:00:07. > :00:13.A woman from New Zealand who married a Norfolk farmer is facing
:00:14. > :00:17.Alex Chapman got married and settled here four years ago
:00:18. > :00:21.but the Home Office is now hnsisting she must return to her birthplace.
:00:22. > :00:25.The appeals procedure is lasting more than a year.
:00:26. > :00:28.The Home Office says it can't comment while legal
:00:29. > :00:34.The Chapmans have been speaking to our chief reporter Kim Rhley
:00:35. > :00:38.She met her husband, Will, on a working holiday here
:00:39. > :00:41.They have a five-month old daughter, Olivia.
:00:42. > :00:44.Alex's 2.5 year visa expired last December.
:00:45. > :00:48.It was a bombshell when, just after Christmas last ydar,
:00:49. > :00:51.they heard her application for leave to remain was refused.
:00:52. > :00:55.Alex works in the office at WR Chapman and Son
:00:56. > :01:01.The Home Office was not sathsfied with information about her leans,
:01:02. > :01:04.nor convinced it would be a serious hardship for the couple
:01:05. > :01:08.An appeal process has dragged on for a year.
:01:09. > :01:12.With Alex's New Zealand passport withheld by the Home Office,
:01:13. > :01:23.Obviously, the position we `re in, Alex and I and our little d`ughter
:01:24. > :01:27.would like to go and see thd rest of Alex's family at Christm`s time
:01:28. > :01:32.And we're struggling to do that at the moment.
:01:33. > :01:35.They open their arms to all the others coming in,
:01:36. > :01:38.but then there's people likd me I just feel like they don't
:01:39. > :01:42.I've never had any money from the government or anything
:01:43. > :01:45.I've always worked and paid my taxes, and you do feel
:01:46. > :01:48.like they don't want you here at all, really.
:01:49. > :01:53.Yeah, I do get quite upset about it sometimes.
:01:54. > :01:58.But hopefully it will all end happily.
:01:59. > :02:03.Alex plays an important rold in a firm whose agricultural
:02:04. > :02:07.contracting and plant hire business has a ?2.8 million annual ttrnover
:02:08. > :02:13.Jobs likely to disappear if she and Will had to move
:02:14. > :02:17.Last year, Will and Alex lost their baby daughter, D`isy
:02:18. > :02:22.They are daring to hope for another precious gift,
:02:23. > :02:31.That is an official acceptance that Alex is welcome here.
:02:32. > :02:34.The father of a suspected computer hacker who is facing extradhtion
:02:35. > :02:39.to America has issued his gravest warning yet that his son
:02:40. > :02:43.will take his own life rathdr than serve time in a US prison.
:02:44. > :02:46.Lauri Love from Suffolk is wanted in America to face charges
:02:47. > :02:53.of hacking agencies like NASA and the FBI.
:02:54. > :02:57.Day by day the pressure is building for action to block the extradition
:02:58. > :03:01.The Americans are desperate to fly him across the
:03:02. > :03:06.Atlantic to face trial and a possible jail term of 99 xears.
:03:07. > :03:10.Today his father told Stuart White that his son's autism and mdntal
:03:11. > :03:13.state made it hard for him to understand the consequences of what
:03:14. > :03:22.Lauri actually believes that he can fix the world and that
:03:23. > :03:26.is what he tries to do, and in doing so, in a way,
:03:27. > :03:31.More than 100 MPs have alre`dy urged the American President Barack
:03:32. > :03:36.Obama to block the extradithon which was approved by a judge in London
:03:37. > :03:39.Yesterday in the Commons, an appeal to the
:03:40. > :03:43.Does he realise that this young man is on the
:03:44. > :03:47.He has severe mental health challenges and may not
:03:48. > :03:52.I have to emphasise to the honourable
:03:53. > :03:55.gentleman that of course it is a matter of the courts
:03:56. > :03:56.and there has been a
:03:57. > :03:59.court procedure relating to these issues.
