Skip to main content

tv   BBC News at Ten  BBC News  May 23, 2023 10:00pm-10:31pm BST

10:00 pm
tonight at 10pm... cctv footage appears to show a police van following two teenage boys on an electric bike in cardiff, moments before they die in a collision. it seems to contradict the local police and crime commissioner, who denied officers were following the boys. the deaths sparked riots last night, involving up to 150 people. the two boys have lost their lives. they were young with their whole lives ahead of them. did they were young with their whole lives ahead of them.— they were young with their whole lives ahead of them. did you see how fast they were _ lives ahead of them. did you see how fast they were going? _ lives ahead of them. did you see how fast they were going? it's _ lives ahead of them. did you see how fast they were going? it's just - lives ahead of them. did you see how fast they were going? it'sjust sad. i south wales police has now referred itself to the watchdog. also tonight...
10:01 pm
borisjohnson has been referred to police by the government's cabinet office, over new claims he broke lockdown rules during the pandemic. a fresh search begins near a reservoir in portugal for madeleine mccann, 16 years after she disappeared. this device was found to have high levels of lead, nickel and chromium. a bbc investigation finds harmful levels of chemicals in vapes confiscated from secondary school children. and from secondary school children. on newsnight at 1( deeper and on newsnight at 1030, we will go deeper behind the headlines and speak like the key players on today's big stories. plus, we take a first look at what is on tomorrow's front pages. good evening. cctv footage appears to show a police van following two teenage boys on an electric bike in cardiff, moments before they died in a collision yesterday.
10:02 pm
the deaths of kyrees sullivan, who was 16, and harvey evans, who was 15, sparked a riot, involving around 150 people. the police and crime commissioner for south wales had denied reports on social media that officers were following the boys. police say they're aware of the cctv footage and their investigation is ongoing. 0ur correspondent danjohnson is in cardiff for us tonight. dan, a lot of questions raised by the appearance of this footage. it could have been that sparked it and because things escalate so quickly, the damage is still clear to see. they have cleaned up a lot
10:03 pm
but there are still smashed cars and one has been much harder to get clear, the sequence of events that led to that disturbance and the police losing control. it's been a really difficult 2a hours for people here on this estate and for south wales police. this is the footage that questions the police account of what happened here last night. it appears to show to teenagers on an electric bike being followed by officers just minutes before a fatal crash. a couple of streets further on, two young lives ended and the community was upturned. kyrees sullivan and harvey evans had been closed for many years. the police initially said they responded after the collision that killed them. here is how some people reacted last night, hours of serious disorder which injured at least 15 police officers. earlier today, the police and crime commissioner denied there had been a chase. it commissioner denied there had been a chase. ., ., , , ., ., chase. it would appear that there were rumours —
10:04 pm
chase. it would appear that there were rumours and _ chase. it would appear that there were rumours and those - chase. it would appear that there were rumours and those rumours became rife of a police chase, which wasn't the case. but became rife of a police chase, which wasn't the case.— wasn't the case. but this footage challenges _ wasn't the case. but this footage challenges that _ wasn't the case. but this footage challenges that an _ wasn't the case. but this footage challenges that an earlier - wasn't the case. but this footage challenges that an earlier police | challenges that an earlier police statements. all day, france had paid tribute and tried to piece together these events. desperate friends have paid tributes. the cctv cast doubts on the official accounts. these people both knew the dead boys. asda the two boys have lost their lives, they were young with their whole life ahead of them. major evidence, you can see how fast they were going, it'sjust sad. i you can see how fast they were going, it'sjust sad.— you can see how fast they were going, it'sjust sad. i am the chief superintendent _ going, it'sjust sad. i am the chief superintendent responsible. - going, it'sjust sad. i am the chief superintendent responsible. let l going, it'sjust sad. i am the chief l superintendent responsible. let the afternoon, more _ superintendent responsible. let the afternoon, more information. - superintendent responsible. let the afternoon, more information. we i superintendent responsible. let the i afternoon, more information. we have received ccw — afternoon, more information. we have received cctv footage _ afternoon, more information. we have received cctv footage showing - afternoon, more information. we have received cctv footage showing a - received cctv footage showing a police vehicle following a bike just prior to 6pm. this footage had been recovered as part of the investigation and will assist us in piecing together the circumstances
10:05 pm
