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English

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British (General) British (Received Pronunciation - RP, BBC)

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Sarah Jane Rose. Five demonstrators from the campaign group Plain Stupid climbed onto the roof of the houses of Parliament after gaining access is visitors. They then took a lift on got up to the top of the building through a fire escape. Despite strenuous efforts to tighten security procedures at the palace over recent years, it's emerged tonight that detailed maps of the building's layout can still be accessed over the Internet. Questions will also be asked over how the protesters managed to get banners on DH handcuffs through the search points on whether they had help inside. Our political correspondent Norman Smith, reports, Westminster may now be guarded by armed police ringed by security barriers and equipped with sophisticated airport style entry cheques. But at 9 30 this morning, the five protesters managed with some ease, it seems to find their way onto one of Parliament's Gothic rubes. From there, they unfurled their banners, wave to the cameras and phoned the media. The fact that we've got a news really knows worrying your concern is the fact that we're on a pathway to absolute chaos if we carry on with the government's airport expansion policies. Some two hours later, they were escorted down by police and arrested just as the prime minister was delivering this message. I think the message should go out today very clearly. That decision's in this country should be made in the chamber of this house and not on the roof. It's understood that protesters gained access to the Commons today by pretending to be visitors attending a committee hearing. Once inside, they apparently gained access to a lift up to the roof. But the speculation among MPs is they must have received help from someone working at Westminster. Otherwise, it's argued, it would have been almost impossible for the intruders to find their way around the warren of corridors and doorways and to know it. There was some sympathy for the police, thank you, Norman. But in a separate development this evening we have learned that the maps with detailed floor plans for parliament can be found on the Internet. This despite the Commons authorities apparently being warned about it after a previous security breach in 2004. While today's events have inevitably raised further questions about security on access to Westminster, there appears to be a broader consensus among MPs that whatever the security complications, nothing should be done to compromise the right of the public to visit Parliament