:00:07. > :00:13.This is BBC world news Today with me, Zeinab Badawi. The latest
:00:14. > :00:18.international report on climate change warns that unless serious
:00:19. > :00:24.action is taken, global warming will get worse and constitute a greater
:00:25. > :00:32.threat to humankind. More food shortage and floods. Is it another
:00:33. > :00:37.apocalypse now scenario or is there a glimmer of hope? The world has to
:00:38. > :00:42.adapt and the world has to mitigate and the sooner we do that the less
:00:43. > :00:46.the chances of some of the worst impacts of the climate change.
:00:47. > :00:49.President Francois Hollande of France tries to rejuvenate the
:00:50. > :00:52.Government after the socialist poor showing in elections. A new Prime
:00:53. > :00:57.Minister and a new Cabinet is being announced. Also coming up - widening
:00:58. > :01:01.the scope for child cruelty prosecutions. How emotional abuse
:01:02. > :01:04.could become a criminal offence here in the UK.
:01:05. > :01:09.And a special report on the challenge for the Nigerian
:01:10. > :01:11.authorities who are fighting Boko Haram as the killing campaign claims
:01:12. > :01:33.more and more lives. Welcome. The UN Intergovernmental
:01:34. > :01:37.Panel on Climate Change has delivered it's first report in seven
:01:38. > :01:41.years on global warming. The report complied by more than 300 experts
:01:42. > :01:46.from 70 countries says there's an increased risk of floods and food
:01:47. > :01:49.shortages, but it says some of the impact can be offset through
:01:50. > :01:55.adaptation. These are the key findings - it warns that the impact
:01:56. > :01:59.of climate change are likely to be severe, pervasive and irreversible.
:02:00. > :02:03.The report suggests rising global temperatures that are likely to
:02:04. > :02:08.cause a higher risk of flooding, more extreme weather like heatwaves,
:02:09. > :02:11.as well as changes to crop yields, causing food shortages. Scientists
:02:12. > :02:16.behind the report conclude that people may be able to adapt to some
:02:17. > :02:21.of the changes, but only within limits. Sceptics have accused the
:02:22. > :02:27.report's authors are being too alarmist.
:02:28. > :02:32.A consignment of animal feed from South American. Brought ashore in
:02:33. > :02:36.Belfast Harbour. The food industry is now so global and so dependent on
:02:37. > :02:40.international trade that if crops are struggling in one part of the
:02:41. > :02:45.world, the impacts will be felt in another. So, how the climate changes
:02:46. > :02:50.in countries very distant from our own can have serious implications.
:02:51. > :02:54.This is soya from Brazil, where they've just had a heatwave. So the
:02:55. > :02:59.prices have gone up. Because this stuff is used for chicken feed, the
:03:00. > :03:04.prices of chicken will also rise. What the UN panel is saying is that
:03:05. > :03:10.while some plants in some regions may do better with climate change,
:03:11. > :03:14.overall, the yields are likely to go down. The scientists say the most
:03:15. > :03:19.severe impacts like this record drought in Texas two years ago are
:03:20. > :03:22.more likely if temperatures rise steeply during the course of the
:03:23. > :03:27.century. They want the world to start adapting to a changing
:03:28. > :03:31.climate. At the launch of the report in Japan this morning, there was a
:03:32. > :03:35.warning of the need for urgent action. The one message that comes
:03:36. > :03:40.out very clearly is that the world has to adapt and the world has to
:03:41. > :03:45.mitigate. The sooner we do that, the less the chances of some of the
:03:46. > :03:48.worst impacts of the climate change being faced in different parts of
:03:49. > :03:52.the world. The report says that climate change is now being felt
:03:53. > :03:56.across the continents and the oceans. Warming the Arctic and as we
:03:57. > :04:01.have been reporting in recent years, melting the ice which raises the
:04:02. > :04:06.level of the sea. There's also change in the oceans. The waters
:04:07. > :04:14.becoming more acidic and the BBC was in applicant knew Guinea this week
:04:15. > :04:18.to report on the threats to coral. We filmed these scenes in Bangladesh
:04:19. > :04:22.five years ago. A struggle to cope with extreme conditions. The most
:04:23. > :04:28.vulnerable, the report says, are the poorest cities. Within the slum
:04:29. > :04:32.areas they do not have the proper facilities. Then you add on the
