01/03/2016

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:00:07. > :00:10.The Omagh bombing in Northern Ireland -

:00:11. > :00:13.the case against the only remaining suspect collapses.

:00:14. > :00:16.More people were killed in the 1998 atrocity than in any other terror

:00:17. > :00:21.Seamus Daly leaves prison - prosecutors accept their evidence

:00:22. > :00:28.against him is unreliable - disappointment for the families.

:00:29. > :00:34.I think most families have given up on justice, they have given up on

:00:35. > :00:35.the criminal justice system because they have been let down so many

:00:36. > :00:38.times. We'll be asking if this is the end

:00:39. > :00:48.of the road for the victims' Shares in Barclays plunge after it

:00:49. > :00:53.announces a drop in profits - Can anyone stop Donald Trump's bid

:00:54. > :00:59.for the White House? It's Super Tuesday in

:01:00. > :01:04.America's election season. Notice the refreshing absence of

:01:05. > :01:08.traffic congestion. That was the promise

:01:09. > :01:10.a generation ago - now the NHS says new towns should be

:01:11. > :01:18.about healthy living. Coming up in the sport there is a

:01:19. > :01:22.big night Premier League action ahead, Leicester could go five

:01:23. > :01:23.points clear at the top of the table with a win against West Bromwich

:01:24. > :01:39.Albion. Hello and welcome to

:01:40. > :01:42.the BBC News at Six. The Omagh bombing was the worst,

:01:43. > :01:46.single atrocity of Northern Ireland's troubles and today

:01:47. > :01:49.the prospect of justice for the victims' families

:01:50. > :01:53.seems as remote as ever. The case against the only remaining

:01:54. > :01:56.suspect charged with the attack Seamus Daly has always denied

:01:57. > :02:02.the murders of 29 people in the Real IRA attack and today

:02:03. > :02:05.he was released from prison. The prosecution said

:02:06. > :02:07.it was withdrawing the charges because a key witness

:02:08. > :02:32.was unreliable. August 15, 1998 was unparalleled

:02:33. > :02:38.even in the Northern Irish history of brutality. This was an ordinary

:02:39. > :02:41.market town, a day out for families, by the evening parents and children

:02:42. > :02:47.were grieving because of a massive car bomb. 18 years later shops have

:02:48. > :02:51.been repaired, this street rebuilt, but nothing is forgotten. The

:02:52. > :02:55.relatives of those who died are still looking for justice, however

:02:56. > :02:59.they did not find it when they went to court today. The case against

:03:00. > :03:08.Seamus Daly, the man accused of all 29 murders, collapsed. You will

:03:09. > :03:12.notice there are not many families, most families have given up on

:03:13. > :03:16.justice, they have given up on the criminal justice system because they

:03:17. > :03:20.have been let down so many times. Seamus Daly has always strongly

:03:21. > :03:26.denied any part in the explosion in Omagh. I would like to ask you some

:03:27. > :03:36.questions please about the Omagh bombing. In 2000, panorama named him

:03:37. > :03:41.as one of the men involved in the bombing. The key to the prosecution

:03:42. > :03:45.case was a mobile phone owned by the bombers. A witness said he could

:03:46. > :03:49.connect Seamus Daly to the phone, but in court he gave inconsistent

:03:50. > :03:53.evidence and contradicted his earlier testimony. The prosecution

:03:54. > :04:02.against the defendant Seamus Daly was based on a house of straw. The

:04:03. > :04:07.failure of this case to reach trial means only one man has ever been

:04:08. > :04:11.prosecuted for the murders at Omagh. In December 2007, Sean Hoey was

:04:12. > :04:16.acquitted and cleared of involvement in the attacks after a lengthy

:04:17. > :04:20.criminal case, two years later for other men including Seamus Daly were

:04:21. > :04:25.found liable for the bombing in a civil case brought by some of the

:04:26. > :04:29.Omagh families. They continued to push for criminal convictions and

:04:30. > :04:35.two years ago Seamus Daly was arrested and charged. However, the

:04:36. > :04:37.case against him collapsed with the prosecutors admitting they did not

:04:38. > :04:43.have enough evidence. To bring it to that level where it has even been at

:04:44. > :04:47.a committal hearing was pointless and I do not understand why the

:04:48. > :04:54.families are put continually through it. This afternoon Seamus Daly left

:04:55. > :04:58.the prison, but he has been held in remand therefore almost two years.

