• 5 months ago
Catch up on all the latest news across your county with Sofia Akin.
Transcript
00:00 (upbeat music)
00:27 - Hello, and welcome to Kentonite, live on KMTV.
00:31 I'm Sophia Akin, and here are your top stories
00:33 on Monday the 3rd of June.
00:35 Trapped indoors, Whitstable pensioner left shaken up
00:39 after her car was smashed up on the high street.
00:42 - You take things personally, I think,
00:44 but I was so shocked and obsessed about it.
00:48 - Caught red-handed, business owner says
00:51 Medway Council traffic management scheme
00:53 is killing business.
00:55 - We're down 30% in numbers,
00:58 and probably in financial terms,
01:00 probably a thousand pound a week.
01:01 - And feline good.
01:03 Canterbury Cat Cafe celebrates first birthday.
01:07 - All of our cats have been rehomed
01:08 from all across the UK from different situations.
01:11 - But first night, we start with some breaking news.
01:22 As new polling data has revealed,
01:24 the Labour Party might be on track
01:25 for a landslide victory in Kent,
01:27 with the polling seeing them taking many more seats.
01:30 Latest predictions from Pollster's YouGov
01:33 shows that Keir Starmer could be heading to Downing Street
01:35 with a majority of 194 seats.
01:38 The Tories are looking likely to keep Sevenoaks,
01:40 Tunbridge, and the New Weald seats,
01:42 with other traditionally strong seats on the knife edge.
01:45 Our local democracy reporter,
01:46 Gabriel Morris, joins me now with more.
01:48 So, some breaking polling news.
01:50 What more can you tell us about this?
01:51 - Well, this has come through from Pollster's YouGov,
01:54 and also Sky News as well,
01:55 and it shows a landslide towards the Labour Party,
01:59 not just nationally, but also here in Kent.
02:01 Keir Starmer could be heading to Downing Street
02:03 with a majority of 194 seats,
02:06 the biggest majority for 100 years for the Labour Party.
02:11 So, let's have a look through some of the data
02:13 in Kent for Labour.
02:15 Now, the biggest majority is looking to be Fanateast,
02:19 with a 47.8% to 28.9% for the Labour Party.
02:25 And that would be one of the biggest swings we have seen,
02:29 we would see in Kent, if that prediction is true.
02:33 Craig McKinley was the last MP for South Fanateast.
02:37 East Fanateast is a new seat that's changed.
02:40 The constituency boundaries have changed slightly,
02:42 which could be one of the reasons for that huge swing.
02:46 Now, likely, Labour Party also likely to take
02:49 Dover, Gravesham, Dartford, plus two Medway seats.
02:52 Now, looking at Chatham and Ellsford,
02:55 it's looking pretty close with just 0.1% in it.
02:58 And Gabriel, what about the Conservatives?
03:02 What can you tell us about those?
03:04 Well, they are looking likely to lose quite a few seats.
03:08 Now, let's start with Damien Green's seat of Ashford.
03:12 Now, there have been some big constituency,
03:15 some big boundary changes there,
03:17 losing much of the will.
03:18 Now, we do know that Damien Green
03:20 did want to stand in the will,
03:21 but he wasn't selected and he had Ashford.
03:23 Now, VAT is looking on life edge with Labour setting to win,
03:27 but just by 5%.
03:28 So that will be one to watch out for on July 5th
03:31 when the results start coming in early in the morning.
03:35 Now, other seats possibly could go to Labour are Folkestone
03:40 as well as possibly Herne Bay and Sandwich.
03:42 But it's looking like the Conservatives will retain VAT.
03:46 Otherwise, in other parties, the Liberal Democrats
03:49 are very close behind the Conservatives
03:51 in Tunbridge Wells by just 2%.
03:54 Some polling would suggest that the Liberal Democrats
03:57 could take Tunbridge Wells from the Conservatives.
04:01 Gabriel, thank you for joining us for those details.
04:05 Next tonight, an 80-year-old from Whitstable
04:09 is one of two to have had their cars targeted
04:12 in what's been described as a random act of vandalism.