:04:33. > :04:37.impact of climate change or extreme events and people become more
:04:38. > :04:41.vulnerable. The report does offer a message of hope that just as the
:04:42. > :04:45.Dutch build new defences against the rising sea, people can adapt to a
:04:46. > :04:49.changing climate. The question is how serious the impact will be. And
:04:50. > :04:55.one scientists withdrew his name from the report because he said it
:04:56. > :05:02.was going too far. People live on the equator and at the Poles so
:05:03. > :05:05.humans are very, very adaptive to very diverse climates. We have
:05:06. > :05:09.well-developed technology to deal with that. There will be impacts,
:05:10. > :05:14.but I don't think it will be dramatic. Here, the chief Government
:05:15. > :05:17.scientist says climb change will mean more intense rain and flooding
:05:18. > :05:20.in line with what is expected for us. Global warming will mean
:05:21. > :05:30.different things to different parts of the world, but according to the
:05:31. > :05:36.new report, we will all be affected. I've been joined by Professor Samuel
:05:37. > :05:39.Fankhauser, co-director of the Grantham Research Institute. He's a
:05:40. > :05:43.member of the UK committee on climate change, an independent body
:05:44. > :05:49.that advises the Government and he's had a little bit of impact into the
:05:50. > :05:52.IPPC report. Is this a council of despair? We have had one of the
:05:53. > :05:57.report's authors saying look this is all a bit depressing and too
:05:58. > :06:00.pessimistic? Well, there's a lot of information in that report to be
:06:01. > :06:06.alarmed about, but I don't think it's alarmist. The scientists we
:06:07. > :06:13.heard, there were over 300 of them, who produced this report, are quite
:06:14. > :06:16.clear in their message. They are measured and it's evidence-based and
:06:17. > :06:19.they're careful, but what they say is quite important, yes. Sure. You
:06:20. > :06:23.don't want people to throw their hands up in despair and say,
:06:24. > :06:32."Goodness, it's so awful, there's nothing we can do about it." There's
:06:33. > :06:35.a number of things we can do and have to do now. Two things
:06:36. > :06:41.particularly, as we heard from the report. First, to adapt to climate
:06:42. > :06:45.change that is already locked in. What we will experience over the
:06:46. > :06:49.next 20 years is the product of past emissions. That's locked in. We have
:06:50. > :06:54.to adapt to it. We can't change it. What we can change is the climate we
:06:55. > :06:59.will have beyond those 20 years and what we have to do there and
:07:00. > :07:02.urgently is to start reduce greenhouse gas emissions. It's the
:07:03. > :07:05.mitigation that worries people, because it comes with a very high
:07:06. > :07:12.price tag. It requires people to have a radical change in their live
:07:13. > :07:17.styles, use leg fossil fuel, trying to convert renewable energy and that
:07:18. > :07:20.comes with a heft by price tag that the governments say they can't
:07:21. > :07:23.afford. A lot of governments are taking action and they're
:07:24. > :07:27.recognising that it does cost something, but the price tag isn't
:07:28. > :07:32.actually very high. Certainly not if you compare it with the cost of
:07:33. > :07:34.reducing emissions with the risks of climate change if we don't do
:07:35. > :07:40.anything. We know what we have to do. We know how one can take fossil
:07:41. > :07:44.fuels out of the energy sector and we have ideas about energy
:07:45. > :07:49.efficiency. If developing countries, we know how one can stop
:07:50. > :07:55.deforestation, so we have a plan, a blueprint. If you can adapt to the
:07:56. > :07:59.impact of climate change that has already made itself felt, why can't
:08:00. > :08:05.you also adapt to any future changes in climate change? Adaptation and
:08:06. > :08:10.mitigation are not alternatives. We have to do both. We have to do it
:08:11. > :08:15.over the next 20 or so years, to adapt to relatively moderate climate
:08:16. > :08:20.change, say up to two degrees. Why isn't that enough in itself and just
:08:21. > :08:24.go for an adaptation policy rather than mitigation andious say, "Human
:08:25. > :08:29.beings are resourceful and resilient." We have been adapting to
:08:30. > :08:36.different climates for centuries? Humans are capable of living in many
:08:37. > :08:40.climates, but as a species we have never experienced the sort of change
