27/10/2016

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:00:00. > :00:00.Welcome to South East Today, I'm Polly Evans.

:00:07. > :00:10.Tonight's top stories: What next for Calais?

:00:11. > :00:14.As bulldozers clear the rem`ins of the Jungle camp, we look

:00:15. > :00:17.at its impact and what it could mean for Kent.

:00:18. > :00:19.We'll be talking live with one of the refugee charities in calais,

:00:20. > :00:25.His "life-altering operation" was cancelled at the last mhnute.

:00:26. > :00:33.Now this Sussex teenager saxs he fears for his future.

:00:34. > :00:41.If I did not have flexibility in my back it would restrict me so much.

:00:42. > :00:43.Also in tonight's programme: Will terror-style security

:00:44. > :00:46.and a rail strike put a dampener on the Lewes Bonfire?

:00:47. > :00:48.Goodbye to Love - Brighton's registrar, Trevor Love,

:00:49. > :00:58.the first to oversee a same sex wedding in the UK, retires.

:00:59. > :01:00.Britain's leading silk farm flourishes.

:01:01. > :01:03.And the remarkable story of how a Kent aristocrat devoted hdr castle

:01:04. > :01:18.to creating Britain's first silk farm.

:01:19. > :01:21.The British and French governments said "the human thing to do"

:01:22. > :01:23.was to close the Jungle camp in Calais.

:01:24. > :01:26.Today the bulldozers began flattening its remains.

:01:27. > :01:29.In recent years tens of thotsands of migrants and refugees have

:01:30. > :01:33.flocked to the French port , often on a perilous journey to Kent,

:01:34. > :01:41.In 1999 the Red Cross controversially opened a calp

:01:42. > :01:43.at Sangatte, but it was closed down three years later amid

:01:44. > :01:46.concerns it was actually attracting migrants there.

:01:47. > :01:49.Smaller camps have spontaneously appeared again and again since.

:01:50. > :01:54.In 2009 the first large camp to be known as the Jungle was bulldozed.

:01:55. > :01:59.But it didn't deter the migrants, and a new, semi-official

:02:00. > :02:01.Jungle camp emerged - at one point as many as 10,000

:02:02. > :02:05.This week it has of course been demolished

:02:06. > :02:07.and 5500 people dispersed around France.

:02:08. > :02:10.In a moment we'll be crossing live to the Jungle, where we'll be

:02:11. > :02:12.speaking to Lallie Jacout from the charity Help Refugdes

:02:13. > :02:16.and we'll be live in Dover talking to the town's MP Charlie Elphicke.

:02:17. > :02:17.But first our reporter Peter Whittlesea reflects

:02:18. > :02:32.With the jungle largely destroyed migrants woke up on the pavdment

:02:33. > :02:37.outside the camp propping charities to question the French authority's

:02:38. > :02:43.claims everyone, including children, had been processed and given

:02:44. > :02:47.shelter. We have nowhere for around 80 unaccompanied children in the cab

:02:48. > :02:51.to sleep. They came to the warehouse for processing earlier and turned

:02:52. > :02:55.away and told to go back to the camp which is a very dangerous place

:02:56. > :02:59.especially now with the fird is raging. This morning migrants return

:03:00. > :03:04.to the camp despite the French authorities claiming everyone had

:03:05. > :03:08.been processed and the oper`tion declared over. We do not want the

:03:09. > :03:16.registration process we had here to attract every migrants in France.

:03:17. > :03:19.Our mission is to offer shelter to all the migrants in the camp has

:03:20. > :03:24.been achieved. Yesterday it was only possible to clear the majorhty of

:03:25. > :03:29.the jungle after fires brokd out. My cameraman and myself were in the

:03:30. > :03:34.camp as the flames spread. There was no choice but to leave, and quickly.

:03:35. > :03:39.Reduced to ashes in full more than an hour, the only place thotsands

:03:40. > :03:45.could call home. -- in little more than an hour. You can see how

:03:46. > :03:49.quickly the fire has spread. It is quite hot, you can fuel the

:03:50. > :03:59.temperature from the fires. Cutting through the fire, migrants raised

:04:00. > :04:09.the alarm. Crazy situation, so it was like get

:04:10. > :04:17.out. As the flames spread positions they could carry were saved.

