Thursday, 20 January 2011

Kiev: Golden-domed city of Eastern promise

By George Webster for CNN
January 20, 2011 -- Updated 1216 GMT (2016 HKT)

CNN's global series i-List takes you to a different country each month. In January, we visit Ukraine and look at changes shaping the country's economy, culture and social fabric.

(CNN) -- The Ukrainian capital of Kiev is a riverside city that boasts streets lined with onion-domed churches and lively summer beer gardens.

Founded over 1,500 years ago, it can legitimately claim to be one of Europe's oldest cities -- and it has the monuments to prove it.

Modern-day Kiev is an unusual mix: Part historic Slavic, part Soviet, part Ukrainian-nationalist and part cosmopolitan European. Shiny office blocks mix with medieval statues and examples of bold Soviet-era constructivist architecture.

It is a 24-hour city, bustling with friendly, busy locals. Travelers from the West need to bear in mind that few people speak English, and nearly all the signs are in Russian or Ukrainian script.

Here to help you along is an at-a-glance guide to this intriguing city.

What to see

To get an immediate flavor of the city's rich history head to Kiev Pechersk Lavra, Kiev's monastery complex, which sprawls over a series of hills running along the Dnipro river.

"Mummified monks and a 4th-century B.C. gold hoard that rivals any collection in the world, as well as caves and a marvelous cathedral are the headlines here," says Tom Hall, travel editor of the Lonely Planet guides. "The Lavra will require at least half a day and deserves more."

If you can't get enough of Ukraine's ancient past, then an immersive excursion to the Pirogovo open-air museum -- showcasing folk architecture and life from across the ages -- should be just the ticket.

There are old-fashioned windmills, traditional churches and peasant huts dotted around (Pirogovo).
--David Mottershead - visitkievukraine.com

According to David Mottershead, founder of travel site visitkievukraine.com, the museum consists of a number of traditional villages, built to represent the folk heritage of each region of Ukraine.

"There are old-fashioned windmills, traditional churches and peasant huts dotted around the site," he says. "You're free to wander around and interact with the craftsman that work here in the summer -- it's a very popular activity with both tourists and locals."

However, if you want to have an experience that combines Kiev's colorful history with its buzzing, metropolitan present, then Mottershead suggests a stroll to Independence Square -- Kiev's central plaza renamed following the country's independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.

The focal point for mass demonstrations in 2004's peaceful "Orange Revolution," the square is also the city's social hub, where parades, concerts and festivals take place and which is, according to Mottershead, "a popular spot for late-night drinking and people watching."

Even if you think you've had enough history for one day, no trip to Kiev would be complete without taking in the golden domes and intricate mosaics of St. Sophia cathedral -- Kiev's oldest church and a UNESCO World Heritage site.

Where to shop

Lurking beneath the busy roads surrounding Independence Square you'll discover "Metrograd" -- a vast subterranean shopping Center. Divided into a myriad of quarters according to various categories -- such as "shoes," "books," and "boutiques" -- the "Metrograd" is the largest dedicated shopping space in Kiev and perfect for those in search of high-end products and designer labels. Tourists should note, however, that prices are relatively high by Ukrainian standards and bargain-hunters are better off above ground.

For a more traditional Ukrainian shopping experience head to Bessarabsky Square, home to a historic indoor market that glows with colorful spices, exotic fruits, fish, meat and flowers. "It's a photographer's dream," says Mottershead. But pliable travelers be warned, some of the sales people don't easily take "no" for answer.

"Khreschatyk is Kiev's answer to (London's) Oxford Street" says Mottershead. "You can find anything here from mobiles and bargain clothes to the fine porcelain and stylish watches."

Where to eat

If you're in a hurry, Kiev's "Puzata Khata" is a self-service eatery that offers good, cheap, no-frills food in an interior designed to look like a traditional Ukrainian peasant house. Part of a chain of restaurants, it has regional classics like borsch (a type beetroot soup), holubtsy (stuffed cabbage), and mlyntsi (a thin, yeasty pancake).

For those craving a panoramic view of the city, and who have the cash, then "Belvedere," housed in an elevated glass gazebo on a hill overlooking the Dnipro River, is an up-market option, serving a variety of European and fusion foods.

If the weather's good, Hydropark is the place to aim for beaches, bathing and ogling the city's bodybuilders.
--Tom Hall, Lonely Planet

A popular haunt among ex-pats and homesick travelers is "O'Brien's Irish Pub." Situated just a short walk from Khreschatyk, this Irish boozer also serves-up an excellent English breakfast and other traditional pub food, as well as a host of decent quality ales, according to Mottershead.

Where to hang out

"If the weather's good, Hydropark is the place to aim for beaches, bathing and ogling the city's bodybuilders," said Hall. "This outdoor play park is much loved by locals, some of whom plunge into the river from the bridge connecting its two islands to the rest of Kiev."

