:00:15. > :00:19.This is BBC World News Today. Riots and the aftermath. More
:00:19. > :00:22.confrontation and looting, as London's troubles spread. We left
:00:23. > :00:26.the flat as the rioters were coming up the road and the buildings were
:00:27. > :00:29.on fire. We didn't see one policeman. And the fire engines
:00:29. > :00:34.couldn't be there because the police weren't there to protect
:00:34. > :00:38.them. There was nobody there to protect us. Fears persist of
:00:38. > :00:44.America and Europe are failing to manage their economic woes. The
:00:44. > :00:47.torture camps near Zimbabwe's diamond fields, the BBC speaks to
:00:47. > :00:57.former prisoners. And we look at the life of the fearless spy, Nancy
:00:57. > :01:03.
:01:03. > :01:07.Wake, who became a hero of the David Gill of hopers getting under
:01:07. > :01:11.way in north London about now. -- a Rich Hall of hope. Aimed at
:01:11. > :01:15.restoring a sense of calm and proportion after two nights of
:01:15. > :01:19.violence, and yet already this evening trouble has surfaced in
:01:19. > :01:22.another northern borough just to the east in Hackney. Right police
:01:22. > :01:27.confront of local youths this afternoon as they threw missiles
:01:27. > :01:31.and attacked shops, buses and other vehicles. This was the London
:01:31. > :01:36.borough of Hackney this evening. Youths clashing with the police,
:01:36. > :01:41.attacking squad cars and shop fronts. This is the third night of
:01:41. > :01:46.such scenes in the capital. In Tottenham, a flash point on
:01:46. > :01:49.Saturday night, they have barely recovered. This building housed 26
:01:49. > :01:53.families until rioters set fire to a carpet store beneath it in the
:01:53. > :01:58.early hours of Sunday morning. was just to get away from the
:01:58. > :02:02.burning building. Rosie lived there. Now homeless with nothing but her
:02:02. > :02:05.handbag and a few clothes, she today described the moment the
:02:05. > :02:10.residents fled for their lives. There was another neighbour trying
:02:10. > :02:13.to get out of the building. She was in such a panic. Then we got
:02:13. > :02:17.outside and I saw the building, there were flames going up the
:02:17. > :02:23.building. It was just black smoke coming billowing down from the
:02:23. > :02:28.corner of the high road. Two minutes longer in that building and
:02:28. > :02:32.we would have been dead. Today the deputy Prime Minister, Nick Clegg,
:02:32. > :02:36.was in Tottenham to hear first hand from residents and shopkeepers.
:02:36. > :02:41.They were angry. They told him they'd felt abandoned on Saturday
:02:41. > :02:48.night. Can I ask you, is this what is going to happen in England now
:02:48. > :02:54.because of cuts could? People's buildings burned and people made
:02:54. > :02:58.homeless? I don't think so. weren't we protected? The left the
:02:58. > :03:02.flat as the rioters were coming up the road and the buildings were on
:03:02. > :03:07.fire. We didn't see one police person. A on the fire engines went
:03:07. > :03:09.there because the police went there to protect them. On Sunday, even as
:03:09. > :03:14.the residents of Tottenham were counting the costs of the previous
:03:14. > :03:18.night's rioting, the violence had spread to Enfield, four miles away.
:03:18. > :03:23.This time the police were decisive. The violence did not escalate.
:03:23. > :03:27.Other parts of London were affected, too. In Brixton, shops were broken
:03:27. > :03:31.into. Police arrested more than 100 people across the capital. The Home
:03:31. > :03:36.Secretary, Theresa May, cut short her holiday to return to the UK.
:03:36. > :03:41.Let's be absolutely clear that there is no excuse for violence, no
:03:41. > :03:44.excuse for looting, there is no excuse for thuggery. The police
:03:44. > :03:48.will deal with any emerging situations as they consider best
:03:48. > :03:54.appropriate for those situations. But I am absolutely clear there was
:03:54. > :03:57.no excuse for looters or thuggery or violence on the streets. It was
:03:57. > :04:01.a peaceful protest at the police shooting of a local man, Mark
:04:01. > :04:05.Duggan, which preceded the violence in Tottenham. Police admitted
:04:05. > :04:08.relations with Mr Duggan's family could have been better handled in
:04:08. > :04:12.the aftermath of his death. I've spoken to community representatives.
