro, gives new powers to parliaments and

:14:43. > :14:49.We need to fix these challenges, fix these problems.

:14:50. > :14:52.That's what the negotiation's about, and then we can throw ours

:14:53. > :14:55.elves headlong into keeping Britain in a reformed Europe.

:14:56. > :14:59.But if the talks fail, he doesn't rule out leaving the EU.

:15:00. > :15:03.Most people here and most people in Brussels believe that you will

:15:04. > :15:05.end up leading the campaign to stay in the EU.

:15:06. > :15:07.How can you succeed in a negotiation where everybody

:15:08. > :15:14.If these things can't be fixed, then Britain would naturally ask,

:15:15. > :15:22.I think people in Europe know I'm deadly serious about that.

:15:23. > :15:24.He had, he said, no emotional attachment to the EU's

:15:25. > :15:30.institutions and the UK could survive outside them.

:15:31. > :15:33.David Cameron is walking a narrow path.

:15:34. > :15:36.He wants to threaten leaving the EU to squeeze concessions out

:15:37. > :15:39.of Brussels, but he also wants to reassure pro-EU business groups that

:15:40. > :15:47.he wants to stay in a reformed EU, and that can lead to mixed messages.

:15:48. > :15:50.But for now, he's looking for support from EU leaders.

:15:51. > :15:53.And in some capitals, he's getting it.

:15:54. > :15:56.Where the UK seeks reasonable and achievable adjustments, we will

:15:57. > :16:06.But if the EU backpedals on reform, others want David Cameron to

:16:07. > :16:09.I think that the Prime Minister is being very strong

:16:10. > :16:13.in what he's saying to our friends and partners, and he's really making

:16:14. > :16:16.that they should not underestimate the seriousness of Britain wanting

:16:17. > :16:25.Tomorrow, the Prime Minister will reveal more

:16:26. > :16:28.detail of how he wants the EU's institutions to change, and then the

:16:29. > :16:35.James Landale, BBC News, Westminster.

:16:36. > :16:41.Russian athletes are found to have been involved in widespread doping

:16:42. > :16:44.and cheating - there are calls for them to be banned from the next

:16:45. > :16:47.And still to come - the farmer called Fidler who faces jail for

:16:48. > :16:50.hiding his mock Tudor dream home from the planners.

:16:51. > :16:52.And coming up on Reporting Scotland at 6.30:

:16:53. > :16:56.star whose success in Shanghai has rocketed him up the world rankings.

:16:57. > :16:58.And the astronaut who's become the first to play the bagpipes

:16:59. > :17:18.She's a winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, kept for 15 years

:17:19. > :17:21.under house arrest and tonight Aung San Suu Kyi has taken her

:17:22. > :17:26.In Myanmar's first openly contested national election for a quarter

:17:27. > :17:29.of a century, her party says it expects to win by a landslide.

:17:30. > :17:32.It would be a remarkable feat for a woman who became one of the

:17:33. > :17:34.world's most prominent political prisoners, barred from any contact

:17:35. > :17:39.But even if - as is looking likely - her party wins,

:17:40. > :17:41.Aung San Suuu Kyi will be barred from becoming President

:17:42. > :17:49.From the capital Yangon, our Special Correspondent Fergal

:17:50. > :18:00.This report contains some flashing images.

:18:01. > :18:03.It isn't often an entire nation waits for that moment when

:18:04. > :18:07.The first hint of confidence came when we saw the pro-democracy leader

:18:08. > :18:11.emerge to address her supporters at 20 minutes to midday.

:18:12. > :18:13.Counting had been under way less than three hours,

:18:14. > :18:22.The results are not yet official, she said,

:18:23. > :18:27.It was time to remember the dignity of the defeated,

:18:28. > :18:35.This for Aung San Suu Kyi the moment of truth.

:18:36. > :18:36.Now all day the election results announcements

:18:37. > :18:39.have been coming forward and this a certain impatience here

:18:40. > :18:46.to know whether they have got the mandate they were seeking.

:18:47. > :18:49.To win freedom from fear, that was the key, she always said.

:18:50. > :18:55.If we stay afraid the country will never change.

:18:56. > :19:00.To achieve change we have to be brave.

:19:01. > :19:04.The last time Aung San Suu Kyi won 25 years ago

:19:05. > :19:13.But even with an NLVD victory, the army still holds a quarter

:19:14. > :19:18.of all parliamentary seats and controls key security ministries.

