:00:12. > :00:16.In is BBC World News Today. Unfit to lead a may stkwhror
:00:16. > :00:19.international company. That is the damning conclusion of a British
:00:19. > :00:24.Parliamentary report about media mogul Rupert Murdoch. Rupert
:00:24. > :00:29.Murdoch is not fit to run an international company like BSkyB.
:00:29. > :00:31.To vote or not to vote f that is the question facing France's
:00:31. > :00:37.National Front supporters in the second round of the Presidential
:00:37. > :00:43.election. It is one year since this man was killed, but how much weaker
:00:43. > :00:46.is Al-Qaeda since the American operation to remove him? Also
:00:46. > :00:52.coming up. Coup and counter coup in West Africa. Rebels in Mali say
:00:52. > :00:56.they have the upper hand in fighting against forces loyal to
:00:56. > :01:00.the deposed President. And the art of activism. The occupy movement
:01:00. > :01:10.has spawned new forms of political expression, but can they change
:01:10. > :01:14.
:01:14. > :01:17.The conclusions were damning and potentially far-reaching. A British
:01:17. > :01:20.Parliamentary investigation into the phone hacking scandal at the
:01:20. > :01:25.News of the World concluded that the media mogul Rupert Murdoch is
:01:25. > :01:30.not a fit person to run an international company. It claimed
:01:30. > :01:35.he was Willfully blind to what was going on signed his newspaper. It
:01:35. > :01:38.added there was an instinct to cover up rather than seek out wrong
:01:38. > :01:45.doing. News Corporation has said some hard truths have emerged but
:01:45. > :01:49.that some of the commentary was highly partisan. Rupert Murdoch,
:01:49. > :01:55.till recently seen as the world's most powerful media mogul. Today,
:01:55. > :01:58.declared by MPs not a fit person to run a major international
:01:58. > :02:02.bibusiness because they say he and his colleagues turned a blind eye,
:02:02. > :02:05.for year, to phone hacking by journalists at the News of the
:02:05. > :02:09.World. Everyone in the world knows who is responsible for the wrong
:02:10. > :02:16.doing of News Corporation. Rupert Murdoch. More than any individual
:02:16. > :02:21.alive, he is to blame. Morally, the deeds are his. He paid the piper,
:02:21. > :02:26.and he called the tune. The Culture, Media and Sport committee was more
:02:26. > :02:30.damning about three of his colleagues. Colin Myler, the former
:02:30. > :02:35.editor of the closed News of the World. Tom Crone, who was the legal
:02:35. > :02:39.affairs manager for Mr Murdoch's British newspaper and Les Hinton,
:02:40. > :02:45.for decades his right-hand man. All accused of misleading MPs in the
:02:45. > :02:49.case of Mr Myler and Mr Crone, in part because they had been aware of
:02:49. > :02:53.a 2005 E may showing hacking was more widespread than the company
:02:53. > :02:58.admitted. It is because Mr Mile e Mr Crone and Mr Hinton told MPs in
:02:58. > :03:03.2009 that hacking was the work of a single rogue reporter, that MPs
:03:03. > :03:10.have found them guilty of misleading them. Mr Myler in New
:03:10. > :03:14.York where he is editor for another organisation. He, Mr Crone and Mr
:03:14. > :03:17.Hinton have rejected the damning verdict. It was the disclosure that
:03:17. > :03:22.the News of the World hacked the phone of Milly Dowler that turned
:03:22. > :03:26.hacking into a story of national importance. And since then the
:03:26. > :03:32.rosta of prominent people whose privacy has been invaded by phone
:03:32. > :03:37.hacking has grown and grown. We are used to not ever being seen to
:03:37. > :03:43.criticise Murdoch or the press. To see this frankly brutal report, has
:03:43. > :03:47.come as a bit of a shock. Then I thought is it too much? Has it gone
:03:47. > :03:51.too far? Then I think no, he has a lot of questions to answer. He has
:03:51. > :03:57.a lot to answer for, and I think he is, for the very first time being
:03:57. > :04:01.held to account. So why did the committee reach its verdict on
:04:01. > :04:05.Rupert Murdoch? We find News Corporation carried out an
:04:05. > :04:10.extensive cover up of its rampant law breaking. In the view of the
:04:10. > :04:14.majority of committee member, Rupert Murdoch is not fit to run an
:04:14. > :04:19.international company like BSkyB. The issue on which no Conservative
:04:19. > :04:24.member felt they could support the report itself, was the line put in