:04:12. > :04:17.We've had meetings at a London level and a local level. We should
:04:17. > :04:21.have helped the IPCC come closer to the family more quickly.
:04:21. > :04:25.tonight, amid fresh outbreaks of trouble, it seems that violence has
:04:25. > :04:33.developed a life of its own. Far removed from the original cause of
:04:33. > :04:37.the disturbance on Saturday. Those pictures are from Hackney, some
:04:37. > :04:41.trouble spreading further afield. I want to take you over to south-east
:04:41. > :04:45.London. This is the scene in Lewisham, where another vehicle has
:04:45. > :04:55.been set alight. The police have strung themselves right across the
:04:55. > :05:00.main road there to try to bring a sense of order to the area. There
:05:00. > :05:04.is the vehicle. That is the effect of what is happening in Lewisham.
:05:04. > :05:08.We've also had reports that a bit further down the road in Peckham a
:05:08. > :05:13.bus has been set alight. You can see down the road, these pictures
:05:13. > :05:17.from earlier in the evening. It gives you a sense of the problems
:05:17. > :05:22.there. It is not just about Tottenham, it is not just about
:05:22. > :05:28.Hackney. There are also several other sporadic events in and around
:05:28. > :05:30.various parts of London. To discuss all of this and more I am joined by
:05:30. > :05:36.the associate professor of education at the University of
:05:36. > :05:42.London. And also by David Atkins Tanya, who is a journalist and a
:05:43. > :05:48.writer on black issues. I know that you were in the area during the
:05:48. > :05:53.course of the Troubles over the weekend. For you, what is the cause
:05:53. > :05:57.of this? I think what happened on Saturday night was definitely
:05:57. > :06:01.caused by the fact that there was a peaceful demonstration, they had
:06:01. > :06:07.asked for answers from the local police. They haven't come out and
:06:07. > :06:11.spoken to them, and then a young woman was apparently pushed by one
:06:11. > :06:15.of the special policemen that were there. That is how that flared up.
:06:15. > :06:19.So that was an issue of perhaps the way police handled that issue. We
:06:19. > :06:24.then had a variety of incidents, some bigger, some smaller, what
:06:24. > :06:27.would you put that down to? starting to hear from a lot of
:06:27. > :06:31.people that these are disaffected young people and they are angry
:06:31. > :06:33.about social issues. Unfortunately, what it looks like to me on the
:06:33. > :06:37.television is a group of young people who have been going around
:06:37. > :06:40.polluting. I'm not sure about what the motivation is in Hackney and
:06:40. > :06:45.Pekan at the moment. I've just come from Tottenham and it's really
:06:45. > :06:47.difficult to get out there at the moment. There are social issues and
:06:47. > :06:51.we have lost educational maintenance allowance, which was
:06:51. > :06:55.helping young people to stay in Col will stop we have had the youth
:06:55. > :06:58.offending service cut in our area and the staff at the Citizens
:06:58. > :07:01.Advice Bureau. So cats are affecting people. We do need to
:07:01. > :07:05.look at how they are affecting young people in the community. But
:07:05. > :07:09.we cannot excuse the looting. We cannot pretend that is anything
:07:09. > :07:15.other than people going to get stuff that they want to steal.
:07:15. > :07:18.Theresa May also said there is no excuse for looting. A clear
:07:18. > :07:24.suggestion coming from there that a lot of this is just pure
:07:24. > :07:30.opportunism. It might be but one of the things that I find fascinating
:07:30. > :07:35.is that people are talking about, Bryan Abbott for example, about
:07:35. > :07:38.young people doing these things in broad daylight. -- Diane Abbott. I
:07:38. > :07:44.have been very perturbed over the last number of months about young
:07:44. > :07:50.people killing one another in broad daylight. Attacks at bus-stops, a
:07:50. > :07:54.group of 12 attacking a boy in the middle of Victoria station at 5pm.
:07:54. > :07:59.What we basically have here is a group of young people who have no
:07:59. > :08:04.fear or. There are no boundaries, they are not deterred by anything.
