:00:00. > :00:07.Tonight at Six - Labour's key manifesto pledge on childcare
:00:08. > :00:14.but Jeremy Corbyn stumbles over its cost.
:00:15. > :00:16.He's now apologised for not knowing the bill for extending free care
:00:17. > :00:23.I will give you the figure in a moment.
:00:24. > :00:30.You are logging into your iPad here, you've
:00:31. > :00:33.announced a major policy and you don't know how much it costs?
:00:34. > :00:36.Theresa May concentrates on Brexit and says she'll be ready on day one
:00:37. > :00:42.The SNP launches its manifesto - Nicola Sturgeon calls for Scotland
:00:43. > :00:47.to have a greater say in Brexit negotiations.
:00:48. > :00:50.Scotland must have a choice about our future.
:00:51. > :00:54.The choice between following the UK down the Brexit path or becoming
:00:55. > :01:02.We'll bring you the latest in this, the last full week of campaigning.
:01:03. > :01:07.Returning to Manchester - Ariana Grande announces a benefit
:01:08. > :01:11.concert to remember the victims of the terror attack.
:01:12. > :01:14.Passionate about her job - tributes to the zookeeper killed
:01:15. > :01:24.It's been a 45-year wait - Huddersfield celebrates the team's
:01:25. > :01:30.And coming up in the sport on BBC News...
:01:31. > :01:32.It's "Wenger In" as Arsene signs a new two-year
:01:33. > :01:57.deal to extend his 21-year stay as Arsenal manager.
:01:58. > :02:01.Good evening and welcome to the BBC News at Six.
:02:02. > :02:04.Jeremy Corbyn has apologised for not knowing the cost of one of Labour's
:02:05. > :02:10.In the last full week of campaigning, this was a chance
:02:11. > :02:12.for him and Theresa May to press home their messages.
:02:13. > :02:16.Instead Labour has found itself having to explain
:02:17. > :02:19.what the Conservatives have a called a car-crash interview
:02:20. > :02:22.in which he failed, repeatedly, to say how much it would cost
:02:23. > :02:27.More on the Conservatives in a moment but first
:02:28. > :02:35.here's our deputy political editor John Pienaar.
:02:36. > :02:45.Got to keep up, cannot fall too far behind. More free childcare might
:02:46. > :02:48.play well with voters. Some say don't play with children. It Jeremy
:02:49. > :02:55.Corbyn knows what looks and sounds good. Ought to know. Look at these
:02:56. > :03:00.wonderful children here, they all need a childcare place, so ours is a
:03:01. > :03:06.universal provision so every child gets a place of at least 30 hours a
:03:07. > :03:13.week from 22 aged four. Playtime over, onto women's hour, what could
:03:14. > :03:18.go wrong. How much will it will it be to provide childcare for 1.3
:03:19. > :03:25.million children. It will cost a lot to do so. I presume you have the
:03:26. > :03:33.figures? Yes I do. So how much will it cost? I will give you the figures
:03:34. > :03:40.in a minute. You are logging into your iPad in a minute. Can I give
:03:41. > :03:43.you the exact figure in a minute. Is this an issue with people in the
:03:44. > :03:51.Labour Party which came up under Gordon Brown, we cannot trust you
:03:52. > :03:56.with our money. Not at all, our manifesto is fully costed and
:03:57. > :04:01.examined. You have been looking at your iPad, you have had a phone call
:04:02. > :04:07.and you don't know how much it is going to cost. Can we come back to
:04:08. > :04:11.that in a moment? If we don't invest in our children and invest in them
:04:12. > :04:15.for the future they do less well in primary school, less well in
:04:16. > :04:21.secondary school and less well in the future. At a rally in Watford,
:04:22. > :04:28.he was amongst friends. A much better tomorrow for everybody in
:04:29. > :04:32.this country. Thank you very much. Mr Corbyn, you Labour's choice for
:04:33. > :04:37.the next Prime Minister, but you couldn't put a cost on the key
:04:38. > :04:42.childcare policy he went out to promote. How do you answer the
:04:43. > :04:46.suggestion this showed a lack of basic confidence? I didn't have the
:04:47. > :04:52.exact figure in front to me so I was unable to answer that question. For
:04:53. > :04:57.which, I apologise. But I don't apologise for what is in the
:04:58. > :05:01.manifesto. There is always a queue to see Jeremy Corbyn. But whether
:05:02. > :05:05.you are a convert to the cause or not, who doesn't want more for
:05:06. > :05:09.childcare, hospitals and schools and tax those who can afford it. Leaving
:05:10. > :05:14.Labour can deliver without borrowing and taxing more than the party is
:05:15. > :05:17.admitting, is another question. And seeing Jeremy Corbyn is not just
:05:18. > :05:23.well-meaning but prime ministerial, people will remain to be convinced.