:04:24. > :04:30.the middle of the report that said that Mr Rupert Murdoch is not a fit
:04:30. > :04:33.person to run an international company. The media regulator Ofcom
:04:33. > :04:37.is investigating whether BSkyB 39% owned by Rupert Murdoch's News
:04:37. > :04:43.Corporation is fit and proper to hold a broadcasting license. In
:04:43. > :04:48.theory, if Mr Murdoch is deem by MPs not to be fit and proper, that
:04:48. > :04:53.could push Ofcom nearer ho deciding that for BSkyB to retain its
:04:53. > :04:57.license News Corporation should sell most of its BSkyB shares. The
:04:57. > :05:01.News of the World scandal still making news, shaking perhaps the
:05:01. > :05:07.whole of Rupert Murdoch and James Murdoch on their sprawling media
:05:07. > :05:11.empire. -- hold. I am joined by Ben Bradshaw, former British culture
:05:11. > :05:14.and media secretary under Gordon Brown. Were you surprised by the
:05:14. > :05:18.strength of the language used in this report? I refer in particular
:05:18. > :05:21.to that phrase that Murdoch is unfit to run a major organisation?
:05:21. > :05:29.Not really and don't forget these MPs have spent a long time, they
:05:29. > :05:32.have taken a great deal of evidence, they have summoned witnesses,
:05:32. > :05:36.including Rupert and James Murdoch themselves. We know because it has
:05:36. > :05:39.been widely reported about the phone hack, the bribes that were
:05:39. > :05:43.paid to police officers for information, that his papers paid,
:05:43. > :05:46.so we all know, and there is a serious problem here, and these MPs
:05:46. > :05:50.have clearly felt it was serious enough to make this recommendation.
:05:50. > :05:54.But the fact they were split along party line, by this particular
:05:54. > :05:58.phrase, doesn't that now turn it into a bit of a political football,
:05:58. > :06:02.and undermine, if you like, the wait of -- weight of the report's
:06:02. > :06:07.findings? I suggest people who are interested read the report and draw
:06:07. > :06:11.their own conclusion, I think it is worth noting those party lines,
:06:11. > :06:17.whether the Conservatives wanted a milder report which would indicate
:06:17. > :06:20.to me, we know the members of the committee have been holding private
:06:20. > :06:22.meetings with News International recently, whereas the majority, the
:06:22. > :06:27.opposition Labour members and the one Liberal Democrat member, don't
:06:27. > :06:30.forget the Liberal Democrats are part of the Government here,
:06:30. > :06:33.supported the more stronger language report. Think that says
:06:33. > :06:37.more about the fact that Conservatives either haven't
:06:38. > :06:41.learned the lessons of this scandal are in thrall to the Murdoch empire.
:06:41. > :06:46.What power does this report or Select Committee have, in reality?
:06:46. > :06:50.It is advisory in this instance, but of course, I would be very
:06:50. > :06:52.surprised if our independent media regulator Ofcom did not at least
:06:52. > :06:56.take into account the recommendation of the committee,
:06:56. > :06:59.and I would be very surprised too if the Government didn't take it
:06:59. > :07:03.into account, and indeed there will be a vote on this committee's
:07:03. > :07:05.report and it will be very interesting to see how the
:07:05. > :07:09.governing Conservative Party in Britain votes, are they going to
:07:09. > :07:12.vote to support Murdoch, or are they going to vote to support the
:07:12. > :07:15.outrage really that has been expressed not just by this
:07:16. > :07:20.committee, but the broad British public, at what we have learned
:07:20. > :07:24.about the tactics of some of the Murdoch newspapers. What about the
:07:24. > :07:30.long-term consequences of this? Murdoch still owns the time, the
:07:30. > :07:33.Sunday Times as well as his stake, the Sun, as well as BSkyB. If he
:07:34. > :07:38.were to pull out of that, would it be a good thing for the British
:07:38. > :07:43.media? I think there are a number of long-term consequences. I hope
:07:43. > :07:48.one of them that Parliament and elected representatives have taken
:07:48. > :07:53.power back from the media. I think too many years elected politicians
:07:53. > :07:58.have been cowed and fright and by Murdo Fraser -- Rupert Murdoch. All
:07:58. > :08:02.partys have been guilty of this, I hope we get a proper media
:08:02. > :08:06.regulatory landscape that doesn't allow one particular individual or