:04:59. > :05:03.He is no longer wanted in connection with the murders of all those who

:05:04. > :05:09.are remembered in Omagh. The town's Memorial garden also serves as a

:05:10. > :05:14.reminder no one has been held accountable for their deaths. As you

:05:15. > :05:18.can understand different families in Omagh feel very differently today.

:05:19. > :05:26.There are some who are still pushing for a full cross-border enquiry

:05:27. > :05:33.because they believe the information has not yet come to light about this

:05:34. > :05:36.attack. But hopes to seemed dashed. I was told that prosecutors

:05:37. > :05:40.currently have no ongoing lines of criminal enquiry.

:05:41. > :05:42.There have been new confrontations between migrants and police

:05:43. > :05:44.at the Calais refugee camp - also known as the jungle.

:05:45. > :05:48.It follows a decision by the French authorities to move some of the four

:05:49. > :05:50.thousand migrants and refugees to new sites elsewhere.

:05:51. > :05:52.As Lucy Williamson reports from the camp, activists oppose

:05:53. > :06:09.This small white shack is where am these men lived. Today it was marked

:06:10. > :06:14.the demolition. Take our house, they cried, and we will take our lives.

:06:15. > :06:19.It was a protest of the powerless ended in minutes by the police.

:06:20. > :06:26.Around them, other figures watch to find from their own flimsy rooftops

:06:27. > :06:30.wrapped against the cold. The irony is that migrants here are clinging

:06:31. > :06:36.on to makeshift shelters in a country most do not want to be.

:06:37. > :06:41.Moving to official migrant camps with heat and electricity means

:06:42. > :06:45.registering in France. These temporary shacks show their resolve

:06:46. > :06:49.not to settle here. This road marks the jungle's new boundary,

:06:50. > :06:54.everything to the south of it will be cleared out and the people

:06:55. > :06:58.addicted. Everything that is except that the communal buildings, the

:06:59. > :07:02.mosques, the schools, the community centres, churches and many of the

:07:03. > :07:06.people who are facing eviction today so rather than leave their

:07:07. > :07:12.community, those communal buildings where they will sleep tonight. After

:07:13. > :07:17.yesterday's violence, there is a sense of resignation among many

:07:18. > :07:19.migrants here, but as more shelters burned today, the government

:07:20. > :07:24.directed its anger towards the extreme and violent actions by some

:07:25. > :07:30.of the activists here. Police on the ground told us off camera that most

:07:31. > :07:34.of the agitators are British. TRANSLATION: Have arrested four

:07:35. > :07:39.people, mostly British, these are people who use other but are never

:07:40. > :07:44.on the front-line themselves. They use the migrants inciting them to

:07:45. > :07:49.start fires and throw stones. The shrinking of the Calais migrant camp

:07:50. > :07:53.either bigotries. Fresh figures from the UN's refugee agencies suggest

:07:54. > :07:57.the rate of new arrivals across the Mediterranean has almost tripled

:07:58. > :08:01.since last year. The buildings may be cleared, but as for their owners,

:08:02. > :08:02.many are so waiting for their chance in England and many more are on

:08:03. > :08:06.their way. What's happening in Calais is only

:08:07. > :08:09.part of a much wider migrant Official figures from Europe's

:08:10. > :08:14.border control agency show that the number of migrants crossing

:08:15. > :08:19.into Europe in January and February this year was 30 times higher

:08:20. > :08:22.than the levels reached Next week European leaders

:08:23. > :08:25.will meet once more to try and find a way

:08:26. > :08:28.out of the crisis. Our Europe Editor Katya

:08:29. > :08:34.Adler is in Athens. Katya, what chance of

:08:35. > :08:43.any kind of solution? Slim from where I am standing,

:08:44. > :08:47.Greece remains the main point of entry into Europe for refugees and

:08:48. > :08:51.other migrants arriving in those large numbers that you mentioned.

