24/04/2012

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:00:09. > :00:13.This is BBC World News Today with me, Kirsty Lang. Tonight - Murdoch

:00:13. > :00:21.Junior takes the stand. Calls for government resignations, as the

:00:21. > :00:26.scale of his family's ties to the Sudan - is it a war in all but

:00:26. > :00:36.name? As border skirmishes continue between North and South, a call for

:00:36. > :00:37.

:00:37. > :00:47.restraint from China is met by more angry rhetoric. He hares declared

:00:47. > :00:50.

:00:50. > :00:52.war against Bcell for of it is Sudan One. -- he has.

:00:53. > :00:56.The death-toll mounts in Syria raising more doubts about the

:00:56. > :00:59.viability of the UN peace plan. Also coming up in the programme: A

:00:59. > :01:02.holiday with a twist or just a twisted holiday? Why are tourists

:01:02. > :01:05.attracted to sites of death and destruction? We look at the growth

:01:06. > :01:08.of so called dark tourism. And now you see her, now you don't - the

:01:08. > :01:18.extraordinary moment a teenage girl fell through the pavement into an

:01:18. > :01:20.

:01:20. > :01:24.Well come. Britain's minister for culture is facing calls for his

:01:24. > :01:29.resignation after links between the Murdoch empire and the British

:01:29. > :01:35.Government came under intense scrutiny today at the inquiry into

:01:35. > :01:39.press standards. James Murdoch has been repeatedly asked about his

:01:39. > :01:43.dealings with Jeremy Hunt. He was responsible for the final decision

:01:44. > :01:48.on the controversial BSkyB takeover that News Corporation were so keen

:01:48. > :01:52.to win. This has flash photography.

:01:52. > :01:57.The company which he once led has been accused are having to close a

:01:57. > :02:03.relationship with various public officials. Tonight, after a day of

:02:03. > :02:07.evidence from James Murdoch, the suggestion is there was too close a

:02:07. > :02:10.relationship with office of a Cabinet minister.

:02:10. > :02:15.At the Royal Courts of Justice, Mr Murdoch stepped forward to give

:02:15. > :02:20.evidence under oath. I swear that the evidence a chubby the truth,

:02:20. > :02:24.the whole truth and nothing but the truth. He was taken to phone

:02:24. > :02:29.hacking and time and again, he claimed ignorance of the scale of

:02:29. > :02:33.wrong doing at the company he had headers. That is not what I recall.

:02:33. > :02:39.That was not what I it was told. That is not what they communicated

:02:39. > :02:43.to me for stopped that was it on phone hacking. He either couldn't

:02:43. > :02:48.remember all claimed ignorance. Then to the question of News

:02:48. > :02:53.International's political links and to the company's bid in 2010 to

:02:53. > :02:58.take control of BSkyB television. It should have been the crowning

:02:58. > :03:01.moment of James Murdoch's career and it seemed to be going so well.

:03:01. > :03:06.Vince Cable had been relieved of responsibility for the decision

:03:06. > :03:11.after making unguarded remarks. Two days after that, Mr Murdoch found

:03:11. > :03:18.herself at a pre-Christmas dinner at the home of Rebekah Brooks. One

:03:18. > :03:22.of the guests was David Cameron. Had he discussed the BSkyB bid with

:03:22. > :03:29.the Prime Minister? I expressed the hope that things would be dealt

:03:29. > :03:33.with in a way that was appropriate and judicial. The crucial figure

:03:33. > :03:37.for News International was Jeremy Hunt, the Culture Secretary. He had

:03:38. > :03:42.a legal obligation to act impartially. The picture at the

:03:42. > :03:51.inquiry was of a ministerial office that was in contact with News

:03:51. > :03:59.International. Council quoted from Consort -- private e-mails. We are

:03:59. > :04:04.in a good place tonight. Q are being given private information

:04:04. > :04:12.about the Secretary of State's current view. -- You are being

:04:12. > :04:18.given. It is a private view. Councils pointed out that Jeremy

:04:18. > :04:28.Hunt was acting in a Kuala sigh a judicial capacity. He was in effect

:04:28. > :04:31.

:04:31. > :04:36.a judge. This judge was in contact through his special adviser with

:04:36. > :04:41.another. You having covert interactions, weren't you? I never

:04:41. > :04:45.saw them as covert and I would have expected that his advisers were

:04:45. > :04:50.communicating with other parties around this transaction as well.