:19:19. > :19:25.By late afternoon, the heavens had opened.

:19:26. > :19:27.There were still no official results, but rumours

:19:28. > :19:38.Everybody here is soaked the rain has been coming down.

:19:39. > :19:40.But it doesn't matter, the sense of joy the sense

:19:41. > :19:49.And then flashing into the night - win after win.

:19:50. > :19:53.It didn't seem to matter a definitive verdict was some way off.

:19:54. > :20:12.Tonight a bold and precarious new landscape is revealing are itself.

:20:13. > :20:15.The former Secretary of State for Scotland has told an election court

:20:16. > :20:18.he thought it was "politically beneficial" to leak a memo about the

:20:19. > :20:21.SNP leader, Nicola Sturgeon during the general election campaign.

:20:22. > :20:23.Alistair Carmichael has been giving evidence at a hearing

:20:24. > :20:26.into claims he misled the public in the run-up to his re-election

:20:27. > :20:36.Our Scotland Correspondent Lorna Gordon has more.

:20:37. > :20:42.What more can you tell us? This is the first election court hearing to

:20:43. > :20:49.be held in Scotland for 50 years. One lawyer said it wasn't a court of

:20:50. > :20:54.morals or honesty, but a legal court dealing with specific legal issues.

:20:55. > :20:59.Namely, whether Alistair Carmichael broke election law in denying and

:21:00. > :21:06.lying about his knowledge of a leaked civil service memo. My report

:21:07. > :21:11.does contain flash photography. He is the only Liberal Democrat MP left

:21:12. > :21:16.in Scotland. I won't be talking to you at this stage. Now fighting for

:21:17. > :21:20.his political survival not in a Parliamentary chamber, but in a

:21:21. > :21:24.court. It started with a newspaper article giving details of a leaked

:21:25. > :21:28.civil service memo claiming Nicola Sturgeon would prefer to see David

:21:29. > :21:33.Cameron as Prime Minister, a claim Nicola Sturgeon denied. Alistair

:21:34. > :21:37.Carmichael at first said he had no involvement with the leak. I told

:21:38. > :21:40.you the first time and this is on record is when I received a phone

:21:41. > :21:44.call on Friday from a journalist making me aware of it. An official

:21:45. > :21:47.investigation into the leak found otherwise. He told the election

:21:48. > :22:03.court: The court here heard it wasn't until

:22:04. > :22:07.five days after he won his seat at the general election that he

:22:08. > :22:11.admitted his role in the leak. Four of his constituents say this cover

:22:12. > :22:15.up calls into question his integrity and brought the action. One of them

:22:16. > :22:19.said she was shocked that a politician she trusted and respected

:22:20. > :22:25.would do such a thing as lie to the constituents of Orkney and Shetland.

:22:26. > :22:29.Lie though he did. That is not disputed. But if it is proved that

:22:30. > :22:35.what he said relates to his character or conduct and that it

:22:36. > :22:36.helped him win his seat, it could end Mr Carmichael's political

:22:37. > :22:44.career. A brief look at some of

:22:45. > :22:47.the day's other other news stories. The Chief Executive of

:22:48. > :22:49.the troubled steel company, Caparo, has died after falling from his

:22:50. > :22:52.penthouse flat in central London. Police say they are not treating

:22:53. > :22:55.the death of Angad Paul, who was 45, Administrators had been called

:22:56. > :23:02.into try to salvage the firm which The Government is to delay

:23:03. > :23:07.controversial changes to the way police forces are funded

:23:08. > :23:09.after conceding errors were made Six forces and London's Deputy Mayor

:23:10. > :23:14.for Policing had threatened legal action, saying the process was

:23:15. > :23:16.unjustified and deeply flawed. The Policing Minister, Mike Penning,

:23:17. > :23:19.has apologised for what he said was He built a mock Tudor castle without

:23:20. > :23:24.planning permission, moved his family into it and then hid it for

:23:25. > :23:28.four year behind bales of straw. Now Robert Fidler, a farmer

:23:29. > :23:32.from Surrey, has been told he'll go Our correspondent Duncan Kennedy is

:23:33. > :23:36.in the village of Salfords where Duncan,

:23:37. > :23:48.they say an Englishman's home is his No sadly not for him. You may be

:23:49. > :23:53.able to make out the castle. It is that light across the field. This is

:23:54. > :23:58.a castle living on borrowed time. Because today Mr Fiddler lost an