:08:06. > :08:11.company to amass as much power as Rupert Murdoch has here. Something
:08:11. > :08:14.that would never be allowed in the United States, or most other
:08:14. > :08:19.European countries. There are positives things that could come
:08:19. > :08:26.out of this. Let us look at some of the other news. In the latest stage
:08:26. > :08:30.of his landmark visit to Burma, the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon
:08:30. > :08:33.held talks with Aung San Suu Kyi. Mr Ban praised her for backing away
:08:33. > :08:40.from a boycott of Parliament that had threatened to stall the reforms
:08:40. > :08:42.in Burma. He said she accepted an invitation to visit New York. The
:08:42. > :08:47.former head of the International Money Fund Dominique Strauss-Kahn
:08:47. > :08:50.has suffered another legal setback. A judge in New York has ruled that
:08:51. > :08:54.a civil lawsuit alleging he sexually assaulted a hotel made can
:08:54. > :08:57.go ahead. He the nighs the allegation he tried to rape her
:08:57. > :09:05.last May. Prosecutors dropped the criminal charges in the case last
:09:05. > :09:10.summer. Work has begun to draw up a new fully civilian constitution in
:09:11. > :09:14.Turkey. A multiparty part tricommittee is cameing up to come
:09:14. > :09:17.up with a democratic charter to replace the existing constitution
:09:17. > :09:23.which was drawn up under military rule 30 years ago. It is expected
:09:23. > :09:26.to take a year. And in football, the manager of the English Premier
:09:26. > :09:31.League team West Bromwich Roy Hodgson has been confirmed as the
:09:31. > :09:36.new manager of the England national side when he takes charge, after
:09:36. > :09:42.the remaining two games of the season, his first task will be to
:09:42. > :09:46.lead his country into the European Championships. The large Mayday
:09:46. > :09:52.rally in Paris the leader of the far right Front National told her
:09:52. > :09:56.supporters that she would not be voting for either President Sarkozy
:09:56. > :09:59.or his challenger Francois Hollande in the next round of the
:09:59. > :10:02.Presidential election. Marine Le Pen said she would cast a blank
:10:02. > :10:10.ballot. Six million people voted for the National Front in the first
:10:10. > :10:15.round, so how they vote this Sunday could be decisive. The traditional
:10:15. > :10:18.Labour Day rally, always a big event if France but more so this
:10:18. > :10:22.years unemployment rose again in April for the 11th month, in line
:10:22. > :10:26.with the anger and frustration directed at Europe. No party has
:10:26. > :10:30.captured the mood better than the Front National. Support for the far
:10:30. > :10:35.right is now at record levels across the country and today the
:10:35. > :10:41.new generation of the party paraded past the statue of Joan of Arc.
:10:41. > :10:46.Marine Le Pen, who casts herself as the modern day patron saint blames
:10:46. > :10:50.open borders and the evils of globalisation, and she is winning
:10:50. > :10:54.the argument. In the first round of this vote some 6.5 million people
:10:54. > :10:57.in France turned out for Marine Le Pen. The President now needs to
:10:57. > :11:01.steal a large percentage of that vote if he is to have any chance of
:11:01. > :11:06.winning on Sunday. Marine Le Pen has told both candidates she
:11:06. > :11:12.doesn't own the vote, which may be true but the size of her support
:11:12. > :11:16.here today she wields great political influence. The res rick
:11:16. > :11:21.was steeped in history and condemnation for five years of
:11:21. > :11:26.broken promises. In the end, she offered noen dorsment of either
:11:26. > :11:28.candidate. -- rhetoric. If votes were awarded for stage design
:11:29. > :11:32.Nicolas Sarkozy would be home and dry, but they are not. In recent
:11:32. > :11:37.days the President has been criticised for straying too far
:11:37. > :11:44.into Front National territory, on immigration, law and order and
:11:44. > :11:48.security. Today, he picked labour reform. I will fight for a new
:11:48. > :11:54.social model. Where the trade unions instead of being a source of
:11:54. > :11:58.conservatism will be a source of transformation. Francois Hollande
:11:58. > :12:02.made a decision last week to stay away from labour day, it is an
:12:02. > :12:07.occasion for the workers he said not the politicians. Perhaps it
:12:07. > :12:11.shows the confidence he exuded with a six point lead in the polls.
