18/10/2016 Look East


18/10/2016

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Transcript


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That's all from the BBC News at Six, so it's goodbye from me,

:00:00.:00:10.

In the programme tonight - the rescuer becomes the rescued.

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Dramatic pictures from the coast of Libya as a Norfolk

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life-saver nearly died helping drowning migrants.

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It makes you question what you are doing but at the end of the day, it

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is a humanitarian act you are performing so we are there to save

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lives at sea. Three men on trial for

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a burglary and shooting The cardboard boxes cutting

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the number of cot deaths. How chemical profiling could help

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this winemaker produced vintages to rival the world's very best.

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First tonight dramatic pictures off the coast of Libya in which a rescue

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swimmer from Norfolk almost lost his life.

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Paul Chamberlain has saved hundreds of migrants from the sea, but this

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Paul is a volunteer with the charity MOAS, which stands

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He lives at sea for weeks at a time, ready to jump in to save migrants

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who get into difficulties in ramshackle boats.

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But in one recent operation things went badly wrong and the rescuer

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In a moment we'll hear from Paul after this report from Debbie Tubby.

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You may find some of the pictures upsetting.

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Paul Chamberlain jumps into the sea as migrants scream,

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In mass panic, some clamber to safety from their flimsy boat.

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Others are dragged aboard, barely alive.

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They have swallowed fuel, leaking from their boat.

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Suddenly, the MOAS team realise Paul Chamberlain -

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their own rescue swimmer - himself needs rescuing.

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These pictures were all captured by a Sky camera.

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Ten minutes after these terrifying moments, Paul Chamberlain recovers

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We first met Paul Chamberlain in April, training in the Norfolk

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He is a volunteer for the Norfolk search and rescue.

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If it was my family in that position, I would want the best help

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for them, so that is kind of my motivation for that.

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I just think it is about doing the right thing, it is about

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Listen, we want the sick women first.

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It is Paul Chamberlain's voice you can hear.

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Our BBC camera on his head captures the pictures you see.

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These are just some of the men, women and children he has already

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He has literally saved hundreds of lives, volunteering

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for the charity MOAS, working in 30-degree heat.

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A relentless mission rescuing boatloads of people.

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A couple of times, I have found my little space on the ship,

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It is difficult not to be moved by what is going on around you.

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Paul Chamberlain has now put his life on the line several

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times, to rescue people he has never met.

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This time, maybe, it's been just a little too close for comfort.

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Paul Chamberlain is just back from Libya.

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When he came into the studio this afternoon, I asked him

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about that incident. He said it happened

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when he was doing his fifth rescue from the boat.

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I can remember as I was swimming back, knocking into somebody

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facedown in the water, who was unconscious at the time.

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So I turned them over and then got two people on me,

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so I am then trying to swim back with two people.

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Got as far as the boat, the two people recovered

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What we subsequently think is that it was a mixture of fuel

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and a fuel additive, a solvent additive

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that was in the fuel and it was the fumes that had

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Does something like that make you question whether you are doing

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the right thing for yourself and your family?

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Yeah, it makes you question what you are doing that

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at the end of the day, it is a humanitarian

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So, we are there to save lives at sea.

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How will they feel about it when they see those pictures,

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It obviously upsets people but the difference

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is that I am working with a professional organisation.

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We had a stand-by swimmer just in case of that sort of eventuality

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You do save a huge number of lives up but there are also lives

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lost which you witness. How do you cope with that?

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I think being such a close team on the ship and the respect for each

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It is happening daily, there are lives being lost daily

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and there are boats leaving Libya daily.

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Just this morning, I heard from a friend on another ship,

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that they rescued 113 people, so this is a huge, huge problem

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Are there any things that have happened that you found difficult

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That you have thought, actually, I don't know if I want to do this?

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Unfortunately, there were seven people that lost their lives that

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day and we recovered them and took their bodies back to Italy.

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For me, the hardest thing was, on that particular rescue,

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there were a couple of young boys that had been orphaned

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and you could see one of them, see his eyes scanning

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the ship, desperately trying to find his mother.

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And we knew he wouldn't be able to find her.

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Do you find that helps you with the way you deal with it

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or does it make you more sensitive to situations like that?

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I think it makes you more sensitive and more aware

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because you are always kind of thinking, what if?

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You asked me what is difficult about dealing with it and I think

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some of the hardest stuff is attitudes back here.

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When you rescue a young child, all these people that say,

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throw them back into the sea or if I handed these people

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an eight-month-old baby, would they be prepared to throw that

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baby back into the sea? Probably not.