leading up to the collision. the families are being kept up—to—date. he refused to answer any questions. why were we not told that this morning? why did you not explain that this morning? what morning? why did you not explain that this morning?— that this morning? what is your police and _ that this morning? what is your police and crime _ that this morning? what is your police and crime commissioner| that this morning? what is your i police and crime commissioner say something — police and crime commissioner say something completely different? the force has something completely different? tie: force has put something completely different? tte: force has put itself something completely different? "tt2 force has put itself to something completely different? tt2 force has put itself to the police watchdog. there was mistrust and anger here first thing is the clear up anger here first thing is the clear up again. anger here first thing is the clear u- aaain. ~ , anger here first thing is the clear u- auain.~ ,,~/ .,~ anger here first thing is the clear u- auain.~ , ., anger here first thing is the clear uauain.~ ,, ., , up again. why you taking out people in the street. _ up again. why you taking out people in the street, it _ up again. why you taking out people in the street, itjust _ up again. why you taking out people in the street, itjust doesn't - up again. why you taking out people in the street, itjust doesn't make i in the street, itjust doesn't make sense. in the street, it 'ust doesn't make sense. ., ., , ., sense. tonight we found this man returnin: sense. tonight we found this man returning to _ sense. tonight we found this man returning to retrieve _ sense. tonight we found this man returning to retrieve his _ sense. tonight we found this man returning to retrieve his taxi. - sense. tonight we found this man returning to retrieve his taxi. do | returning to retrieve his taxi. do you think your car is written off? i think so. this is solid. t you think your car is written off? i think so. this is solid. i think- think so. this is solid. i think there has _ think so. this is solid. i think there has been _ think so. this is solid. i think there has been a _ think so. this is solid. i think there has been a boiling - think so. this is solid. i think there has been a boiling pot| think so. this is solid. i think. there has been a boiling pot for think so. this is solid. i think- there has been a boiling pot for a lon- there has been a boiling pot for a longtime — there has been a boiling pot for a long time waiting to blow up. those
10:06 pm
who preach — long time waiting to blow up. those who preach peace _ long time waiting to blow up. those who preach peace here _ long time waiting to blow up. those who preach peace here have - who preach peace here have long—standing concerns. who preach peace here have long-standing concerns. what can the olice do? long-standing concerns. what can the police do? they _ long-standing concerns. what can the police do? they have _ long-standing concerns. what can the police do? they have to _ long-standing concerns. what can the police do? they have to go _ long-standing concerns. what can the police do? they have to go after- police do? they have to go after them for tip i think they went after them for tip i think they went after them too hard. but then police are humans and they get angry. they want to keep the law. if humans and they get angry. they want to keep the law-— to keep the law. if there was this violence may _ to keep the law. if there was this violence may be _ to keep the law. if there was this violence may be repeated - to keep the law. if there was this violence may be repeated this i violence may be repeated this evening in a community which is both grieving and aggrieved. we will get some more from dan in a few minutes. bbc verify, a new service bringing together a team of forensic and investigative journalists, has been analysing that crucial cctv footage that's emerged from cardiff, and we've managed to establish its authenticity. now, the footage shows two people on an electric bike, followed by a police van. if you look at the time stamp here, you can see it's marked as 17:59 on monday. that's just minutes before police confirm the accident happened. our team then tracked the location of the video to frank road in ely, just over half a mile from the site
10:07 pm
of the crash, on snowden road. here, we found another video, from which we've taken just a screen grab, because it's disturbing. it shows two people lying on the pavement in front of a bus on snowden road. they're being given emergency first aid. what happened between the two videos being filmed is unclear, but rumours quickly spread online. several messages, like this one, claimed a police chase led to the boys being hit by a bus. violence then erupted, resulting in these scenes over the course of yesterday evening, live—streamed on youtube. let's return to our correspondent danjohnson live in ely tonight. it's just over 2a hours since yesterday's shocking events. how are things there now, dan? thankfully, things are calm and peaceful here this evening. there has been a repeat of that violence so far. there are huge numbers of
10:08 pm
officers on stand by and we have seen them waiting at the police on the edge of this estate. they are no doubt on edge, like many people here, and let's reflect for a moment on the role the police have to play in this, because last night had to deal with the investigation of a fatal collision they then faced a crowd and questions about what was going on, what the condition of those boys were and they then faced the spread of information through social media, rumours that were going around that drew further people here and they had to deal with that intense violence. a number of officers were wounded, but i think what we've seen here is how, if there isn't information or there is inconsistency in the information presented, it can inflame things, and what played out here over the last 2a hours or so really seems to be a frenzy of people having reacted to that vacuum of official information, and it's going to take a long time for this community to heal. there are two teenage lives to grieve and all sorts of questions about the relationship between people here and there police. thank
10:09 pm