:08:04. > :08:08.They would simply go about to destroy. They are not just
:08:08. > :08:12.destroying others, they are being self destructive. There is an
:08:12. > :08:17.opportunity, something sparks of an opportunity for trouble. We've seen
:08:17. > :08:22.it over the last few days. Underlying that, what is the root
:08:22. > :08:26.cause? The question is - why is it that some of our young people would
:08:26. > :08:31.indulge in that kind of behaviour while others would run 100 miles
:08:31. > :08:37.from it? We need to find out why it is that there are so many of our
:08:37. > :08:41.young people, generation after generation, being totally
:08:41. > :08:46.marginalised by this society within the society, and feeling that they
:08:46. > :08:50.have no stake in the future. So you don't necessarily see this as a
:08:50. > :08:54.current economic situation? Absolutely not. That's an
:08:54. > :08:59.interesting perspective. I don't know if you share it. One thing we
:08:59. > :09:05.have seen is a sort of street wisdom among these young people in
:09:05. > :09:08.terms of the speed and ability to organise themselves. It's
:09:08. > :09:13.outflanking the police. Yes, and the communications. In my area,
:09:13. > :09:17.young people do use their mobile phones to assault people and get
:09:17. > :09:21.people in lowly positions. That is technology. But I want people to
:09:21. > :09:26.remember and understand why the Mods and rockers went to Southend
:09:26. > :09:30.on Bank Holiday. Why football fans to meet by phone boxes in my day,
:09:30. > :09:34.but now they've got technology to press a button and 500 people get a
:09:34. > :09:40.message to say, go to Anfield tonight at 4pm. That was happening
:09:40. > :09:45.yesterday afternoon at 1pm. It's a very powerful tool, isn't it? You
:09:45. > :09:49.are asking questions, what is it that is making young people the way
:09:49. > :09:55.they are? What do you think could be done to turn that round? I think
:09:55. > :09:59.the sadness is that young people are using that berry effect of mass
:09:59. > :10:05.communication tool for the stock of reasons. Just imagine if they were
:10:05. > :10:09.all politically literate and they were using the social networking to
:10:09. > :10:12.organise themselves, so that as a body of people who are generally
:10:12. > :10:15.rendered a voiceless within a society, they could give themselves
:10:15. > :10:21.a boys and be much more politically active within the Democratic sphere
:10:21. > :10:24.than they are. Just imagine what that would be like. I'm sorry to
:10:24. > :10:29.interrupt but we are going to have to stop there. Thank you for
:10:29. > :10:34.joining us. I do want to get back to the live pictures we have it for
:10:34. > :10:38.you. This is Lewisham in south east London. We've seen the pictures in
:10:38. > :10:44.Hackney, but this is the situation live now. A large police presence.
:10:44. > :10:50.We may see a string of police across the roadway, trying to keep
:10:50. > :10:54.some semblance of order bear. It also seen earlier, some pictures
:10:54. > :11:00.which I think we can bring you as well. This is the scale of the
:11:00. > :11:07.trouble that was brought into Lewisham Borough. That is one
:11:07. > :11:11.vehicle on fire. You see that trail of fire running down the street.
:11:11. > :11:15.Just an impression there. I'm not saying it runs all the way to
:11:15. > :11:21.Peckham, but we have also heard of trouble in Peckham, a bus being set
:11:21. > :11:24.alight there. This is the scene like this evening. Another nerve-
:11:24. > :11:29.shredding day on the stock markets worldwide today. Europe's Exchange
:11:29. > :11:34.has suffered without exception. London's FTSE 100 closed down more
:11:34. > :11:38.than 3%. Madrid and Milan, they were down more than 2%. And that
:11:38. > :11:41.despite the European Central Bank's belated decision to buy Spanish and
:11:41. > :11:46.Italian bonds, a move which did ease the pressure on those
:11:46. > :11:51.economies as they saw their borrowing rates fall. Ringing the
:11:51. > :11:55.bell for more investor misery. Shares on Wall Street today opened
:11:55. > :11:59.2% lower and then fell, hard on the heels of a sharp stock price drops
:11:59. > :12:03.in Asia and Europe. But the declines on stock markets are the
:12:03. > :12:06.symptom and not the cause. This is where the Royal Bank of Scotland
:12:06. > :12:10.traits not shares but debt. And it's on trading floors like this
:12:10. > :12:15.one that this great drama is being played out, because the financial
:12:15. > :12:19.crisis is all about the growing doubts over whether the
:12:19. > :12:23.government's of giant economies like Italy, Spain and even the US,
:12:23. > :12:27.can repay all their debts. What you can see here, the rising cost of
:12:27. > :12:30.borrowing for the Spanish and Italian governments, is investors
:12:30. > :12:34.saying they are increasingly worried about lending to those
:12:34. > :12:38.countries. Today, there's been a sharp fall in the interest rate
:12:38. > :12:42.paid by those governments. Because this body, the European Central
:12:42. > :12:47.Bank, has taken the historic decision to buy Italian and Spanish
:12:47. > :12:50.bonds, which is an indirect way of lending to those countries. This is
:12:50. > :12:54.what markets were looking for, this kind of short-term relief that
:12:54. > :12:59.someone would stabilise the bond deals offered Spain and Italy.
