:00:00. > :00:07.A hero's welcome. The rising cost of
:00:08. > :00:29.some parking spaces in this one are too small.
:00:30. > :00:31.For one night only, Southampton's Craig David
:00:32. > :00:38.announces a homecoming concert at The Ageas Bowl.
:00:39. > :00:48.It always feels amazing when I come home. Like, I am from Southampton
:00:49. > :00:50.and even though people stayed where I sound moment I can't be
:00:51. > :00:51.Southampton boy, it's true. And a century on,
:00:52. > :00:54.a fitting tribute to the hundreds of South African troops who died
:00:55. > :01:04.in the sinking of the SS Mendi. It is very emotional to be here but
:01:05. > :01:12.it's also pride in the sense that they did not die in vain.
:01:13. > :01:15.Mourners from the Kurdish community in Britain paid a remarkable
:01:16. > :01:19.spontaneous tribute this weekend to Ryan Lock from Chichester
:01:20. > :01:23.who died in Syria fighting the so-called Islamic State.
:01:24. > :01:26.As his body was returned to Heathrow, they were out in force
:01:27. > :01:29.to pay their respects to a man they regard as a hero.
:01:30. > :01:36.Our home affairs correspondent Emma Vardy has this exclusive report.
:01:37. > :01:43.You could be forgiven for thinking this was Kurdistan,
:01:44. > :01:47.but actually, it was Heathrow Airport on Saturday.
:01:48. > :01:51.Ryan Lock, a former chef from Chichester, for these people a
:01:52. > :01:57.Ryan's sacrifice will be written in our history
:01:58. > :02:01.and humanity's history, I believe personally.
:02:02. > :02:04.A young man, you know, going 1000 miles
:02:05. > :02:09.Ryan Lock had told friends and family he was going on
:02:10. > :02:13.holiday to Turkey last year before revealing on Facebook he was joining
:02:14. > :02:21.In December, he and four others came under attack from
:02:22. > :02:25.so-called Islamic State fighters near the Syrian city of Raqqa.
:02:26. > :02:27.It's believed that to avoid being taken hostage,
:02:28. > :02:31.Ryan Lock turned his gun on himself.
:02:32. > :02:35.What Isis is doing in Kurdistan is fascist things.
:02:36. > :02:40.Many Kurds here today, they all lost some member of
:02:41. > :02:46.their family within the last few years.
:02:47. > :02:50.Ryan Lock is the third British man to die fighting alongside the Kurds.
:02:51. > :02:55.His body was recovered from IS held territory.
:02:56. > :02:58.In Syria, he was given full military honours by the Kurds
:02:59. > :03:07.before his coffin began its long journey home.
:03:08. > :03:12.It's taken some eight weeks to bring Ryan Lock's body back home via Iraq.
:03:13. > :03:15.The people who have turned out today to pay their respects,
:03:16. > :03:18.they did not know Ryan before he went to fight,
:03:19. > :03:23.but they see him as a British man who decided to fight their cars.
:03:24. > :03:28.Dozens of western volunteers are known to have joined
:03:29. > :03:32.For these young men and women to feel such responsibility to go
:03:33. > :03:36.out there and try to do something and unfortunately to sacrifice their
:03:37. > :03:44.The British Government is against British people
:03:45. > :03:45.going to join this war.
:03:46. > :03:48.Do you think they should be discouraged from doing this?
:03:49. > :03:51.I mean, there are enough people fighting,
:03:52. > :03:54.but of course we don't want to encourage anyone to go out there.
:03:55. > :03:57.They don't know what kind of battle is happening.
:03:58. > :04:01.I think probably if the British Government were doing
:04:02. > :04:05.what they can and what they should, maybe these people didn't have to go
:04:06. > :04:13.After this colourful sendoff, Ryan Lock's family are now
:04:14. > :04:16.planning a private funeral for him at home.
:04:17. > :04:19.So, just who are the YPG, and who's joining them?
:04:20. > :04:28.There are many different groups fighting in Syria.
:04:29. > :04:31.The YPG are the Kurdish people's home grown defence forces
:04:32. > :04:33.in Northern Syria, in a region known as Rojava.
:04:34. > :04:36.They have become one of the key groups fighting the ground war
:04:37. > :04:39.And they've been battling to liberate Syrian towns
:04:40. > :04:44.and villages that have been under the control of the IS jihadists.