:04:50. > :04:54.another, Frederic Michel said he had obtained a copy of what Mr Hunt

:04:54. > :05:01.would be telling the House of Commons the following day. Managed

:05:01. > :05:08.to get some info on the plans for tomorrow. Although, absolutely

:05:08. > :05:14.illegal. What do you make of that? I thought it was a joke. The

:05:14. > :05:18.exclamation mark there, it is a joke. Tonight, as James Murdoch

:05:18. > :05:24.departed, Downing Street said the Prime Minister had full confidence

:05:24. > :05:34.in Jeremy Hunt. For his part, Mr Hunt declined to comment. I will

:05:34. > :05:35.

:05:35. > :05:39.His father will be giving evidence tomorrow. Saddam and South Sudan

:05:39. > :05:44.seemed to be moving closer and closer to all out war. Perhaps they

:05:44. > :05:49.may already be there. South Sudan's president on a visit to China

:05:49. > :05:54.thinks so. China has called for Sudan and his neighbour, South

:05:54. > :05:58.Sudan, to show restraint in the conflict of their disputed border

:05:58. > :06:08.and the United Nations has condemned an aerial bombardment in

:06:08. > :06:09.

:06:10. > :06:15.The army is preparing for the possibility of an all out war with

:06:16. > :06:22.Sudan. It has reinforced along the border and the south Sudanese

:06:22. > :06:27.military say they know it Sudan is doing the same thing. Tuber macro

:06:27. > :06:31.is no longer in control. A trigger for this latest crisis that the

:06:31. > :06:40.fighting has not stopped. The country's president, on a visit to

:06:40. > :06:45.China, said this was a decisive moment. Our neighbour has declared

:06:46. > :06:53.war on South Sudan. A Monday, Bentiu was hit. The main target may

:06:53. > :06:58.have been a bridge a one civilian was killed in a market. It has been

:06:58. > :07:01.condemned by the United Nations. The south Sudanese say they have

:07:01. > :07:06.been more aerial bombardments but there has been no ground fighting

:07:06. > :07:12.since Sunday. The battle for the oil fields was extremely popular

:07:12. > :07:14.here, as it was on the other side of the body in Sudan. Bentiu is a

:07:14. > :07:21.frontline town and no one thinks they have seen the last of the

:07:21. > :07:24.fighting. The cost of the fighting is high. South Sudan's archbishop

:07:24. > :07:31.has warned political leaders could create a war that both countries

:07:31. > :07:36.don't want. World leaders are calling on both sides to court --

:07:36. > :07:42.to pull back from the brink but it does seem to be working.

:07:42. > :07:48.Just before we came on air, James said us there is a date.

:07:48. > :07:56.South Sudan's president says Saddam has declared war on his country. --

:07:56. > :08:02.Sudan. South Sudanese troops are no longer in a Heglig oil field bet

:08:02. > :08:09.there has been Ariel and apartments and some ground clashes. I am

:08:09. > :08:16.joined by her Hilde F Johnson. What is the situation? It is a big

:08:16. > :08:22.concern because the chances are -- tensions have escalated. We

:08:22. > :08:26.reported new bombardments today in to new locations. The ones today,

:08:26. > :08:36.we are on the way to verify. This is a major concern and we condemn

:08:36. > :08:38.

:08:38. > :08:46.these attacks the stock -- these attacks. As far as the reports go,

:08:46. > :08:51.we have yet to verify that. We are seeing a calming in some ways with

:08:51. > :08:57.aerial bombardment and that has to seize. You have been in this region

:08:57. > :09:03.for a considerable period of time. How damaging would a new conflict

:09:03. > :09:07.be and how can that be avoided? Clearly, very damaging. On the

:09:07. > :09:13.ground, people would like to see a complete end to any escalation of

:09:13. > :09:18.the war. There is a strong desire for peace and there is a strong

:09:18. > :09:24.desire for peace among the leadership. So if we would like to

:09:24. > :09:28.see -- we would like to see independence that was declared on

:09:28. > :09:33.9th July last year and hope it can lead to a new chapter for these

:09:33. > :09:37.people and see peace come. What that implies is both sides need to

:09:38. > :09:41.restrain from any further attacks and we need to see both sides

:09:41. > :09:48.willing to come to be a negotiating table and sort out their

:09:48. > :09:54.differences. So far, the president of Sudan has said the glaciation is

:09:54. > :09:59.not possible. Attention is clearly high and lots of international

:10:00. > :10:05.efforts to get both sides to restrain, so far don't seem to be

:10:05. > :10:14.working. The African unions have been

:10:14. > :10:24.meeting to discuss this and joining me is Erastus Mwencha. Thank you

:10:24. > :10:28.