:12:59. > :13:02.These countries are too big to bail-out. The European central bank
:13:02. > :13:06.is owned by the passengers on the tram outside its office and the
:13:06. > :13:11.other taxpayers of the eurozone. So how much financial risk of the
:13:11. > :13:17.German and French population taking? It's about 2.5 billion
:13:17. > :13:20.euros per day. It will potentially added to a big number, around 800
:13:20. > :13:25.billion euros of sovereign debt from Spain and Italy. American
:13:25. > :13:28.investors have been blue, too. Since the ratings agency Standard
:13:28. > :13:35.and Poor's took what many saw as a shocking decision to strip the US
:13:35. > :13:39.government of the top triple A rating for what it borrows. It has
:13:39. > :13:43.shown really terrible judgment. They've handled themselves very
:13:43. > :13:47.poorly and shown a stunning lack of knowledge about basic US fiscal
:13:47. > :13:50.budget Mathew. They do exactly the wrong conclusion. The big story for
:13:50. > :13:54.many is that governments, households, banks and businesses of
:13:54. > :13:59.the developed Western economies, including the UK's, have borrowed
:13:59. > :14:02.far more than is prudent, and in pain down the debt there is less
:14:02. > :14:06.spending and investment so economic growth slows to a trickle. The
:14:06. > :14:12.realisation that economic recovery may be stalling is the new lead
:14:12. > :14:15.weight on share prices. Commodities such as oil have been falling, too.
:14:15. > :14:21.So here is a silver lining if you are a driver. The price of petrol
:14:21. > :14:25.and perhaps other essentials is coming down. That whole issue of
:14:25. > :14:29.the triple A rating that the US was deprived of by Standard and Poor's,
:14:29. > :14:33.it's very much in the mind of President Obama. He came out to
:14:33. > :14:36.speak at the White House a few moments ago. The rating agency to
:14:36. > :14:41.tell us that the gridlock in Washington over the last several
:14:41. > :14:46.months has not been constructive, to say the least. We knew from the
:14:46. > :14:51.outset that a prolonged debate over the debt ceiling, a debate where
:14:51. > :14:57.the threat of default was used as a bargaining chip, could do enormous
:14:57. > :15:03.damage to our economy and the world. That threat, coming after a string
:15:03. > :15:06.of economic disruptions in Europe, Japan and the Middle East, as now
:15:06. > :15:16.rolled the markets and dampened consumer confidence and slowed the
:15:16. > :15:21.
:15:21. > :15:27.Joining me his or specialist from the consulting firm it Eurasia.
:15:27. > :15:37.Let's remember how much the Chinese have as well, I'll be near the
:15:37. > :15:37.
:15:37. > :15:47.cliff edge. How much does China have to lose in the situation in
:15:47. > :15:51.
:15:51. > :16:00.the US? China is very Bunnell ball. They have a reserve of the free 0.2
:16:00. > :16:09.trillion dollars -- 3.2 trillion dollars. Ultimately I do not think
:16:09. > :16:16.they are too concerned. There is no question mind it -- no question in
:16:16. > :16:25.Beijing that that money will be repaid. There are long-term issues,
:16:25. > :16:34.they at an end least solvable, what is it that Beijing will want Obama
:16:34. > :16:39.to do to make amends? What is it they will not want to see him to?
:16:39. > :16:46.They would not want to see him default obviously. There are not
:16:46. > :16:51.too many demands that China can make. That is the big structural
:16:51. > :16:56.story. China is stuck with their holdings, it is the only market
:16:56. > :17:02.that is capable of whole -- absorbing the investments that
:17:02. > :17:10.China it generates. I do not think their capacity for making demands
:17:10. > :17:20.on Washington is very strong. the inclination is heading back
:17:20. > :17:22.
:17:22. > :17:28.towards further quantitative the easing, will they once that? It is
:17:28. > :17:33.a structural driver, China for the past a two years, baby back
:17:33. > :17:40.currency to appreciate. I think that'll be a long-standing problem.