:08:52. > :08:55.Numbers which are predicted to rise now spring is coming and the weather

:08:56. > :08:59.is getting warmer and the sea is calm. The key to stopping that flow

:09:00. > :09:04.of people into Europe lies in Turkey. That is where most of the

:09:05. > :09:08.asylum seekers are jumping on the people smuggling tinnies and making

:09:09. > :09:13.the short but dangerous hop over to the Greek islands. The meeting on

:09:14. > :09:18.Monday that you mentioned is between EU and Turkey, but Turkey has little

:09:19. > :09:23.incentive to stop people leaving it sure is. It is having a hard time

:09:24. > :09:26.looking after well over 2 million Syrian refugees who fled their civil

:09:27. > :09:32.war and another complication, the EU is not speaking with one voice. The

:09:33. > :09:35.South Greece feels abandoned and abandoned and resentful and Germany

:09:36. > :09:39.are struggling to accommodate more than 1 million asylum seekers that

:09:40. > :09:42.it took in last year. The countries in between like Austria, Hungary and

:09:43. > :09:47.Sabine you have broken ranks and taken matters into their own hands,

:09:48. > :09:53.slammed the border shop and are reducing the number of migrants they

:09:54. > :09:59.are letting through for their own protection they said. -- Slovenia.

:10:00. > :10:03.Can a meeting on Monday solve all that? It is extremely unlikely, but

:10:04. > :10:12.it may make some baby steps of progress.

:10:13. > :10:15.Shares in Barclays dropped sharply today after the bank reported

:10:16. > :10:18.Barclays also announced plans to sell its controlling stake

:10:19. > :10:21.in the bank's Africa operations - ending its presence on the continent

:10:22. > :10:23.Here's our Economics Editor Kamal Ahmed.

:10:24. > :10:29.It has been travelling in one direction and that is downwards.

:10:30. > :10:33.Berkeley 's share price is a barometer of its financial health

:10:34. > :10:37.and it has been sickly for a year. Today it sank by 8% as the bank said

:10:38. > :10:41.it was cutting its dividend to investors, struggling to make

:10:42. > :10:46.profits and was quitting the emerging economies of Africa. The

:10:47. > :10:52.new chief executive told me that the heart of Barclays, the UK business

:10:53. > :10:55.and Barclaycard, was still strong. There are clearly challenges in

:10:56. > :11:01.running a bank given the regulatory response to the financial process

:11:02. > :11:06.and the issues bankers are facing. If you look at the numbers, and a

:11:07. > :11:11.lot of what I will focus on today is that Barclays has a core franchise

:11:12. > :11:15.which is to refix that businesses. We are eight years after the

:11:16. > :11:21.financial crisis, your annual results are still littered with

:11:22. > :11:25.conduct you have new issues with PPI mis-selling, when Wilbanks, when can

:11:26. > :11:32.the public trust that banks are behaving better? -- will banks. We

:11:33. > :11:37.lost our way ten or 15 years ago, we lost a lot of trust in the financial

:11:38. > :11:43.crisis and we have an obligation to return that. I interviewed him on

:11:44. > :11:46.the top floor of Barclays glass and steel headquarters here in Canary

:11:47. > :11:51.Wharf. This building is almost from a different era, a time when banks

:11:52. > :11:55.were swashbuckling global businesses making billions of pounds of profit

:11:56. > :12:00.and sowing the seeds of the financial crisis. He made it clear

:12:01. > :12:05.to me that this was a different time, a time of lower profits, a

:12:06. > :12:13.time of smaller bonus payments, a time for a smaller Barclays. It will

:12:14. > :12:18.be smaller here, Kenya, one of the countries affected by the decision

:12:19. > :12:22.to pull out of Africa. It is a very difficult decision, you go to places

:12:23. > :12:27.like Uganda and Kenya and the brand is strong there just like it is in

:12:28. > :12:31.the UK, but we have to make some very difficult decisions if we are

:12:32. > :12:37.going to get Barclays into a focused, clear, compelling business

:12:38. > :12:41.model that turns over for our shareholders. Though shareholders

:12:42. > :12:45.will need some persuading, not constantly changing the person at

:12:46. > :12:50.the top may help. It is not great for any bank to have four CEOs in

:12:51. > :12:53.five years, it is more like a Premier League football club than a

