To keep those figures moving in the right direction, attracting new investors is vital. And while the financial details of the Ministry of Defence development have not been revealed, the New York Times has reported that the Serbian government will
"I've been on breakfast TV, Loose Women, it doesn't happen to me."Melvyn also said other driving instructors and even examiners have asked for photos with him.
"It's unbelievable isn't it, that people are asking for photographs of Melv," Brian said.He confessed they have loved watching the show back because of how much of the scenery the contestants miss while racing."It's quite amazing to watch the footage," he said.
"It is quite nice for us because the pictures that we see on the screen, Melv and I don't actually see because normally our heads are down, we're in a taxi, we're in a train, we're on a bus and that's our life for eight, nine weeks."Aside from the locations, appearing on the BBC show allowed the brothers to talk about their childhood.
Brian was sent to boarding school while his older brother stayed at home and attended the local state school, which they said impacted their relationship.
But the race saw pair grow closer, even joking they want to end up in the same retiring home.In the mid-90s there was no treatment for people living with HIV, and Porter says the documentary along with the quilt highlights "the breadth of devastation" caused by the disease.
Karin Hindsbo, Tate Modern director, says the quilt is "an incredible feat of creative human expression" and believes it will be a "deeply moving experience" for those who come to see it.Hundreds of thousands of people are "slowly starving" in Kenyan refugee camps after US funding cuts reduced food rations to their lowest ever levels, a United Nations official has told the BBC.
The impact is starkly visible at a hospital in the sprawling Kakuma camp in the north-west of the East African nation. It is home to roughly 300,000 refugees who have fled strife in countries across Africa and the Middle East.Emaciated children fill a 30-bed ward at Kakuma's Amusait Hospital, staring blankly at visitors as they receive treatment for severe acute malnutrition.