you, danjohnson, live in ely in cardiff. borisjohnson has been reported to the police by the cabinet office, over new claims he may have broken lockdown rules during the pandemic. the allegations have come to light during preparations for the covid public inquiry. labour says the former prime minister must explain himself. 0ur political correspondent, iain watson, reports. borisjohnson had boris johnson had already borisjohnson had already been found ljy borisjohnson had already been found by the police over this gathering during covid but many civil servants in the cabinet office have referred him to the police for new potential breaches of lockdown rules. the met police have confirmed the information they have received relates to events in downing street between june 2020 relates to events in downing street betweenjune 2020 and may 2021. thames valley police were also told about potential breaches during the same period at the then prime
10:10 pm
minister country residence, chequers, where we know boris johnson spent some of lockdown. the cabinet office said it had to pass information on to the relevant authorities which had come to light when preparing evidence for the covid inquiry to stop tonight, a statement from borisjohnson moscow statement from boris johnson moscow office said, the assertion by the cabinet office they have been further rule breaches is untrue. lewis examined the events in question had advised they were lawful. no contact was made with mr johnson between these incorrect allegations were made. this is bizarre and unacceptable. this powerful committee of cross—party mps has received the same material as the police. the privileges committee is currently investigating whether boris johnson committee is currently investigating whether borisjohnson misled or, bluntly, light to fellow mps about partygate. t bluntly, light to fellow mps about -a ate. . ., bluntly, light to fellow mps about -a ate. ., ., bluntly, light to fellow mps about -a ate. . ., ., bluntly, light to fellow mps about -a ate. ., ., ., partygate. i am here to say to you heart that i — partygate. i am here to say to you heart that l did _ partygate. i am here to say to you heart that i did not _ partygate. i am here to say to you heart that i did not lie _ partygate. i am here to say to you heart that i did not lie to - partygate. i am here to say to you heart that i did not lie to the - heart that i did not lie to the house — heart that i did not lie to the house. if— heart that i did not lie to the house. , ., �* , house. if they don't believe him, they could _ house. if they don't believe him, they could recommend _ house. if they don't believe him, they could recommend he - house. if they don't believe him, they could recommend he is - house. if they don't believe him, - they could recommend he is suspended from parliament, which could lead to a by—election, so the stakes are high and borisjohnson's supporters
10:11 pm
have suspicions about the latest development. have suspicions about the latest development-— development. stories are 'ust another example i development. stories are 'ust another example of i development. stories are 'ust another example of how i development. stories are just | another example of how those development. stories are just - another example of how those who don't like boris, mainly because of brexit, always looking for something ago at him on. it's a supremely non—story for tip ago at him on. it's a supremely non-story for tip— non-story for tip labour more seriously- _ non-story for tip labour more seriously. boris _ non-story for tip labour more seriously. boris johnson - non-story for tip labour more seriously. boris johnson will l non-story for tip labour more - seriously. boris johnson will have to exlain seriously. boris johnson will have to explain himself _ seriously. boris johnson will have to explain himself to _ seriously. boris johnson will have to explain himself to the - to explain himself to the authorities once again, but we see the conservatives being haunted by this disgraced former prime minister and it's time the country turned a corner on 13 years of conservative sleaze. �* ., , corner on 13 years of conservative sleaze. 1, _ ., ,., corner on 13 years of conservative sleaze. boris johnson was meeting oliticians sleaze. boris johnson was meeting politicians in _ sleaze. boris johnson was meeting politicians in the _ sleaze. boris johnson was meeting politicians in the usa _ sleaze. boris johnson was meeting politicians in the usa today - sleaze. boris johnson was meeting politicians in the usa today but. sleaze. boris johnson was meeting politicians in the usa today but he | politicians in the usa today but he is finding that domestic politics still cut a long shadow of the dip tonight, borisjohnson bosco team seem to be hopping mad. some people will conclude that all of this has the hallmarks of a classic political stitch up and they are thinking of the new donors came to light as a
10:12 pm
means of undermining borisjohnson and extended the inquiry by mps into his conduct. it has to save the cabinet office saying double that they dispute the idea that boris johnson wasn't told about any of this in advance and, secondly, when it comes to political stitch up, it was civil servants who passed on this information, not government officials. after poor local election results for the tories, i'm sure the current leadership do not welcome partygate again dominating the news, but somehow boris johnson partygate again dominating the news, but somehow borisjohnson seems to have got the ability even out of office to dominate headlines. the government has announced new immigration rules that prevent some overseas students bringing dependents to the uk. it will mean foreign postgraduate students can no longer bring family members with them, unless they're on specific research programmes. 0n on thursday, official figures are likely to show net legal migration is it a record 700,000 this year.