:12:54. > :12:58.financial institution. We had a CEO last year who was a lifetime

:12:59. > :13:03.financial banker, this one has been an investment banker, the markets

:13:04. > :13:10.are worried about. Not the Tarrant dried it once was, but as a major

:13:11. > :13:12.contributed to our pensioners, he is the new broom, can he sweep the bank

:13:13. > :13:14.clean? Details of a review into the state

:13:15. > :13:17.pension age have just been announced The news prompted pension experts

:13:18. > :13:21.to warn that the government could accelerate rises

:13:22. > :13:33.in the state pension age. Ross Hawkins joins us now from

:13:34. > :13:37.Westminster, are we all going to be working longer? We will because

:13:38. > :13:42.there is already a plan for the age to rise to 66 and 67 over the next

:13:43. > :13:46.12 years and none of that will change. This review will look at

:13:47. > :13:52.whether the system is sustainable in the long term and the big issue is a

:13:53. > :13:58.simple one. It is a ?19 billion bill for the state pension, we are all

:13:59. > :14:02.living longer. While we are living longer, it does not mean that the

:14:03. > :14:07.state pension age will rise. Many young people will look at any

:14:08. > :14:09.prospect of a state funded retirement for them receding further

:14:10. > :14:25.and further into the distance. The time is very nearly quarter past

:14:26. > :14:30.six. Our top story this evening: the only remaining suspect in the Omagh

:14:31. > :14:34.bombings. Seamus Daly is released after the case against him is

:14:35. > :14:37.dropped. And still to come just how do we make memories? A top

:14:38. > :14:41.international award for three British scientist. In the sport,

:14:42. > :14:43.Anthony Joshua has been told that he can compete in the Olympics as long

:14:44. > :14:52.as the changes approved. Americans began voting today

:14:53. > :14:56.in what's dubbed Super Tuesday - a day when voters in nearly a dozen

:14:57. > :15:00.states get to pick who will end up It's widely expected that

:15:01. > :15:09.Donald Trump will get enough support For the Democratic Party,

:15:10. > :15:15.this is Hilary Clinton's chance to open up a credible gap

:15:16. > :15:18.with her rival, Bernie Sanders. Our correspondent James Cook

:15:19. > :15:25.is in Houston, Texas. Eight months to go and the field

:15:26. > :15:30.seems to be narrowing at last. Hillary Clinton forging ahead in the

:15:31. > :15:35.polls and Donald Trump trying to see off his main rivals, Ted Cruz and

:15:36. > :15:37.Marco Rubio and this super Tuesday may be the moment when we find out

:15:38. > :15:47.who is old hat and no cattle. In Houston it is the biggest show in

:15:48. > :15:50.town, not super Tuesday but the annual livestock fair and Rodeo.

:15:51. > :15:55.They have come to Texas from all over the US that this event and when

:15:56. > :16:00.it comes to politics folk here like everyone else are transfixed by one

:16:01. > :16:05.man. Donald Trump is stating exactly what this country needs and what

:16:06. > :16:09.this country needs is a leader in business and not a leader in

:16:10. > :16:13.politicians. I do not really care for Trump because I feel he attacks

:16:14. > :16:18.people when he is trying to make a point. I believe he is trying to

:16:19. > :16:22.point out other people's flaws and not focus on his own plans. It is

:16:23. > :16:28.kind of crazy right now, but if I can go ahead and say I'd just like

:16:29. > :16:35.Trump and what he stands for. I want Trump to get it. You do? Why? I

:16:36. > :16:41.think he is the best man and whatever he tells you, he does what

:16:42. > :16:44.he tells you. Vote! In 11 states Democrats and Republicans are doing

:16:45. > :16:48.just that today, picking the person they want to stand for president.

:16:49. > :16:51.Here in Texas there are local elections as well, but in the White

:16:52. > :16:57.House race the boats will be counted, shared among the candidates

:16:58. > :17:01.and then turned into delegates who will share their choice at party

:17:02. > :17:05.conventions in the summer. Everyone involved in the presidential race

:17:06. > :17:09.this is the biggest test so far, here in Texas there is particular

:17:10. > :17:14.pressure on Ted Cruz, if he loses here his campaign will be in real

:17:15. > :17:19.trouble. Polls suggest the Texas senator is on course for victory in

:17:20. > :17:23.his home state. Almost everywhere else though Donald Trump is the

:17:24. > :17:28.favourite. Today he campaigned in Ohio which votes in a fortnight.