At night, Kiev comes alive with a growing number of bars and clubs. However, it's worth remembering that a number of venues operate a "face control" policy -- which gives them the right to turn people away based on their looks.

In search of the next big thing? Mottershead recommends "Art Club 44." "It's an amazing live venue, playing all sorts from jazz and experimental, to reggae and rock, and is very popular among the local students," he says.

For those in search of an all-night rave, try "Arena." Spread over four floors, this entertainment megaplex houses a dance club with a deafening sound system, a sports bar, beer house, and a karaoke lounge and has played host to the likes of Kraftwerk and 50 Cent.

However, if a quiet night is more your thing, take a stroll along "St. Andrew's Descent" -- a winding pebble-stone street on a steep hill that is one of Kiev's oldest and most popular. Linking St Andrew's church at its top to a bevy of historical museums at its bottom, St. Andrew's descent is lined with galleries, art sellers and, inevitably, a fair share of souvenir stalls.


Injury-hit Williams claims Melbourne win

January 20, 2011 -- Updated 1048 GMT (1848 HKT)
Despite having won Wimbledon five times and the U.S. Open twice, Venus Williams has never claimed the Australian Open.
Despite having won Wimbledon five times and the U.S. Open twice, Venus Williams has never claimed the Australian Open.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Venus Williams recovers from one-set down to beat Sandra Zahlavova in Australia
  • Caroline Wozniacki is also through after a straight-sets win at Australian Open
  • Justine Henin beats British number one Elena Baltacha in 61 minutes

(CNN) -- Former world number one Venus Williams came through an injury scare to defeat Sandra Zahlavova 6-7 6-0 6-4, in the second-round of the Australian Open on Wednesday.

The fourth-seed Williams had not lost a set to the Czech in any of their four previous meetings, but Zahlavova remedied that when she claimed the first thanks to a tie break.

After falling behind, the 30-year-old Williams required treatment in the locker room after picking up a groin injury and returned with the area heavily strapped to win the final two sets of the match.

Williams, who is playing in only her second tournament since the 2010 Wimbledon championships after struggling with a knee injury, recorded her win in three hours and one minute.

"I wasn't very happy, to say the least," the American said of her injury on the tournament's website.

"I mean, with an injury like that, you just don't know what to expect. I think what keeps me going is knowing that when I'm healthy I play really, really well and knowing that I have so much good tennis in my body keeps me motivated."

Knowing that I have so much good tennis in my body keeps me motivated
--Venus Williams

The seven-time grand slam winner -- who wowed the crowds with another head-turning outfit -- will face Germany's Andrea Petkovic in the third round after the 30th seed also came from behind to defeat Britain's Anne Keothavong 2-6 7-5 6-0.

Top-seed Caroline Wozniacki and 2004 champion Justine Henin had less complicated second rounds, with both winning in straight sets.

World number one Wozniacki dispatched America's Vania King in under an hour with a 6-1 6-0 win.

"I was playing aggressively," the Dane told the WTA Tour's website. "I took the balls early and made her run, and had a couple of good net approaches. In general I played solid."

Wozniacki will next play Dominika Cibulkova, the Slovakian who beat her in Sydney last week. Cibulkova eliminated Alberta Brianti of Italy 6-1 4-6 6-2.

Belgian Henin, seeded 11th, beat British number one Elena Baltacha 6-1 6-3 at the Rod Laver Arena.

The 28-year-old Henin has won seven majors and overcame Baltacha in 61 minutes, despite being troubled by an elbow injury.

The Australian Open should be in February!

Henin's next opponent will be former French and U.S. Open champion Svetlana Kuznetsova of Russia.

Kuznetsova, 25, ended the hopes of Dutch qualifier Arantxa Rus with a 6-1 6-4 win on Show Court Two

Russia's Maria Sharapova is into the next round after a hard-fought 7-6 (7-3), 6-3 success over Virginie Razzano.

Sharapova, a champion at Melbourne Park in 2008, lost the opening three games of the match to her French opponent but bounced back to seal victory in little over two hours.

"Looking back, obviously you want to play faster matches with an easier score line," Sharapova, 23, said.

"That would be great, but it's also good to play these types of matches where you're put in a situation where you have to find a way to win, especially when your opponent is playing really well."

The 14th seed will meet 22-year-old Julia Goerges in the last 32 after the German eliminated 20th-seed Kaia Kanepi 6-4 3-6 6-4.

Sonia Peres, wife of Israeli president, dead at 87

From Guy Azriel, CNN
January 20, 2011 -- Updated 1255 GMT (2055 HKT)
Sonia Peres married Shimon Peres, current President and twice the former Prime Minister of Israel, in 1945.
Sonia Peres married Shimon Peres, current President and twice the former Prime Minister of Israel, in 1945.
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Sonia Peres preferred to remain out of the public eye
  • The couple has lived separately since Shimon Peres was elected president
RELATED TOPICS

Jerusalem (CNN) -- Sonia Peres, the wife of Israeli President Shimon Peres, died at her Tel Aviv home Thursday morning, a president's spokeswoman said. She was 87.