:04:45. > :04:48.The YPG allows foreign volunteers to come and fight with them.
:04:49. > :04:51.People not only from Britain, but also from other countries
:04:52. > :04:56.in Europe, as well as America and Canada have joined up.
:04:57. > :05:00.For the British authorities, legally though, this is a grey area.
:05:01. > :05:05.The government warns people not to fight with the YPG in Syria,
:05:06. > :05:09.but no one from the UK has yet been prosecuted on their return.
:05:10. > :05:14.These three British men have now died in Syria with the YPG.
:05:15. > :05:18.And others are still out there fighting.
:05:19. > :05:21.Well, a little earlier I spoke to Dr Jack Holland,
:05:22. > :05:23.an international security expert from Leeds University,
:05:24. > :05:26.and I asked him to spell out the risks to those thinking
:05:27. > :05:31.So there's the very obvious risk to British
:05:32. > :05:32.nationals who go out and fight
:05:33. > :05:35.in one of the most dangerous battlefields in the world.
:05:36. > :05:37.There's the risk of what happens when those people
:05:38. > :05:40.come home having been battle hardened and pick up certain skills
:05:41. > :05:44.and the risk of the complexities of different groups merging together
:05:45. > :05:48.because not everyone draws the same lines between groups that the Brits
:05:49. > :05:54.And so, is it that the British Government do not want
:05:55. > :05:57.to get drawn into this in the sense that there are these
:05:58. > :06:00.sensitivities with the YPG and Turkey?
:06:01. > :06:04.Yes, they are certainly worried about the relationship
:06:05. > :06:09.The YPG are one of the most important groups on
:06:10. > :06:11.the ground for the Brits and the Americans
:06:12. > :06:12.but for the Turks, that group
:06:13. > :06:14.on the ground has actually been
:06:15. > :06:16.a long-standing problem for the Turkish state,
:06:17. > :06:19.so even though Turkey is a Nato ally, there is a very
:06:20. > :06:22.different relationship with the YPG for the Turks whereas the Brits
:06:23. > :06:26.and the Americans see these guys is absolutely crucial ground forces.
:06:27. > :06:32.Could you see a new policy being put in place by the British Government
:06:33. > :06:37.in the sense of taking a harder line with those going out to fight?
:06:38. > :06:39.Belgium and Australia for example have
:06:40. > :06:42.legislated against this, so in the same way as in Britain
:06:43. > :06:45.you can't go abroad and support terrorism, where
:06:46. > :06:55.as the relationship for going to support someone
:06:56. > :06:59.for the Australians, they've just said, you cannot go
:07:00. > :07:04.Hard to prosecute, but still, that's one option that's open
:07:05. > :07:08.I guess the critique of that is, is it really in the public
:07:09. > :07:10.interest to try and prosecute anyone?
:07:11. > :07:12.Are they really a danger if they are fighting
:07:13. > :07:16.Are they anything of a threat back home in the UK?
:07:17. > :07:18.And how much, if you like, propaganda value
:07:19. > :07:22.when a British person goes out and gets either kidnapped or indeed
:07:23. > :07:27.Isis has been a pretty phenomenal fighting machine,
:07:28. > :07:29.but it social media and propaganda presence has been
:07:30. > :07:34.unparalleled amongst terrorist networks and any Western victim
:07:35. > :07:44.There are calls for Wiltshire's Chief Constable to explain how
:07:45. > :07:47.details of his force's investigation into Sir Edward Heath ended up
:07:48. > :07:50.Officers have been investigating the former Prime Minister,
:07:51. > :07:53.who died ten years ago, as part of a wider
:07:54. > :08:03.It all started here at the gates of Sir Edward Heath's Salisbury home.
:08:04. > :08:06.I'm really appealing for anybody who's been a victim of crime
:08:07. > :08:09.or who is a victim of anything that may have taken place involving
:08:10. > :08:17.At a cost of more than ?800,000, Wiltshire Police's investigation
:08:18. > :08:22.Operation Conifer, has been trawling through every aspect of the former
:08:23. > :08:27.Wiltshire Police say they have a duty to properly
:08:28. > :08:33.investigate all allegations of historical sexual abuse.
:08:34. > :08:35.With such a high-profile investigation,
:08:36. > :08:39.there is no surprise it has come under intense scrutiny.