:08:41. > :08:43.we have had unless we mitigate. We have will have maybe five degrees of
:08:44. > :08:47.warming by the end of the century and it's not something we have seen
:08:48. > :08:51.for hundreds of thousands of years. It's not something we as a people
:08:52. > :08:56.have ever experienced so we do not know whether we can actually
:08:57. > :09:00.adeposit to that. In a nutshell, 25 seconds, sum this report up. What is
:09:01. > :09:05.the key message? For me, it's two-fold. The first, climate change
:09:06. > :09:09.is real. We can already see it. We can see the impacts, so we are
:09:10. > :09:15.talking about the real phenomenon. The second message for me is, it's
:09:16. > :09:19.going to get worse unless we start taking action now, but we can still
:09:20. > :09:25.avoid the worst impacts from climate change. Professor Samuel Fankhauser,
:09:26. > :09:30.thank you. President Francois Hollande from
:09:31. > :09:33.France has just named Manuel Valls the former interior minister as the
:09:34. > :09:39.under Prime Minister, following those dismal results he had in
:09:40. > :09:44.Sunday's local polls. The out-going Prime Minister, Jean Marc Ayrault
:09:45. > :09:52.resigned earlier today. The President was speaking a short time
:09:53. > :09:59.ago at. TRANSLATION: In the last elections voting or not vote, you
:10:00. > :10:03.expressed your anger and disappointment with us. I come here
:10:04. > :10:10.to tell you that I have heard your message. It is clear. Not enough
:10:11. > :10:15.change. Things going too slow. And not enough jobs. Too much
:10:16. > :10:23.unemployment. Not enough social justice. Too many taxes. And too
:10:24. > :10:29.many questions. That's on the capacity of the country to get out
:10:30. > :10:32.of the crisis. That was President Francois Hollande there in that
:10:33. > :10:37.statement. It wasn't live, by the way. In Paris is the French
:10:38. > :10:44.political comexT Tatar -- commentator, Anne-Elizabeth Moutet.
:10:45. > :10:48.Apart from Manuel Valls, what else? We don't really know yet. We know
:10:49. > :10:56.who is not going to be in the Cabinet and that is the two Greens
:10:57. > :11:00.and Hollande has muted a red/green coalition, but the housing minister
:11:01. > :11:08.would said she would never sit in a Cabinet headed by Manuel Valls, who
:11:09. > :11:10.she thinks is too right-wing. The coalition is finished with that
:11:11. > :11:18.result. There might be some other members of the more left-wing parts
:11:19. > :11:22.of the Socialist Party, who until now the President had managed to
:11:23. > :11:26.appease and these people may not well to agree to sit under Manuel
:11:27. > :11:29.Valls, who they see as a Nicolas Sarkozy clone. I know the
:11:30. > :11:34.announcement is being made and you may not wish to risk your
:11:35. > :11:41.reputation, by trying to guess who might be moved out or whatever.
:11:42. > :11:49.We'll take some of the big names. What about finance and foreign
:11:50. > :11:55.affairs, will they stay put? Fabouse very probably. I would not bet on
:11:56. > :11:59.the other minister because these been lacklustre in finance. He was
:12:00. > :12:04.in a difficult situation in which he has seven junior ministers next to
:12:05. > :12:10.him or under him in some cases and there were so many disagreements
:12:11. > :12:14.within the various storeys of the massive buildings in the ministry
:12:15. > :12:19.that there was a feeling that he's not making that much of an
:12:20. > :12:25.impression. The Budget minister was doing his own thing, but the
:12:26. > :12:38.industrial recovery minister was really in many ways a disruptive
:12:39. > :12:46.presence. What about fresh faces with the departure of the form First
:12:47. > :12:51.Lady? Could we see Miss Royale? He name has been linked to the
:12:52. > :12:57.education portfolio. The President's former partner, need I remind
:12:58. > :13:03.anybody? Well, that's certainly more likely than the minister from
:13:04. > :13:08.culture, but yes it is possible. The President has said for some time he
:13:09. > :13:14.had to do something about it and she is very much wanting to be a
:13:15. > :13:18.minister. It's possible she has popularity. She was a presidential
:13:19. > :13:22.candidate seven years ago. There's no reason why she shouldn't be in
:13:23. > :13:26.the inner Cabinet. She is his former partner, but she has political
:13:27. > :13:33.legitimacy. Anne-Elizabeth Moutet, thank you.