:17:29. > :17:32.Believe me, folks, illegal immigration has turned out to be one

:17:33. > :17:36.of the really big factors in this entire campaign. You would not even

:17:37. > :17:42.be talking about it, hearing about it if I did not take all that heat.

:17:43. > :17:46.As the Democrats, Bernie Sanders, the left-wing challenge to heal a

:17:47. > :17:51.dude Clinton seems to be fading. Secretary Clinton stands out in a

:17:52. > :17:55.very positive way. Mr Trump is an embarrassment to our country. Bernie

:17:56. > :18:00.Sanders makes the most sense and he has the most experienced and he is

:18:01. > :18:03.really making a change in America. The presidential election is not

:18:04. > :18:06.even until November, but even now it feels like make or break.

:18:07. > :18:09.A head teacher has told a murder trial how she found a 16-year-old

:18:10. > :18:11.pupil bleeding to death after he was stabbed

:18:12. > :18:14.The court heard how Bailey Gwynne was involved

:18:15. > :18:22.in a fight at Cults Academy in October last year.

:18:23. > :18:25.The 16-year-old accused, who cannot be named for legal

:18:26. > :18:34.Steven Godden is outside the high court in Aberdeen.

:18:35. > :18:43.It was lunchtime at cults Academy and what started as an ardent over a

:18:44. > :18:53.biscuit ended with Bailey Gwyn dead, stabbed through the heart. -- as an

:18:54. > :18:58.argument. Today the victim's family were in court to hear highly charged

:18:59. > :19:03.evidence. One boy who was friends with both recalled the fight and

:19:04. > :19:08.broke down. He saw the queues reaching into his blazer and pulling

:19:09. > :19:12.out a knife. The headteacher of the school gave evidence. She spoke of

:19:13. > :19:17.seeing baby lying on the corridor, seriously injured and bleeding and

:19:18. > :19:25.very pale. -- sealing the victim lying on the corridor. The

:19:26. > :19:29.16-year-old denies murder and two other charges of having weapons on

:19:30. > :19:37.school property. Trial here continues.

:19:38. > :19:39.The Home Office has tightened up privacy safeguards in new legal

:19:40. > :19:41.proposals allowing police and intelligence services

:19:42. > :19:42.to monitor electronic communications.

:19:43. > :19:44.The legislation will give police more powers to see internet

:19:45. > :19:46.browsing records in specific investigations.

:19:47. > :19:48.And service providers will need to store browsing history data

:19:49. > :19:56.Now, this is unusual - the NHS is getting involved

:19:57. > :19:58.in the planning for ten new towns in England.

:19:59. > :20:02.It's part of a plan to put healthy living at the heart of the design.

:20:03. > :20:05.Some of the options being looked at include special zones free

:20:06. > :20:06.of fast-food outlets and dementia friendly streets.

:20:07. > :20:14.Our Health Editor Hugh Pym has the details.

:20:15. > :20:21.How they used to build a new town, Stevenage in the 1950s with

:20:22. > :20:25.convenient access to the shopping centre. The housewives themselves

:20:26. > :20:30.have only a short step to the shopping ways. Now it is not only

:20:31. > :20:35.short steps but longer walks that the planners want to encourage. Here

:20:36. > :20:38.close to the Thames Barking and Dagenham Council are encouraging

:20:39. > :20:42.development with cycling and walking right at the centre. The idea is we

:20:43. > :20:47.do not want people thinking they go to the gym, nice walks out with the

:20:48. > :20:50.family. The leader told me why he had signed the council up with NHS

:20:51. > :20:54.England as a healthy new town for the next round of house-building. We

:20:55. > :20:58.have to make sure we are friends with the walker and the cyclist and

:20:59. > :21:11.not the car. That is what we will be looking at, we make the development

:21:12. > :21:13.as friendly as possible for people that want to use their own steam.