:23:59. > :24:00.epic 15-year battle with the planners and if he doesn't demolish

:24:01. > :24:06.it now he will be going to jail. It's the castle

:24:07. > :24:09.in the countryside, but tonight the man who built it is facing jail

:24:10. > :24:12.if he doesn't pull it down. Robert Fiddler has lost

:24:13. > :24:15.his long fight to keep it after the High Court ruled he put it

:24:16. > :24:18.up without planning permission Tonight, the High Court gave him

:24:19. > :24:22.a three-month suspended prison sentence for failing to comply with

:24:23. > :24:24.planning laws Oh, well, I mean, I told you

:24:25. > :24:31.before and I told you over and over again I never broken any laws,

:24:32. > :24:36.I've never done anything wrong. All I have done is look after

:24:37. > :24:39.my family and look after my cattle. And that is where I have got to

:24:40. > :24:43.go now and look after them. Will you be demolishing your house

:24:44. > :24:46.now that the court has ruled? The story began in 2000 when Robert

:24:47. > :24:51.Fiddler used these bales of hay to It went up behind them in secret

:24:52. > :24:58.for four years. The local council said they had

:24:59. > :25:01.been deceived and he didn't Well Mr Fiddler has been fighting

:25:02. > :25:07.this battle for 15 years to keep his house, but as you can see it's right

:25:08. > :25:12.in the heart of Green Belt land. His argument all along is

:25:13. > :25:14.as nobody has objected, He also claimed it couldn't be

:25:15. > :25:23.demolished, because it had bats and newts and that he had

:25:24. > :25:27.since sold it to someone else. This has been depicted as an

:25:28. > :25:29.epic David and Goliath battle over In the end, the council

:25:30. > :25:35.and the courts have prevailed. Castles of stone cannot be

:25:36. > :26:00.built behind walls of hay. Now the weather. Matt is here. What

:26:01. > :26:05.a start for the week. Rain in Wales and northern England and rivers

:26:06. > :26:10.bursting their banks in North Yorkshire and not only has it been

:26:11. > :26:16.wet, it has been windy as you can see from the Wirral. And it stays

:26:17. > :26:23.that way in Wales and northern England with winds up to 50mph. It

:26:24. > :26:31.could cause problems for transport. The heaviest rain is in western

:26:32. > :26:36.Scotland and further rain around western coasts and the incredible

:26:37. > :26:41.thing is how mild it is. It could be one of the mildest November nights

:26:42. > :26:45.on record. But tempered by the strength of the wind in the morning

:26:46. > :26:53.and cooler in northern Scotland. Here we should see some sunshine to

:26:54. > :27:03.start the day. Still rinse raining to -- still raining to the

:27:04. > :27:07.north-west of Glasgow. Still gla in northern England. In the South West

:27:08. > :27:10.some heavy rain first thing and the rain will work towards the south

:27:11. > :27:15.Midlands and East Anglia during the day. Some dry weather either side in

:27:16. > :27:19.the west. The rain in western Scotland and Northern Ireland just

:27:20. > :27:25.inches further south and fizzles a touch. Some sunshine in the north of

:27:26. > :27:29.Scotland between the showers. But temperatures while above average

:27:30. > :27:33.only around 12. In the south and east itself could be up to 19

:27:34. > :27:38.degrees. Another mild one into Wednesday and the same areas getting

:27:39. > :27:44.the same heavy rain. Part of north-west England and Wales and

:27:45. > :27:46.south-west Scotland and bright and breezy to the north. Temperatures

:27:47. > :27:58.still above where they should be. Thank you. Before we go, an update

:27:59. > :28:02.on our top story, the inter national anti-doping has called for Russian

:28:03. > :28:08.athletes to be suspended after allegations of doping. Lord Coe has

:28:09. > :28:10.been giving his reaction to our correspondent. It

:28:11. > :28:15.been giving his reaction to our correspondent. It is very important

:28:16. > :28:20.That you recognise that there are you know, our sport has to be clean.

:28:21. > :28:23.It has to be seen to be clean and you do whatever you can to do that.

:28:24. > :28:33.If there are lessons to be learned, if there are failings in our

:28:34. > :28:39.systems, if there are internal governances thoub in place. So they

:28:40. > :28:42.have failed? So, I am saying we to understand the full-scale of the

:28:43. > :28:51.allegations, but you know we will look at ourselves. We are not hiding

:28:52. > :28:56.from that. You can follow that story on the News channel.