:13:34. > :13:37.Manuel Valls is the new Prime Minister in France. The Cabinet
:13:38. > :13:42.reshuffle is on-going. Meanwhile, in the local elections in Turkey, the
:13:43. > :13:46.governing party has won a convincing victory. It won just under half of
:13:47. > :13:51.the votes, almost 20% more than the main opposition party. And this has
:13:52. > :13:53.given a boost to the Prime Minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has
:13:54. > :13:57.endured months of protests against his rule and allegations of
:13:58. > :14:03.corruption. The party retained control of the country's two biggest
:14:04. > :14:07.cities, Ankara and Instanbul. He welcomed the outcome saying his
:14:08. > :14:13.rivals would now pay a price for challenging his authority.
:14:14. > :14:17.Now, new inquests have begun into the deaths of 96 Liverpool fans who
:14:18. > :14:21.were killed in the Hillsborough disaster 25 years ago here in
:14:22. > :14:25.England. The original verdicts of accidental death were overturned at
:14:26. > :14:30.the High Court in London in 2012, after a campaign by the victims'
:14:31. > :14:36.families. Our reporter, Judith Moritz reports.
:14:37. > :14:44.They lost their loved ones. They came to court to find out what
:14:45. > :14:47.happened. These families have spent years campaigning. They know the
:14:48. > :14:53.months ahead will not be easy. I think there will be quite a few
:14:54. > :15:00.shocks as we progress over the next 12 months, maybe. The truth will
:15:01. > :15:04.out. You can't underestimate how difficult it will be for everybody.
:15:05. > :15:11.We can do is do our best and in the judge. Sheffield Wednesday's Stadium
:15:12. > :15:15.has long been associated with the disaster which happened here. It is
:15:16. > :15:22.where Liverpool came to play an FA Cup semifinal in 1989, and whether
:15:23. > :15:26.terraces became so overcrowded that 96 people eventually lost their
:15:27. > :15:33.lives. What happened here nearly 25 years ago has defined the lives of
:15:34. > :15:39.many people, most directly, Deborah Reeve and survivors, but arguably
:15:40. > :15:43.across the Pennines, in Liverpool, the entire reputation of the city
:15:44. > :15:55.has been affected -- directly, the bereaved. This woman spoke about her
:15:56. > :16:04.brother, who died at Hillsborough. Donna came to court again today. It
:16:05. > :16:11.is something we have got to go through, the evidence, as hard as it
:16:12. > :16:20.is, we have to do it for the 96. They were taken from their families
:16:21. > :16:25.needlessly. We will continue. They knew inquests are housed in a
:16:26. > :16:31.purpose-built courtroom. The hearing will cover areas including cause of
:16:32. > :16:37.death, crowd management and the response of the emergency services.
:16:38. > :16:41.There is thousands and thousands of pages of documents, hundreds of
:16:42. > :16:45.witnesses coming and hours and hours of footage that has never been seen
:16:46. > :16:53.before. All the work that has gone into this is huge. The youngest to
:16:54. > :17:00.die at Hillsborough was ten, the oldest, 67. Worst murder under the
:17:01. > :17:04.age of 30 -- most were under the age of 30.