:05:24. > :05:27.I want to know how he can pay for it all. He comes across very well with
:05:28. > :05:31.the youngsters, but he hasn't got all his facts and figures correct. I
:05:32. > :05:36.think he is one of the most honest politicians we have seen in the last
:05:37. > :05:40.15 years, to be honest. I have seen him on a couple of things recently
:05:41. > :05:44.and he gives honest answers, which is more than I can say for their
:05:45. > :05:49.members of the other parties. People need to give him a chance. If you
:05:50. > :05:55.don't try something, you don't know how good it can be. Some love him,
:05:56. > :05:59.but Jeremy Corbyn needs more believers, and not just in his sums.
:06:00. > :06:06.The square root of nine is three. The square root of 16 is for. Will
:06:07. > :06:11.that do you. He needs more trust, he has got ten days to earn it.
:06:12. > :06:13.For the Conservatives it was not Labour's policies but the competence
:06:14. > :06:16.of its leader that was the focus of their fire today.
:06:17. > :06:18.In a speech about Brexit the Prime Minister questioned
:06:19. > :06:20.Jeremy Corbyn's fitness to conduct talks with the EU.
:06:21. > :06:23.But Labour says Mrs May's negotiating position so far had made
:06:24. > :06:36.Here's our political editor Laura Kuenssberg.
:06:37. > :06:48.Your road, everyone's Avenue. It is on all our streets and that the
:06:49. > :06:53.doors where elections are decided. Has a shaky few days for Theresa May
:06:54. > :06:59.made much difference? I wish she would make her mind up. I know it is
:07:00. > :07:07.a woman's privilege... But not in politics. On plenty of doorsteps,
:07:08. > :07:12.the perceptions of the two leaders could hardly be more far apart.
:07:13. > :07:19.Everything she does is so proficient. I don't like that Mr
:07:20. > :07:25.Corbyn to be the head of the Labour Party, if they get in. I cannot see
:07:26. > :07:30.them getting in, can you? I like Theresa May, I think she is good. I
:07:31. > :07:35.don't like Jeremy Corbyn. Theresa May wants to drive her hoped-for
:07:36. > :07:40.contrast home so after a tricky few days, our top up of her main
:07:41. > :07:46.message, back onto Brexit. To try to get away from accusations of
:07:47. > :07:51.indecision. Her number one target, the Labour leader. With his position
:07:52. > :08:02.on Brexit, he will find himself alone and naked in the negotiating
:08:03. > :08:05.chamber of the European Union. With the Brexit negotiations June to
:08:06. > :08:09.begin only 11 days after polling day, he is not prepared for those
:08:10. > :08:13.negotiations. But I am prepared. Prepared to take the difficult
:08:14. > :08:21.decisions that leadership the man's. I am ready to go. Jeremy Corbyn, is
:08:22. > :08:24.not. Election campaigns test leaders, don't they? Isn't the
:08:25. > :08:31.emerging truth of this campaign is it is showing you a leader to be
:08:32. > :08:34.weaker rather than stronger? Let me tell you what strong and stable
:08:35. > :08:38.leadership is about. It is about being open with the challenges we
:08:39. > :08:45.face and that is what we have done in the manifesto we have set out.
:08:46. > :08:48.Strong and stable leadership is about being open and the hard
:08:49. > :08:54.choices that lay ahead in order to build the stronger Britain. But
:08:55. > :08:57.despite the Tories' recent troubles, any scepticism towards them perhaps?