:12:11. > :12:16.Tomorrow it is live debate between the two main candidates. The first
:12:16. > :12:24.and only time they go head-to-head. Mr Sarkozy needs a career best
:12:24. > :12:29.performance, without it, his presidency has just days to run.
:12:29. > :12:36.Now it has been a year since the former Al-Qaeda leader Bin Laden
:12:36. > :12:44.was killed in the Pakistani town by US navy seals but where has has
:12:44. > :12:48.that left the militant group. They now have a new leader, Ayman Al-
:12:48. > :12:54.Zawahiri, in the past year US drone attacks have killed a number of key
:12:54. > :12:59.members of the organisation including Ilyas Kashimiri and then
:12:59. > :13:03.there was Anwar Al-Awlaki, a US- born radical Islamist cleric in
:13:03. > :13:08.Yemen. Despite this weakened leadership Al-Qaeda is growing. It
:13:08. > :13:13.has links with Boko Haram in Nigeria, it has formed a
:13:13. > :13:16.partnership with Somalia's Al- Shabab. President Obama who was the
:13:16. > :13:21.man wo ordered the operation to kill Bin Laden has given an
:13:21. > :13:27.interview to the US network, NBC, from the famous situation room in
:13:27. > :13:32.the White House where he watched events unfold on that night..
:13:32. > :13:38.this point I think all of us understand that we are a long way
:13:38. > :13:43.to go before the night is done, and I have said, this was the longest
:13:43. > :13:49.40 minute moifs life. To cone a phrase, all you know is you have a
:13:49. > :13:58.black hawk down. It is in the courtyard, it turns out to have
:13:58. > :14:05.been especially piloted by a pilot who cushions everyone onboard..
:14:05. > :14:14.I will tell you when I saw that pilot, I gave him a pretty good hug.
:14:14. > :14:18.I am joined from New York by a journalist. In the course of your
:14:18. > :14:24.research, for this book, what was the thing that surprised you most
:14:24. > :14:28.about the hunt for Bin Laden? I mean I guess one of the things
:14:28. > :14:33.that surprised me, having visited inside the compound where Bin Laden
:14:33. > :14:39.lived, the only outsider to do so, but the kind of life he was leading.
:14:39. > :14:43.I mean you know, he had three wives, ranging in age from 29 to 62. He
:14:43. > :14:47.had a dozen kids and grand kids. There were other, about a dozen
:14:47. > :14:52.other people living in the compound, people who were protecting him and
:14:52. > :14:56.their families. They were living a simple life, they had very few
:14:56. > :15:02.heaters, in a place that gets cold in the winter. They had no air
:15:02. > :15:06.conditioning, they were growing their own vegetables, they were
:15:06. > :15:14.living this kind of almost like back o the land lifestyle on the
:15:14. > :15:18.compound. -- to. Each of the wives had her own kitsch within a crude
:15:18. > :15:23.bucket suspended over the stove where kitchen smells would be
:15:23. > :15:31.sucked up to the outside. Bin Laden had a tiny toilet where he would do
:15:31. > :15:35.his business. A kitchen... Didn't you say in spite of all these
:15:35. > :15:40.people living openly in town, nonetheless the intelligence that
:15:40. > :15:46.President Obama was confronted with, on a, on the basis of which he had
:15:46. > :15:51.to take a decision to launch this attack, wasn't that secure, was it,
:15:51. > :15:58.there were doubts? There were huge doubts. At one point is the deputy
:15:58. > :16:03.director of CIA who is a veteran of the CIA, and who said to the
:16:03. > :16:06.President before the raid, the circumstantial case that Iraq had
:16:06. > :16:10.weapons of mass destruction is better, than the circumstantial
:16:10. > :16:17.case that Bin Laden was in the compound. That is a sobering thing
:16:17. > :16:20.to have a veteran CIA guy tell you, and you know, President Obama at a
:16:20. > :16:27.certain point decided the intelligence picture was never
:16:27. > :16:33.going to improve. The only way they could improve it was by taking the
:16:33. > :16:38.measures that might spook the target. And so he would have to
:16:38. > :16:42.make a decision based on imperfect information which is the
:16:42. > :16:52.intelligence business, intelligence is not about definitive proof
:16:52. > :17:04.