:17:05. > :17:08.Here, the Government is considering a new offence of emotional cruelty
:17:09. > :17:11.to children. If a change of the law is introduced, it will mean children
:17:12. > :17:15.will have the same protection against this as they do against
:17:16. > :17:18.physical abuse. The proposal would make it a criminal offence to
:17:19. > :17:21.inflict emotional or mental suffering on a child in cases where
:17:22. > :17:27.there's evidence of significant harm. It's understood the new law
:17:28. > :17:30.could come into force before the general election next year. Joining
:17:31. > :17:40.me now from Westminster is the former UK Children's Minister and
:17:41. > :17:46.Conservative MP Tim Loughton. Many would say, isn't this already on the
:17:47. > :17:49.books, this kind of law? Emotional abuse is physically very
:17:50. > :17:55.detrimental, sometimes very easy to identify, why isn't it already a
:17:56. > :18:01.criminal offence? The law on child neglect goes back to 1933. We have
:18:02. > :18:05.good laws on dealing with children who are abused physically, we have
:18:06. > :18:10.good laws on dealing with children who are victims of sexual
:18:11. > :18:14.exploitation, and those have been getting better, but still, an awful
:18:15. > :18:22.lot of children are subject to neglect through emotional abuse. The
:18:23. > :18:25.traumatic conditions it can bring about and the mental health problems
:18:26. > :18:29.it can bring about a considerable. Too many social workers are saying
:18:30. > :18:32.they would like to be able to intervene but under the current
:18:33. > :18:38.rather have to wait until the condition is much more serious. Give
:18:39. > :18:42.it a quick idea of what you might mean by a serious case of emotional
:18:43. > :18:48.abuse. We're not talking about parents bellowing at their children
:18:49. > :18:54.in Tesco's. This is sustained neglect of children, caused by
:18:55. > :18:59.neglecting their health, caused by emotional neglect as well, and
:19:00. > :19:04.clearly not forming a proper attachment with their child. What we
:19:05. > :19:07.know is parents who don't form an emotional attachment with their
:19:08. > :19:10.child at an early stage and neglect their children, those children are
:19:11. > :19:16.likely to have attachment dysfunction with mental health
:19:17. > :19:22.problems later in life. We need to be careful here between what is poor
:19:23. > :19:30.parenting and what is clearly abusive or deliberately neglectful
:19:31. > :19:34.parenting. That is what I was going to ask. Well parenting could mean a
:19:35. > :19:38.parent with holding cuddles from a child, not putting a child, not
:19:39. > :19:44.telling a child that the paradoxes, and the child could say -- not
:19:45. > :19:49.telling a child that the parent looks it, and the child could say
:19:50. > :19:54.they had problems. Is that emotional abuse? You have to be able to prove
:19:55. > :19:59.a pattern of sustained and deliberate abuse. We should not
:20:00. > :20:05.underestimate the mental health implications on children who are
:20:06. > :20:10.neglected. Over 60% of serious case reviews into children who have been
:20:11. > :20:13.abused, injured or even killed attribute neglect as a common
:20:14. > :20:18.factor. The fact is, we are doing better than we were at intervening
:20:19. > :20:23.to protect one double children, but we have to do a lot better. Social
:20:24. > :20:27.workers and others are telling is that under the current law, they are
:20:28. > :20:36.not able to intervene until the situation has got far more serious.
:20:37. > :20:41.That can't be the right thing. Thank you very much for talking to others.
:20:42. > :20:43.Now a look at some of the day's other news.
:20:44. > :20:45.The Ebola outbreak in Guinea has been called an unprecedented
:20:46. > :20:53.epidemic by the aid organisation Medecins Sans Frontieres. Health
:20:54. > :20:57.authorities in the West African nation say at least 78 people have
:20:58. > :21:02.died after contracting the virus. Neighbouring Liberia has confirmed
:21:03. > :21:05.two cases, including one death. A court in Pakistan has charged the
:21:06. > :21:08.former president, Pervez Musharraf, with high treason for imposing
:21:09. > :21:11.emergency rule and violating the constitution in 2007. Mr Musharraf
:21:12. > :21:14.pleaded not guilty and claims the charges against him are politically
:21:15. > :21:23.motivated. He could face the death penalty if convicted.
:21:24. > :21:26.A US government website where people sign up for health insurance under
:21:27. > :21:29.President Obama's affordable health care act was briefly out of service
:21:30. > :21:32.on Monday just hours before a midnight enrolment deadline. More
:21:33. > :21:35.than six million Americans have signed up for the various plans,
:21:36. > :21:43.with a large increase in the number of people taking out policies in the
:21:44. > :21:46.past month. Russian media say some military
:21:47. > :21:49.forces are being pulled back from the country's border with Ukraine.
:21:50. > :21:52.Reports suggested several hundred troops are withdrawing. The United
:21:53. > :21:55.States says up to 40,000 have been stationed on the border. Earlier,
:21:56. > :21:57.Ukraine condemned a visit to Crimea by the Russian Prime Minister,
:21:58. > :22:02.Dmitry Medvedev.The peninsula was recently annexed by Russia. Mr
:22:03. > :22:08.Medvedev said Russia would make Crimea a special economic zone, with
:22:09. > :22:13.tax breaks to attract investors. The BBC's David Stern is in Kiev.