04:15 Police were called just after 9.30pm on the 26th of May,
04:19 where they discovered windscreens and windows
04:21 smashed in.
04:22 Georgina Jenkins has Parkinson's, and without her car,
04:25 she says she missed appointments and was left feeling isolated.
04:29 An 80-year-old from Whitstable awoke to a shock last weekend.
04:34 The windscreen of her car was completely smashed to pieces.
04:38 Georgina has Parkinson's disease, and without her car,
04:41 she can't get around.
04:43 So she had to cancel important appointments,
04:46 leaving her locked indoors, feeling isolated.
04:49 You take things personally, I think.
04:51 But I was so shocked and obsessed about it.
04:55 And then people said, oh, no, there's
04:57 a couple of others been done, and a shocked window.
05:00 But it meant that I couldn't go out all week, really.
05:06 Because by the time we'd found a reliable windscreen place
05:14 and got it done, I think it was Thursday,
05:17 hospital appointment I had to cancel,
05:20 because it's a specially made vehicle to take wheelchair.
05:26 This spot here where you can see the two cars parked up,
05:28 this is the exact spot where the incident with Georgina's car
05:31 happened.
05:32 It's a popular spot for disabled users to use,
05:34 but it's also right in the heart of the high street.
05:37 There's lots of cameras dotted around.
05:38 So the exact moment was caught on CCTV footage.
05:43 You can see Georgina's car in front of the vehicle
05:46 being damaged.
05:47 Kent police said it was called to the high street
05:49 on Sunday the 26th of May of cause
05:51 to a disturbance between two people thought
05:54 to be known to each other.
05:55 During the incident, damage was believed
05:57 to be caused to several cars in this area.
06:00 Inquiries remain ongoing.
06:02 I mean, it just never occurred to me
06:04 that the car would be vandalized.
06:07 That's what makes it so abnormal, really,
06:10 when something not good happens.
06:14 Because most things that happen here are quite joyful.
06:18 Georgina's windscreen has since been repaired,
06:20 but it's come at a cost.
06:22 Some was covered under her insurance,
06:24 but the rest was a stretch with her pension.
06:26 A friend of Georgina's has set up a GoFundMe page,
06:29 hoping to get her compensation.
06:32 Sophia Akin for KMTV in Whitstable.
06:35 Next tonight, a fox cub has been rescued in Herne Bay
06:39 after getting its head stuck in an old wheel.
06:42 The young animal was found in the predicament
06:44 by Sophie Fowler and her husband, John,
06:46 in their garden on Herne Avenue.
06:48 The couple tried to get her free by pushing her head back
06:50 through and even used oil as a lubricant
06:53 before calling Kent Wildlife Rescue Services, which
06:56 brought the animal to the local vets.
06:58 The young fox, named Fifi, was then put under anesthesia
07:01 and went limp, allowing the vet to pull her free.
07:03 After being freed from the wheel,
07:05 the fox was released back into the couple's garden safely.
07:08 Now, a singer from Gravesham has won Britain's Got Talent
07:11 with her rendition of "Over the Rainbow"
07:13 from The Wizard of Oz.
07:14 [MUSIC - "OVER THE RAINBOW"]
07:18 28-year-old Sydney Christmas, who has dreams
07:23 of being a West End star, burst into tears
07:25 when her name was announced by presenters Anton Deck.
07:28 Speaking afterwards, she said she didn't know what to say
07:30 and couldn't believe the amount of love
07:32 she felt since the show aired.
07:33 The singer's now set to perform at the West End's
07:36 Royal Variety Performance later this year.
07:38 Well, a big congratulations to her.
07:41 And now, experts are warning about the impact of AI
07:44 on the coming July election, where
07:46 Kent will go to the polls.
07:47 Some are concerned that computer-generated false audio
07:50 clips and videos of senior politicians, known as deepfakes,
07:53 could mislead voters.
07:54 Medway social media expert Zoe Kenz
07:56 joins us virtually to explain a little bit more about deepfakes.