:08:40. > :08:43.None more so than from friends like his former agent.
:08:44. > :08:47.It should have stopped months and months and months ago.
:08:48. > :08:56.It's our money that's being spent and it's destroying the idea
:08:57. > :09:03.And today, she and others, including Wiltshire MPs,
:09:04. > :09:07.are concerned about apparent leaks or briefings to the
:09:08. > :09:12.Mail on Sunday about operational details in this case.
:09:13. > :09:14.Yesterday, the paper claims that more than 30 alleged
:09:15. > :09:20.victims had come forward and that the Chief Constable was certain
:09:21. > :09:25.The Chief Constable made a promise that
:09:26. > :09:29.there would be no leaks confirming numbers or any details of the
:09:30. > :09:34.alleged victims and that he is responsible for this investigation.
:09:35. > :09:37.But the force have refused to answer my question
:09:38. > :09:41.as to where this leak or briefing came from and whether
:09:42. > :09:46.was involved in the Mail on Sunday's story.
:09:47. > :09:51.from the investigation but they have no links to Sir Edward Heath.
:09:52. > :09:58.For now, his life remains under investigation.
:09:59. > :10:00.In the last few hours, it's been revealed that
:10:01. > :10:04.the Hampshire mother who's been imprisoned in an Iranian jail -
:10:05. > :10:08.has been taken to a Tehran hospital to see a specialist neurologist.
:10:09. > :10:10.For the past month, Nazanin has been complaining
:10:11. > :10:12.of neck and back pains and there are concerns
:10:13. > :10:15.about the nerves within her right arm and hand.
:10:16. > :10:17.The young mum, from Fleet in Hampshire, is facing
:10:18. > :10:20.a five-year prison sentence on what are described
:10:21. > :10:29.And also later for a special announcement...
:10:30. > :10:32.I've got some amazing news for all the Southamptoners out there.
:10:33. > :10:36.Well, right here on Saturday, I'll be telling you
:10:37. > :10:44.Frustration is growing in Berkshire over repeated delays to the opening
:10:45. > :10:49.The Shinfield Eastern Relief Road has been dogged by setbacks
:10:50. > :10:53.and should have been finished last summer.
:10:54. > :10:56.Local businesses say it's killing their trade and residents
:10:57. > :11:05.The Swan Inn at Arborfield Cross reopened for business last summer,
:11:06. > :11:07.about the same time the new relief road should have opened.
:11:08. > :11:12.Expected profits are down by at least 15%.
:11:13. > :11:14.We've got quite a good reputation so far,
:11:15. > :11:16.but to try and get here, it's impossible.
:11:17. > :11:20.We lost a lot of trade when they actually stopped work for
:11:21. > :11:22.a week because some of the signs never got
:11:23. > :11:25.moved and basically, it closed down,
:11:26. > :11:28.which no one knew it was supposed to be opened and it
:11:29. > :11:31.wasn't open and it did cost is major problems.
:11:32. > :11:36.When they've got that road closed, the detour is miles, so I tend
:11:37. > :11:42.if I've got to go that way, I don't bother.
:11:43. > :11:44.I'll go to Aldershot or somewhere instead.
:11:45. > :11:46.It's a nightmare here for traffic in the mornings,
:11:47. > :11:53.Melina Harrison says patients at her clinic are often late
:11:54. > :12:00.We're in our 14th year here and I've never known
:12:01. > :12:03.Even getting the business off the ground was easier
:12:04. > :12:07.They're getting so frustrated with the traffic that
:12:08. > :12:09.they actually missed their appointment and, you know, when
:12:10. > :12:12.you're trying to get somebody better and maybe are rehabbing them after
:12:13. > :12:15.they've had disc surgery or something like that, the timing of
:12:16. > :12:18.appointments is really important to their well-being.
:12:19. > :12:20.The road will serve Reading University's
:12:21. > :12:23.huge new Science Park currently under construction.
:12:24. > :12:25.But with so much house building also underway here,
:12:26. > :12:30.it's vital to the local authorities future development plans.
:12:31. > :12:32.In a statement, Wokingham Borough Council told us it
:12:33. > :12:34.shares people's frustration with the delays.
:12:35. > :12:37.It says it doesn't have any control over the contract but it's
:12:38. > :12:40.working with Hochtief and the University
:12:41. > :12:43.of Reading to get the project finished and open.