:04:18. > :04:24.Migrants set the gap on fird, witnesses said,.

:04:25. > :04:27.This fire is smouldering and this smoking quite heavily and there are

:04:28. > :04:31.more fires over there and the French Fire Brigade are trying to put the

:04:32. > :04:37.fire out and you can see thd water overheads. This is in the hdart of

:04:38. > :04:41.the jungle and the fire brigade are trying to put them out and they are

:04:42. > :04:46.trying to tell us to go out and overhear the caravans are on fire

:04:47. > :04:53.and this street here there `re many buildings also burned down.

:04:54. > :04:58.Migrants were helpless to intervene but thankful the escaped in time. --

:04:59. > :04:58.thankful the escape. I'm joined now by Lallie Jacout

:04:59. > :05:01.from the charity Help Refugdes, and the MP for Dover

:05:02. > :05:03.and Deal Charlie Elphicke. Lallie Jacout, more than 5500 people

:05:04. > :05:18.have now been dispersed We could say it is good news if we

:05:19. > :05:22.knew more about where they were going but more importantly that is

:05:23. > :05:27.not the total sum of people in the camp. Just five minutes ago I was

:05:28. > :05:31.walking along with 100 people with nowhere to stay when there `re no

:05:32. > :05:36.more bosses today or tomorrow and the police told them to disperse and

:05:37. > :05:45.it was now a problem for thd charities. -- no more bosses. No

:05:46. > :05:50.more frostbite. Included were numerous children and lasts about

:05:51. > :05:54.100 children were unaccompanied for. They were not allowed into the

:05:55. > :06:01.warehouse where registration was happening and today we only have 30

:06:02. > :06:05.accounted for. 70 are in thd wind. Is any provision put in place for

:06:06. > :06:10.migrants to turn up in the Calais area now, let alone the ones are

:06:11. > :06:15.still there. If someone turns up now is that any provision for ddaling

:06:16. > :06:20.with them? Absolutely nothing by the state. They would be arrestdd on

:06:21. > :06:26.site, as far as I can tell. The charities are still here working

:06:27. > :06:29.very hard to do the best we can Mobile units helping people out but

:06:30. > :06:34.we do not know if that will be allowed so in reality there will be

:06:35. > :06:38.nothing for these people arriving. You're the MP for Dover, Ch`rlie,

:06:39. > :06:42.you have been calling for this dispersal for a long time btt it

:06:43. > :06:46.does not sound as it has bedn done so and how happy and there will

:06:47. > :06:51.still be significant problels going on? I welcome the jungle finally

:06:52. > :06:56.been dismantled and we should bear in mind this Christmas thousands of

:06:57. > :07:00.vulnerable people well have safer homes, running water and proper

:07:01. > :07:04.sanitation in France and th`t is the right thing. We now need to see the

:07:05. > :07:08.children still they are properly looked after and cared for `nd the

:07:09. > :07:12.rest of the people helped to safer places.

:07:13. > :07:17.We talked before about it, particularly the juxtaposed border

:07:18. > :07:20.controls from Le Touquet. Are you concerned about what will h`ppen

:07:21. > :07:28.over the next couple of years ago we will see more issues in the future?

:07:29. > :07:32.Who knows what will happen with the Le Touquet Treaty and the French

:07:33. > :07:37.presidential elections or indeed how the Brexit negotiations will go

:07:38. > :07:41.What we do know is we need to take control, invest more in Dovdr,

:07:42. > :07:45.invest in Channel security `nd the roads to Dover as well as border

:07:46. > :07:51.controls and work with the French to make sure we go after the pdople

:07:52. > :07:55.traffickers behind so much of this misery that Calais has had to bear

:07:56. > :08:01.the brunt of for so many ye`rs. I think we can see some smoke behind

:08:02. > :08:06.you, there is clearly still things going on. Are you seeing evhdence of

:08:07. > :08:12.people in the area engaged hn people smuggling? I like the whole point of

:08:13. > :08:17.this if they are very covert, we would not be able to spot them. That

:08:18. > :08:22.is a huge risk, especially with children who are out in the wind.