:08:58. > :09:03.It is a case of labour trying to cling on in areas like this, the
:09:04. > :09:08.Midlands margins. One source told me the fundamentals of the campaign
:09:09. > :09:13.hasn't changed. Questions in voters' minds about Jeremy Corbyn, the
:09:14. > :09:16.Tories tried to focus on Brexit. Negotiations in Brussels seem remote
:09:17. > :09:21.from the hard graft of this campaign. But Theresa May wants to
:09:22. > :09:24.make this about her authority to carry them out. But the Tory wobble
:09:25. > :09:31.has been noticed on the doorsteps and it is here her party has to make
:09:32. > :09:33.their case. And house by house, street by street, for both sides,
:09:34. > :09:35.time is running out. And live now to our political
:09:36. > :09:47.editor Laura Kuenssberg Watching your report, it was quite a
:09:48. > :09:52.personal attack on Jeremy Corbyn? It certainly was, George. You can
:09:53. > :09:57.faintly hear the jangling of Tory nerves. And ten days out, it is not
:09:58. > :10:01.a time for flowery language, it is not a time for appeals to the
:10:02. > :10:06.electorate about elegant philosophies, or even, time for more
:10:07. > :10:11.arguments about public services or more new policies on health or on
:10:12. > :10:17.education. This is a time, in their view, to go after the central
:10:18. > :10:21.question, who do the voters trust to take the country to the difficult
:10:22. > :10:26.complex of leaving the European Union and the Tories will no doubt
:10:27. > :10:29.use the kind of confusion we saw from Jeremy Corbyn over childcare as
:10:30. > :10:34.the kind of evidence to suggest again in his closing moments of the
:10:35. > :10:39.campaign, to suggest that he's just not up to it. No question in the
:10:40. > :10:43.last few days, we have seen the polls tightening and there is a new
:10:44. > :10:54.scepticism on the doorsteps towards the reason may. But with this time
:10:55. > :10:57.to go, they were returning to their core argument and I don't think the
:10:58. > :10:59.Tories will budge from it. It might not be elegant, they hope it will be
:11:00. > :11:02.effective but it is not necessarily the kind of message and not the kind
:11:03. > :11:05.of campaign where the party is trying to inspire voters, but it is
:11:06. > :11:08.what they hope will see them through. Laura, thank you.
:11:09. > :11:10.The Scottish National Party has launched its election
:11:11. > :11:12.manifesto pledging to promote fairness and opportunity.
:11:13. > :11:14.Leader Nicola Sturgeon, said Labour was in disarray
:11:15. > :11:16.and the only way to keep the Conservatives in
:11:17. > :11:20.She also said that an SNP victory in Scotland would "further
:11:21. > :11:22.reinforce" the mandate for a second referendum on independence.
:11:23. > :11:31.Our Scotland Editor Sarah Smith is in Perth.
:11:32. > :11:40.Sarah? This is a tricky election for the SNP because they are almost
:11:41. > :11:45.victims of their own success. They did so well in 2015, winning all but
:11:46. > :11:50.three of the seats in Scotland, they cannot do any better. But if they
:11:51. > :11:53.lose any, opponents will say, it shows people don't want another
:11:54. > :11:55.independence referendum and that is why there was barely a mention of
:11:56. > :12:04.that referendum here today. Nicola Sturgeon know she won't be
:12:05. > :12:10.walking into Number Ten as the next Prime Minister. The SNP cannot form
:12:11. > :12:16.a UK Government, so head coach? They are the only effective opposition.
:12:17. > :12:21.Now, more than ever it is vital to have strong SNP voices standing up
:12:22. > :12:26.to Scotland at Westminster. A vote for the SNP on June the aids will
:12:27. > :12:31.strengthen Scotland's hands against Tory cuts. It will strengthen our
:12:32. > :12:44.hand against an extreme Brexit and it will strengthen Scotland's right
:12:45. > :12:45.to make our own decisions. The SNP advocate an additional ?118 billion
:12:46. > :12:49.in public spending. Raising the minimum wage to over ?10 and raising
:12:50. > :12:54.the top rate of tax to 50p. Nicola Sturgeon had less to say about a
:12:55. > :12:59.second referendum on Scottish independence. Are you worried it is
:13:00. > :13:05.a vote loser? Know, at the end of the Brexit process, I think Scotland
:13:06. > :13:10.should have a choice over our own future. I have also said, in this
:13:11. > :13:13.election there is a more immediate opportunity and that is to
:13:14. > :13:18.strengthen Scotland's hands in the Brexit negotiations. You have
:13:19. > :13:22.changed your language about independence, you talk about
:13:23. > :13:28.Scotland have a choice, we almost never hear you say a second
:13:29. > :13:33.referendum. It is almost as though you are a bit embarrassed about it?
:13:34. > :13:38.Saying I talk about nothing else, that is not true. But they want to
:13:39. > :13:41.talk about nothing else because particularly the Tories are
:13:42. > :13:46.embarrassed about their record and the policies in their manifesto.
:13:47. > :13:52.Right on cue, a Tory protest promising to block another
:13:53. > :14:02.referendum. Then drowned out by the SNP. You say more SNP 's will be
:14:03. > :14:06.able to stand up to the Tories, you have 56, what material difference
:14:07. > :14:12.did any of them make to the lives of any Scottish voters in two years?