:12:44. > :12:45.It says though, with complex projects like this,
:12:46. > :12:48.there are always unforeseen problems.
:12:49. > :12:51.Currently issues include water seeping up through the road
:12:52. > :12:57.The contractor Hochtief UK has apologised for the delays and says
:12:58. > :13:00.it's brought in significant extra resources to address
:13:01. > :13:03.the unforeseen challenges it's facing.
:13:04. > :13:16.The road should be open within the next couple of months.
:13:17. > :13:19.Parking and issue but this story is very different.
:13:20. > :13:21.South West Trains is having to repaint part of its car park
:13:22. > :13:24.at Southampton Central station after a driver proved some
:13:25. > :13:28.Jago Lawless got a penalty notice because his car overlapped one
:13:29. > :13:33.And that's when he turned to his tape measure,
:13:34. > :13:36.he proved that the car park doesn't actually meet
:13:37. > :13:43.Keeping between the lines isn't always easy.
:13:44. > :13:48.And it's even harder these days because cars are bigger, but
:13:49. > :13:51.I've been to meet one man who has proved in his case it wasn't
:13:52. > :13:57.It was just over a week ago, 46-year-old Jago Lawless was issued
:13:58. > :14:00.a penalty notice because his car just overlapped one
:14:01. > :14:03.of the spaces at Southampton Central Station.
:14:04. > :14:07.My front wheel, where I had pitched the front of the car over so
:14:08. > :14:10.I could actually get out of the door, the front of the car
:14:11. > :14:14.had moved over an inch, two inches over the line.
:14:15. > :14:17.But he felt something wasn't right and as a naval architect by
:14:18. > :14:21.day, who reviews detailed measurements, he took out his own
:14:22. > :14:28.measuring tape to find out what was going wrong.
:14:29. > :14:30.When I first measured the entrance into the car park bay,
:14:31. > :14:33.But because they have angled parking bay
:14:34. > :14:37.over, the parallel with between the lines is actually only 1.978
:14:38. > :14:39.metres wide which is too small for the
:14:40. > :14:49.After he highlighted the issue to South West
:14:50. > :14:58.South West trains says the car park was painted out before the
:14:59. > :15:00.Government advisers came in and the fee was withdrawn.
:15:01. > :15:01.But it appears small parking spaces isn't
:15:02. > :15:06.In general, all parking spaces are way too small for today's cars.
:15:07. > :15:08.My personal opinion is that I have two
:15:09. > :15:10.children with disabilities and that's even worse because if you
:15:11. > :15:13.don't qualify for a blue badge, you're forced to park
:15:14. > :15:16.I find that parking spaces are a bit too small because whenever
:15:17. > :15:20.I go out with my fiancee, he invariably has to let me out
:15:21. > :15:24.beforehand otherwise I can't open the door properly and squeeze out.
:15:25. > :15:27.Jago tells me he's happy that the company is taking positive
:15:28. > :15:36.steps to widen the spaces and I'm sure that
:15:37. > :15:42.will be thankful that one man really had it taped.
:15:43. > :15:45.Southampton's Craig David has announced he's to play a one-off gig
:15:46. > :15:49.The singer shot to fame as a teenager at the end
:15:50. > :15:53.of the '90s after growing up on a Southampton council estate.
:15:54. > :15:56.He's currently enjoying a spectacular career comeback,
:15:57. > :15:58.with a number one album, and a nomination as best solo male
:15:59. > :16:14.# I feel nothing like this, like this
:16:15. > :16:19.# I have felt nothing like this, like this... This is what is taking
:16:20. > :16:23.Craig David back to the top. 16 years since his first album went to
:16:24. > :16:28.number one, he would did it again stopped on the 1st of September, he
:16:29. > :16:32.will play for founds new and old at the Ageas Bowl. The generation think
:16:33. > :16:38.of people who are now discovering my music who would have only followed
:16:39. > :16:43.my last album. The were kids who only just found out about my music.
:16:44. > :16:47.Calling me a new kid! I loved the new kid thing, I will run with that.