07:59 Zoe, thanks for joining us.
08:00 First of all, something that's been
08:02 a bit of a buzz around the world,
08:04 is there's a lot of talk about deepfakes.
08:06 Zoe, thanks for joining us.
08:07 First of all, some people might be wondering,
08:09 what actually are deepfakes?
08:11 How do they work?
08:12 So what it is, is where someone would take a video that
08:15 might already be out there, and then they actually then put
08:18 someone-- they can use AI and change the voice.
08:22 They can change the movement in the mouth.
08:25 So it actually looks like someone is actually
08:27 saying what they've put together.
08:29 So AI is creating this video.
08:30 And it's actually a video that's being played on a mobile phone.
08:34 And it's actually a video that's being played on a mobile phone.
08:37 And it's actually a video that's being played on a mobile phone.
08:40 And it's actually a video that's being played on a mobile phone.
08:43 And it's actually a video that's being played on a mobile phone.
08:46 And it's actually a video that's being played on a mobile phone.
08:49 And it's actually a video that's being played on a mobile phone.
08:52 And it's actually a video that's being played on a mobile phone.
08:55 And it's actually a video that's being played on a mobile phone.
08:58 Honestly, one of the [BLEEP] inside shouting at me
09:01 that I was a Tory.
09:02 Why do we have to have conference here every single year?
09:06 [BLEEP] hate Liverpool.
09:10 That is an example of a deepfake.
09:12 So that was not a real clip that we showed there,
09:14 and obviously censored as well.
09:16 But what can be the impact of making these deepfakes,
09:20 especially in the time of a general election
09:22 where people are trying to cast their votes
09:24 and decide who they want to be the prime minister?
09:27 It's going to cause so much confusion.
09:29 And obviously, people might not know the difference between
09:32 whether it's a deepfake or whether it's real.
09:35 And therefore, it can influence that person on the other end.
09:38 So it's really important to make sure that these platforms,
09:42 they're now trying to put in a tag which
09:45 will tag AI audio and videos, which actually makes people
09:49 aware whether they're AI or whether they're
09:52 actual real footage.
09:54 Does that make sense?
09:55 So I know that TikTok are jumping onto this.
09:59 Yeah, do you think that this is going--
10:01 so it looks like it could be having
10:02 an impact at a national level.
10:03 Do you think it could have an impact at a local level as
10:06 well?
10:06 Are people going to start doing this
10:08 for parliamentary candidates?
10:10 Yeah, I definitely think it can become local as well.
10:13 I mean, there was a lady--
10:14 I was looking at a News Report Today article.
10:18 And this girl, she'd done one.
10:20 She'd actually got a video clip.
10:21 She got the voice, what she wanted it to say.
10:24 She'd put it to the video.
10:26 And she got over 400,000 views on that video.
10:28 She didn't think it would go very far,
10:30 but she'd made it herself.
10:32 So people could be doing this locally as well.
10:35 And I just also wanted to ask you,
10:36 we know a lot of people now are getting their news
10:39 from social media platforms.
10:40 So what would you say to them to make sure
10:42 that they are getting the correct information
10:44 and, I guess, fact-checking before they do cast their vote
10:47 and rely on this information before casting their vote
10:50 as well?
10:51 Just make sure that if you see something
10:53 and you're unsure whether it's a deep fake
10:55 or whether it's real, just to check the source of where
10:58 it's coming from.
10:59 So who's actually shared that video?
11:01 Does it say where that video's come from?
11:04 We can't believe absolutely everything
11:05 we read, so do your research before really
11:09 being influenced by that video or audio that's out there.
11:13 Well, Zoe, thank you very much for joining us.
11:15 Great to talk to you about that.
11:16 Thank you.
11:17 Thank you.
11:19 Well, it's time for us to take a short break now.
11:21 But coming back, we'll have Bartholomew Hall here
11:23 with all the latest sports news from across Kent.
11:26 And we've been visiting Kent's first fully sustainable cat
11:29 cafe one year on from when it first opened.
11:33 All that and more coming soon.