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Paul Chamberlain speaking to meet the earlier.

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A jury has been told that an insurance executive

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thought he was going to die during a break-in

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Timothy Mardon was shot in the leg at the Grade II listed

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Old Rectory in Sible Hedingham earlier this year.

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The trial of three men Essex - all in their 20s - started today.

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A police investigation at the mansion called

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The Old Rectory in the village of Syble Hedingham.

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The mansion's owner had been shot during what appeared

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Timothy Mardon, an insurance executive, had just flown home

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from Tokyo and was flying to the States the next morning.

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Today, at court in Chelmsford, Richard Christie QC

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for the prosecution told the jury about what he described

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as the brutal attack Mr Mardon suffered.

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Mr Christie told the jury that as Mr Mardon lay in a pool of blood,

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his attacker screamed, "Tell me where the safe

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is or I will kill you", and then started counting down, ten,

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He said Mr Mardon was terrified he was going to be killed.

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In the dock, the accused - Kalebh Shreeve, Charlie Simms

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and Christopher Bergin - all three deny aggravated burglary,

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wounding with intent, possessing a firearm and possessing

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a firearm with intent to endanger life.

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Charlie Simms, who the prosecution say fired the weapon,

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a 12 bore shotgun, also denies a charge of attempted murder.

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During his opening speech, Mr Christie told the jury how

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Mr Mardon had been home alone when he was woken

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by the noise of a break-in. He called 999 and was on the phone

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to the police when he was shot through his bedroom door.

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The jury were told the men mistakenly hoped to find drug

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They are accused of stealing a watch worth $3,000

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Mr Mardon, who lost 20% of his blood and according

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to an expert pathologist, would have died were it not

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for the emergency services, is expected to give his evidence

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The number of patients in this region waiting more than an hour

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to be transferred from an ambulance into A has gone up three-fold

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The figures came from the East of England Ambulance Service

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following a Freedom of Information request from the Labour Party.

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Well, the figures released today show that in the year

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between 2013 and 2014, 3,729 patients had to wait more

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than an hour to be transferred from an ambulance to A

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That figure has now increased to 13,173.

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Meaning over the last three years it has more than trebled.

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It does have a major impact on our ability

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There is a risk that needs to be balanced between handing over

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a patient safely in the corridor of a hospital and emergency

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department, for example, versus the patient who is in

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the community with a life-threatening condition who is

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Now paramedics can only hand patients over to hospitals

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when staff there are ready to take charge of them.

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This process is supposed to take no longer than 15 minutes and delays

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of more than 30 minutes can lead to fines for hospitals.

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The latest breakdown we have, show that 146 patients had

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to wait more than an hour at West Suffolk hospital.

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Treble that figure and you still won't come close to the number

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they had over at the Norfolk Norwich Hospital.

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However, at Colchester General they had more than a thousand

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patients waiting more than 60 minutes.

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In A departments, the staff are absolutely working

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But they can only move patients through who need admission,

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be that short-term or longer term, providing there is a bed

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within the hospital complex itself and that is where the problem often

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In a statement, an East of England Ambulance Service Trust

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spokesperson said: "Hospital handover delays have a significant

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impact on us, as it means that an ambulance crew are unable

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to respond to patients in the community.

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We continue to work closely with hospitals and commissioners

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And that's the problem - when a hospital is full -

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there's nothing the ambulance crew can do about it.

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Stansted's biggest airline Ryanair has reduced its forecast

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for full-year profits blaming the fall in the pound

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The budget carrier says demand for flights is still

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strong in the UK. Analysts say that part of the drop

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is due to Ryanair discounting fares to compete with budget rivals.

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The father of missing Suffolk airman Corrie McKeague has been telling

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Look East about the heartbreak of still not knowing

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Martin McKeague says it gets harder every day.

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Corrie who's 23 and based at RAF Honington disappeared three weeks

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ago after a night out in Bury St Edmunds.

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Martin McKeague, has like the rest of the family,

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done everything he can in the hunt for Corrie - taken to the streets,

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retraced key routes, handed out leaflets.

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And by their side, a mini-army of volunteers desperate to help,

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The people of Bury and surrounding areas, it really does go

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to your heart, the way that everybody has been, you would have

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thought Corrie had grown up in this area with the amount of people that

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They are crying in front of me, you know, you would honestly think

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that Corrie came from this area, with the amount

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Today, at Suffolk Police headquarters, Mr McKeague made

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a fresh appeal for information about his son, last seen

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in the early hours of Saturday 24th September, planning,

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it's thought, to walk the nine miles back to the base at Honnington.