:08:23. > :08:24.Every charity told the governments and the authorities the children

:08:25. > :08:29.should be dealt with first `nd instead it happened the othdr way

:08:30. > :08:33.round and children were funnelled into the containers whilst they

:08:34. > :08:36.watched their homes burn and showed on the smoke of the only holes they

:08:37. > :08:41.have known for the past couple of months and not even of the children

:08:42. > :08:44.made that they are. Roaming around Calais and they have been moved

:08:45. > :08:48.around all day going back and forth trying to get registered and they

:08:49. > :08:53.did not registered and that is a real threat that someone max find

:08:54. > :08:57.them and kidnap them. Thank you very much for joining us. We will return

:08:58. > :08:58.to the subject over time. You can watch more

:08:59. > :09:00.about the dismantling of the Camp in Calais,

:09:01. > :09:02.what happens next, and the hmpact here in the south-east in a special

:09:03. > :09:06.edition of Inside Out on BBC One The secret plans for

:09:07. > :09:10.a multi-million pound A teenager from Sussex who had

:09:11. > :09:25.a "life-altering operation" cancelled by the NHS at the last

:09:26. > :09:28.minute has been told he has just four weeks to have the procddure

:09:29. > :09:33.or face giving up his fledghng 17-year-old Jamie Kaye, who has

:09:34. > :09:39.performed for the Queen in the past, was due to have an operation to help

:09:40. > :09:41.straighten his spine. But new NHS guidance means

:09:42. > :09:48.it now can't go ahead. Now his family who live

:09:49. > :09:51.in East Grinstead say it's ` race against time to find someond

:09:52. > :09:53.to perform the operation. Briohny Williams has our

:09:54. > :10:01.exclusive report. Jamie Kaye had been preparing for

:10:02. > :10:08.his operation to help his ctrvature pays Spain months. My shoulder pokes

:10:09. > :10:08.out and my rib cage staked out a bit.

:10:09. > :10:16.You can see my rib cage pokds out. He put his education on hold and

:10:17. > :10:20.made sure he was doing all the right exercises, although to be told a few

:10:21. > :10:24.weeks beforehand that was not going ahead. Just disbelief, the only

:10:25. > :10:29.thing I could think of when I found out it had been cancelled, H did not

:10:30. > :10:34.believe it. The NHS say it was cancelled because it does not fund

:10:35. > :10:37.this type of procedure and because of his age his doctor says ht wants

:10:38. > :10:43.with privately it must be done within weeks, before he stopped

:10:44. > :10:47.going. He was put in to havd body tethering were screws are attached

:10:48. > :10:52.to vertebrae and a chord, the tether, joins the screws and it can

:10:53. > :10:55.then be tension to straightdn the spine and allows for continted

:10:56. > :11:00.growth and increased mobility later in life. What Jamie was instead

:11:01. > :11:06.offered was spinal fusion where the screws are attached by metal rods

:11:07. > :11:09.and the bone graft is used to join together at the vertebrae so there

:11:10. > :11:15.is no movement between them. His parents want to raise over ?100 000

:11:16. > :11:18.to take him to New York to have the operation he needs to carry on doing

:11:19. > :11:25.the things he loves like gylnastics and dance. She has been so focused

:11:26. > :11:31.since seven years old and pdrforming is what he wants to do. We just

:11:32. > :11:38.cannot feel him. Devastated the NHS told us the only option in the UK is

:11:39. > :11:42.a spinal rods. He is a dancdr and acrobats and that would cause him to

:11:43. > :11:51.lose the lot of flexibility so that is not a suitable option for him.

:11:52. > :11:56.But exercise sometimes you can help to strengthen the spine but in his

:11:57. > :11:59.case he has already quite a severe curve. I know he is getting quite a

:12:00. > :12:04.bit of pain. In pain and desperate to rahse

:12:05. > :12:09.enough money. If I wait and how the NHS get the funding it will be too

:12:10. > :12:14.late for me. For Jamie and his family the clock is ticking.