:17:04. > :17:13.usually, it is about kind of things There were many there were against
:17:13. > :17:17.the raids. The number to military adviser to the President suggested
:17:17. > :17:25.another option that was a small experimental bomb to be dropped on
:17:25. > :17:35.compound. There were many against it and many had much more real
:17:35. > :17:40.
:17:40. > :17:48.experience. Joe Biden was elected senator when President Obama was 10.
:17:48. > :17:55.It was a decisive decision. Fascinating stuff, thank you.
:17:55. > :18:01.In Mali's capital, Bamako, soldiers from the ruling junta have overrun
:18:01. > :18:06.the barracks of the presidential guard. Leaders who handed over
:18:06. > :18:10.authority to a civilian Government on 12th April said they had fended
:18:10. > :18:17.off attacks on the national TV station, the airport and a military
:18:17. > :18:20.base. Vehicles turning back in the streets of Mali's capital as the
:18:20. > :18:27.City remains tense. There were further outbreaks of shooting after
:18:27. > :18:32.the attempted counter-coup. TRANSLATION: But we spent a
:18:32. > :18:40.sleepless night. They are shooting at people, stray bullets are
:18:40. > :18:44.killing people. We want this to stop. This morning, this tank stood
:18:44. > :18:51.outside the headquarters of state TV which the anti-German to forces
:18:51. > :19:01.are trying to takeover. There were few people on the streets. --
:19:01. > :19:02.
:19:02. > :19:12.Imitating the gunfire he had heard, this man said he had seen soldiers
:19:12. > :19:19.of the presidential garden at shooting. It began with forces
:19:19. > :19:24.loyal to them seizing power. They remain loyal to the former
:19:24. > :19:30.president ousted during the coup. Under dog mess, they attacked the
:19:30. > :19:37.TV station, the airport and a military base. -- dog mess. Earlier
:19:37. > :19:44.today, soldiers loyal to the coup leader appeared saying they still
:19:44. > :19:49.held these key locations. The TV showed weapons and ammunition
:19:49. > :19:55.belonging to captured troops. They suggested they had had foreign
:19:55. > :19:59.backing. What to demonstrate his how volatile Mali continues to be
:19:59. > :20:06.even though a coup leaders have handed over power to an interim
:20:06. > :20:09.Government. The job of restoring constitutional control remains
:20:09. > :20:14.acute. It is May Day and the international
:20:14. > :20:20.workers' holiday was turned into a day of international protest. This
:20:20. > :20:25.was the scene in Turin a few hours ago. They were angry about the
:20:25. > :20:30.austerity measures. In Spain, thousands took to the streets after
:20:30. > :20:36.two years of deep spending cuts, tax hikes and one-in-four Spanish
:20:36. > :20:41.unemployed. Greece, grilled by debt, more than
:20:41. > :20:46.2000 people marched through central Athens ahead of national elections
:20:46. > :20:52.these -- this Sunday. In the United States, the Occupy
:20:52. > :20:54.movement is holding demonstrations against capitalism. It is
:20:55. > :21:04.supporting new forms of artistic expression which have a directly
:21:05. > :21:08.
:21:08. > :21:18.New York, the centre of the global art world. Since last October, it
:21:18. > :21:23.has been at the centre of something else. The Occupy movement. Whether
:21:23. > :21:32.the protest leave a lasting impact, what is for certain come they are
:21:32. > :21:42.already impacting on its art and culture. It is simple. It suggests
:21:42. > :21:47.
:21:47. > :21:56.and 99% and reads as a bat symbol. Instead of a superhero, it is
:21:56. > :22:00.ourselves. 99% coming to save our self. We are our own superhero.
