Weekly round-up: Five stories you may have missed
BBCIn a week where police officers are being investigated over their conduct in the Henry Nowak case and two teenage boys who raped girls were given four years' detention after the appeal court changed their sentences, we have also reported on the introduction a summer hosepipe ban, access to a pregnancy sickness drug and the spectacular Strawberry Moon
We have picked five stories from the past seven days across Hampshire, the Isle of Wight, Dorset, Berkshire and Oxfordshire to keep you up to date.
Hosepipe ban for Hampshire and Isle of Wight

A hosepipe ban is being introduced for about one million customers across Hampshire and the Isle of Wight for a second year in a row.
Southern Water said the restriction would come into force on 10 July but is requesting customers to "put down their hosepipes now, to avoid putting the network under further pressure".
A ban for South East Water customers in Kent started from Friday. Southern Water said its restrictions would likely run until the autumn unless there was significant and sustained rainfall.
It comes after the warmest spring on record and last week's record-breaking heatwave.
In pictures: Stunning Strawberry Moon lights up the sky
BBC Weather Watcher Hang RossWith clear nights, the glowing Strawberry Moon was a spectacle above the skies over Hampshire and Dorset.
Marking the first full Moon of the summer season its name comes from the time of year it appears, not its colour.
It appeared full in the night sky on Monday and was also visible on Tuesday night.
Plenty of people stayed up late to try and take the perfect shot of the full moon, the lowest-hanging in the sky.
Why is pregnancy sickness drug not easily accessible to all?
BBC/Linzi KinghornBBC journalist Linzi Kinghorn investigated why a pregnancy sickness drug is not always accessible on the NHS.
After going to her local GP with chronic sickness, Linzi was diagnosed with Hyperemesis Gravidarum (HG).
She was told that there were a variety of first-line drug treatment options available on the NHS, including Doxylamine Succinate and Pyridoxine Hydrochloride, a drug which goes by the brand name Xonvea in the UK.
Linzi said: "It really worked for me and access to it was straightforward, so I was surprised to find out that some pregnant women face challenges when trying to get hold of it."
RAF's largest base to close for 'essential' works
PA MediaThe RAF's largest base is set to temporarily relocate all of its operations while work to modernise its airfield takes place.
RAF Brize Norton, in Oxfordshire, is set to undergo "essential" resurfacing and improvement works which the base said would "ensure the base remains fully operational and fit for the decades to come".
The site is home to about 5,800 service personnel and the RAF's Air Mobility Force - with all flights set be relocated to alternative locations around the UK from July. They will also occasionally use Bournemouth Airport.
The air force stressed that the UK's air military capability would not be "diminished" by the works, with its teams "maintaining full operational tempo throughout".
Summer fireworks set to light up resort
Getty ImagesThe return of summer evening firework displays is set to boost the local economy, a council has said.
The free seafront displays, set to music, will take place off Bournemouth Pier on Fridays and Poole Quay on Thursdays from late July.
They have been partially funded by Bournemouth Coastal Business Improvement District (BID) in an attempt to encourage longer stays and generate additional spending for businesses in the resorts.
