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Live Reporting

Patrick Byrne

All times stated are UK

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  1. Our live coverage across the day

    That's it from the Norfolk Live team on Friday so goodbye... we'll be back from 08:00 on Monday, bringing you the news, sport, travel and weather updates as they happen. 

    If you have any photographs from around the county that you'd like to share, or if there's anything happening that you'd like us to know about, you can contact us via email, Facebook or Twitter.

  2. Man quizzed over airport cyber attack released on bail

    A 29-year-old man arrested by police investigating a cyber attack on an airport's computers has been released on bail until June. 

    The unnamed man from Dover was questioned by Kent police over the attack at Norwich Airport in October last year. 

    He was held overnight in Dover on suspicion of computer hacking. 

  3. Weather: Cloudy but largely dry night

    Chris Bell

    BBC Look East weather

    Tonight will be cloudy and largely dry with a few clear intervals, but also the small chance of an isolated light shower.

    Some patchy frost is possible. Minimum temperature: -2C (30F).  

    Weather chart

    Saturday will be cloudy much of the time with bright spells and a small chance of isolated showers. Maximum temperature: 7C (43F).

  4. Neil: Canaries 'need to think positively' at Leicester

    BBC Sport

    Canaries boss Alex Neil has asked his squad, currently lingering in the relegation zone, to adopt a positive attitude ahead of their trip to Premier League front-runners Leicester City.

    Alex Neil

    "Leicester are effective and good at what they do, but we need to impose ourselves on the game. We're going there to get something," he said. 

    "We need to win games - that's the bottom line. We're going to go out and attack and play with freedom and that's our strength."

  5. Patients waste 63 tonnes of medicines costing £1.6m over four months

    More than 63 tonnes of medicines, worth an estimated £1.6m, have been wasted in Norfolk and Waveney over the past four months, clinical commissioning groups have revealed.

    Waste mediicines

    Ian Small, deputy head of medicines management for Norfolk, said people often automatically ticked the repeat prescription box when they do not need them.

    "This is a waste of NHS resources. People reorder things like painkillers every time yet often a bottle will last nearly four months," he said.

  6. Ousted vice-chairman denies 'disloyalty' to Broads Authority

    Patrick Byrne

    BBC News

    A vice-chairman of a Broads Authority committee ousted in a vote of no confidence claims the accusations of "disloyalty" made against him are untrue.

    James Knight

    James Knight, who sits on the navigation committee, said his questioning of spending and proposals from officers had been misinterpreted, adding: "I have always sought to uphold the principles of the law and the authority's code of conduct. 

    "I have served the public interest to the best of my ability and have sought to ensure the authority uses its resources prudently and is open and honest in its decision-making and actions."

  7. Groups to appeal to chancellor over rail bottleneck

    Andrew Sinclair

    BBC Look East political correspondent

    Another attempt is to be made to speed up improvements to a bottleneck junction at Ely that may be holding up rail development across East Anglia. 

    Ely Junction

    A "summit meeting" of local MPs, councillors and transport groups today agreed to a feasibility study into turning a single-track section of line into double track with Cambridgeshire LEP funding. 

    An appeal will also be made to Chancellor George Osborne to announce extra funding for the scheme in next month's budget. 

    Network Rail told the meeting it did not expect to have any money to fund the scheme until 2019 at the earliest.

  8. Man bailed after eight-hour armed police stand-off in Gorleston

    Patrick Byrne

    BBC News

    A man in his 40s arrested in connection with a stand-off incident involving armed police in Gorleston yesterday has been bailed.

    Armed stand off

    Police spent more than eight hours investigating reports that there were suspicious devices inside a property on Viking Road. 

    Two items seized from inside the building were thought to be BB guns, said police.

  9. Rapist jailed 35 years after crime through DNA enhancement

    A man who raped a woman in Bristol 35 years ago has been jailed for four years and eight months and will serve half the sentence in custody. 

    Stephen McCafferty

    Stephen McCafferty, 62, from Thetford, pleaded guilty at Bristol Crown Court to one count of rape committed in Wells Road, Knowle, in 1981.

    He was caught thanks to advances in DNA sample enhancement but police said the impact of his crime on the victim's life had been immense as she still lived in fear and did not like to go out alone. 

  10. Headlines: Man jailed for rape committed 35 years ago... Police grant bail to man arrested over cyber attack on airport

    Tim Addicott

    BBC Radio Norfolk

    Stories today covered this evening:

    • A 62-year-old man from Thetford has been jailed for a rape committed in Bristol 35 years ago 
    • MPs are to lobby Chancellor George Osborne for money to open up a rail bottleneck 
    • Police grant bail to a man arrested in Dover in connection with a cyber attack on Norwich Airport
  11. Team news: Leicester City v Norwich City

    BBC Sport

    Norwich face top-of-the-table Leicester with defender Andre Wisdom struggling to overcome a knee problem.

