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				Parliamentary authorities have decreed that the media encampment 
				- the source of thousands of Brexit despatches broadcast all 
				over the globe - be temporarily dismantled next week to allow 
				the downtrodden turf to be repaired.
 An email sent to media outlets this week said urgent action was 
				needed to re-turf and reseed damaged areas, preserve the grass 
				in the less-damaged parts, and maintain flowerbeds.
 
 Normally reserved for occasional major political events like 
				general elections and budget announcements, the number of 
				broadcasters based on the green has become a barometer of the 
				state of the nation: The more cameras, the bigger the drama.
 
 For the last few months the area has been packed
 
 Inside parliament, Prime Minister Theresa May's government 
				teeters on the brink of collapse, Brexit has been delayed and 
				the fate of the world's fifth-largest economy rests in the hands 
				of the 650 lawmakers elected to sit there.
 
 Outside, TV channels have built elaborate two-tier studios, 
				radio stations have bunkered down inside white tents and 
				presenters speaking languages from Arabic to Italian have 
				jockeyed for a camera shot with a backdrop of parliament.
 
 All that has turned College Green - a normally grassy area less 
				than the size of four tennis courts - into a piebald muddy 
				patchwork in need of a break.
 
 But with Brexit far from resolved and an insatiable appetite for 
				news of the country's biggest political crisis in more than 70 
				years, the respite will only be temporary.
 
 Parliament, which owns the land, said the closure was expected 
				to last seven days. After that, regular access will be allowed 
				again "should the circumstances justify it."
 
 (Reporting by William James and Tom Scally; editing by Stephen 
				Addison)
 
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