10:13 pm
here's our home editor, mark easton. lights, a front room in the west midlands, camera, a youtuber helping nigerians come to britain, and action! hi, guys. welcome back to my youtube channel. it's your boy... among emdee's hundreds of videos are guides on how to get a student visa to come to the uk. because there's new information regarding the student route to the uk. last year, a fifth of international student visas were issued to nigerians, 120,000 people in total — half of them students, half their dependants. but emdee believes many are actually coming not for a new qualification so much as a new life. so the student thing is not really... it's not like they need the degrees. they need the degree as an access route to come into the country. so a lot of these people get their priorities shifted real fast. so it's really about getting into the uk. exactly! and then to stay here with a job hopefully. it's not really about the education. nigerians have a word for what's going on here, "japa" —
10:14 pm
escape, doing whatever it takes to leave nigeria and start a new life somewhere more prosperous. and japa may explain why the shropshire town of telford, with its university of wolverhampton student campus, now has more than 300 nigerian residents. among those is rotimi, who's paying £15,000 for a masters engineering course in telford. he is frank about his hope that being in britain as a student will make it easier for him to stay and work. did you come because you wanted to improve your education or because you wanted a new life in britain? me studying provides an opportunity to also probably work in the uk. so stay here, make your life here, potentially? it's a lot easier. yeah, make better life basically. telford is a predominantly white english town in a rural shropshire, but it's become significantly more diverse in the last decade, largely as a consequence of international migration. sometimes it doesn't i feel like i'm in england sometimes because, like,
10:15 pm
there's all different - cultures everywhere. they're just human like us, just obviously a different colour. 680,000 foreign students studied in the uk last year. 315,000 of them did a masters at a british university and would be banned from bringing their dependants under government plans. we don't know exactly how many masters students' dependants are in britain today, but they make up the vast majority of the 136,000 issued with dependant visas. in the university canteen in telford, there was disappointment at the idea of discouraging fee—paying foreign students from coming to shropshire. when students are studying, they need their dependants near them. it's a support network. and where students are here and they've got their support network, they're more likely to succeed. so i do feel it's incredibly important we offer those people opportunities as well. there's another reason why today's announcement may not have the impact the home office says it seeks. most masters students and their dependants only come for nine months or so during term time, too short to appear
10:16 pm
in the long—term net migration statistics. mark easton, bbc news, telford. in southern portugal, police officers have been digging near a reservoir they're searching in connection with the disappearance of madeleine mccann. the area is about 30 miles from where the three—year—old vanished during a family holiday in 2007. the operation is being led by german police, who've named a 45—year—old sex offender as their main suspect. christian brueckner is currently serving a prison sentence for raping a woman in the same area. daniel sandford has the very latest from the algarve. 0n the arid banks of an algarve reservoir, german and portuguese police officers working methodically through the undergrowth, probing for anything that could finally provide a clue to what happened to madeleine mccann. because of the sensitivity of the case, british police officers have been invited to observe the operation that also
10:17 pm
involved dogs and a rigid hull inflatable boat. the work is expected to resume tomorrow. that promontory, which has been the focus of the search, has a car park and impromptu campsite on it, and what the police have been doing is searching down from the car park to the edge of the water. madeleine mccann vanished from a holiday apartment 30 miles away in may 2007, and this has become one of the most infamous missing persons cases. her parents, kate and gerry mccann, have never given up hope of finding her alive. earlier this month they released a simple statement. "the police investigation continues and we await a breakthrough." that investigation has led to the arade reservoir because the main suspect was a regular at the unofficial campsite. he is christian brueckner, a german man currently serving a prison sentence for rape. it is german prosecutors who are leading this investigation.