:12:15. > :12:16.More than 2700 lorries have been caught parking in unsafe or illegal

:12:17. > :12:18.locations in Kent over the past year.

:12:19. > :12:21.The HGVs were all either moved on, fined or immobilised.

:12:22. > :12:24.Kent Police and Highways England have been working together to target

:12:25. > :12:26.lorries parked on lay-bys, hard shoulders and

:12:27. > :12:34.A Labour activist from Kent, who was suspended from the party

:12:35. > :12:38.after comments she made about anti-semitism

:12:39. > :12:41.and Holocaust Memorial Day, is calling for public help to raise

:12:42. > :12:45.money for legal action against Labour's general secretary.

:12:46. > :12:47.Jackie Walker's trying to r`ise ten thousand pounds

:12:48. > :12:55.BBC South East has learned of multi-million pound plans

:12:56. > :12:58.to dramatically develop the Port of Ramsgate,

:12:59. > :13:01.with a bid for ?4 million of Government of money,

:13:02. > :13:04.to be coupled with ?2 million from Thanet District Council.

:13:05. > :13:06.The development would potentially double the number of lorries

:13:07. > :13:11.able to use the facility to a million a year.

:13:12. > :13:16.Our Environment Correspondent Yvette Austin joins us now.

:13:17. > :13:18.Yvette, first of all explain more about the plan

:13:19. > :13:30.At the heart of this is the Thanet Council best want to make the sport

:13:31. > :13:34.work. It owns it and as originally said it wants to make it

:13:35. > :13:44.commercially competitive. It used to have various groups there. The new

:13:45. > :13:48.plan is long-term and I unddrstand the bid for Government monex in the

:13:49. > :13:53.spring failed because they put it in too late but it will be revhsed

:13:54. > :13:57.This is a plan for mainly freight operation building a new birth of

:13:58. > :14:02.the cross-channel ferries and another phase would see a freight

:14:03. > :14:07.logistics hub for miles awax. Has that been reaction this evening

:14:08. > :14:10.locally to this? To the Mac a big freight operation with thousands of

:14:11. > :14:13.lorries will be controversi`l and there is a public meeting tonight

:14:14. > :14:19.where people will hear about a plan to expand aggregates and thhs other

:14:20. > :14:23.plan is much bigger and the local MP told me he does not think a dirty

:14:24. > :14:28.type of business like this hs right for the port and thinks the tile has

:14:29. > :14:30.much more to offer its incrdasing number of visitors. -- the town is

:14:31. > :14:32.much more to offer. Charities which rely on the annual

:14:33. > :14:35.Lewes Bonfire for some of their funding say they'rd worried

:14:36. > :14:37.that collection totals may be significantly down this year -

:14:38. > :14:40.as a planned rail strike, and extra security following recent

:14:41. > :14:43.terrorist attacks, mean fewdr people Southern has announced no trains

:14:44. > :14:47.will run after midday on Saturday week, because of the the action

:14:48. > :14:50.by RMT union members. But many in the town fear additional

:14:51. > :14:53.road closures will put people John Young's report has

:14:54. > :15:01.some flashing images. For more than 160 years it has been

:15:02. > :15:04.one of the most colourful fundraisers in the country,

:15:05. > :15:09.the rival bonfire societies believe their buckets raise more

:15:10. > :15:11.than ?60,000 a year for charity But it has always been

:15:12. > :15:15.a challenge for the police, and three months after a terrorist

:15:16. > :15:18.atrocity in Nice in the South of France, they say they're

:15:19. > :15:22.not taking any chances. We do not expect anything to happen,

:15:23. > :15:26.but we do need contingencies in case something does happen and wd have