:22:00. > :22:08.Meet the eliminators. Mission, to project slogans on to buildings
:22:08. > :22:17.from a van. They have created a brand of more successful than many
:22:17. > :22:25.brands. Is it performance art or is it activism? For the generation of
:22:25. > :22:31.artists that art in Occupy, it is a piece of scepticism. It is people
:22:31. > :22:37.putting out their work. The poster is where the white-walled gallery
:22:38. > :22:43.meets the black blog, where fine art meets St top. What they did was
:22:43. > :22:48.it a curse out of ourselves, out of the gallery system, out of this
:22:48. > :22:54.serve -- self referential way of working and we were able to engage
:22:54. > :22:58.with the outside world. With my work for Occupy, I am not just
:22:58. > :23:03.producing a cool image, I am producing a functional and
:23:03. > :23:09.persuasive piece of work that will be pasted on buildings and held up
:23:09. > :23:14.by demonstrators. Please turn around and exit the block. Since
:23:14. > :23:23.they were expelled from the original camp, they have been
:23:23. > :23:28.playing cat-and-mouse with the police Knightly. As the real police
:23:28. > :23:34.moved in, so do actors playing a spoof police force. You don't have
:23:34. > :23:41.any money to pay S. A night after night, they turn New York into a
:23:41. > :23:45.venue for the culture war. Of course, today's artistic rabble is
:23:45. > :23:52.tomorrow's guy in the Academy but at least with this lot, you can't
:23:52. > :23:59.call them RAAD balls without a cause. -- rebels Without a Cause. I
:23:59. > :24:05.am joined by Laurie Penny who has been following the protests. Dr
:24:05. > :24:11.Occupy movement promised to action in New York. Is anything happening?
:24:11. > :24:17.There are lots of protests all over the city that started at 8am to
:24:17. > :24:25.stop some of the pickets were backed by a unions around current
:24:25. > :24:33.union disputes and some were people going down in groups of 20, 30, 40,
:24:34. > :24:38.picketing financial institutions, and right now, there are people
:24:38. > :24:47.using the black blog tactics where people are taking to the streets
:24:47. > :24:55.and gathering for a rally. What is that rally? Black blocker. They
:24:55. > :25:01.dress in black and mask up as a pre- cursor to people in other
:25:01. > :25:07.situations. It is not just in New York, there are protests in LA,
:25:07. > :25:13.Chicago, Philadelphia, people using a variety of tactics. In Madison
:25:13. > :25:22.Square Gardens, there is a free university being held aimed at
:25:22. > :25:29.raising the problems of student debt. Can a movement like this
:25:29. > :25:35.survive, given it no longer has this physical base like it had in
:25:35. > :25:40.Zucotti Park? It doesn't have a proper leadership or a hierarchy.
:25:40. > :25:44.Can it sustain itself? That is an interesting question. Particularly
:25:44. > :25:50.the question about space because the movement has changed both in
:25:50. > :25:54.New York, London and across the world since all these spaces were
:25:54. > :26:01.evicted by police. What has happened today is they have had the
:26:01. > :26:07.pop up occupation which is in a never Parkin New York. It is
:26:07. > :26:11.functioning as Homebase. People are going to try it and converge on
:26:11. > :26:16.Zucotti Park. It is interesting how that's based has functioned in
:26:16. > :26:22.place of a traditional leadership structure, as long as people feel
:26:22. > :26:32.they have a place to go to. Space is a contested resource, never more
:26:32. > :26:34.so than now. For that is all we have time for. Thank you very much.
:26:34. > :26:38.The main news, British parliamentary committee has issued
:26:38. > :26:43.a damning verdict on the role of Mayor to it -- Rupert Murdoch in
:26:43. > :26:49.the phone hacking scandal saying he was unfit to run a major company.
:26:49. > :26:59.That is off from the programme. Next, the weather. From me and the
:26:59. > :27:06.
:27:06. > :27:12.Hello. We had a lovely day across parts of Scotland, with England and
:27:12. > :27:15.Wales seeing rain. Tomorrow, it will be mostly a dry day. This
:27:15. > :27:21.weather front is still with us and it is pushing his way northwards
:27:21. > :27:26.through the night and it will keep thick cloud across Northern Ireland
:27:26. > :27:30.and towards the Midlands. Some sunshine to the west of that band
:27:30. > :27:35.and further north. Through the afternoon, things should brighten
:27:35. > :27:45.up bed temperatures will struggle with that breeze coming in from the
:27:45. > :27:45.
:27:45. > :27:49.North Sea. -- but. Across south- west England, the trade -- day
:27:49. > :27:55.should be dry and bright. Temperatures up to 16. South-west
:27:55. > :28:00.Wales, another place where we will see brighter spells. The north-east
:28:00. > :28:07.is staying over cast. Northern Ireland, a cloudy day but not huge
:28:07. > :28:11.amounts of rain. Temperatures around 12 Celsius. For Scotland, it