:10:28. > :10:35.for joining us. What did the AU decide today? First of all, the

:10:35. > :10:43.consul of the African Union, has expressed grave concern on the

:10:43. > :10:51.situation along the border between South and North sedan. Also this

:10:51. > :10:58.situation on the human terrain aspect. Also, the Council condemns

:10:58. > :11:05.the occupation and the variable -- aerial bombardment that is going on

:11:05. > :11:13.in a South Sudan. In the view of the you, who is the aggressor in

:11:13. > :11:22.this case? The North or the south. Who is in the wrong? There is a

:11:22. > :11:25.history that has been built on. First of all, the two countries,

:11:25. > :11:35.the council noted that concern that they have not been going along with

:11:35. > :11:37.

:11:37. > :11:42.the agreements that they completed. They have continued to engage in

:11:42. > :11:50.talks. There was a very good at this fear at the beginning of March

:11:50. > :11:52.when there was a new atmosphere to engage in talks that would lead to

:11:52. > :12:01.implementation and result in some of the outstanding issues.

:12:01. > :12:07.Outstanding issues. This is key, isn't it? The African Union left a

:12:07. > :12:14.lot of outstanding issues when you oversaw this agreement. Don't you

:12:14. > :12:21.think more should have been done to resolve the issues of the border of

:12:21. > :12:27.access to oil, before the South got its independence? If that would

:12:27. > :12:30.have been possible, yes. Obviously, there are priority is to ensure

:12:30. > :12:35.that the two countries can co-exist side by side and the political

:12:35. > :12:39.aspect of it, first of all allow and the people of South Sudan to

:12:39. > :12:44.take legitimate decisions as to whether they want it to be one

:12:45. > :12:48.nation or separate nations. This was equally important but now that

:12:48. > :12:55.is behind us. What is important is the road map that the councillors

:12:55. > :13:00.have agreed to, to address the crisis. We have asked the two

:13:00. > :13:07.states to seize the hostilities within 48 hours. Ask them to go

:13:07. > :13:12.back to the negotiating table and Rooker the road map there should be

:13:12. > :13:15.completed in three months. More importantly, to implement the

:13:15. > :13:22.agreements that they have agreed and also an implementation

:13:22. > :13:26.mechanism would have to be agreed. Thank you very much.

:13:26. > :13:31.The other news now and a bomb has exploded at the main robbery

:13:31. > :13:35.station in Lahore in Pakistan. Two people have been killed and more

:13:35. > :13:42.than 25 injured. The attack happened minutes after a busy trade

:13:42. > :13:47.has pulled into the station. Israel has legalised the status of

:13:47. > :13:51.three settler outposts in the West Bank. The settlements, Sansana,

:13:51. > :13:57.Bruchin and writer Lem are home to 800 people. They have condemned the

:13:57. > :14:03.decision. -- Rechelim. Robert Mueller has visited lemon -- Yemen

:14:03. > :14:08.and promised the US would do more to put down a Islamist insurgency.

:14:08. > :14:18.He told the Yemeni President that the Americans would use for force

:14:18. > :14:18.

:14:18. > :14:24.A pro-government TV station in serious says a car bomb has

:14:25. > :14:30.exploded, blamed on armed terrorists. There are clashes

:14:30. > :14:37.reported in several parts of the capital, these are the latest UN

:14:37. > :14:44.verified images from the suburb of Douma. The Koffi -- the UN envoy

:14:44. > :14:50.could fire a man is going to update the situation soon. -- Kofi Annan.

:14:50. > :14:52.This is Douma, a suburb just north- east of Damascus. It has defied the

:14:52. > :14:58.government for months. Heavy weapons that should have been

:14:58. > :15:00.withdrawn two weeks ago under the UN plan are still being used. And

:15:00. > :15:07.the troops and armoured vehicles which should also have gone are

:15:07. > :15:11.still there as well. Just a day earlier, a handful of UN observers

:15:11. > :15:16.was in Douma, completely swamped by a huge crowd of anti- regime

:15:17. > :15:21.protesters. Furthermore, they were burying their dead in mass graves.