:21:14. > :21:16.The council is planning 10,000 new homes on this site and will follow

:21:17. > :21:18.the advice of NHS leaders. Now only one in five children are playing

:21:19. > :21:22.outside and fewer are getting to walk to school or cycle. We know it

:21:23. > :21:26.is holder for older people to walk to the shops if there are not

:21:27. > :21:31.benches or other facilities, pavements where one in ten older

:21:32. > :21:35.people fall each year. We can design in health to make healthy living the

:21:36. > :21:38.easy choice the people. Fast food outlets are very much part of the

:21:39. > :21:42.inner-city landscape, you do not have to go too far from the proposed

:21:43. > :21:46.development in Barking and Dagenham to find them. That is a challenge

:21:47. > :21:50.for all policymakers trying to promote healthier environments.

:21:51. > :21:55.While health campaigners welcomed today's announcement, they point out

:21:56. > :21:59.that the governments chartered anti-abuse city policy has been

:22:00. > :22:04.postponed. It looks like a lack of joined up thinking, they say. I am

:22:05. > :22:08.not against when you build a new town, making it a more healthy

:22:09. > :22:12.environment, that is a good idea, the idea it will solve the crisis in

:22:13. > :22:18.public health in the UK is ridiculous. It is not just to be

:22:19. > :22:21.city, the healthy towns plan also includes helpful residents with

:22:22. > :22:25.dementia. This hairdresser in Bristol is an example which could be

:22:26. > :22:29.followed with staff specially trained and more understanding when

:22:30. > :22:33.appointments are missed. After having the training it made us

:22:34. > :22:36.understand the problem and we do not get stressed and now, we put plans

:22:37. > :22:41.into action to help those people when they come in so they feel more

:22:42. > :22:46.comfortable and the staff feel more confident. Creating communities

:22:47. > :22:50.which are dementia and exercise friendly is the dream, building them

:22:51. > :22:52.is now the challenge. A brief look at some of the day 's other news

:22:53. > :22:57.stories. A timber storage warehouse

:22:58. > :22:59.was destroyed and several vehicles badly damaged when a huge fire broke

:23:00. > :23:02.out at an industrial yard Over 70 firefighters were needed

:23:03. > :23:07.to put the blaze out. This winter was the wettest recorded

:23:08. > :23:11.in Scotland since records Met Office statistics show that

:23:12. > :23:15.an average of two and a half foot of rain fell across the country

:23:16. > :23:18.in December, January and February. And there's more bad weather

:23:19. > :23:21.on the way with a warning of snow and ice being issued for large parts

:23:22. > :23:24.of Scotland overnight. Tim Peake has sent Wales

:23:25. > :23:38.a St David's Day message. Wales is an important part of our UK

:23:39. > :23:42.space community. From up here it is also beautiful looking down on

:23:43. > :23:46.Snowdon, the Brecon Beacons and the valleys and so I would like to wish

:23:47. > :23:51.you all are very happy St David's Day.

:23:52. > :23:54.Three British researchers have won one of the world's most coveted

:23:55. > :23:56.science awards for their work on the brain.

:23:57. > :23:58.They were praised for making significant advances into finding

:23:59. > :24:02.And guess what - it's called the Brain Prize.

:24:03. > :24:07.Here's our Science Editor David Shukman.

:24:08. > :24:13.Throughout our lives, we collect memories, some remaining clear,

:24:14. > :24:17.others fading. They are part of a system that allows us to learn,

:24:18. > :24:21.without it we would never advance and everyday tasks like driving

:24:22. > :24:25.would be simply impossible. Until recently know one knew how the brain

:24:26. > :24:29.could store information, but researchers at this lab in

:24:30. > :24:35.Edinburgh, together with teens in Bristol and London have found ways

:24:36. > :24:39.to explain the mystery of memory. Memory we now have a good handle on

:24:40. > :24:45.because we know about the events that occur when memories are laid

:24:46. > :24:49.down, we know where it happens and we know at the level of connections

:24:50. > :24:53.between nerve cells what is happening. How the brain actually

:24:54. > :24:56.holds memories was the year is something too difficult to

:24:57. > :25:01.understand, but scientists then realise that one part of it called

:25:02. > :25:05.the hippocampus plays a crucial role. Inside it there are billions

:25:06. > :25:09.of connections between the brain cells and when those links become