:14:13. > :14:19.This Prime Minister is not so much the iron Lady, and she is the queen
:14:20. > :14:23.of the U turn. Therefore the stronger the SNP and Scotland's
:14:24. > :14:29.voice is, the more we can effect change to Tory positions that are
:14:30. > :14:34.damaging so many people. The SNP's biggest challenge is holding onto
:14:35. > :14:39.those MPs. It will be difficult to hold onto 56 seats and nobody
:14:40. > :14:43.expects them to do so. But I would be surprised if they lose more than
:14:44. > :14:52.half a dozen. Even if they lose two or three, it will be said their vote
:14:53. > :14:53.is going backwards and they have lost momentum towards another
:14:54. > :14:58.independence referendum. It will be spun that way by the other parties.
:14:59. > :15:03.So it is all aboard the campaign bus and there is not a moment to lose.
:15:04. > :15:05.The singer Ariana Grande has announced she'll return
:15:06. > :15:08.to Manchester on Sunday to hold a benefit concert in memory
:15:09. > :15:10.of the 22 people who died in the suicide bombing
:15:11. > :15:13.She'll be joined by other musicians including Justin
:15:14. > :15:20.Our Home Affairs Correspondent June Kelly is in Old Trafford now.
:15:21. > :15:29.This is going to be quite an undertaking so soon after the
:15:30. > :15:31.attack? That's right. A major security challenge for Greater
:15:32. > :15:35.Manchester Police when this benefit takes place here at the cricket
:15:36. > :15:38.ground. Today the Chief Constable, Ian Hopkins, said he had taking
:15:39. > :15:41.soundings from both the bereaved families and the victims of the
:15:42. > :15:45.arena bombing and while most were in favour of this benefit going ahead
:15:46. > :15:48.on Sunday, some felt that it was simply too soon because of course
:15:49. > :15:53.there are 50 people still in hospital and some of them are in a
:15:54. > :15:57.critical condition. Now the security situation has been complicated by
:15:58. > :16:01.the fact that on Sunday afternoon the former Manchester United star,
:16:02. > :16:06.Michael Carrick, is due to have his testimonal up the road at Old
:16:07. > :16:10.Trafford Football Ground. It was announced this afternoon that that
:16:11. > :16:14.game has been brought forward by 90 minutes so that there will be more
:16:15. > :16:19.breathing space following the end of that match and the start of the
:16:20. > :16:24.Ariana Grande concert. People coming to both these events here on Sunday
:16:25. > :16:34.should expect extremely stringent security measures. June, thank you
:16:35. > :16:38.very much. The time is 6. 16pm. Our top story this evening.
:16:39. > :16:40.The Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, has apologised after struggling
:16:41. > :16:43.to explain the cost of a key pledge on childcare that he was
:16:44. > :16:48.Still to come: Thousands turn out to celebrate Huddersfield's return to
:16:49. > :16:51.top-flight football. There's a shock defeat
:16:52. > :16:55.for the British Number One, Johanna Konta, in the first
:16:56. > :16:57.round of the French Open. Konta was beaten in three sets
:16:58. > :17:10.by Chinese Taipei's Hsieh Su-ewi. Patients of the breast surgeon
:17:11. > :17:17.Ian Paterson will find out tomorrow how long he'll spend in jail, that's
:17:18. > :17:20.following his conviction last month for carrying out unnecessary
:17:21. > :17:22.operations on 17 women. Lawyers say hundreds of Paterson's
:17:23. > :17:25.patients could have undergone As Jeremy Cook reports,
:17:26. > :17:28.some victims are calling A broken bond of trust
:17:29. > :17:35.between a doctor and his patients. He told them he'd cut them free of
:17:36. > :17:51.life-threatening cancer - he lied. I had no need to be there and he had
:17:52. > :17:55.no reason to cut bits off me. Ian Paterson removed lumps,
:17:56. > :17:57.performed entire mastectomies, deliberate mutilation
:17:58. > :18:02.for no medical reason. Judy Conduit suffered a catastrophic
:18:03. > :18:04.infection following Paterson's phoney diagnosis that
:18:05. > :18:10.both her breasts must be removed. John Ingram was among ten
:18:11. > :18:21.former patients chosen to testify against Paterson
:18:22. > :18:24.at his nine week trial. As a man, his case was not typical,
:18:25. > :18:28.but in every other aspect He persuaded me to undergo
:18:29. > :18:36.a double mastectomy. A massively invasive procedure
:18:37. > :18:40.and the lumps in John's chest Paterson exploited me as a person
:18:41. > :18:53.for his own ends both as a cash cow, being paid to operate needlessly
:18:54. > :19:02.on me, to satisfy whatever bit of twisted logic is in his head