The president was making his way to Tel Aviv from Jerusalem on Thursday, said spokeswoman Meital Jaslovitz.

The couple has lived separately since Shimon Peres was elected president in 2007, with his wife -- who preferred to remain out of the public eye -- remaining in their Tel Aviv home while her husband moved to the official residence in Jerusalem.

Dr. Rafi Valdan, Peres' son-in-law, told Israel Radio that she was found dead Thursday morning when a grandchild came to visit her, according to the daily newspaper Haaretz.

Sonia Peres was "all nobility and devotion," Valdan said. "The family members were very close to her. We would see her almost every day."

She was born in 1923 in the Ukraine and met Shimon Peres after they both came to Israel, Haaretz said. They married in May 1945 and had three children.

Sufis hoping for divine intervention in Sudan

From Ben Wedeman, CNN
January 20, 2011 -- Updated 1042 GMT (1842 HKT)

Omdurman, Sudan (CNN) -- Islamic hardliners frown at their offbeat, spontaneous ways, but in Sudan, Sufism runs deep.

While they shun politics, the Sufis are well aware this country has reached a historic crossroads.

Southern Sudan last week held a referendum to determine if the south will split from the north. But some members of the mystical branch of Islam are hoping for divine intervention to head off what appears to be an almost certain divorce between the Muslim majority north and the Christian, Animist, south.

"We ask God almighty that they vote for unity," said Shaik Amin Briil, from a cemetery in the city of Omdurman, where followers of the Sufi Qadiriya order have gathered every Friday night for decades.

The Sufis, who brought Islam to much of Sudan and sub-Saharan Africa, dance, pray and preach using drama and humor.

It's finished. The south will be out. For me, as a Sudanese, it makes me sad because we want one Sudan.
--Hussein Ali, former government official, Sudan

But most significantly, they follow strictly the Quranic prohibition against compulsion or force in religion. Everyone is at liberty to choose their own path.

Omid Safi, a professor of religious studies at the University of North Carolina, described Sufism as the most prominent mystical tradition in Islam.

"Above all else, it aspires to have a face-to-face encounter with God," he said.

"Rooted in the Quran and the experience of the Prophet Muhammad, Sufis often emphasize the transformative power of Divine love."

It's this power that some followers hope will help keep Sudan united.

Former government official Hussein Ali says Sudan's politicians have destroyed the country by fighting instead of having a dialogue with the people in the south.

"It's finished. The south will be out," he said. "For me, as a Sudanese, it makes me sad because we want one Sudan."

But Badr Khalafallah says after all the suffering it's better to live in a small country at peace rather than a large country at war. He works in Darfur, where, according to the United Nations, at least 300,000 people have been killed and more than three million others displaced as a result of conflict.

"For me, because I am working in Darfur as a civil administrator, I know the wars," he said.

"I know the displaced people, I know the conflict there. For this we have no right to have any war in Sudan."


Daughter snatched from hospital reunited with mom 23 years later

By the CNN Wire Staff
January 20, 2011 -- Updated 1521 GMT (2321 HKT)
Updated 1521 GMT (2321 HKT)
Click to play

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Carlina White was abducted in 1987 from a hospital room
  • The girl told authorities that she had felt that she was raised by a family that she did not belong to
  • She did an Internet search recently and found information on her abduction case

Find out more about this story from CNN affiliate WABC.

(CNN) -- In 1987, an anguished, trembling Joy White pleaded for someone to help her find her infant daughter.

"I hope she's all right," the heartbroken mother told reporters at the time before collapsing in tears.

Now, 23 years later, White is crying tears of joy as the decades-long mystery of her missing daughter reached a happy ending.

The saga started on August 4, 1987, when White took her sick baby, Carlina, to a Harlem hospital because of an extremely high fever, a New York police official said.

Carlina was admitted in the hospital and White went home to rest. When the mother returned, Carlina was gone.

Years passed as White searched for her daughter, all the time holding onto a photograph of a baby girl she had only held for three weeks.

On January 4, White's phone rang.

The woman on the other end of the line said she was Carlina, and she sent White a picture taken in 1987.

The face in the photograph bore a striking resemblance to that of the baby in the tattered picture White had held on to.

Police too agreed that the photographs looked alike and carried out a DNA test.

On Tuesday, the results came back -- and they were a match.

"Carlina was a missing link," Pat Conway, Carlina White's aunt told CNN affiliate WABC as she raised her hands in the air. "We have gotten her back. In the name of Jesus, Hallelujah. Hallelujah. Hallelujah."

For her part, Carlina Renae White, had nursed a nagging feeling that she was raised by a family she did not belong to, said Ernie Allen from the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

Raised under a different name, Carlina grew suspicious when the woman who raised her could not provide her with a birth certificate.