:16:48. > :16:51.And then there was a generation who grew up with my stuff from back in
:16:52. > :16:56.1999. Last year, things really took off again for Craig David. He had a
:16:57. > :17:00.residency and I be there with his DJ sets TS five which she also
:17:01. > :17:04.performed at Southampton's Common people Festival. But the date at the
:17:05. > :17:08.Ageas Bowl will be his first headline show in his home city. You
:17:09. > :17:11.can take the boy out of Southampton but you can't take Southampton at
:17:12. > :17:17.the boy and it's true. Wherever I go, as soon as I come back down the
:17:18. > :17:21.avenue, I feel like I'm home and the crowd responds in that way and any
:17:22. > :17:27.shows that I've done here, either at the Guildhall or at Common People, I
:17:28. > :17:31.could feel that there was an ownership of coming from here and
:17:32. > :17:35.we've got your back. A source on his ties with home that this afternoon,
:17:36. > :17:39.Craig took the time along with his manager to talk to and perform for
:17:40. > :17:47.students at the city's Solent University. When you meet your
:17:48. > :17:51.favourite artist, you kind of get disappointed but I don't feel like
:17:52. > :17:56.that. I was like, yeah, man! That was exciting. To see an idle but is
:17:57. > :18:01.performing five metres from you, it's amazing. Craig David's story is
:18:02. > :18:05.about talent and staying power. Through it all, he has never
:18:06. > :18:06.forgotten his roots. Tickets for his Southampton concert go on general
:18:07. > :18:20.sale this Friday. I like that line, talent and staying
:18:21. > :18:22.power. We know all about that, don't we?
:18:23. > :18:27.I met Craig before the FA Cup final in 2003 and I'm still here! I could
:18:28. > :18:30.be on stage with him. Big Southampton fan and we will hear his
:18:31. > :18:35.spots about that EFL Cup final which is going to dominate the week,
:18:36. > :18:38.really. Later in the week though, so as was his concert, he was keen to
:18:39. > :18:40.talk about saints. Football to start with as well tonight.
:18:41. > :18:43.The two horse race at the top of the Championship saw Brighton
:18:44. > :18:45.leap above Newcastle and back into top spot, although
:18:46. > :18:48.could return to the top if they beat Aston Villa tonight.
:18:49. > :18:52.A double from Sam Baldock in the second half at Oakwell
:18:53. > :18:56.was enough to hand Albion their 20th win of the campaign,
:18:57. > :19:05.Reading on Saturday, then Newcastle a week tomorrow.
:19:06. > :19:09.Meanwhile with no Premier League action this weekend,
:19:10. > :19:14.Good luck to Sutton United and their former Eastleigh boss
:19:15. > :19:19.Paul Doswell, the Surrey club take on Arsenal tonight live on BBC One.
:19:20. > :19:23.Oxford United's cup dreams ended on Saturday and we start
:19:24. > :19:36.Three and a half thousand Oxford fans were in the north-east aiming
:19:37. > :19:39.for a giant-killing at the home of Premier League opposition. For the
:19:40. > :19:43.first hour, that seemed highly unlikely after Stewart Downing was
:19:44. > :19:47.bundled over in the box, Grant Leadbeater scored from the box.
:19:48. > :19:53.United had been unable to weather the early storm and it got worse.
:19:54. > :19:56.Acrobatics put Middlesbrough two up before the break. But it was far
:19:57. > :20:00.from over. Chris Maguire placed this free kick perfectly to pull a goal
:20:01. > :20:05.back just after the hour mark. The momentum of that goal was ensemble.
:20:06. > :20:09.Within 60 seconds, they swept forward again and although Maguire's
:20:10. > :20:13.effort was boiled, Toni Martinez followed up to level the scores. A
:20:14. > :20:17.replay would have been the right reward for Oxford's endeavours, but
:20:18. > :20:24.four minutes from time, their hearts were broken. We've got one big
:20:25. > :20:27.semifinal coming up that we're all looking forward to and then to be
:20:28. > :20:31.fair, we have about 16 cup finals is well on the way, so we've still got
:20:32. > :20:35.two great opportunities to have a little bit of success this year and
:20:36. > :20:38.we're not going to let go of that. In the two, Portsmouth remain on
:20:39. > :20:42.course for the play-offs but ahead of a huge travelling contingent,
:20:43. > :20:46.they fell behind at Barnet through this free kick. Inspiration was in
:20:47. > :20:51.short supply until Conor Chaplin stepped up late in the game with a
:20:52. > :20:56.brilliant long-range effort, probably his best. In week one, MK
:20:57. > :21:03.dons were beaten at home by this goal at the Stadium MK. A big game
:21:04. > :21:03.for Reading the championship tomorrow night.