:15:27. > :15:28.to look around the rest of the country and the rest

:15:29. > :15:31.of the world about things going on in the past 12 months

:15:32. > :15:34.and slightly longer. So we've got to put some

:15:35. > :15:36.contingencies in place and part of that is, I'm afraid,

:15:37. > :15:39.we have had to close the A26 from 5pm and some of the other

:15:40. > :15:43.roads slightly earlier Yes, for the first time

:15:44. > :15:47.the approaches to the Caulfheld tunnel and the tunnel itself

:15:48. > :15:51.will be closed altogether. To the north, the approach

:15:52. > :15:53.from Cooksbridge will close at pm It will be the same on approaches

:15:54. > :15:57.from the south and west. That, it is feared, may

:15:58. > :16:00.mean people staying away with the direct effect on charities

:16:01. > :16:06.like the Bevan Trust - a local charity that helps xoung

:16:07. > :16:09.adults with profound disabilities. Much of their income comes from

:16:10. > :16:14.an old-fashioned street don`tions. They do understand

:16:15. > :16:16.the police's thinking but... We have three buses,

:16:17. > :16:20.they need to be replaced, Every penny counts for us,

:16:21. > :16:25.every penny that comes in m`kes a massive difference,

:16:26. > :16:28.not just to the people we look Looking at the map, it is a very

:16:29. > :16:34.practical place where they have actually put all the roadblocks

:16:35. > :16:38.for turing around and stopphng However, the exclusion of ptblic

:16:39. > :16:44.transport is is going to very It is only three months

:16:45. > :16:50.since security was beefed up at Brighton's Pride event and then

:16:51. > :16:53.at Eastbourne Airborne. Decisions, it seems,

:16:54. > :16:55.that may have consequences So, John, will there be

:16:56. > :17:14.any public transport Very it seems. If you want to come

:17:15. > :17:18.by train on the Saturday yot will have to be here by midday bdcause

:17:19. > :17:25.the last train is at 12 and that could lose around 30,000 visitors.

:17:26. > :17:29.Organisers and the charities we spoke to are pinning their hopes on

:17:30. > :17:34.buses and hope some sort of public bus service can be arranged a mile

:17:35. > :17:37.or so outside town to bring people into the centre of town. I spoke to

:17:38. > :17:41.Brighton and Hove bus company and they are working plans out `s we

:17:42. > :17:45.speak but the council and police and should have something on thdir

:17:46. > :17:50.website tomorrow afternoon on what the bosses will be. Thank you. What

:17:51. > :17:59.the buses will be. Bulldozers have begun a flat in the

:18:00. > :18:03.migrant camp in Calais known as the Jungle. Charity see hundreds of

:18:04. > :18:07.people, including children, remain there was nowhere to sleep despite

:18:08. > :18:15.the French authorities saying the opposition to disburse resident has

:18:16. > :18:16.been a success. -- the oper`tion to disperse residents.

:18:17. > :18:21.We meet Brighton's chief registrar - the man who conducted

:18:22. > :18:22.the first same sex marriage, who's now retiring.

:18:23. > :18:28.It is another foggy starts tomorrow and brightening up by the afternoon.

:18:29. > :18:32.The details on that and do we can's forecast later in the progr`mme --

:18:33. > :18:35.and the weekend's forecast. The Royal British Legion

:18:36. > :18:37.was founded in the years after the first world war,

:18:38. > :18:39.as the nation recognised th`t many of the wounded servicelen

:18:40. > :18:42.who had survived needed help - sometimes physical,

:18:43. > :18:43.sometimes mental - and sometimes for the rest

:18:44. > :18:45.of their lives. But as Heather Edwards reports,

:18:46. > :18:49.for this years poppy appeal, we're being urged to

:18:50. > :18:54.'rethink Remembrance' - and recognise that their work

:18:55. > :18:58.is still as vital in helping You see, I was taught soldidrs

:18:59. > :19:02.don't discuss feelings. A chest heavy with medals,

:19:03. > :19:08.Roy Miller served with the Royal Navy during

:19:09. > :19:11.the Second World War. Attacked by kamikaze pilots,

:19:12. > :19:14.it was a harrowing experience. The message - veterans can be

:19:15. > :19:26.all ages, from all conflicts. And going back to my wife and kids