:15:21. > :15:26.Local activist groups named 40 people they said were killed in a

:15:26. > :15:31.government attack on Monday, mostly by shelling, some, they said,

:15:31. > :15:36.summarily executed. The attack also came a day after a brief visit from

:15:36. > :15:43.the UN observers. State media said security forces pursued what they

:15:43. > :15:46.called armed terrorist groups, who had been attacking systems. --

:15:46. > :15:49.citizens. Clearly, the tiny advance party of UN observers cannot be

:15:49. > :15:54.everywhere all the time. They are not just trying to monitor as much

:15:54. > :15:57.as they can but also setting up contact and procedures for the full

:15:57. > :16:04.deployment of 300 who should be overriding bit by bit in the coming

:16:04. > :16:08.weeks. It is this still kind of act -- same kind of activities, meeting

:16:08. > :16:11.with parties, looking at the logistics that will be necessities

:16:11. > :16:16.for the larger nations coming in. All the groundwork activities are

:16:16. > :16:20.being done, and in the process, observing the situation.

:16:20. > :16:24.evidence so far suggests that when the monitors are there on the

:16:24. > :16:29.ground, the violence dies down. But sending unarmed observers into an

:16:29. > :16:32.unstable situation is clearly a gamble. The hope is that by being

:16:32. > :16:39.there, they will tilt the balance away from conflict and towards

:16:39. > :16:46.dialogue. In around an hour, Kofi Annan is

:16:46. > :16:53.due to deliver his latest update to the UN Security Council. Do we know

:16:53. > :16:58.what he is going to say? We do, because unusually, his spokesman

:16:58. > :17:03.has given a preview from Geneva on UN TV on what his boss is going to

:17:03. > :17:06.be telling the council in 45 minutes. It is pretty robust. The

:17:06. > :17:12.spokesman says the sector -- the ceasefire is extremely fragile,

:17:12. > :17:16.when UN monitors enter conflict areas, the guns are silent but when

:17:16. > :17:20.they leave, the exchanges start again. He also said that there are

:17:20. > :17:23.credible reports of Syrian forces approaching people that the UN

:17:23. > :17:29.monitors have met and then sometimes, those people may perhaps

:17:29. > :17:35.be killed. Strong language, and of course what Kofi Annan is going to

:17:35. > :17:38.do, I understand, his call for the deployment of the additional 270

:17:38. > :17:41.monitors to be speeded up and have done as quickly as possible.

:17:41. > :17:46.Presumably now there will be some doubt over that, because some

:17:46. > :17:50.member states will be saying, should we really be putting these

:17:50. > :17:54.UN monitors at risk in this sort of situation? My understanding is that

:17:54. > :17:57.the UN as it is at the moment is going to be proceeding with the

:17:57. > :18:01.deployment. The problem is something that Kofi Annan himself

:18:01. > :18:05.separately identified in a speech to the University in Sweden. He

:18:05. > :18:09.said that the use of UN staff to monitor a conflict, as in the case

:18:10. > :18:13.of Syria, can offer no guarantee of protection without strong

:18:13. > :18:16.international backing. What you have here is the UN Security

:18:16. > :18:22.Council divided between the US and European powers, who would like to

:18:22. > :18:27.take more robust action against the European -- the Syrian government,

:18:27. > :18:32.and then Russia and China, who do not want to interfere any further

:18:32. > :18:36.in what they see is an internal affair.

:18:36. > :18:40.Anders Breivik has been confronted him caught by some of the people

:18:40. > :18:44.who witnessed and survived the attacks in Norway in which he

:18:44. > :18:49.killed 77 people. He had to listen as a security guard explained how

:18:49. > :18:56.he saw a car bomb exploded in the centre of Oslo, the blast killed

:18:56. > :19:01.the 38 of Breivik's victims. -- the first eight. For the past

:19:01. > :19:05.five days, the court has heard nothing but the testimony of Anders

:19:05. > :19:12.Behring Breivik himself. But today, it wants to start hearing the other

:19:12. > :19:17.side. An explosives expert taking the witness stand to give details

:19:17. > :19:22.of the car bomb Breivik built to attack the main government offices

:19:22. > :19:27.in Oslo. He showed this video of a test explosion by the military,