:25:10. > :25:14.stronger, that is the key mechanism allowing us to remember. So one

:25:15. > :25:18.crucial discovery is that the brain can change, creating new connections

:25:19. > :25:23.and breaking them. Another is the full sweep this process can be

:25:24. > :25:27.linked to conditions including depression, autism, addiction and

:25:28. > :25:31.Alzheimer's. An image of some of the billions of connections inside the

:25:32. > :25:38.brain. One hope that this research is to fight Alzheimer's by spotting

:25:39. > :25:41.trouble early. If we can zero in on this connection process between

:25:42. > :25:46.brain cells and understand why that connection process is as it were

:25:47. > :25:50.under stress, and making it difficult for people to keep a

:25:51. > :25:57.record of their daily events, then maybe we could develop new kinds of

:25:58. > :26:01.drugs that could help that process. As the scientist delve into the

:26:02. > :26:06.mechanism of memory, they raise an extraordinary idea, that Sunday in

:26:07. > :26:14.the DJ people who are suffering from trauma like soldiers after battle

:26:15. > :26:18.may be helped by having their bad memories deleted. -- that Sunday,

:26:19. > :26:21.people who are suffering from trauma like soldiers after battle may be

:26:22. > :26:31.helped by having their bad memories deleted.

:26:32. > :26:33.The skies above north-east Scotland were alight last night.

:26:34. > :26:35.It was probably caused by a meteor shower.

:26:36. > :26:37.Many people reported seeing what looked like a fireball

:26:38. > :26:40.and a bright flash, others reported hearing the rumbling sound caused

:26:41. > :26:43.Most meteors aren't seen by the naked eye, this one

:26:44. > :26:46.was thought to have been about 10cm wide and travelling

:26:47. > :26:54.What about the night skies tonight? Now the weather. It is only Tuesday

:26:55. > :26:59.and I am exhausted. We had frost and son yesterday, mild and wept today,

:27:00. > :27:06.snow tomorrow believe it or not. Cloud and rain cleared away to the

:27:07. > :27:10.east. A scattering of showers to the north-west and a mild afternoon,

:27:11. > :27:14.temperatures peaking 15 degrees, it felt almost springlike. That is set

:27:15. > :27:19.to change as we move through tonight, Caldaire moves into the

:27:20. > :27:26.Arctic and it turns showers across the North West Brom rain to sleet

:27:27. > :27:29.and snow. -- hold air. Ice could be an issue and I would not be

:27:30. > :27:35.surprised if we see some lying snow first and in the morning. There is

:27:36. > :27:39.the potential may be for two to five centimetres, maybe more to higher

:27:40. > :27:43.ground across parts of South West Scotland into Northern Ireland as

:27:44. > :27:50.well, accompanied by strong wind. That will be blowing any snow

:27:51. > :27:59.around. There could be some disruption to your early morning

:28:00. > :28:02.commute, certainly to -- certainly listen to your local BBC radio

:28:03. > :28:06.stations the information. There will be damaging gusts of wind across the

:28:07. > :28:11.south-west first thing in the morning and we are more concerned

:28:12. > :28:15.about this cluster of wintry showers moving across north-west England,

:28:16. > :28:18.Wales, through the Midlands, there could be some disruption, as it

:28:19. > :28:22.passes into the south-east, there could be sleet and snow, behind it

:28:23. > :28:28.somewhat brighter, but still colder weather and a scattering of winter

:28:29. > :28:34.showers to the far north and west. A disappointing day. A visible bit

:28:35. > :28:39.drier. A little bit milder, six to 9 degrees. Then we do it all again

:28:40. > :28:42.into Friday. There is potential for another system to draw in some

:28:43. > :28:52.colder air and there is the potential maybe for some sleet and

:28:53. > :28:57.some snow as long as well. Co-reminder of the main story, the

:28:58. > :29:01.only remaining suspect in the Omagh bombings, Seamus Daly, has been

:29:02. > :29:07.released after the case against him was dropped. -- a reminder. More

:29:08. > :29:12.people were killed in that atrocity than any other attacked during the

:29:13. > :29:14.troubles. That is all from the BBC News at six. That is all from me and

:29:15. > :29:15.we