:19:27. > :19:32.and just the relationship I had A veteran of Afghanistan,

:19:33. > :19:42.he severely damaged his back while training in Kenya,

:19:43. > :19:44.putting him in a wheelchair. With the help of the British Legion

:19:45. > :19:48.he took part in a recovery It's helped him come to terls

:19:49. > :19:54.with his physical injuries. The benefits from that showdd

:19:55. > :19:59.when I went home, I was a lot more relaxed, calmer and I got to meet

:20:00. > :20:02.a great bunch of people, so we kind of bounced off e`ch other

:20:03. > :20:05.and helped each other Overnight, these huge video screens

:20:06. > :20:18.have been erected here in the shadow of St Paul's Cathedral in cdntral

:20:19. > :20:20.London, each one telling thd true story of a young service

:20:21. > :20:23.man or woman injured Veterans are anybody who has served

:20:24. > :20:33.- you could be 18, you could be 80 - and there really is a new gdneration

:20:34. > :20:36.of veterans and we are really keen for the nation to understand that

:20:37. > :20:39.and support that new generation We've got to remember that

:20:40. > :20:43.going back to the First World War, Afghanistan and other

:20:44. > :20:44.campaigns, Iraq, everything, The guys who served and suffered,

:20:45. > :20:49.they have got to be looked The British Legion hopes to raise

:20:50. > :20:56.over ?40 million to help veterans young and old get back

:20:57. > :21:09.on their feet. Lullingstone Castle in Kent

:21:10. > :21:12.is probably best known thesd days as the home of its World Garden

:21:13. > :21:15.which contains all sorts of exotic plants collected from around

:21:16. > :21:18.the globe by adventuring gardener But it was his grandmother who first

:21:19. > :21:28.made the family home famous more than 80 years by opening

:21:29. > :21:32.the UK's first silk farm. Lady Zoe Hart-Dyke kept hundreds

:21:33. > :21:35.of thousands of silkworms in the stately Home at Eynesford

:21:36. > :21:40.and grew 20 acres of mulberry trees Some of the silk would be used

:21:41. > :21:44.in the Queen's Coronation robes In case you do not recognisd

:21:45. > :21:48.them they are silkworms, and the leaves are from

:21:49. > :21:50.specially-grown mulberry trdes. It is down at Lullingstone Castle,

:21:51. > :21:53.Kent, where Britain's leading It was, on the face

:21:54. > :21:58.of it, a bizarre idea - turn a fine family home

:21:59. > :22:01.into a silk farm. But in 1933, after being fascinated

:22:02. > :22:05.by silkworms as a girl, that is what Lady Hart-Dyke

:22:06. > :22:07.decided to do. These days the silkworms

:22:08. > :22:10.are gone, but for her son, just a boy at the time,

:22:11. > :22:12.the memories remain. There are 50 rooms in the house

:22:13. > :22:19.and about 40 of them were t`ken up Elizabeth and her husband w`ved

:22:20. > :22:40.to the cheering crowds... In 1947 the then Princess Elizabeth

:22:41. > :22:42.had the silk used on And six years later

:22:43. > :22:50.in her Coronation robes. The silkworms may be gone,

:22:51. > :22:53.but there are still some relinders here of those years when thd farm

:22:54. > :22:59.took over this house. These cocoons were spun out of silk

:23:00. > :23:05.by just three of the thousands The worms climb up into small

:23:06. > :23:12.trusses of straw and spin themselves It was not just the house

:23:13. > :23:16.which was dominated by the silk farm, including the machinery needed

:23:17. > :23:18.to process the silk. The gardens were planted

:23:19. > :23:22.with hundreds of mulberry btshes to provide leaves to keep

:23:23. > :23:27.the hungry silkworms happy. Divorce saw Lady Hart-Dyke leave

:23:28. > :23:31.Lullingstone Castle and takd the silk farm with her,

:23:32. > :23:33.but for 23 years it had, It worked, it worked very wdll

:23:34. > :23:39.indeed, largely thanks Her extraordinary vision,

:23:40. > :23:56.now woven into British history. He made history as the first

:23:57. > :24:00.registrar to marry a same But now the aptly named

:24:01. > :24:05.Trevor Love is retiring - after fourteen years in charge

:24:06. > :24:08.at Brighton Town Hall. Trevor officiated over the country's

:24:09. > :24:11.first civil partnerships in December 2005 and the first gay weddhng,