10:18 pm
brueckner, who used this camper van while living in the algarve, has not been charged and has denied any involvement. prosecutors said today's search was based on intelligence. translation: you can imagine - we don't start searching somewhere in portugal on the off chance. there's a good reason for it. madeleine mccann vanished from a holiday apartment in praia da luz in may 2007. from there to the arade reservoir where the search is taking place is a journey of about 45 minutes. the peninsular that's been the focus of today's operation is on the west side of the like. 0ne former british police officer involved in the original madeleine mccann investigation is optimistic about the search. i think its reasonable to be hopeful twofold. one is that the german police are continuing at pace and they are not taking off the pressure and they are continuing to invest resource. and number two, at some stage there has got to be a breakthrough. but madeleine mccann vanished 16 years ago,
10:19 pm
so the chances of proving what happened to her must now be limited. daniel sandford, bbc news at the arade dam. south africa is facing its worst ever power crisis, as it heads into a bitter southern hemisphere winter. there are daily blackouts of up to ten hours and fears of civil unrest. a bbc investigation has found several reasons for the outages, including corruption involving criminal cartels, with alleged government complicity. andrew harding has sent us this report from johannesburg. it will be a cold, dark night for many south africans... | south africa is sinking into darkness. power cuts injohannesburg for hours every day. the continent's most developed economy can no longer keep the lights on. gloom spreading through
10:20 pm
businesses like this bar, open for the past 25 years. because of the power cut, the electricity, you can see now, it's dark. are you going to survive, your business? i don't think so, i don't think so. next door, a cash transfer company is on the ropes too. it must be frustrating. it is, very much frustrating. do you see an end sight? do you see an end in sight? i don't. this is our new life now. why such chaos? the answers lie out here in coal country. almost all south africa's electricity is generated by burning coal, but the industry is being plundered, billions of pounds lost to criminal cartels. mines like this one looted. even at night you hear gunshots, gunshots. even they are fighting among themselves for this coal. the different gangs? yes. what's extraordinary is quite how brazen it is. it's happening every day out
10:21 pm
in the open, in daylight. and no one's stopping it. with the looting comes sabotage like this at power stations, as ruthless gangs fight to win lucrative maintenance contracts. someone pulled a gun on me. held it to your head? yeah, held it to my head. did they threaten your family? they did, they told me that they are not even afraid of anybody. they are politically connected. so they are above the law? basically. how to stop the rot? the governing anc hired this white businessman, andre de ruyter, to fix eskom, the power utility. this was clearly now an act of sabotage and i think we can call it as such... but he soon declared the corruption was just too big and that powerful politicians were involved. then last december he was poisoned, his cup of coffee laced with cyanide.
10:22 pm
he nearly died. i started feeling extremely nauseous. at that stage i was shaking badly, i was literally lying like this and shaking, gasping for air. but the response from south africa's anc government has been sceptical. i can't give evidence to that. his doctors say he was poisoned, the tests showed he was poisoned with cyanide... i can't... ..rat poisoning. i can't give evidence to that. so you don't recognise this picture he's portrayed of an anc using eskom as a feeding trough? no, i don't. the irony is that vast sun—blessed south africa could quickly solve its power crisis by going green. but for now, south africa remains in the dark, traffic lights down, corruption out of control. andrew harding, bbc news, johannesburg.
10:23 pm
rolf harris, who was jailed for a series of indecent assaults on girls, has died at the age of 93. he had cancer. he was found guilty of a string of offences committed between 1968 and 1986, and was in prison for more than five years. before his crimes came to light, he was a regular fixture on television. he never apologised to his victims. one of britain's leading medical professors says she's shocked by the findings of a bbc investigation into the contents of illegal vapes used by teenagers. a study of confiscated vapes collected from one school found some contained double the safe amount of lead, six times the safe amount of chromium and nine times the safe amount of nickel. the bbc has been told the vapes could cause severe health problems. here's hugh pym. still works. leon finds a vape he once used. i'll get it back.
10:24 pm
it's fine. it was confiscated along with others at his school. a lemon and lime. it's nice. but there was more than flavourings in the vapes when we sent them to be tested. this device was found to have high levels of lead, nickel and chromium. this lab tests vapes to find out if they meet quality standards. in 15 years of testing, i don't think we've ever seen lead content like this in vape products. these metals are usually present in the heating element itself. we've extracted the e—liquid to determine the metals content, so there's a chance that the e—liquid itself has been reacting with the metal to cause leaching of those metals. we don't normally see that coming out into the e—liquid. this device was found to have high levels of lead... we took the lab results back to the school. areas of particular concern were the levels found being unsafe. despite this, the boys say it's easy to ignore the risks. i didn't know there was lead in it, and you won't really care if you're addicted to it. it's just, you won't think about it. you'll just forget about it. the law should be doing something about them, but they're just taking their time.