So she scoured the Internet for answers, stumbling on the website of the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. There, she came across an item about a baby girl who had been taken from a New York hospital .

She called the center, which in turn notified authorities.

Authorities are not saying much about the woman who raised Carlina White as they continue their investigation.

"I never gave up hope," Carlina White's grandmother, Elizabeth, told WABC. "It is like she has been around us all her life. She wasn't a stranger. She fit right in."

CNN's Laura Dolan, Rob Frehse, Lateef Mungin and Jason Kessler contributed to this report.


Kiev: Golden-domed city of Eastern promise

By George Webster for CNN
January 20, 2011 -- Updated 1216 GMT (2016 HKT)

CNN's global series i-List takes you to a different country each month. In January, we visit Ukraine and look at changes shaping the country's economy, culture and social fabric.

(CNN) -- The Ukrainian capital of Kiev is a riverside city that boasts streets lined with onion-domed churches and lively summer beer gardens.

Founded over 1,500 years ago, it can legitimately claim to be one of Europe's oldest cities -- and it has the monuments to prove it.

Modern-day Kiev is an unusual mix: Part historic Slavic, part Soviet, part Ukrainian-nationalist and part cosmopolitan European. Shiny office blocks mix with medieval statues and examples of bold Soviet-era constructivist architecture.

It is a 24-hour city, bustling with friendly, busy locals. Travelers from the West need to bear in mind that few people speak English, and nearly all the signs are in Russian or Ukrainian script.

Here to help you along is an at-a-glance guide to this intriguing city.

What to see

To get an immediate flavor of the city's rich history head to Kiev Pechersk Lavra, Kiev's monastery complex, which sprawls over a series of hills running along the Dnipro river.

"Mummified monks and a 4th-century B.C. gold hoard that rivals any collection in the world, as well as caves and a marvelous cathedral are the headlines here," says Tom Hall, travel editor of the Lonely Planet guides. "The Lavra will require at least half a day and deserves more."

If you can't get enough of Ukraine's ancient past, then an immersive excursion to the Pirogovo open-air museum -- showcasing folk architecture and life from across the ages -- should be just the ticket.

There are old-fashioned windmills, traditional churches and peasant huts dotted around (Pirogovo).
--David Mottershead - visitkievukraine.com

According to David Mottershead, founder of travel site visitkievukraine.com, the museum consists of a number of traditional villages, built to represent the folk heritage of each region of Ukraine.

"There are old-fashioned windmills, traditional churches and peasant huts dotted around the site," he says. "You're free to wander around and interact with the craftsman that work here in the summer -- it's a very popular activity with both tourists and locals."

However, if you want to have an experience that combines Kiev's colorful history with its buzzing, metropolitan present, then Mottershead suggests a stroll to Independence Square -- Kiev's central plaza renamed following the country's independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.

The focal point for mass demonstrations in 2004's peaceful "Orange Revolution," the square is also the city's social hub, where parades, concerts and festivals take place and which is, according to Mottershead, "a popular spot for late-night drinking and people watching."

Even if you think you've had enough history for one day, no trip to Kiev would be complete without taking in the golden domes and intricate mosaics of St. Sophia cathedral -- Kiev's oldest church and a UNESCO World Heritage site.

Where to shop

Lurking beneath the busy roads surrounding Independence Square you'll discover "Metrograd" -- a vast subterranean shopping Center. Divided into a myriad of quarters according to various categories -- such as "shoes," "books," and "boutiques" -- the "Metrograd" is the largest dedicated shopping space in Kiev and perfect for those in search of high-end products and designer labels. Tourists should note, however, that prices are relatively high by Ukrainian standards and bargain-hunters are better off above ground.

For a more traditional Ukrainian shopping experience head to Bessarabsky Square, home to a historic indoor market that glows with colorful spices, exotic fruits, fish, meat and flowers. "It's a photographer's dream," says Mottershead. But pliable travelers be warned, some of the sales people don't easily take "no" for answer.

"Khreschatyk is Kiev's answer to (London's) Oxford Street" says Mottershead. "You can find anything here from mobiles and bargain clothes to the fine porcelain and stylish watches."

Where to eat

If you're in a hurry, Kiev's "Puzata Khata" is a self-service eatery that offers good, cheap, no-frills food in an interior designed to look like a traditional Ukrainian peasant house. Part of a chain of restaurants, it has regional classics like borsch (a type beetroot soup), holubtsy (stuffed cabbage), and mlyntsi (a thin, yeasty pancake).

For those craving a panoramic view of the city, and who have the cash, then "Belvedere," housed in an elevated glass gazebo on a hill overlooking the Dnipro River, is an up-market option, serving a variety of European and fusion foods.

If the weather's good, Hydropark is the place to aim for beaches, bathing and ogling the city's bodybuilders.
--Tom Hall, Lonely Planet

A popular haunt among ex-pats and homesick travelers is "O'Brien's Irish Pub." Situated just a short walk from Khreschatyk, this Irish boozer also serves-up an excellent English breakfast and other traditional pub food, as well as a host of decent quality ales, according to Mottershead.