:24:12. > :24:14.in March 2014. Altogether he has conducted more

:24:15. > :24:20.than a thousand ceremonies. Claudia Sermbezis has

:24:21. > :24:38.been to meet him. Just after midnight 2014. Two men

:24:39. > :24:44.make history. You are not ldgally married, so congratulations. -- you

:24:45. > :24:49.are now legally married. Historic for the couple, Brighton and Trevor

:24:50. > :24:54.Love, the registrar. By the time we left it was one in the mornhng and

:24:55. > :25:01.the thing that amazed me more than anything was when we left there was

:25:02. > :25:04.a crowd of several hundred people outside who just appeared from

:25:05. > :25:10.nowhere to greet the couple and shear them. I thought, what a

:25:11. > :25:16.wonderful place it is that we live. -- ensure them. Where peopld are so

:25:17. > :25:22.accepting. Yesterday Trevor Mallard has last couple. I felt -- Trevor

:25:23. > :25:26.married his last couple. I felt quite emotional and thought it would

:25:27. > :25:29.be terrible if I burst into tears but I saw one of the rooms was

:25:30. > :25:39.crying anyway so I pulled mxself together. -- one of the grooms.

:25:40. > :25:48.I could not resist the music pun. For 14 years it has been Mr Love

:25:49. > :25:54.marrying thousands of peopld. Magazine editor James led what was

:25:55. > :25:59.one of them. With the same section marriage legislation it was very

:26:00. > :26:05.important somebody presented it well for the community, which he did and

:26:06. > :26:11.he was a great ambassador for both the community and the city. He also

:26:12. > :26:17.conducted Brighton and Hove's first civil partnerships in 2005. He is a

:26:18. > :26:25.bit of a legend and is a big character in the office so H am very

:26:26. > :26:29.excited about the new job btt I feel I am following in a very big shadow

:26:30. > :26:39.here. One thing clever says he will not

:26:40. > :26:41.miss is the most commonly rdquested music, Canon In D.

:26:42. > :26:55.It is lovely! And now the wdather. Through the next few days it settles

:26:56. > :27:02.and similar to today. We st`rt with sums stubborn mist and fog `nd by

:27:03. > :27:07.the afternoon it brightens tp. Today temperatures at under 15 Celsius,

:27:08. > :27:10.quite pleasant and the winds back to south-westerly direction and a

:27:11. > :27:16.relatively mild for the next few days. Tomorrow is similar to today,

:27:17. > :27:23.starting with mist and fog `nd bite into the afternoon. Tonight, some

:27:24. > :27:27.clearer skies lighter winds, mist and fog, temperatures not qtite as

:27:28. > :27:34.low as last night, mostly in double figures. Still this area of high

:27:35. > :27:40.pressure stays with us, light winds from the south-west and first being

:27:41. > :27:46.it has missed the boat throtgh the morning we start to see somd breaks

:27:47. > :27:53.in the cloud and some other temperatures to today, 15-16dC. Some

:27:54. > :27:57.cloud around and into Saturday we see clearer skies developing and

:27:58. > :28:03.some more mist and fog with temperatures dropping to around 10

:28:04. > :28:09.Celsius. We are dry as we start Saturday and staying that w`y. By

:28:10. > :28:14.the afternoon once again around 15-16dC, perhaps a bit more cloud

:28:15. > :28:20.and a similar story into Sunday and indeed for Halloween itself on

:28:21. > :28:23.Monday. Lots of dry and ple`sant weather, Misty and foggy st`rts so

:28:24. > :28:32.take care if you are out and about on the roads first thing.

:28:33. > :28:38.All good for Halloween. But is it from us. Join us again at 8pm and

:28:39. > :28:43.10:30pm. And I will be back tomorrow, so see you then. Goodbye.