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But he vanished, one key piece of evidence, his mobile phone,

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As a father to a father, I can't begin to imagine what it has

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Three weeks down the line and we just need someone

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to come forward and try to find where he is.

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Corrie is, he says, funny, a joker, a wonderful person to have around.

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They are so desperate to get him home.

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Still to come tonight, one for the wine buffs, the grape that could do

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rather well here in the east. And a pep talk from a Paralympic champion,

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rowing hopeful Callum gets a taste for gold.

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Every year, nearly 300 babies die and expected leap in the UK with no

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clear reason. Most people know the Scott death but the medical term is

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sudden infant syndrome. Now though a cheap and simple

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solution to bring the numbers down. Baby Boxes are small cardboard boxes

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with a mattress for It stops them flipping over

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onto their front. Colchester hospital is one

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of the first to give them out Josephine Dave Bennett yesterday, a

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baby girl. She has just been given a free baby box and there been handed

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the all-new expectant mothers in Colchester. We have to take the baby

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away from the blanket. Lay her feet down to the bottom of the court and

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loosely put the blanket under her armpits. It has been credited with

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reducing infant deaths and giving new mums more confidence. I am a bit

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scared to put her down, we put her in there last night. It is nice to

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take that weight off your mind because it has been proven that it

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has reduced cocked death so that is amazing. First introduced in fin

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land in the 1930s, there, the infant death rate has been cut from 65

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deaths per 1000 births to two. They are a good size, nice, rigid

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construction. They are this size to make it easier for the babies do not

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roll over which keeps them safe. You get a lovely mattress in them,

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waterproof, a washable cover and the babies go to sleep on there. It

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comes with a booklet to help new mums. We are aiming to provide a

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resource, even if it reduced the likelihood of one baby dying, it

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would be a significant improvement. The idea is backed by Colchester MP

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after his own baby was stillborn in 2014. He became a passionate

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advocate for reducing deaths, speaking up on behalf of other

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parents, asking for more to be done. I know that every member of this

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House will agree they could be few more life distressing events than a

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loss of a child. 100 people queued this morning to get their boxes and

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babies up to eight-month-old can sleep in them. It is wonderful to

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see so many parents standing in line waiting to pick up their baby box.

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It shows it is an initiative people want to try and so much of this

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prevention is around educating parents and that is what this box

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will do, education but also providing the tools to do it. 23

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babies died from sudden infant death syndrome in the east last year. Mums

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like Josephine, say the baby box gives her more confidence when it

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comes to putting her first-born to bed.

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Bordeaux, Marlborough, Napa Valley and Champagne -

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Makes you thirsty just thinking about it!

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Some of the great wine producing regions in the world.

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Sadly East Anglia doesn't feature in that list.

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But wine producer Ben Witchell thinks it could and should.

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He believes our cooler climate is perfect for the production

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And he's employing some high-tech science to help producers

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here outdo their rivals from abroad.

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Early morning, Pinot Noir grapes arrive at the Flint Vineyard

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Soon, they are being loaded into the press destined

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to become champagne. But it is another great - Bacchus -

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that this new winery hopes will soon become much better known.

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This is Bacchus juice, which has been clarifying

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Does it already have that distinctive aroma?

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It does. You can smell that.

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Bacchus, when it is picked, is typically like elderflower...

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Yes, it smells like elderflower. It is a really unique character.

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Only really Bacchus smells like that.

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But nobody really knows what that particular aroma compound is.

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Bred in the 1930s, Bacchus is a cross between

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Its grapes contain compounds called thiles that give

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In the vineyard's laboratory, Ben Witchell has taken samples

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from around 20 types of Bacchus and they have been sent away

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for specialist analysis using gas chromatography and mass spectroscopy

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to identify Bacchus' atomic fingerprint.

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A lot of research has taken place in New Zealand on Sauvignon Blanc

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and that has really influenced the winemaking

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techniques used there. And they are now able to make

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consistently high quality products in New Zealand.

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What we want to do is a very similar thing to what they have

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done in New Zealand on Sauvignon Blanc, but on Bacchus.

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So we are the first people to start looking at the detail of what those

:18:47.:18:50.

What we will end up with is called chromatogram and it is a series

:18:51.:18:55.

of peaks and that will show us exactly what the main

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The results should be back soon, ready to share with fellow

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winemakers and then the second phase of the project -

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testing differing wine production techniques - begins.

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Ben and his wife Hannah have just planted Bacchus vines.

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The first harvest will be in two years' time when they hope the full

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potential of this variety can be realised.