Where to hang out

"If the weather's good, Hydropark is the place to aim for beaches, bathing and ogling the city's bodybuilders," said Hall. "This outdoor play park is much loved by locals, some of whom plunge into the river from the bridge connecting its two islands to the rest of Kiev."

At night, Kiev comes alive with a growing number of bars and clubs. However, it's worth remembering that a number of venues operate a "face control" policy -- which gives them the right to turn people away based on their looks.

In search of the next big thing? Mottershead recommends "Art Club 44." "It's an amazing live venue, playing all sorts from jazz and experimental, to reggae and rock, and is very popular among the local students," he says.

For those in search of an all-night rave, try "Arena." Spread over four floors, this entertainment megaplex houses a dance club with a deafening sound system, a sports bar, beer house, and a karaoke lounge and has played host to the likes of Kraftwerk and 50 Cent.

However, if a quiet night is more your thing, take a stroll along "St. Andrew's Descent" -- a winding pebble-stone street on a steep hill that is one of Kiev's oldest and most popular. Linking St Andrew's church at its top to a bevy of historical museums at its bottom, St. Andrew's descent is lined with galleries, art sellers and, inevitably, a fair share of souvenir stalls.


Americans fall for rising Shanghai

By Steven Jiang, CNN
January 20, 2011 -- Updated 1447 GMT (2247 HKT)

Shanghai (CNN) -- Inside the three-story "Chinatown" nightclub, the packed building that once housed a Japanese temple was anything but Zen on a recent Friday night.

Red decor and smoky rooms, loud music and burlesque acts, gyrating Russian dancers and a cheering international crowd -- this could be a quintessential Shanghai scene in the 1930s, if not for the ringing cell phones on the tables.

"I think you could hardly keep a good town down," said British owner Andrew Bull.

CNNGo.com: Insider's guide to Shanghai

In the early years of the 20th century, Shanghai was the foremost cosmopolitan city in the Far East, home to some 70,000 foreigners and flourishing in trade and commerce -- the leading Asian city in style and decadence.

Most non-Chinese residents had left by the time the Communists dimmed the neon in 1949. The "Paris of the East" became a grim industrial powerhouse that churned out textiles and machinery to the rest of the country.

Hu's visit to Washington
Shanghai: The 'Paris' of Asia
China's military power concerns others
China looks to sustain economy
Cupcakes and rock 'n' roll in China
"It's an amazing place to start a business ... If you work hard, there can be nothing better."
--Kelly Lee, 34, Chinese-American entrepreneur

When Beijing's leadership decided to breathe fresh life into the aging metropolis in 1990, years of neglect produced an unintended consequence: preservation of one the world's largest collection of art deco buildings, completed during Shanghai's last heyday.

Spencer Dodington saw romance and opulence in Shanghai's unique architecture when he first moved here in 1995. Since quitting his finance job with a U.S. conglomerate, the Texan has turned his passion for the city's elegant old homes into a successful second career.

"For me, the crucial thing has been to preserve the Shanghai pedigree -- '20s, '30s or '40s design in a way that still suits modern living," Dodington, 42, said as he showed CNN his last project -- restoring his art deco apartment built in 1928 in the heart of the former French quarter.

He installed pine floors from the same era found at demolition sites, and put in period furniture he collected over his long stay in Shanghai. As the city fast redevelops, Dodington said the value of properties like his has surged 15 times in the past decade.

While Dodington relishes recapturing the city's past glory, he is nevertheless drawn to the dynamic changes in Shanghai, now home to some 20 million residents -- a far cry from his hometown hidden in the cornfields of central Texas with a population of 953.

"There is that new energy that keeps proving to me that it's interesting to stay here rather than find a different place," he said.

The city's physical transformation is even greater than during its first "Golden Age." After two decades of fervent economic growth, skyscrapers -- including China's current and future tallest building -- have replaced farmland on the east side of the Huangpu River, which cuts through the city.

During the construction boom before last year's World Expo, Shanghai reportedly spent more than $50 billion to build new infrastructure and landmarks. In the 15 years Dodington has lived in Shanghai, the city's subway system went from nonexistent to the world's longest network with 420 kilometers (260 miles) of tracks.

Dodington remembers what the expatriate scene was like when he first arrived.

"There was one bar that was not in a hotel," he said. "You ring up your mate in the office: 'Hey, let's go out tonight,' and he would just hang up: 'OK, fine.' There was only one place."

Hundreds of bars and nightclubs now dot city streets, and government statistics show the number of registered foreign residents by the end of 2008 has exploded to 152,000 -- with Americans being the second largest community, trailing Japanese residents.

In the Jinqiao neighborhood in eastern Shanghai lies a picture-perfect replica of American suburbia. Single-house homes with manicured lawns stand near private schools with large sports arenas; SUVs scout for parking spaces at strip malls.