:19:27. > :19:31.demonstrating just how powerful Breivik's bomb was. It had the

:19:31. > :19:37.potential to kill hundreds. The actual car bomb last July killed

:19:37. > :19:40.eight people, and left nine others seriously injured. When Breivik

:19:40. > :19:44.drove the van containing the bomb up to the government buildings here,

:19:44. > :19:49.he was not able to park in the exact location where he knew he

:19:49. > :19:54.would cause the maximum damage. And it was mid- afternoon on a Friday,

:19:54. > :19:57.during the summer holiday. So the offices were pretty empty. Some of

:19:57. > :20:05.those who were inside the government offices and survived

:20:05. > :20:09.have also been giving evidence in court today. TRANSLATION: We had to

:20:09. > :20:14.read by the police and stickier video footage. -- notified the

:20:14. > :20:17.police. We had to make sure it did not get damaged so we secured the

:20:17. > :20:21.servers with plastic. That was crucial as it showed Breivik

:20:22. > :20:25.walking away from the van before it blew up. The Police able to trace

:20:25. > :20:35.him through the registration number, but they could not stop him before

:20:35. > :20:39.he carried out his second attack on Utoeya Island.

:20:39. > :20:42.Spending your summer break is surrounded by death and brutality

:20:42. > :20:46.and terror may not sound like everyone's idea of a holiday, but

:20:46. > :20:52.the number of travellers who talk site of Dravid cheap -- tragedy is

:20:52. > :20:57.growing. There is even a term for it, and dark tourism, and each year

:20:57. > :21:00.more than 1.5 million people walk through the gates at Poland's

:21:00. > :21:06.Auschwitz memorial to learn about the Holocaust. In New York,

:21:06. > :21:12.tourists flocked to the World Trade Center site. And 100 years since

:21:12. > :21:15.Titanic sank, cruises retrace the original route. Tourists dressed in

:21:15. > :21:20.period costume get the chance to wine and dine just like all those

:21:20. > :21:24.people who lost their lives at sea. To discuss that I am joined by

:21:24. > :21:32.Professor John Lennon at the Glasgow Caledonian University who

:21:32. > :21:37.coined the term dark tourism in 1996. Why did you coin the term? Is

:21:37. > :21:43.it because it was something you? was a good umbrella catch-all term

:21:43. > :21:46.for something that I realised was a significant phenomenon. Visitation

:21:46. > :21:52.and fascination with site associated with death, with mass

:21:52. > :21:57.killing, with incarceration, assassination, seemed to exert a

:21:57. > :22:01.curious fascination over visitors. And the more deeply you burrow into

:22:01. > :22:05.that, the more you see the Connectivity visitors have with

:22:06. > :22:10.such sites is not purely because I loved one has passed away their or

:22:10. > :22:15.because there is a family connection, rather, such sites have

:22:15. > :22:19.become part of the tourist's eye to a very. Something they will do, if

:22:19. > :22:25.they are visiting Poland, they will go to Auschwitz -- tourist's

:22:25. > :22:30.itinerary. Is it aspirational? So people want to learn about history?

:22:30. > :22:35.Or is it rather more morbid than that? I did the motivations are

:22:35. > :22:39.mixed. There is genuine historical interest -- I think the motivations

:22:39. > :22:43.are mixed. In many times, such site become the repository of the

:22:43. > :22:49.history. If he wants to understand about the Khmer Rouge, he will not

:22:49. > :22:53.find out on the history syllabus, but you would expect to find some

:22:53. > :22:57.details in the area where the massacres happened. Getting the

:22:57. > :23:02.history right wed the history is not ideological and based on

:23:03. > :23:08.primary sources is quite important. There is also a darker fascination

:23:08. > :23:14.that is close to where his am. Death is something we all have in

:23:14. > :23:18.common. -- it is close to the voyeurism. We all fascinated with

:23:18. > :23:22.death, it comes across in literature, film, and tourist

:23:22. > :23:27.behaviour at such a site which seems to be enduring and not going

:23:27. > :23:31.away. Where is the line between it been it a bit tacky and morbid,

:23:31. > :23:38.like going to the world trying to do and buying a T-shirt saying you

:23:38. > :23:41.have been to grown -- ground zero, or actually learning about an

:23:41. > :23:46.important historical events like the historic -- the Holocaust or

:23:46. > :23:51.the killing fields? I am not a moral arbiter of taste. But there

:23:51. > :23:54.is a scale of activity of what you do in these sites, there is genuine

:23:54. > :24:00.reflection and historical interest at one end of it, and there is also

:24:00. > :24:08.share mess -- shameless, order size Asian and entertainment at the

:24:08. > :24:15.other end. -- shameless commodity making. People would hope that they

:24:15. > :24:19.get some insights into what we are capable of as the human race. It

:24:19. > :24:26.would seem, however many times we visit site of mass killing or

:24:26. > :24:33.incarceration, it does not seem to stop that happening again. So we do

:24:33. > :24:38.not learn. It would seem, depressingly, not the case.