11:34 I'll see you after this short break.
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15:15 Hello, and welcome back to Kent tonight, live on KMTV.
15:19 Now, a Raynham business owner says
15:20 he's seen a huge drop in customers
15:22 ever since Red Roots came to the town last month.
15:25 The traffic management scheme is aimed
15:27 at stopping drivers pulling over to the side of the road.
15:30 If they do, they'll face fines.
15:32 Stephen Goddard says the additional loading
15:34 bays introduced by Medway Council
15:36 are stopping passersby from seeing his businesses.
15:40 We found that where we would have customers coming in
15:43 from, say, 4.30 up to 7 o'clock, literally,
15:47 it was someone coming and turning the tap off.
15:49 We're down 30% in numbers, and probably in financial terms,
15:54 probably a thousand pound a week.
15:56 There's no 30-minute bay allowed for potential customers.
16:01 So all we get on a multiple times a week
16:05 for multiple periods, certainly over 20 minutes--
16:08 they're taking longer than 20 minutes--
16:09 we have great big massive HGVs that are here,
16:14 delivering to Nutmegs, delivering to Pizza Hut,
16:18 delivering to Greedy Banker.
16:21 And obviously, when they're here, no one can see it.
16:27 Well, in response to the comments,
16:29 Medway Council sent us this statement.
16:31 "Red Roots have been introduced in five locations
16:34 across Medway where yellow lines were already
16:36 in place to help enforce existing traffic restrictions
16:39 and tackle congestion on Medway's roads.
16:42 Following feedback from public consultations,
16:44 five additional clearly signposted loading and unloading
16:47 bays have been introduced, as well as
16:49 designated parking places.
16:51 And we will retain an open dialogue
16:53 with businesses moving forward."
16:57 To sport now, and as the T20 blast season set off
17:00 at the weekend, it was mixed fortunes for Kent.
17:02 And elsewhere, after Gillingham's High Street
17:04 signing announcement on Friday, the Medway Club
17:07 has gone on to unveil who will man Mark Bonner's backroom
17:10 team.
17:10 For more on this and the rest of today's sports,
17:13 here's Bartholomew Hall.
17:13 Hello there.
17:24 We start with Kent Spitfires, who
17:26 have had a mixed opening weekend to the start of this year's T20
17:30 blast, with a club record win over Middlesex,
17:32 followed by a three-wicket loss to Hampshire.
17:35 On his Spitfires debut in Chelmsford,
17:37 Matt Parkinson took his career first hat trick,
17:40 helping to limit Middlesex by a deficit of 98 runs.
17:43 That coming after Kent made 205 for eight,
17:46 thanks to a half century for Joe Denley.
17:48 Then in Southampton on Sunday, it
17:50 was quite a different story for Kent,
17:51 as the Spitfires couldn't defend their total of 165 for nine,
17:55 despite three wickets for Joey Everson.
17:57 The weekend's events leaves Kent in second overall
18:00 in the South table with two points.
18:02 The Spitfires make their white ball return to Canterbury
18:05 this Friday against Somerset.
18:08 Gillingham have announced who will be joining Mark Bonner
18:11 in his back room, with the names from both the Championship
18:14 and League One set to be brought into Priestfield.
18:18 Former Sunderland first team coach Anthony Hayes
18:21 has become Bonner's assistant manager
18:22 after having previously spent seven years as a coach
18:25 with Charlton Athletic.
18:27 Also coming from the Addicts, Peter Gill
18:29 will become a first team coach.
18:30 Meanwhile, Gillingham will also be keeping Deron Ibrahim
18:33 as a goalkeeper coach.
18:36 Work has started today on fitting of a new 3G pitch
18:39 at Maidstone United's Gallagher Stadium.
18:42 Following their exceptional FA Cup run to the final 16,
18:45 earning them more than £800,000 earlier this year,
18:48 the club has announced the quarter of a million pound
18:51 upgrade has finally begun.
18:52 The Gallagher was the first ground in the country
18:55 to be built with a 3G pitch, and was last replaced back in 2016
18:59 following the club's promotion to the National League.