:17:40. > :17:49.Thank you very much. I want to get back to the main
:17:49. > :17:59.story of the evening. Let us return to Hackney. Our reporter is there
:17:59. > :18:03.
:18:03. > :18:07.for us. What is the situation? can see her lines of riot police.
:18:08. > :18:12.What they are trying to do this section off parts of Hackney where
:18:12. > :18:16.there has already been trouble. They have been fires a satellite,
:18:16. > :18:23.bricks and bottles are thrown at the right police. They are trying
:18:23. > :18:30.to calm the situation, and section it off. It is not clear how many
:18:30. > :18:36.protesters are out on the streets. What I can tell you that this
:18:36. > :18:40.situation, you can see the police, they have ambulances lined up. I
:18:40. > :18:50.have been behind these lines, there is a road where a car has been set
:18:50. > :18:50.
:18:50. > :18:55.of plier -- set on fire, there are some men with Hank achieve --
:18:56. > :19:01.hanged achieves over their faces. They have been testing the lines.
:19:01. > :19:11.So far, they are minor skirmishes. What the police is trying to do is
:19:11. > :19:18.come out in such numbers that they can quash the situation. It is very
:19:18. > :19:27.difficult for them to do anything other than container. -- than are
:19:27. > :19:32.contained. If you think about their tactics, they want to control lead,
:19:32. > :19:39.they want to be in control, they do not want to be seen to be provoking
:19:39. > :19:48.the situation. They are saying that these disturbances are
:19:48. > :19:55.opportunistic. There has been a lot of smashing windows, they do not
:19:55. > :20:01.want to give people an excuse to ratchet this up. They want to keep
:20:01. > :20:08.things calm, or at least as calm as possible. It is a stand-off, we do
:20:08. > :20:14.not know what it will be like when it gets dark. Thank you very much.
:20:14. > :20:21.This is a rooftop in Lewisham. You can see smoke because one house is
:20:21. > :20:28.a blaze. If we pullback back picture, we can get a sense of what
:20:28. > :20:33.has been happening. It is not just vehicles, it is a building on fire.
:20:33. > :20:38.We have seen people coming out on the attic. They are going across at
:20:38. > :20:43.the roof to safety. It is an extremely dangerous situation when
:20:43. > :20:48.this sort of thing happens. Those buildings are so close together.
:20:48. > :20:57.That is the situation from Lewisham. We have seen Hackney, we have heard
:20:57. > :21:03.of trouble in Peckham as well. A BBC investigation has shown that
:21:03. > :21:10.torture camps are being operated in Zimbabwe near the Marange diamond
:21:10. > :21:17.fields. They had said that prisoners are subjected to rape and
:21:17. > :21:23.beatings, some have been a mauled by dogs. The names of people in
:21:23. > :21:27.this report had been changed to protect their identities.
:21:27. > :21:32.Zimbabwe's Marange Diamond Fields. They are shrouded by allegations of
:21:32. > :21:41.killings and abuse. We went into the mountains of Mozambique to meet
:21:41. > :21:45.my witnesses -- to me to witnesses. They would tie you to a tree and
:21:45. > :21:51.are sold too severely. That went on for a long time, people died as a
:21:52. > :21:56.result of the injuries. Soldiers would throw the bodies away.
:21:56. > :22:00.deployed our undercover camera team to the location the witnesses
:22:00. > :22:06.describe. They found this camp, active and guarded. They could not
:22:06. > :22:12.stay very long. Witnesses said it people are held in a razor wire
:22:12. > :22:20.enclosures, mauled by dogs, raped and beaten. They are held against
:22:20. > :22:26.their wills. Zimbabwe's government has not responded to our findings.
:22:26. > :22:32.Down the road is this mine, Mbada, President Mugabe, his friend runs
:22:32. > :22:38.that mind. They want to lift the international sales ban so that
:22:38. > :22:48.mine could export its findings. Some of these diamonds are already
:22:48. > :22:52.hitting the raw markets. We met the Kimberley Process, the world's
:22:52. > :22:58.policemen on diamonds. We went to Hatton Garden, for a premier retail
:22:58. > :23:04.street to find out if we could buy any. I am going to go into this
:23:04. > :23:07.shop or -- this shop, they have been selling diamonds since 1975.