    Leicester manager Claudio Ranieri

    Vadis Odjidja Ofoe is fit after a minor ankle injury and midfielder Alex Tettey returns after completing a two-game ban. 

    Foxes manager Claudio Ranieri (pictured) could give a debut to January signing Daniel Amartey, with right-back Danny Simpson serving a one-match suspension.

  12. Solar-powered litter bin helps keep seafront tidy

    A solar-powered rubbish bin on trial until Easter at Cromer is helping to keep problem litter under control on the seafront.

    Solar powered bin

    Food packaging from seaside takeaways fills bins to overflowing very quickly, spreading litter across the ground, according to North Norfolk District Council, which installed the bin.

    The solar-powered compactor crushes down waste regularly using a hydraulic arm meaning the bin needs to be emptied less frequently and litter-picking becomes less of a problem.

  13. Feed-the-homeless group slams council 'bureaucratic nonsense'

    An organisation which gives free hot food to homeless people has rejected as "bureaucratic nonsense" a request from council officials to have its food hygiene standards inspected.

    Distributing food to homeless

    The People's Picnic volunteers were told by Norwich City food inspectors that they faced the same health and safety regulations as commercial organisations. 

    The group posted a message on Facebook in which a spokesman said: "Apparently we need to register in order to engage in the act of sharing food and adhere to their terms and conditions. Safe to say we were not prepared to engage in such bureaucratic nonsense." 

    The council said closing down the operation would be a "last resort".

  14. Man arrested in Dover over cyber attack on Norwich Airport website

    Paul Moseley

    BBC Radio Norfolk

    A 29-year-old man has been arrested in Dover in connection with a cyber attack on the Norwich Airport website in October last year.

    Norwich Airport

    In November a hacker calling himself "His Royal Gingerness" contacted BBC Radio Norfolk to say he could have infected computers running the airport to prove it was vulnerable to attack. 

    He added that he believed another hacker had planned to put fake bomb alerts on the site at Christmas - potentially causing chaos.

  15. Weather: Cold and dry with some sunshine

    Elizabeth Rizzini

    BBC Look East weather

    Sunny spells in places with the best of the sunshine in the west of the county.

    Lunchtime weather chart

    Dry but chilly in a light breeze. Maximum temperature: 6C (43F).

  16. Mass whale-stranding mystery 'will take months to solve'

    Scientists investigating the mass stranding of sperm whales in the North Sea have said it could be many months before they determine the cause of the deaths.

    Whale groundings

    Six whales have died this year after washing up on the east coast of England around Skegness and Hunstanton.

    Theories to suggest why the whales became stranded in the shallow waters of the North Sea have cited pollution, increased noise levels, and competition for food and females. 

  17. Three patients waited 12 hours for hospital beds on trolleys

    Patrick Byrne

    BBC News

    Three patients at the James Paget Hospital in Gorleston spent more than 12 hours on trolleys waiting for beds during a "major incident" last month.

    Hospital warning

    An unprecedented number of emergency ambulance admissions were made in the first few weeks of the year, the hospital said.

    A report to the board of directors also revealed accident and emergency treatment targets were missed with many people waiting six hours or more but all cancer patients were seen within target times.

  18. New coastal flood warning signs to be installed

    Patrick Byrne

    BBC News

    Four digital road signs to warn of tidal flooding along the west Norfolk coast are to be installed in Hunstanton, Heacham and Snettisham next week.

    Hunstanton flood

    The new LED signs, replacing manually updated warnings introduced in 2005, will be brighter, more visible to motorists and provide "timely" information, the Environment Agency said. 

    Hunstanton Sea Life Sanctuary was flooded by a North Sea tidal surge in December 2013. The new signs will alert residents to potential dangers at high tides and imminent floods or when evacuation is necessary.

  19. Coombs is seething at rival's age jibe

    Diss Express

    Today's back page of the Diss Express:

    Diss Express sport page
  20. Hospitals in Norfolk face multi-million pound deficits

    Nic Rigby

    BBC News

    The Queen Elizabeth Hospital (pictured) in King's Lynn, with a predicted shortfall of £12m, is facing the highest deficit of Norfolk's hospitals, a new BBC survey has found.

    Queen Elizabeth Hospital

    The Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital is facing a deficit of £10.3m at the end of the financial year 2015-16, while the James Paget Hospital in Gorleston is facing a £5.5m deficit.

    Across the East of England hospitals are facing a deficit of about £441m.

    Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital