Transcripts For BBCNEWS The Travel Show 20240709

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a man has been remanded in custody after appearing in court charged with the murder of sabina nessa. the 28 —year—old was killed after she walked to meet a friend. the 26 —year—old man was arrested. it is now more than a week after sabina nessa vanished after she made her way to a bar in this square in kidbrooke in south—east london. over the weekend, the police investigation switched to eastbourne in east sussex. and today, there was a first court appearance for a man arrested there. he is accused of the murder of the primary school teacher. the 26 —year—old is an albanian national, his lawyer told the court he did not need an interpreter for the brief hearing today. he gave his name, address and date of birth. he is charged with murdering sabina nessa in caterer park in kidbrooke. her body was discovered here the day after she went missing. the defendant �*s lawyer said his client had indicated that he would be pleading not guilty to the murder charge. this is not a formal entering of a plate. that will come at a later stage in the legal process. the next hearing in the case will be on thursday when the defendant will appear at the old bailey. now on bbc news — the travel show. this week on the show. auf wiedersehen, tegel airport. getting in the zone for the paris marathon. and around wales by pipped up peddlo. it's been really hard, painful. but a grand adventure. 60 years ago this summer, berlin's infamous wall went up, effectively slicing the city into two, and leaving capitalist west berlin isolated deep within communist east germany. almost overnight, tegel airport became an important lifeline for west berliners. in 1974, its brutalist inspired hexagonal shaped terminal opened, making the shortest walk from aircraft to exit just 30 metres long, which led to the airport becoming one of the busiest in germany. i've been to many airports in my lifetime, but i've never had the unique opportunity to stand in the middle of a runway, one thatjust two years ago saw 2a million passengers leave and arrive. it's empty now, and a bit bizarre... but then again, this is no ordinary airport. after a decade of stays of execution, in november 2020, the planes and the passengers stopped, and it was time to say a final goodbye to this cold war relic. it's less than a year since tegel airport closed to the public. now, it's full of deserted departure boards, closed carousels. makes you feel like you're walking through a post apocalyptic world. i want to rid myself of this eerie feeling, i want to know what this place was like when it was brimming full of people at the start of exciting journeys. well, hello, roy. this strikes me as being an area where very few passengers would have gone. this used to be our baggage area for gate number eight and nine, and all the luggage came down here. in one year we had about 2 million pieces of luggage just coming down here, going from here, into containers and out through there. roy worked at the airport for 30 years as a flight dispatcher, and walking around tegel with him, you soon get a sense of his love for the place. people went up here, and just through here, and they were already out. wow, did you use it? about 10,000 times. roy, i guess it must be strange to see it when you once knew it as the kind of bustling, throng of passengers. it's kinda funny when you just walk through here, there's nobody at all. berlin's new state of the art airport lies on the outskirts of the city in brandenburg. though roy believes he knows the main reason why tegel will be sorely missed. the thing was, all the business passengers knew it takes them, when they get out of their taxi to be in an aeroplane, with check—in and everything, it took them ten minutes. tegel will not be left to decay. its famous terminal and tower will be incorporated into a vision of the future with a new housing district and a research park springing up around them. but that is not before berliners get to say one last goodbye to this much loved landmark. this summer the airport became part of the son ambiente festival, which fills abandoned spaces with art. the ethereal sounds you are hearing being played across the public address system at tegel is the work of the turner prize—winning sound artist susan philipsz. ambient air is a work, we have taken brian eno�*s ambient music for airports and honed it from the window, taken time to look down at the landscape and just get lost in the clouds, and i wanted to create a sense of solitude and time passing. some people would say that the architecture�*s really ugly. they use the term brutalist, doesn't necessarily mean ugly, but it is forbidding in some way. it does create a melancholy feel when it's empty. that is the real theme, solitude and melancholy. yeah, i think most people, when they came for the opening they really did want to enter in and just enjoy that, to feel like a final farewell to the place. before i leave the festival there is one last trip i want to take from tegel. even though this airport is not really functional, not operational, no planes anywhere, i still get that kind of special tingle, that kind of air of anticipation of being somewhere like this, where i could be transported somewhere else, and apparently this next trip, if you like, a virtual one, takes me into a new dimension. voiceover: so now, you're on your way to the moon. . wow, this isjust incredible. now i'm in the middle of space, i'm now floating in the middle of space, no land around me whatsoever, just huge amounts of stars. to the moon allows visitors to go to our lunar neighbour without the use of any air or spacecraft. you get to experience what it would be like to drift over vast craters and through the emptiness of space, with a few ghosts of dinosaurs thrown in for good measure. now i'm kind of moving, kind of going through it! laughs. amazing, i'm inside the body of a brontosaurus, or something, on the moon. wow. wow, now i am floating! this is weird. the shooting stars above me, i willjust revel around, i can see behind me, it's like vertigo because you think you'll fall down into these craters. now i'm moving away from the dinosaurs, floating into space. voiceover: welcome back. germany is in reflective mood this year, on the 60th anniversary of the building of the berlin wall. so, the subdued melancholy of this long goodbye to tegel seems fitting. i can see why there's so much affection, almost sentimentality for it. but what's also brilliant is that they've got new art in here that kind of throws things forward, the kind of the end of an era, because this place will never be forgotten. voiceover: ladies and gentlemen, this really is the last call to tegel. right, still to come on the travel show: it's a marathon, not a sprint, getting your head together after months of lockdown. and a little pedal boat that can. we're with the husband—and—wife team taking the welsh coastline by storm. what we're trying to do here is get around this headland, but it looks like the tide has already turned. so don't go away. now, for many young people just starting out in life, the last 18 months been excruciating. gap years, uni and school trips, and holidays with mates have all been cancelled. some found it especially hard, like graduate freddie pearson, who had his own battles with mental health in the past. but he's hoping travel and exercise would provide the solution to his post lockdown blues. hi, my name is freddie pearson, i'm 21 years old and i have just graduated from the university of manchester. i was doing my final year of university during the height of the pandemic. i think the hardest thing about being in yourfinal year of university, while all this was unfolding, i think there was a frustration because your early 20s is the time of your life when you can travel, go clubbing, new parts of the world, meet new people, and these are the perfect years to have stories to tell moving forward, so you can really develop your character, and i think a lot of young people felt incredibly deprived of that. the uncertainty, the uncertainty of not really knowing what was going on and not being able to plan anything. for a lot of young people when they finished university, travelling is such a big thing to look forward to, so i had a bit of a nightmare injune. i decided to go to lisbon, and i was out there and i remember i was sitting at this beautiful cafe on a thursday morning and my phone was blowing up with messages and notifications about how lisbon was going to go into the amber checklist which would mean i would have to quarantine, so i cancelled my hotel and original flight, booked myself a new flight and about two minutes after i booked, a notification came through on my phone saying that it wasn't going to happen until tuesday so i needlessly cancelled my flight and everything, lost out on quite a bit of money but also lost two days in such a brilliant and vibrant city, so i wasn't very happy. i think the lockdown in winter last year was by far the hardest, october to january, definitely there were days when getting out of bed was an incredibly difficult thing to do. the final year at university was so restrictive because every day seemed to blur into one. i'm at a time of my life when i don't really know what i'm doing. no direction, surrounded by great people who are helping me and guiding me, butjust feeling a little bit lost. setting myself goals such as running and exercise was pivotal. i signed up to the marathon because it was something to look forward to, we all needed someone to look forward to after the last year. i'm really excited. i've never been to paris before in my life, so it's a whole new city to explore. hard work! some of the landmarks you go past are incredible, obviously the eiffel tower, the opera house, notre dame, past the louvre. there are so many things i'm looking forward to, one of the things is the architecture, i've heard that it's so beautiful and tells such a tale and i'm a bit of a hopeless romantic as well, so i thought going to the city of love in europe is my best bet. if paris got cancelled i would be really gutted, but i think i've always been an optimist and i think would be great to run a marathon around here and ijust have to replan and get my hopes up the world we're living in at the moment, it's frustrating, but i'm determined to get through it. fingers crossed we will show you how freddie gets on in paris in around one month's time. last week, wejoined husband and wife team jason and tammie on their punishing zero—carbon adventure around wales. so far, we have seen them cross the country from north to south on foot, bike and kayak and make their way around half the welsh coastline in a special custom—made pedal boat. let's join them now for the second half of their incredible journey. so we're in aberystwyth. so far we've cycled to milford haven and we've just done about 130 miles pedalling up to where we are in aberystwyth. basically all uphill! every single segment, all uphill. i love that gear! gosh, we've seen some amazing projects. everyday people that are making — that are just doing their bit to live more sustainably and to combat climate change. so we're now going to pedal our moksha across to bardsey island, which is about 36 miles. shove off? yep. it's a nice evening for it — we'll probably pedal through the night. should be a nice, relaxed, calm pedal. chuckles. it should be! 0h! i'm pretty far out of my comfort zone right now! i didn't realise we were pedalling overnight. that was left out of the notes. i did not want to tell you until now. it's making that sound again. i kind of know now what a hamster on a wheel feels like, going and going and going — and with the sound. i'm pretty tired but i did get a little bit of a nap. god. suddenly hit me, likejet lag. toasty in there. i don't care. i'm so tired. i'll sleep anywhere right now, just for ten, 15 minutes, tam. we're getting too old for the all—nighters. i don't think they were ever easy. god! sleeping in a skip! it just feels like you're biking through mud. uphill. the llyn peninsula — that i am really looking forward to — just a gorgeous stretch of coastline, the weather will be beautiful and there's lots of little inlets and coves on the way up. it's really beautiful and that's always the reward. it's just a total pay—off. the question then is once we're in holyhead and we've done all the bits and pieces there — like, the stories that we need to film there, whether or not we go clockwise. oh, tam. oh, shoot. i'm all right. god, i would kill for a coke zero or a pepsi max right now. perfectly good tortilla, that. hand it over. in a sick bag. i'm really looking forward to meeting gem. she's a woman i have been communicating with now for one year. thank you for agreeing to see us. what exactly is it that you do? we are basically- a research organisation. we know not very much - about seals on the north wales coast so the idea is to update our research, track them, - figure out what they like - and what habitat they prefer, where they have their pups. why is it important for us to know about these animals? i think they're a really, really important part . of the ecosystem but also, they have an incredibly - high intrinsic value - on the north wales coast — welsh people love seals, l they want to protect them, they want to save them. i can see two. just off here. oh, yeah! 0h, three, actually — one, two, three. - oh, i see — one, two, three! so because it is high tide, l they will be doing a mixture probably of something called bottling, which is they float i vertical and they are - essentially sleeping but also foraging as well on the bottom. they pup in autumn — - that coincides with strong autumn storms with climate change _ so are humans the main detriment to the survival and the well—being of these seals? we're having more frequent. storms, we're having increased severity of storms as well. they can easily be swept off beaches in a storm . surge, away from itiuiti. you see them trying to get back and it's really, - really heartbreaking to see. we need to ignite that passion for nature in our local- communities to encourage them to save nature and to have - a passion for marine wildlife. it looks like the tide has already turned so i think we have a bit of a fight on our hands to get around the corner here. i should have just left an hour earlier and then we wouldn't have had this crunch. ow! yep. cross waves ? those last three miles are going to kick us in the arse, and they did. yeah. they totally kicked us in the arse and it could've — we could have lost everything. we could have lost the whole — could've lost the boat, we could've lost our lives. tammie yawns. look at you and what you've almost done. only 15.5 more miles... woo! ..to complete this journey. wow! thank you for an amazing opportunity. and thank you for keeping me alive in desperate, desperate circumstances. thank you. it's been a really grand adventure. a really hard, painful... all right! let me at it! are we going to finish this trip, tammie? let me at it! i'm so close! come on. yeah, it's been an amazing — an amazing trip and i'm really glad. i think the tide is coming up for another ten minutes. yes, maybe a little bit slacker. there we go. thank you. come on, tammie. i'm gonna do my rocky run! come on. i feel kind of silly because it's probably not a big deal, but it is huge. it is huge — circumnavigating wales by human power. well done. well done! well done. 0h. amazing scenes. congratulations to jason and tammie. i've got a feeling that's not the last time we will hear about those two. right, that's it for this week. coming up next time — i'm in ireland, exploring from dublin to the south of the country in our all—electric travel show van, finding out how it's preparing to welcome back tourists after lockdown. that was a real smacker. perfect! if you fancy following us on social media, we're in all of the usual places. we've got loads of inspiration for the next time you're on the road. in the meantime, though, keep planning your next trip and we'll see you very soon. goodbye. hello, there. after the heavy rain and brisk winds that affected most parts of the uk during tuesday, wednesday gives something of a chance to draw breath — certainly a drier, brighter day in prospect with some sunshine. it will still be quite breezy and there will be one or two showers but we are essentially between weather systems — this band of cloud that brought the rain on tuesday, this area of cloud waiting in the wings in the atlantic — but, in between, a zone of clearer skies thanks to this little ridge of high pressure building its way in. notice the white lines on the chart, though — the isobars still fairly tightly squeezed, so it will still be quite breezy and certainly we're getting off to a very cool start, quite a chilly start in places — three orfour degrees in one or two spots in the countryside, but we should see a good deal of sunshine through the day. now we will see some showers, too — these most plentiful across parts of northern ireland, south—west scotland, drifting through northern england, into the midlands, perhaps one or two into east anglia and the south—east, but many spots by the end of the afternoon will be dry with some sunshine. the winds easing a little by the end of the day, but temperatures just 13 to 16 degrees. and temperatures will drop quite quickly under clear skies during wednesday evening. however, the clear skies won't last. in western areas we see cloud and rain spreading in, a strengthening breeze, so by the end of the night it will be turning milder in the west — ii for belfast, 12 for plymouth — still quite chilly to start the day across eastern areas. but for thursday, this frontal system dominates the weather — that's going to bring some outbreaks of quite heavy rain southwards and eastward, the rain quite sporadic, quite on and off in nature. very windy to start the day, especially in north—west scotland. the winds will ease a little through the day across northern areas — it should brighten up a little bit here, too. further south, those winds will stay strong and gusty, exposed spots in england and wales seeing gusts in excess of a0 or 45 mph even through into the afternoon. temperatures still struggling — 13 degrees for aberdeen, 17 in plymouth — although, actually, that's about where we should be at this time of year. now, into the weekend, low pressure dominates. weather system spinning around these areas of low pressure — that means we'll see some outbreaks of heavy rain at times, some very strong winds are possible, too, and temperatures will stay in a similar range — between 12 and 17 degrees. so with the cloud, the rain, the brisk winds and the cool conditions, it will feel very autumnal. welcome to bbc news. the headlines. how to make friends and influence people — new research uncovers the staggering scale of china's hidden foreign lending. america's top general admits the united states�* reputation has been damaged by the chaotic exit from afghanistan. the french insist they're doing everything they can to stop migrants crossing the english channel, and accuse the uk of being ungrateful. we all have our secrets. we just didn't get to yours yet. and shaken, stirred and very, very late. finally, the newest bond film is released, with the premiere in london.

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