:23:07. > :23:16.I'm going to ask them whether they know whether these diamonds come
:23:16. > :23:20.from? There are regulations that mean they have to know where the
:23:20. > :23:25.diamond comes from. I have no idea where that Diamond has come from.
:23:25. > :23:28.He even the supplier would not know where it has come from. We have had
:23:28. > :23:34.1000 customers coming through, not one person has asked whether the
:23:34. > :23:44.diamond -- where the diamond comes from. They do not care, they want a
:23:44. > :23:47.big rock on their finger. If East - - if this EU deal goes through,
:23:47. > :23:53.many Marange diamonds could did end up on the streets. The average
:23:53. > :23:59.person would not know what they are buying.
:23:59. > :24:03.To be number one on the wanted list for the Gestapo is some feat. Even
:24:03. > :24:08.more so if you were a woman. That was the case for Nancy Wake, she
:24:08. > :24:14.has died in London at the age of 98. She was a leading figure in the
:24:14. > :24:17.French Resistance Movement. We look back at a remarkable life.
:24:17. > :24:21.Feisty and fearless, she was a glamourous fighter with the French
:24:21. > :24:26.Resistance. She was christened at the White Mouse by the Nazis
:24:26. > :24:30.because every time they thought they had cornered her she escaped.
:24:30. > :24:36.Nancy Wake was born in New Zealand, she came to Europe to be a
:24:36. > :24:44.journalist. What she found in the 1930s set her life on a different
:24:44. > :24:52.path. In 1933 Q c but anger at the violence committed by the Nazis.
:24:52. > :24:57.The Jews were tied to a while, they whipped them. I stood there and I
:24:57. > :25:01.thought that is dreadful, I could not believe it. By the end of the
:25:01. > :25:05.decade she had married a French businessmen, for six months later
:25:05. > :25:09.Germany invaded and her life to a dramatic turn. She began working
:25:09. > :25:15.for the French Resistance, smuggling messages back and forth,
:25:15. > :25:20.as well as people back to safety. Hundreds of allied personnel are
:25:20. > :25:29.lie because of her efforts. Because of the work she did in occupied
:25:29. > :25:32.France. She was trained in Britain as a spy by the Specials -- the
:25:32. > :25:36.Special Operations Executive. She was rain in hand-to-hand combat.
:25:36. > :25:44.She was dropped back in France and Leader of raids on the Gestapo
:25:44. > :25:50.headquarters, becoming their most wanted. She relished the war years,
:25:50. > :25:55.outspoken. In my opinion the only good German is a dead one, the more
:25:55. > :26:03.dead be better! I rejoiced in the fact that I killed so many of them.
:26:03. > :26:07.I'm sorry I could not cut -- kill so many more. In 1944 as the allied
:26:07. > :26:13.forces fought their way through France, she learnt that the Gestapo
:26:13. > :26:18.had tortured her husband to death in 1943. He refused to disclose her
:26:18. > :26:26.whereabouts. Her story would eventually inspire the book and
:26:26. > :26:34.film Charlotte Gray. She was decorated by France, you Britain
:26:34. > :26:39.and America. She died in London on Sunday, she requested that her
:26:39. > :26:42.ashes were scattered in central France.
:26:42. > :26:52.I want to take you back to some disturbing pictures from south
:26:52. > :27:02.London. This is the scene in Peckham. Police are pushing some
:27:02. > :27:10.locals down this road. There is a burning edifice. There are some
:27:10. > :27:18.shops, and a whole flighted apartments are in fire. Another
:27:18. > :27:25.very disturbing sight. We have seen vehicles on fire. There is a bus in
:27:25. > :27:35.Peckham which is also one buyer. This is coming -- this is coming up
:27:35. > :27:37.
:27:37. > :27:47.the pictures in Hackney as well. We have some respite from the rain.
:27:47. > :27:48.
:27:48. > :27:57.have some respite from the rain. It is not going to feel any warmer.
:27:57. > :28:07.High pressure is moving in. This is the weather on Tuesday. Cloud is
:28:07. > :28:09.
:28:09. > :28:16.building. Most of the weather will be dry. 17 degrees in a Hull. Not
:28:16. > :28:25.quite as brisk as it is today. The vast majority temperatures will be
:28:25. > :28:30.in the upper teens. Some breaks in the cloud in Wales. It is not going
:28:30. > :28:36.to be wall-to-wall cloud. Along coastal areas we will see the best
:28:36. > :28:44.available sunshine. Northern Ireland will see a lot of cloud. It