Lining up the main commercial street are restaurants with names like "New York Pizza" and "Cantina Agave." The latter, packed with families during weekend lunch hours, is the creation of Kelley Lee, a Chinese-American born and raised in Southern California, and trained as a chef in Paris.

When Lee had an opportunity to open a restaurant in Shanghai in 2004, she relocated without hesitation, having witnessed the city's resurgence in an earlier visit.

Six years later, Lee, 34, sits atop a mini-empire of six dining establishments across the city -- including two Mexican restaurants, an American microbrewery and a cocktail bar.

"It's an amazing place to start a business," she said. "If you work hard, there can be nothing better."

During the dinner rush hours in her brewery, Lee brought food to the tables, suggested beers at the bar, and even briefly donned the chef's dress to help out in the kitchen.

She acknowledged the challenge of bringing Chinese customers to Western restaurants. But she said she captured an ever-larger local clientele by sticking to authentic food and ambiance at her venues.

"Every year, I keep saying to myself that I'm going to go back to the States, but every year I find that there are just more opportunities," she said. "It's such a fantastic place to grow a business."

It is also a remarkable place to keep a loyal musical following. The sound of jazz from Shanghai's ubiquitous dancing halls, which had once permeated the city until the then new Communist government put a stop to it, has returned after decades of silence.

One staple venue is the dark and smoky Cotton Club. Trumpeter Hwa Fu performed on a recent Saturday night to a packed crowd of locals and expatriates.

Born in Taiwan, Fu, 35, grew up in Seattle and moved to Shanghai in 2002 to join the music scene in a city in the fast lane.

As Dodington speaks the Shanghai dialect with a Southern drawl and Lee chats in Mandarin with a Californian twist, Fu, too, has discovered the connection between his musical notes and the city that effortlessly blends East and West.

"Jazz is the energy in Shanghai," he said. "Shanghai is reborn as a city -- it's changing so fast and it's great!"


Boxing champion Vitali Klitschko plans to be political heavyweight

From Diana Magnay and Barry Neild, CNN
January 20, 2011 -- Updated 1517 GMT (2317 HKT)

CNN's global series i-List takes you to a different country each month. In January, we visit Ukraine and look at changes shaping the country's economy, culture and social fabric.

Kiev, Ukraine (CNN) -- Ukrainian politicians don't pull their punches. There have been fist fights in parliament and, as the country deals with aftermath of a turbulent two decades since emerging from Soviet rule, brushes with the law that have threatened to bruise reputations.

Newcomers could be forgiven for entering this uncompromising arena with trepidation -- unless, of course, they are Vitali Klitschko.

A name familiar to boxing fans, Klitschko is the current WBC world heavyweight champion, having retained his title last October with a victory that left American opponent Shannon Briggs recovering in hospital.

But Klitschko has also been making a name for himself in Ukraine's political ring, scoring success for his Ukrainian Democratic Alliance for Reform party -- aptly also known as "Punch."

Gallery: Ukraine's pugilist politician

And the 38-year-old believes there are clear similarities between sparring in the ring and fighting a political corner.

"In every way, in life, in politics, you have to show your skills," he told CNN. "You have to defend yourself. You have to defend your mind -- not physically -- you have to use your strong mentality, you use your brain skills to defend your position."

Klitschko, already an oddity in the boxing world thanks to a doctorate in sports science that earned him the nickname "Dr. Ironfist," made the jump into politics in 2006, standing in his home city of Kiev.

He launched his Reform party in April last year, campaigning on a platform of anti-corruption and pledging to bring "European standards" of politics and economics to Ukraine.

Standing at over two meters tall, Klitschko is a formidable addition to Ukraine's political landscape, but the fighter says, unlike some politicians, he will keep his fists to himself.

It's painful to see that if a politician doesn't have brain power to defend his position, he tries to use his muscles
--Vitali Klitschko, boxer and politician

"I am actually 20 years in sport, in boxing, and never ever in 20 years I use my skills outside of the ring," he said.

"It's painful to see that if a politician doesn't have brain power to defend his position, he tries to use his muscles -- this politician doesn't have a future."

Klitschko isn't the only fighter to switch from pugilism to politics. In the Philippines, welterweight world champion Manny "Pacman" Pacquiao was last year elected to the country's House of Representatives.

Even as he eyes inevitable retirement from boxing, Klitschko says he will not focus entirely on politics, maintaining an active role in the children's charity he runs with younger brother Wladimir, also a world heavyweight champion.

Founded in 2003, the Klitschko Brothers Foundation built on work the pair were already undertaking for the United Nations, aiming to promote healthy lifestyles for children through sport.

"We try to give the young generation the opportunity to develop himself through sport," he said. "We try to use the power what has sport to change the world and bring attention to the people the problems that have our society."