:21:04. > :21:06.It was a successful weekend for some of the country's top
:21:07. > :21:11.university sports stars in the British Universities
:21:12. > :21:14.Rhys Gray from Southampton University took the honours
:21:15. > :21:16.with this performance in the elite men's trampoline.
:21:17. > :21:18.The 22-year-old is a former Great britain trampolinist who left
:21:19. > :21:21.the national programme to pursue his academic studies.
:21:22. > :21:25.And a reminder this week is all about the EFL Cup final.
:21:26. > :21:27.Southampton take on Manchester United on Sunday in their first
:21:28. > :21:31.major cup final at Wembley for 38 years.
:21:32. > :21:33.We'll be building up to Wembley where Claude Puel's men
:21:34. > :21:36.go for glory and we want to hear from you, wherever you might
:21:37. > :21:44.How will you be watching the game, how far have you come to be here.
:21:45. > :21:46.Give us a shout via our Facebook page.
:21:47. > :21:50.We would love your video messages to the team.
:21:51. > :21:54.We will play them out on Friday night. It's each week for
:21:55. > :21:56.Southampton. We will look forward to that.
:21:57. > :21:59.It was a terrible maritime disaster but the sinking of the SS Mendi
:22:00. > :22:01.is a story that remains largely unknown in the UK.
:22:02. > :22:04.More than 600 people lost their lives when the troopship
:22:05. > :22:06.went down off the Isle of Wight exactly a hundred
:22:07. > :22:09.Most of those onboard were black South Africans,
:22:10. > :22:11.travelling to France to assist the allies.
:22:12. > :22:13.Today their loss was commemorated at a service attended
:22:14. > :22:16.by Her Royal Highness Princess Anne in Southampton.
:22:17. > :22:33.I'm driving to honour lost countrymen, members of the South
:22:34. > :22:35.African Navy have sailed 6000 miles to Southampton to commemorate a
:22:36. > :22:45.tragedy their nation has never forgotten. In February 1917, the
:22:46. > :22:50.trip ship the S S Mendi was on the last leg of her journey from Africa
:22:51. > :22:53.to France. She carried members of the South African native labour
:22:54. > :22:57.corps, forbidden to bear arms, they were recruited to build trenches,
:22:58. > :23:01.railways and roads for the Allied forces. In thick fog, south of the
:23:02. > :23:06.Isle of Wight, the Mendi collided with the much larger ship. There was
:23:07. > :23:10.effectively cut into by the impact, take relatively quickly in only a
:23:11. > :23:15.matter of minutes so many of those who lost their never even made it
:23:16. > :23:18.out into the water. Many of those who did drowned and many of these
:23:19. > :23:25.men had never even seen the sea, let alone been to see before. It must've
:23:26. > :23:29.an incredibly harrowing experience. More than 600 men died. A few bodies
:23:30. > :23:32.washed ashore and were buried but most were lost at sea, their names
:23:33. > :23:40.recorded here in Hollybrook Cemetery. Natalia is here on a
:23:41. > :23:44.pilgrimage to remember her relatives, the Reverend Isaac Job.
:23:45. > :23:49.Survivors said he calmed the men as the ship went down saying to them,
:23:50. > :23:54.we are the sons of Africa, let us die like brothers. It is very
:23:55. > :24:01.emotional to be here, but it is also pride in the sense that they did not
:24:02. > :24:05.die in vain. 100 years later, they are brought to life with this
:24:06. > :24:11.commemoration. Though long honoured in South Africa, in the UK, the
:24:12. > :24:14.recognition for trips lost on the Mendi have taken time, the story
:24:15. > :24:21.only becoming more known after the wreck was discovered by an Isle of
:24:22. > :24:24.Wight diver in 1974. It is just a horrendous story of loss of life.