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I like a nice glass of Bacchus. I wouldn't mind one now!

:19:27.:19:33.

There are some famous derbies in football -

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Liverpool - Everton Arsenal - Spurs, and of course Ipswich - Norwich.

:19:41.:19:51.

But tonight another one returns after a gap of 7 years.

:19:52.:19:55.

Peterborough United kick off against Northampton Town at London Road.

:19:56.:19:59.

The last time the two teams met was in 2009.

:20:00.:20:02.

Our sports editor Jonathan park is there now.

:20:03.:20:08.

Both teams have got rivals geographically closer but

:20:09.:20:13.

historically this is the one that matters and inside London Road

:20:14.:20:17.

tonight, there will be eight to 10,000 fans screaming their team on.

:20:18.:20:22.

We have found someone who played for both teams. Tommy Robinson made your

:20:23.:20:25.

debut for Northampton against Peter Brough. I was 17. I joined

:20:26.:20:34.

Northampton when I was 16. This was my debut ground. I scored in a 2-1

:20:35.:20:40.

victory. I didn't forget that one! Your loyalties are split? I am more

:20:41.:20:50.

in line with Posh. My royalty is a little bit this way. I still love

:20:51.:20:54.

Northampton, I had a great time there. Northampton higher than Posh

:20:55.:21:00.

in the table at the moment, will it stay that way? No one seems to be

:21:01.:21:05.

pulling away this season. We can get back at them or they can go higher.

:21:06.:21:10.

You can't really say. I wouldn't put bets on it. We are a young side and

:21:11.:21:14.

we are a bit up and down at the moment but I think once we get it

:21:15.:21:19.

together, I think we could go. You would love to be playing on this

:21:20.:21:24.

pitch tonight! Absolutely fabulous, this pitch, pictures all over the

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country. I remember playing at Nottingham Forest, the pitches were

:21:29.:21:34.

nowhere near like this. You can't play tonight sadly, but you will be

:21:35.:21:38.

watching. There are other games taking place this evening. Also in

:21:39.:21:45.

League 1, MK Dons who've lost three of their last four games and are in

:21:46.:21:51.

trouble, they are playing Bristol Rovers and Southend are at Bradford

:21:52.:21:56.

City. In the Championship, Ipswich and Norwich. Ipswich could badly do

:21:57.:22:00.

with the goal, they have not scored in over eight hours. They played

:22:01.:22:02.

Burton. Finally, the story of a Paralympic

:22:03.:22:07.

champion inspiring a young sportsman Calum Titmus from Peterborough

:22:08.:22:10.

is autistic but loves his sport. He's a British indoor rowing

:22:11.:22:15.

champion and he's competing in figure skating for Team GB

:22:16.:22:19.

at the Special Olympics next year. So the next few months

:22:20.:22:22.

are very important. With all that coming up, Calum has

:22:23.:22:26.

been meeting one of his local James Fox from

:22:27.:22:29.

Peterborough who won gold in the Paralympics in Rio.

:22:30.:22:33.

James Burridge was there. It's not every day you get

:22:34.:22:36.

to meet your sporting heroes, Calum Titmus has talked

:22:37.:22:40.

of nothing else all week. Suits you, mate.

:22:41.:22:53.

This is your colour. Gold.

:22:54.:22:55.

I like that! Do like seeing

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James' medal? Yes.

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And what colour would you like? Gold.

:23:00.:23:01.

Yes. How many people were in the boat

:23:02.:23:02.

with him, did you watch him on the telly?

:23:03.:23:06.

Four. On the journey here,

:23:07.:23:07.

all he kept saying was, James Fox.

:23:08.:23:09.

He has been saying that for a couple of days since I mentioned

:23:10.:23:11.

we were coming down here. Seeing him watch the Paralympics

:23:12.:23:14.

and singing along with the national anthem brings a tear to my eye.

:23:15.:23:16.

It is just... He so inspired.

:23:17.:23:19.

Young guys need someone to look up to and if I can be a part of that,

:23:20.:23:21.

that would be absolutely incredible. Great to see him not only taking

:23:22.:23:25.

part but he is winning races. He is doing the same

:23:26.:23:28.

stuff as I was doing At the Cambridge Autumn Regatta,

:23:29.:23:31.

he has done some races around the local town and he is winning

:23:32.:23:40.

as well, which is really great. James, who suffers

:23:41.:23:43.

from a congenital ankle James, who suffers from a congenital

:23:44.:23:46.

ankle condition, was back at his old rowing club in Peterborough

:23:47.:23:50.

where his journey began. It is just starting

:23:51.:23:52.

for Callum, who dreams of representing his country too.