19:03 And with just a week to go until the 2024 Euros kickoff
19:07 in Germany, former Gravesham schoolboy Mark Gaye
19:10 is set to play an important part in Gareth Southgate's squad
19:13 on the run up.
19:14 England will take on two final pre-tournament friendly
19:17 fixtures later this week, starting tonight
19:19 against Bosnia before taking on Iceland on Friday.
19:22 The Crystal Palace defender is likely to start
19:24 for the National Centennial tonight,
19:28 following doubts over Harry Maguire's availability
19:30 due to a calf injury.
19:34 And that's it from me with the sport for today.
19:38 Well, thank you very much, Bartholomew.
19:41 And in some other news, don't forget
19:42 you can always keep up to date with all the latest news
19:45 across Kent by logging on to our website, kmtv.co.uk.
19:49 There you'll find all our reports, including this one
19:52 about hundreds joining a rally against the University of Kent's
19:55 plans for 2,000 new homes being built
19:58 on open land in Canterbury.
20:01 The University of Kent has landed itself in controversy
20:04 after giving permission for land they owned to Canterbury City
20:06 Council to build 2,000 houses, shops, and offices
20:10 in the heart of the Bleen, a rural countryside
20:13 and ancient woodland only three miles north of the city centre.
20:17 Protesters say what would essentially
20:18 be a new town on areas like Tyler Hill, Bleen, and Rough
20:21 Common could have an extremely detrimental effect
20:24 on the wildlife and woodland and would take until 2040
20:27 to be finished.
20:28 The University of Kent say they are committed to biodiversity
20:31 and environmental issues, but the people behind me
20:34 don't believe them.
20:35 Save Our Bleen aim to stop 2,000 homes
20:38 being built in the Bleen countryside
20:39 just outside of Canterbury.
20:41 Public consultation is open until the 3rd of June.
20:44 So this Saturday 25th, concerned citizens alongside Kent Wildlife
20:48 Trust marched from the Dane John Gardens
20:50 to the University of Kent's registry,
20:52 crossing through the city centre for a total of two miles.
20:56 So we're calling the march in order
20:58 to really raise awareness for the university
21:01 to how people feel, but also to urge them to work with us.
21:05 They've got a new VC in place.
21:07 We urge her to show some bold leadership
21:09 and actually work with us, with residents, with the council,
21:13 and other stakeholders like Kent Wildlife Trust
21:16 to come up with a better solution
21:18 and use this land in a different way.
21:21 Other issues with the site include the landscape,
21:23 which suffers from poor drainage and flooding,
21:25 several heritage sites, including
21:27 an Iron Age settlement, and the increase of traffic and people
21:30 through the area.
21:31 This is all against what the university themselves have
21:34 stated for their sustainability policy.
21:36 The development company, Allison Young,
21:38 have been quoted as saying there is an economic need
21:41 for the sites to be delivered to ensure the future
21:43 success of the university.
21:45 The university has been known to have financial issues,
21:47 shutting down several courses on their Medway campus
21:49 to save money.
21:51 The 2,000 buildings in Bleen aren't the only expansions
21:54 planned by the council, with the Brooklands Farm
21:56 area in Whitstable earmarked for 1,400,
22:00 leading people like Emily to also join the march
22:02 against the council's plans.
22:03 We know what's down there.
22:05 There's so much rare wildlife, birds, fish.
22:10 And I've had a report from the Environment Agency
22:13 speaking about eels being up there.
22:16 And if both developments go ahead, or either one,
22:21 they will kill those streams with concreting.
22:25 The streams won't be filled from aquifers.
22:30 It's a really dangerous thing that they're proposing to do.
22:35 Questions will be raised on whether the march has
22:37 any effect on the council's plans, but only time will tell.
22:40 Finn McDermott for KMTV.
22:42 Tonight, there's going to be cloudy skies with temperatures
22:51 of 15 in Canterbury and Tunbridge Wells, lows of 14.
22:54 Tomorrow morning, we'll have some much-needed sun
22:57 across Kent.