:04:00. > :04:02.I have sat down with my son more than once and said to him, what
:04:03. > :04:06.are you going to do if everxthing fails, if we are not able to stop
:04:07. > :04:10.this irresistible steam roller the American's desire to have you,
:04:11. > :04:15.He says, I won't make it to America, Dad, because I
:04:16. > :04:18.will take my life as I can't survive without the two of you being in my
:04:19. > :04:22.The Home Secretary Amber Rudd is studying currently the
:04:23. > :04:26.She is expected to make a ruling next
:04:27. > :04:30.If it is approval, an appeal from Lauri Love's legal teal is
:04:31. > :04:38.A major mile stone was reached today in the re-location
:04:39. > :04:43.It's the biggest heart and lung transplant centre in Britain,
:04:44. > :04:49.employs 1,800 staff and tre`ts more than 73,000 patients every xear
:04:50. > :04:52.It's being moved from Papworth to the site
:04:53. > :04:55.of Addenbrooke's Hospital in Cambridge.
:04:56. > :05:01.This collection of cranes creating a global centre of excellence.
:05:02. > :05:08.Specialist services centralhsed on one site, where the best
:05:09. > :05:13.All our patients have now got more diseases than they used to have
:05:14. > :05:17.They are getting older and have more complex diseases.
:05:18. > :05:19.And so, all the other specialties will be here.
:05:20. > :05:22.And then, for future patients, we have made sure
:05:23. > :05:25.we have the research and edtcation institute here, which we will build
:05:26. > :05:30.That will allow us to provide tomorrow's medicine today.
:05:31. > :05:33.The old Papworth Hospital d`tes back to the first World War.
:05:34. > :05:38.The village was a sanctuary to treat patients with tuberculosis.
:05:39. > :05:42.In 1979, surgeons performed the UK's first heart transplant.
:05:43. > :05:47.Its international reputation was born.
:05:48. > :05:51.Today, the final slab of concrete sealing the roof was set in place.
:05:52. > :05:55.This is the first look at the new skeleton of the building.
:05:56. > :06:00.The majority of those are all single rooms.
:06:01. > :06:03.So, for infection control ptrposes, for privacy and dignity,
:06:04. > :06:10.The initial cost to replace the old Papworth, ?165 millhon,
:06:11. > :06:15.Some think it might lack the tranquillity of the past,
:06:16. > :06:21.But it will be an international heart and lung centre.
:06:22. > :06:33.Others say that it will provide a lasting legacy for the future
:06:34. > :06:47.The weather is next. It's a largely dry night ahdad.
:06:48. > :06:53.Quite a lot of cloud and underneath, the skies. Temperatures frol any
:06:54. > :06:59.bars staying in double figures although some sports are already
:07:00. > :07:04.following to nine Celsius. Tomorrow morning, largely fine and dry and
:07:05. > :07:07.hopefully the cloud will thdn and break to allow sunshine thrde.
:07:08. > :07:12.Temperatures could get a degree or so higher than these values in the
:07:13. > :07:16.best of the sunshine. On Sunday it might take a while for a mist and
:07:17. > :07:19.fog to clear but then it is a largely fine and dry day with
:07:20. > :07:26.hopefully some sunshine and brightness at times. We hold on to
:07:27. > :07:30.light winds. I will leave you with the Outlook. Monday, another fine
:07:31. > :07:31.and dry day. Tuesday, a dry start but bigger
:07:32. > :07:34.to come into the beginning of next week as well. Now the national
:07:35. > :07:44.picture. Hello, it's been a pretty good week
:07:45. > :07:47.for getting out and enjoying the autumn colours, especially if you
:07:48. > :07:53.have seen autumn sunshine. What sunshine, if you have been in
:07:54. > :07:59.Manchester or the Wirral, damp in places. Ty Gifford had it better,
:08:00. > :08:02.and Deal in Kent, with sunshine It's high pressure and settled
:08:03. > :08:06.weather but the flow of air may be mild but winning in moisture, not
:08:07. > :08:12.necessarily in the form of rain Many others will be staying dry but
:08:13. > :08:15.in the form of cloud. Some mild made it cloudy this weekend and
:08:16. > :08:18.patchy fog overnight and into the morning. Perhaps misty and murky
:08:19. > :08:23.across western hills of Britain through the night. England and Wales
:08:24. > :08:26.seeing patchy lower-level fog, developing into Northern Ireland as
:08:27. > :08:30.well, once we shift the drizzle some of that in northern England and
:08:31. > :08:31.West of Scotland. Eastern