:23:53.:23:56.

During a normal week, he sails, swims, skates,

:23:57.:23:58.

even enjoys ballroom dancing. The thrill of competition

:23:59.:24:00.

driving him on. What is good about rowing?

:24:01.:24:02.

Do like getting out on the water?

:24:03.:24:05.

Yes. Yes?

:24:06.:24:09.

Not sure. Yeah.

:24:10.:24:11.

Yes. What do you like to do at rowing?

:24:12.:24:12.

Do like to win? Yes.

:24:13.:24:15.

Is winning good? Very good.

:24:16.:24:16.

Very good. You want something that interests

:24:17.:24:18.

him and you don't want to bore Calum so we want to occupy him

:24:19.:24:24.

and we want to occupy him, So it keeps him entertained,

:24:25.:24:27.

it gives him a focus. It gives him something he can

:24:28.:24:31.

win at which is good. I think part of the fantastic

:24:32.:24:33.

will to win is because actually, that is how he gets

:24:34.:24:38.

people's approval. Look at that smile.

:24:39.:24:40.

That is a winning smile! And he has had plenty of chance

:24:41.:24:42.

to practice it. In December, Callum defends his

:24:43.:24:44.

World Indoor Rowing crown and in March, takes part

:24:45.:24:46.

in a Special Olympics in Austria. This then the perfect pep talk

:24:47.:24:49.

from one of Peterborough's finest. Brilliant. Let's have a look at the

:24:50.:25:01.

weather. Some beautiful Sunrise photograph sent into the weather

:25:02.:25:05.

watcher website today. This is one taken in Cambridgeshire and another

:25:06.:25:10.

one over in Norfolk. Lots of fine weather today after the early

:25:11.:25:14.

showery rain because once it cleared away, bright blue skies and sunshine

:25:15.:25:18.

and this is a beautiful photograph showing a field in Suffolk.

:25:19.:25:24.

A cold front brought with it some showery rain this morning at a much

:25:25.:25:30.

clearer skies and sunshine but much cooler today with the colder air.

:25:31.:25:34.

There have been some showers also following behind. Some showery spill

:25:35.:25:39.

across parts of Norfolk, Suffolk and Cambridgeshire but they could get

:25:40.:25:42.

further south as we go through the evening. The trend will be for them

:25:43.:25:46.

to clear away the eastwards. Some of the night looking dry with some

:25:47.:25:50.

clear spells. Quite a brisk north-westerly wind still which will

:25:51.:25:53.

mean temperature is not dropping as they could. Expected lows for the

:25:54.:25:59.

night around six or 7 degrees and still a brisk north-westerly wind.

:26:00.:26:03.

Pressure pattern for tomorrow looks like this. High pressure building in

:26:04.:26:07.

from the south so that would essentially mean a lot of dry and

:26:08.:26:11.

fine weather but we have got an area of low pressure that will continue

:26:12.:26:14.

to look through the week so that will mean for us in the east, a risk

:26:15.:26:18.

of showers and a dry and a bright start to the day. Quickly though

:26:19.:26:23.

showers developing. Counties at risk are places like Norfolk, Suffolk and

:26:24.:26:28.

Essex across the eastern side. Through the day, they could move

:26:29.:26:32.

further west. It will feel quite cold tomorrow, that north-westerly

:26:33.:26:39.

wind still quite brisk. Temperatures only 13 degrees. Showers could be on

:26:40.:26:43.

the heavy side, possibly even thundery and likely to continue in

:26:44.:26:47.

the afternoon. And to keep going into the evening and overnight,

:26:48.:26:51.

particularly for the eastern counties. It could be quite a wet

:26:52.:26:55.

night for some of us tomorrow. Clearing out the way for Thursday

:26:56.:26:58.

but not a lot of change on the pressure pattern because we still

:26:59.:27:01.

have this area of low pressure very close by. That could mean some

:27:02.:27:07.

showers for Thursday and once more, the eastern half of most at risk of

:27:08.:27:13.

though showers but it could go further west. Feeling quite cold and

:27:14.:27:18.

a cold theme continuing for Friday. Looking largely dry and risk of some

:27:19.:27:22.

isolated showers across the region and then we start to get an easterly

:27:23.:27:27.

wind so still a cold feel the things and chilli by day and the risk some

:27:28.:27:29.

cold temperatures by night. I saw that beautiful Sunrise this

:27:30.:27:42.

morning, you did not, did you? That is all from us, good night. --

:27:43.:27:45.

goodnight.

:27:46.:27:49.

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