:19:03. > :19:09.and also he exploited me I thought it was
:19:10. > :19:14.cowardly and pathetic. The scale of Paterson's
:19:15. > :19:16.crimes is breathtaking. Every face here a victim, and this
:19:17. > :19:20.is the just the start of it. Solicitors believe the final count
:19:21. > :19:23.may run into the hundreds, This guy potentially has a history
:19:24. > :19:33.of offending that spans 15 years or more maybe,
:19:34. > :19:38.and that has got to be addressed. The sentence has got to be
:19:39. > :19:41.significant enough so that society In my eyes, he deserves nothing less
:19:42. > :19:53.than a life sentence, I hope they throw away the key
:19:54. > :20:00.and he never comes out. Never to do this to
:20:01. > :20:04.anybody else again. Paterson has been told to expect
:20:05. > :20:06.a custodial sentence The maximum punishment
:20:07. > :20:09.is life in prison. Investigations are continuing
:20:10. > :20:23.into the death of a zookeeper in Cambridge yesterday
:20:24. > :20:26.after she was attacked by a tiger. Rosa King had worked
:20:27. > :20:29.at Hamerton Zoo for 14 years. In a tribute, her mother said
:20:30. > :20:32.she loved her job and wouldn't We do a lot of work
:20:33. > :20:36.for conservation, a lot Conservation and compassion,
:20:37. > :20:43.words Rosa King lived by. Today, flowers were laid
:20:44. > :20:46.at Hamerton Zoo by friends and visitors who were struggling
:20:47. > :20:50.to come to terms with her death. She was the most caring,
:20:51. > :20:54.compassionate woman you could ever meet and she's going to be sorely
:20:55. > :20:58.missed by everyone who knew her. In a statement her
:20:59. > :21:13.mother Andrea said... Rosa had an infinity for big cats,
:21:14. > :21:16.she was inside the tiger enclosure In what the zoo is calling
:21:17. > :21:21.a "freak accident", one of the deadly predators got
:21:22. > :21:25.in and mauled her to death. One visitor told the BBC it was
:21:26. > :21:28.the animals that raised the alarm. Just basically the cheetahs
:21:29. > :21:30.were pacing up and down. You could sense that they knew
:21:31. > :21:37.something had happened. Basically, the parakeets,
:21:38. > :21:40.which were close to the cheetahs, they were picking up,
:21:41. > :21:42.they were sensing something had happened, and they
:21:43. > :21:48.were going ballistic. For the park the question
:21:49. > :21:50.is relatively simple - how did an experienced zookeeper
:21:51. > :21:53.come to be trapped in an enclosure The police say they've
:21:54. > :21:59.dropped their investigation because there were no suspicious
:22:00. > :22:02.circumstances, but are sending their files to the local authority
:22:03. > :22:05.which grants the zoo its licence, and they will decide
:22:06. > :22:09.whether there should be any proceedings brought for breaches
:22:10. > :22:11.of health and safety rules. But those are issues for another
:22:12. > :22:14.day, for staff here now thoughts The entertainer Rolf Harris will not
:22:15. > :22:28.face a further retrial on indecent assault allegations after a jury
:22:29. > :22:32.failed to reach a verdict. Rolf Harris left court
:22:33. > :22:41.today without comment, but said, through his solicitor,
:22:42. > :22:44.he felt "no sense of He'd been accused of groping three
:22:45. > :22:48.teenage girls in the 1970s and '80s. In Belfast, the SDLP
:22:49. > :22:50.leader, Colum Eastwood, has launched his party's manifesto
:22:51. > :22:53.with a strong focus on fighting a hard Brexit and a hard border
:22:54. > :22:56.between Northern Ireland He said the nationalist party
:22:57. > :23:01.would stand up "against borders, division and cruel crippling cuts"
:23:02. > :23:06.and claimed Theresa May had called the general election with little
:23:07. > :23:09.thought towards Northern Ireland. As we face into the new challenges
:23:10. > :23:12.across Ireland, we must be mindful of the protections that Europe has
:23:13. > :23:15.gifted us and we must remind others that our situation is unique,
:23:16. > :23:20.more challenging and deeply To do that, we need strong voices
:23:21. > :23:26.taking a stand against the Tories It's a club that last
:23:27. > :23:35.played top-flight football Now, Huddersfield Town
:23:36. > :23:41.will compete with the best in the Premier League next season -
:23:42. > :23:43.that's after winning This evening, the town's laying
:23:44. > :23:57.on a parade, Katie Gornall's there. Katie. Yes, the parade has ended up
:23:58. > :24:00.here at the centre of Huddersfield. The players are currently on stage
:24:01. > :24:03.celebrating with their fans. Their promotion to the Premier League.