Klitschko credits his relationship with his brother -- sometimes compared to that of the tennis world's champion sisters Serena and Venus Williams -- for his success.

"My brother is not just brother -- he's my best friend," he said. "We understand each other very well, we help each other and maybe that's why we're lucky and successful in sport.

"We make a condition in sport also: we never fight each other but we play each other at table tennis, chess. The life without a brother would be so boring and that's why I'm thankful to my parents I have my brother Wladimir. "



Palme d'Or winner denied foreign film Oscar nomination

Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives Uncle Boonmee was a surprise winner of the Palme d'Or last year

The Thai movie that won the prestigious Palme d'Or at Cannes will not feature at the Oscars in the foreign language film category.

Uncle Boonmee Who Can Recall His Past Lives was one of 66 films that had featured on the Academy's longlist of eligible titles.

Yet it is not one of the nine films that have been chosen for the next round of voting.

France's official submission, Of Gods and Men, has also been eliminated.

The film, inspired by the murder of seven French monks in Algeria in 1996, was also lauded at Cannes where it won the Grand Prix last May.

The nine films on the Academy's shortlist hail from Algeria, Denmark, Canada, Greece, Japan, Mexico, South Africa, Spain and Sweden.

The shortlist will now be winnowed down to five nominees, to be announced with the rest of the Oscar nominations on Tuesday.

Uncle Boonmee, directed by Apichatpong Weerasethakul, tells of a dying man who is visited by the ghosts of his late wife and son.

FOREIGN LANGUAGE FILM SHORTLIST

  • Hors la Loi (Outside the Law) - Algeria
  • Incendies - Canada
  • In a Better World - Denmark
  • Dogtooth - Greece
  • Confessions - Japan
  • Biutiful - Mexico
  • Life, Above All - South Africa
  • Tambien la Lluvia (Even the Rain) - Spain
  • Simple Simon - Sweden

The film was praised by critics and awarded the Palme d'Or by a jury headed by the US director Tim Burton.

Algeria's submission, Outside the Law, provoked controversy when it premiered in Cannes last May.

Demonstrators claimed that Rachid Bouchareb's film - which tells of three brothers caught up in Algeria's struggle for independence - was biased against France.

The Academy Awards take place at Hollywood's Kodak theatre on 27 February.

Last year's foreign language film Oscar went to Argentinian drama The Secret in Their Eyes.

One of the titles it beat to the award was Michael Haneke's The White Ribbon, recipient of the Palme d'Or in 2009.

Google fights Spanish privacy order in court

Google logo If Google loses its bid to overturn the ruling, it could have consequences across Europe

Google has challenged Spain's data watchdog in court over claims that its search engine invades personal privacy.

The regulator had told the internet giant to delete links to websites that contain out of date or inaccurate information about individuals.

But the company argues that it is publishers - and not search engines - that should be forced to take action.

Google lawyers told Madrid's high court yesterday that deleting results "would be a form of censorship".

The case revolves around a ruling by the Spanish data protection agency, the AEPD, that some search results contravene the country's privacy laws.

In particular, the watchdog says that Google breaks the country's so-called "right to be forgotten" - a law that enables people to control information about them.

Google is hoping to overturn five AEPD adjudications, including one involving a leading surgeon who has complained that the site's search results treat him unfairly.

Publisher or distributor?

The man was charged with criminal negligence in 1991 but later acquitted of any wrongdoing.

When a Google search is conducted on his name, however, only reports about his arrest - not the eventual outcome of the case - are visible.

The AEPD has said that this is wrong, and that in an increasingly digital world the right to be forgotten should include the ability to delete incorrect or out of date information online.

It has sought an injunction against Google to force it to comply, which the company says is a "dangerous" move.

"Asking search engines to withdraw the information in an arbitrary manner is very dangerous," Google lawyer Luis Javier Aparicio Falon told the court.

"Search engines are a fundamental part of the information society, and it would be attacking freedom of expression."

Speaking before the trial started, Google executives said that it was a fundamental error for regulators to treat the engine as a publisher of information, rather than a distributor.

"We are disappointed by the actions of the Spanish privacy regulator," said Peter Barron, Google's director of external relations, in a statement.

"Spanish and European law rightly hold the publisher of material responsible for its content. Requiring intermediaries like search engines to censor material published by others would have a profound chilling effect on free expression without protecting people's privacy."

'Right to forget'

If Google is unsuccessful in its challenge, it will be forced to delete information about the individuals concerned from its Spanish site - as well as respond to another 88 cases also brought by the regulator.

Although the Californian company famously stopped political censorship of its Chinese service last year, it does screen search results in other countries in order to comply with the law.

In the US it blocks sites known to carry material that violates copyright, while in France and Germany it deletes listings for neo-Nazi and race hate groups.

The case could also have an impact outside Spain - particularly since the European Union has said that it is considering applying the right to be forgotten across the entire continent.