:22:14. > :22:28.David, what do you make of these new developments in the race for
:22:29. > :22:39.president? It is a bit of a mixed bag. The German foreign minister
:22:40. > :22:45.said it was a small signal of lessening intentions. At the same
:22:46. > :22:56.time, you have this visit by the Prime Minister to Crimea. There are
:22:57. > :23:02.still quite a few troops, estimated tens of thousands, on the Ukrainian
:23:03. > :23:08.border with Russia. That is still a very tense situation. There is also
:23:09. > :23:12.the ongoing dispute over Crimea, the Americans calling it the
:23:13. > :23:18.annexation, illegal and illegitimate. The Russians are going
:23:19. > :23:22.ahead with their plans after a number of economic enticements,
:23:23. > :23:29.including raising pensions and salaries. This has been a very mixed
:23:30. > :23:32.development on both fronts today. Thank you, David.
:23:33. > :23:35.Amnesty International says at least 1,500 people have been killed in
:23:36. > :23:38.northern Nigeria this year alone as the Islamist group Boko Haram
:23:39. > :23:41.carries out a campaign of attacks against civilian and military
:23:42. > :23:44.targets. Boko Haram recently launched am audacious attack on the
:23:45. > :23:50.main barracks in the city of Maiduguri - freeing many suspected
:23:51. > :24:01.militants kept inside. Will Ross reports on the challenge of fighting
:24:02. > :24:06.Boko Haram. Islamist militants on the move in
:24:07. > :24:09.North East Nigeria. This rare footage of the group Boko Haram. The
:24:10. > :24:17.insurgents filmed this themselves. The target, the main military
:24:18. > :24:22.barracks. There was a firefight with the Nigerian army, and Boko Haram
:24:23. > :24:31.managed to breach the barracks. They burst open the cells and set many
:24:32. > :24:34.suspected Islamist militants free. That's where the Boko Haram video
:24:35. > :24:37.ends. The Nigerian military says the attack was successfully repelled,
:24:38. > :24:42.and many of the retreating Islamist fighters were killed by the air
:24:43. > :24:49.force and by ground troops. Vigilante groups killed many of
:24:50. > :24:52.those who escaped from cells. We will never know exactly how many
:24:53. > :24:59.people died that day. Some hospital sources said they received about 100
:25:00. > :25:02.bodies. Others said more than 500 people died. Their elusive leader
:25:03. > :25:13.celebrated the raid and pledged more violence. These mountains are close
:25:14. > :25:17.to the border with Cameroon. This footage was taken a few years ago,
:25:18. > :25:20.but these days, Boko Haram fighters have set up base in parts of this
:25:21. > :25:24.mountain range. I met a cattle herder who recently fled the area
:25:25. > :25:28.due to the insecurity there. He says last year, he offered to guide the
:25:29. > :25:33.Nigerian army to Boko Haram hideouts in the mountains. TRANSLATION: As
:25:34. > :25:38.soon as we began climbing up, Boko Haram started firing down at us.
:25:39. > :25:41.They regrouped, but he says a local chief ensured that the Islamist
:25:42. > :25:44.militants were in a mission to thwart the operation. TRANSLATION:
:25:45. > :25:49.The soldiers all met in a village, and then suddenly, a civilian
:25:50. > :25:52.defence force came to join us. But I could see there were Boko Haram
:25:53. > :25:57.members among them. I pointed it out to the soldiers.
:25:58. > :26:04.How do you know there were Boko Haram? TRANSLATION: We all live in
:26:05. > :26:07.the same area. I know their faces. I grew up with them. My younger
:26:08. > :26:18.brother is even a Boko Haram commander. To stop these attacks,
:26:19. > :26:21.the Army will have to flush the Islamist militants out of the
:26:22. > :26:24.mountain hideouts. With Boko Haram members enmeshed in communities
:26:25. > :26:29.across North East Nigeria, winning this war is a daunting task.
:26:30. > :26:32.A reminder of our main news: The UN intergovernmental panel on climate
:26:33. > :26:40.change, the IPCC, has delivered its first report in seven years on
:26:41. > :26:44.global warming. But it does say that some of the
:26:45. > :26:51.impact can be offset through adaptation. Goodbye from me and the
:26:52. > :27:00.team. Monday for most of those was a fine,
:27:01. > :27:08.settled day with some good spells of sunshine. Towards Tuesday morning,
:27:09. > :27:11.this weather front continues, bringing outbreaks of rain and even
:27:12. > :27:17.some thunderstorms. Tomorrow starts off rather damp and cloudy. They
:27:18. > :27:18.will