22:58 Highs of 18 in Margate and Dartford, lows of 17 elsewhere.
23:02 Tomorrow afternoon, cloudy skies,
23:04 but temperatures rising to 19 or 20 in Canterbury and Maidstone.
23:08 Now, the outlook for the week will be seeing both sun
23:10 and clouds with temperatures of between 18 and 20
23:13 across the county.
23:18 And finally tonight, a Canterbury Cat Cafe
23:20 is celebrating one year of rehoming and rescuing
23:23 dozens of cats from all across the county,
23:26 providing them a forever home at a cafe.
23:29 And while the coffee shop is at cat-pacity now,
23:32 it wants to do more to help rescue the animals
23:34 from around the local area and provide adoption support
23:37 services going forward.
23:39 All of Leeders Sacks went down to get a feline for the place.
23:43 You may have heard of the Canterbury Tales,
23:45 but perhaps not quite like this.
23:47 Based in the centre of the city, Pip Harris
23:50 set up Canterbury's first cat cafe just over a year ago.
23:55 Now celebrating its first anniversary,
23:58 the fully sustainable coffee spot
23:59 has rehomed dozens of cats.
24:02 There are around 27 cats at this cat cafe,
24:05 including Custard here, who's looking quite relaxed
24:08 on this chair.
24:10 He is one of 24 cats who have been rehomed and rescued.
24:15 The owners want to give them a perfect life.
24:18 All of our cats have been rehomed from all across the UK
24:21 from different situations.
24:23 Obviously, some of them have had two or three homes before.
24:26 I just wanted them to be secure, happy, healthy,
24:29 and just know that they're safe here.
24:30 They're not going to get moved around again.
24:32 This ethical ethos extends to every part of the business,
24:36 with protecting the planet going hand in paw
24:39 with helping their cat companions.
24:41 Everywhere I source from, I'm trying
24:43 to make sure that we are being as green as possible.
24:46 So some of our delivery providers,
24:50 they have solar power on their roofs and their trucks
24:53 and things and their warehouses, even our waste as well.
24:56 So all of our food waste, the company that we're with,
24:58 it goes away and gets turned into biofuel.
25:01 Our litter is eco as well.
25:02 It's made from plark pulp.
25:04 Anywhere I can that I'm looking to make the more sustainable
25:07 switch, then we do.
25:09 One regular feline friend is final year university student
25:13 Morgan Staden.
25:14 She says the cat cafe gives her a space to relax and reflect.
25:19 When you're studying, you kind of
25:21 feel a bit away from nature and everything.
25:25 But being able to reconnect and be able to be like,
25:28 oh, there are pets here, and that you can give them
25:31 love that you can't give to your pets
25:35 because you're far away from home.
25:36 And it's just lovely.
25:40 While the cafe may already be popular with pet lovers,
25:43 the owners are still thinking about how
25:45 to make the nine lives of cats across Canterbury even better.
25:50 We want to start--
25:50 I don't know if she's mentioned, but we
25:52 want to start rehoming schemes where, obviously, there's
25:55 loads of rooms upstairs.
25:56 We want to be able to--
25:58 and luckily, we've got quite a few eyes on us online.
26:00 So rehoming and spotlighting cats that need a home
26:03 wouldn't be too hard.
26:05 So we want to start on that, working on that.
26:07 We want to start creating evening sessions,
26:09 whether it's going to be sessions about mental health
26:12 or creative sessions.
26:14 We want to create even more of a community.
26:17 With plans for adoption services and cat community assistance
26:20 going forward, it's clear this cafe
26:23 is doing everything it can to be the pick of the litter.
26:26 Oliver Leeds is the sax for KNTV in Canterbury.
26:31 So adorable.
26:31 It looked like Ollie was having a bit too much fun there.
26:34 Well, that's all we've got time for on tonight's episode
26:37 of Kent Tonight.
26:37 There's plenty more news made just for Kent
26:39 throughout the evening.
26:40 Do enjoy the rest of your evening,
26:42 and good night from me.
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