:24:25. > :24:28.Almost half the loss of the number of the Titanic and here it is of the
:24:29. > :24:33.Isle of Wight. There are two ways of looking at it. Either it was covered
:24:34. > :24:37.up by the Admiralty for propaganda reasons and row or we have to look
:24:38. > :24:40.the other aspect of was it because they were black people and they were
:24:41. > :24:44.considered, you know, not as important as white people and
:24:45. > :24:52.unfortunately we had to consider that aspect. Now the story of the SS
:24:53. > :24:57.Mendi is being taught to a new generation and in the centenary
:24:58. > :25:00.year, two nations stand together to remember the contribution and
:25:01. > :25:04.sacrifice of men who died far from home in very different things. --
:25:05. > :25:13.very different times. Remembering the SS Mendi and those
:25:14. > :25:19.who lost their lives. Moving ahead to the weather now. Very mild today
:25:20. > :25:20.with a high of 17 Celsius. That is around 8 degrees above the seasonal
:25:21. > :25:35.average. So, we sat some sunshine today and
:25:36. > :25:39.through the course of this week, we will have some brighter spells here
:25:40. > :25:42.and there. But there will be a great deal of Plaid as well and the chance
:25:43. > :25:46.we could have some outbreaks of rain. Mild start to the week but
:25:47. > :25:50.turning cooler with a brisk, called Westerly winds from Thursday
:25:51. > :25:53.onwards. Through the course of two nights, there will be a good deal of
:25:54. > :25:57.cloud, outbreaks of rain here and there. Could be on the heavy side as
:25:58. > :26:01.well with one or two heavy bursts and president for a time before
:26:02. > :26:06.temperatures fall away by Don to around nine or 11 Celsius so a mild
:26:07. > :26:09.night. It cloudy start to the date tomorrow. Slow, improving picture
:26:10. > :26:12.has to ring for the morning, we will start to see one or two brighter
:26:13. > :26:18.spells more likely the further north and west you are. Generally, cloud
:26:19. > :26:22.tomorrow and another mild day but today's temperatures, culturally
:26:23. > :26:26.different from tomorrow. High today of 17, high tomorrow of 12. Through
:26:27. > :26:30.tomorrow night and the early hours of Wednesday morning, the winds will
:26:31. > :26:34.increase from the south-west. Quite a cloudy night tomorrow night with
:26:35. > :26:37.outbreaks of light and patchy rain. Drier interludes as well with
:26:38. > :26:42.temperatures falling away to around nine or 10 Celsius. A cloudy day on
:26:43. > :26:48.Wednesday. Outbreaks of rain at times and winds will strengthen to
:26:49. > :26:54.touch the force. Even stronger winds inland with one or two brighter
:26:55. > :26:59.spells. Highs of ten to 11 Celsius. On Thursday we start to drop in
:27:00. > :27:03.Calder, Westerly air. That will bring us an area of low pressures of
:27:04. > :27:07.the chance of deals and again. A real squeeze on the isobars. Very
:27:08. > :27:10.cold winds coming directly down from the north and there will be spells
:27:11. > :27:14.of rain during the course of Thursday daytime with a great deal
:27:15. > :27:18.of cloud so a fresh feeling take and it will also feel very cold on
:27:19. > :27:21.Friday with it the chance of the wintry showers. A bit of sweet and
:27:22. > :27:27.even the stall shower here and there with height of 8-7 Celsius. Frost on
:27:28. > :27:31.early Saturday, wet for a time and showers on Sunday.
:27:32. > :27:36.That's always got time for this evening. There is more at 10:30pm
:27:37. > :27:40.tonight and will be back tomorrow at 6:30pm tomorrow. Join us then if you
:27:41. > :28:11.can, but have a lovely evening. Good night.
:28:12. > :28:13.You're sponsored to swap clothes? I don't get that.
:28:14. > :28:16.Maybe you wear your mother's clothes? Cool. Yeah, finally. What?
:28:17. > :28:18.I don't get it, what does she wear? No, no...
:28:19. > :28:20.Like, she wears someone else's. Cool, yeah. No, she's...
:28:21. > :28:22.OK, that's too complicated. Do another one.
:28:23. > :28:26.So, like, you get sponsored to let people lick stuff off you for a day.
:28:27. > :28:28.Ugh. No, but, like, you get these flavoured... Not going to happen.
:28:29. > :28:37.You take a selfie and post it on social media or whatever,
:28:38. > :28:43.and then people have to pay to guess who it is?
:28:44. > :28:45.That's a no-brainer, we love the secret selfie.
:28:46. > :28:50.'For better ideas, get your free fundraising kit now.'
:28:51. > :28:53.Alex and Steph are on a mission to help people