:24:04. > :24:09.These are celebration that is few would have expected. Only 14 years
:24:10. > :24:21.ago, Huddersfield were in the bottom tier of the English Football League.
:24:22. > :24:24.After beating Reading they are not moving up.
:24:25. > :24:28.In Huddersfield, now they feel anything is possible.
:24:29. > :24:31.For fans, young and old, past and present, this has
:24:32. > :24:32.been a season that's exceeded all expectations.
:24:33. > :24:35.I woke up this morning, wiped my eyes and I said,
:24:36. > :24:43.It just goes to show that you don't need a lot of money
:24:44. > :24:48.We've achieved so much and it's amazing, ain't it Darcey?
:24:49. > :24:51.After 54 games of a gruelling season, it all came
:24:52. > :24:54.COMMENTATOR: And he takes that chance!
:24:55. > :24:56.One swing of his boot and Christopher Schindler had made
:24:57. > :25:00.They were led here by the relatively unknown German manager,
:25:01. > :25:02.David Wagner, a left field appointment that has lifted
:25:03. > :25:07.Our wage bill is small, but the hearts and desire
:25:08. > :25:16.Huddersfield's glory days were becoming a distant memory.
:25:17. > :25:19.It was back in 1922 when they won the FA Cup and then three
:25:20. > :25:25.After a more recent decline into administration,
:25:26. > :25:28.now, against the odds, their long journey back
:25:29. > :25:36.Katie Gornall, BBC News, Huddersfield.
:25:37. > :25:39.Time for a look at the weather. Here's Tomasz Schafernaker.
:25:40. > :25:45.The weather was cloudy, there was rain earlier on. It's starting to
:25:46. > :25:51.improve, actually, for many of us, across northern parts of the UK, it
:25:52. > :25:55.will be a lovely evening, dry with clearing skies into tonight. Let's
:25:56. > :25:59.look at the satellite picture from earlier on. A lot of cloud across
:26:00. > :26:03.the UK. This curl of cloud, that is the weather front that moved across
:26:04. > :26:06.the north. It brought rain earlier on, now beautiful weather in
:26:07. > :26:09.Northern Ireland. It's clearing skies during the night across
:26:10. > :26:15.Scotland. To the south it will stay a little bit on the cloudy side.
:26:16. > :26:21.Maybe some murk around the coasts, around 14 degrees, milder, muggier
:26:22. > :26:24.here. In the north nippy under the starry skies. Tomorrow, apart from
:26:25. > :26:28.the south where it might be cloudy first thing, on the whole it's
:26:29. > :26:35.looking beautiful. Lots of sunshine around. Those temperatures really
:26:36. > :26:39.pleasant, 23 in London, 21 across Yorkshire, not far off 20 in the
:26:40. > :26:43.lowlands of Scotland as well. That fine weather, bar the odd light
:26:44. > :26:47.shower if you are unlucky, will last until the end of the day. A fine day
:26:48. > :26:51.on the way tomorrow. Towards Thursday, slight change on the way.
:26:52. > :26:56.Low pressure parked to the south of Iceland and Greenland is moving
:26:57. > :27:00.towards our neighbourhood. It will bring rain into north-western areas,
:27:01. > :27:04.heavier at times, to the south of it we are seeing warmer air from
:27:05. > :27:07.France. Coming back in. On Thursday the temperatures across some parts
:27:08. > :27:11.of the country will be rising whereas in the north-west we have
:27:12. > :27:14.fresher, wetter Atlantic weather setting in. The weather front will
:27:15. > :27:18.be slow moving. It will bring light rain to Wales and some northern
:27:19. > :27:23.parts. You can see where the fresh weather is. In the south-east it
:27:24. > :27:26.could be as high as 26. The south particularly warming up briefly,
:27:27. > :27:30.always a bit fresher in the north. A bit of rain from time to time. On
:27:31. > :27:34.balance, actually, not too bad. Thank you very much.
:27:35. > :27:35.That's all from the BBC News at Six, so it's goodbye from me,