10:25 pm
they're not really as bothered as they should be. it's illegal to sell vapes to under—18s, yet leon and oscar can get them easily. i get mine from shops. walk in, ask them what flavour you want and they pass it to you, give them your money, walk back out. i get it from a few places. cos you mentioned online, and you can do that, but that's what a lot of dealers do. they deal from, like, their house or get on like a mini—scooter and go and deliver it to you. so that's how they usually get theirs. if children are starting i to understand that route of purchasing, then they'll - understand how they could access other illegal substances, and that's a really, - really big concern to me. we showed our findings about the metals to a leading medical expert. i'm genuinely shocked. this is serious. they slow down the way the brain makes connections, so people learn less quickly. it literally slows the brain down, and that's so damaging at a time when the brain should be expanding very rapidly and people are developing.
10:26 pm
the government's recently announced £3 million in funding in england to tackle the sale of illegal vapes, but the head says stronger health warnings are needed. i think as a society we are capable of holding two messages — - one that says if you smoke already, vaping can have a positive - impact on your health, | but our children should not be vaping. it's clear our results have shone new light on the issue of vaping and the risks to children's health. hugh pym, bbc news, kidderminster. one of the uk's best known art galleries, tate britain, in london, has unveiled an entirely new presentation of more than 800 works. the aim is to tell the story of british art more broadly over the last 500 years, in a way that resonates today. our culture and media editor katie razzall has that story. it's a journey through 500 years of british art, but now this story isn't presented in a vacuum but reflects the culture
10:27 pm
and society of its times. tate britain's also giving greater prominence to works by women artists and diversity. this is the first room in which women artists appear. alex farquharson's been busy investing in art by women, including this new acquisition by mary beale, the most prolific female portrait painter of the 17th century. of course this is a man's world, in society as a whole and in terms of the arts scene. these are artists that have been marginalised from art historical accounts, and unfairly marginalised. and it's so important that the work is seen in the context of their male peers. tate now displays its art within its wider historical context, with new commissions alongside for the first time. nils norman's radical pamphlets show the turbulence of an age of civil war in a way the paintings don't. and there is new labelling too, a reminder of what life was really like for workers idealised in this stubbs painting, and slaves depicted amongst the dancers in this 18th
10:28 pm
century agostino brunias. it's a truth that this is a deliberately misleading image. it would have been made for planters, people who made huge wealth out of sugar and slavery, while also offering an image that acts like propaganda to people back home. what's your response to people who say, why are you relabelling these things? why are we notjust proud of our history? well, it's actually not superimposing a modern history onto history. it's precisely telling history more truthfully and more inclusively. tate's collection belongs to us all. they are telling our history through art, whether that's the brutality of war, industrialisation and its impact, or the story of empire. i want people to walk right up to it. hew locke grew up in guyana. this work is a nod to the heraldic imagery on a british passport. it's a document which people are fighting for, people are literally dying to get this thing.
10:29 pm
does it reflect britishness in any sense? it reflects ideas of britishness, ideas of an invented culture, ideas of nationhood. how do we come to become who we are? can art provide an answer? these modern works were created during the upheavals of brexit, black lives matter and me too. in 500 years how will visitors here interpret this art of our island nation? katie razzall, bbc news. time for a look at the weather. here's tomasz schafernaker. a nice sky tonight and guess what, the weather is looking pretty nice over the next few days. a lot of sunshine on the way. i want to emphasise that tomorrow it will be sunny for most of us, not absolutely everybody, right from the word go, because we have a sneaky weather front to the north of us just now. this is the satellite picture and actually there is high pressure over
10:30 pm
us but a fair amount of cloud in the high pressure. the high is shaped like an avocado or mango and the high is to the north of that. thicker cloud and bits of rain to scotland and northern ireland but the vast majority will have clear skies. most city centres between seven and nine but colder in the glens of scotland, possibly down to two celsius. chile first thing. the weather front, two celsius. chile first thing. the weatherfront, notice how it two celsius. chile first thing. the weather front, notice how it slows down as it rides into this area of high pressure. a bit of cloud for northern ireland, scotland, some spots of rain and lots of sunshine to the north of scotland and to the south across england. whoops also worthy of note is the strength of the sun. you may burn, in may the sun is very strong. this is the area of high pressure for the next few days. what happen is it will change
10:31 pm
its shape. the wind direction will flow around the uk in different ways and it looks like it will drag in a little bit of

94 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on