:24:38. > :24:43.A teenage girl has had a remarkable explained -- escape after the

:24:43. > :24:47.pavement collapsed beneath her what she was walking along a road in

:24:47. > :24:51.Xi'an in China. She dropped into an underground cavern and the whole

:24:51. > :24:56.incident was captured on CCTV. An ordinary view of an ordinary

:24:56. > :25:01.street, until this happens. And in case you blinked and missed that,

:25:01. > :25:08.here it is again. Now you see her, but you do not. Running water had

:25:08. > :25:12.created a cavity under the pavement. A passing taxi driver saw her

:25:12. > :25:18.disappear and rushed over to see if she could help. He saw her clinging

:25:18. > :25:22.to an underground cable and climbed down after her. TRANSLATION: He

:25:22. > :25:27.said he called out to her but she did not respond. I shook her a

:25:27. > :25:32.little and she came to. A crowd gathered and soon the rescue

:25:32. > :25:37.services arrived. Down in the gloom, the cabbie, the Tote the terrified

:25:37. > :25:43.teenager as a ladder was lowered. - - there can be comforted the

:25:43. > :25:47.terrified teenager. TRANSLATION: The ladder kept moving, it was

:25:47. > :25:52.flimsy and she was screaming so I told her to get out first.

:25:52. > :25:57.Eventually, she did. The teenager was shaken and dirty but apparently

:25:57. > :26:01.not injured by her subterranean ordeal. A moment later, out came

:26:02. > :26:09.her gallant rescuer. But it may be some time before either of them

:26:09. > :26:14.take the pavement for granted again. Before we go, a reminder of the

:26:14. > :26:18.main news. At the inquiry into media ethics in Britain, James

:26:18. > :26:24.Murdoch, the son of the media tycoon Rupert Murdoch, has been

:26:24. > :26:28.facing questioning on the family's interest on -- interests in British

:26:28. > :26:32.politics. E-mails were produced showing close contact between the

:26:33. > :26:39.News Corporation and the culture minister Jeremy Hunt as they were

:26:39. > :26:43.considering buying BSkyB. Taina's President has urged the two

:26:43. > :26:49.Sudans to back off the descent into war and choose a pass -- path of

:26:49. > :26:59.peace into Beijing. That is all for now, at next the

:26:59. > :27:00.

:27:00. > :27:04.Whilst we have still got a few showers around, it is all going

:27:04. > :27:08.downhill tonight and into tomorrow. We have got some heavy rain and

:27:08. > :27:12.strong winds across much of the country, quite a deep low of moving

:27:12. > :27:20.in of the Atlantic. Here it is through the day on Wednesday, it is

:27:20. > :27:24.A very wet start across many southern areas, the really tricky

:27:24. > :27:28.drive to work tomorrow morning. As we head into the afternoon, that

:27:28. > :27:33.moves across northern England. Torrential downpours, and as a

:27:33. > :27:37.result it will feel quite cold out there. A strong wind and

:27:37. > :27:41.temperatures are nine degree. Following on from the main band of

:27:41. > :27:44.wind, a mixture of sunshine and showers. When you get some she

:27:44. > :27:49.sunshine, there is just enough energy in the sun to give 12

:27:49. > :27:54.degrees. But for showers could be heavy and sundry with some hail and

:27:54. > :28:00.the temperatures will then plummet. But heavy and thundery. North Wales,

:28:00. > :28:05.thicker cloud. Northern Ireland, of grey day, the rain will come and go.

:28:05. > :28:10.The best of dry and bright weather across the Western Isles tomorrow.

:28:10. > :28:14.We have got to strong winds, eastern Scotland has rain and hail

:28:14. > :28:18.snow and very windy. Through the night, the band pushes northwards,