"Internet users must have effective control of what they put online, and be able to correct, withdraw or delete it at will," said Viviane Reding, Europe's digital rights commissioner, two months ago.

"The right to be forgotten is essential in today's world."

Microsoft explains Windows phone 7 'phantom data'

Steve Ballmer holds a Windows Phone 7 handset The software was seen as the firm's first credible challenge to other phone systems

Microsoft has confirmed that some handsets running its Windows Phone 7 software are sending and receiving "phantom data".

Earlier this year, users complained on net forums that their phones were automatically eating into their monthly data plans without their knowledge.

Microsoft said its investigation found that most problems were caused by a unnamed "third party" service.

However, it said it was still looking into other potential faults.

"We are in contact with the third party to assist them in making the necessary fixes," a spokesperson said.

The firm also said that it was looking into "potential workarounds" until the issue was solved.

"At this point in our investigation, we believe this is responsible for most of the reported incidents.

It said that the problem seemed to only affect "a small (low single-digit) percentage of Windows Phone customers".

'Root cause'

The problem surfaced in early January with some owners of phones running Windows Phone 7, claiming that their phone was sending "between 30 and 50MB of data" every day; an amount that would eat into a 1GB allowance in 20 days.

Most complainants were based in the US.

"I received an e-mail from AT&T saying that I was close to my 2GB data limit which truly shocked me as I feel I do not use data that much," a phone owner called Julie told Paul Thurrott's supersite for Windows.

"I went and looked at my AT&T account online and noticed that my phone was sending huge chunks of data seemingly in patterns."

Another, writing on Howard Forums, said that they had noticed that the phone's "idle data usage is around 2-5MB per hour".

Microsoft has admitted that not all problems may have the same root cause and has said it was still "investigating" other potential reasons for the fault.

"We are continuing to investigate this issue and will update with additional information and guidance as it becomes available," the spokesperson said.

Windows Phone 7 was launched in October 2010 to acclaim by manufacturers and users.

It is considered the company's first credible challenge to rival operating systems from Apple, Google, Research in Motion and Nokia.

Al-Qaeda fighter Bekkay Harrach 'killed in Afghanistan'

German al-Qaeda militant Bekkay Harrach, appearing in an al-Qaeda video in September 2009 Harrach appeared in al-Qaeda videos

A German al-Qaeda militant who once threatened to attack the country has been killed in Afghanistan, fellow militants say.

Bekkay Harrach, who was born in Morocco and lived in the German city of Bonn, is said to have died leading an attack on the US air base at Bagram.

No date was given but the statement may refer to an attack last May.

Harrach appeared in al-Qaeda videos in 2009 threatening attacks during the German general election.

He was reported to be on a list of about 100 German nationals thought to be a security threat, and the authorities took his warnings seriously.

The laser technology student, who was 32 at the time, was believed to have travelled abroad to wage violent jihad in the West Bank, Iraq and the Pakistani region of Waziristan.

Fierce battle

Reporting the militants' statement, Germany's Spiegel magazine said Harrach's death had already been rumoured.

A group called the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan (IMU) said in an online statement that Harrach, whose nom-de-guerre was Abu Talha al-Almani (Abu Talha the German), was killed leading an attack on Bagram.

Harrach led a group of 20 suicide attackers composed of al-Qaeda, IMU and Tahreek-e-Taliban members, the group's statement said.

"We had the honour many times to meet with him here in the mountains of Waziristan," the IMU added.

Bagram, one of the largest and most heavily fortified US bases in Afghanistan, was attacked before dawn on 19 May by militants using machine-guns and grenades.

The battle raged several hours and a US spokesman said 10 attackers had been killed and seven US soldiers injured.

According to Spiegel, some 60 German jihadists are currently based in the Afghan-Pakistani border area.

Anger as Georgia evicts refugee families from capital

Evicted refugees leave their shelter in Tbilisi, 20 January Twenty builings are being evacuated

Georgian police have resumed evicting refugee families living illegally in the capital Tbilisi as a result of conflicts in the ex-Soviet republic.

Scuffles broke out as police moved out the first of 550 families, destined for resettlement in the provinces.

Refugees could be seen streaming out with belongings in plastic bin bags.

Human rights activists have condemned the evictions, saying the families are being moved to rural areas with no employment or facilities.

Their protests halted evictions during the summer, when 5,000 people were resettled.

Police aim to clear about 20 buildings where the remaining families live.

The country has been torn apart by wars since the collapse of the USSR, notably the conflicts in its breakaway provinces of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

Compensation 'appropriate'

Valery Kopaleishvili, a spokesman for the ministry responsible for refugees, defended the evictions.

"An absolute majority of these IDPs [internally displaced people] have already received appropriate compensation from the government - either houses in the regions or financial compensation to build houses," he told AFP news agency.

There are thought to be about a quarter of a million IDPs in the country, with nearly 100,000 of them in Tbilisi.

According to AFP, tens of thousands of refugees still live in buildings such as kindergartens and student dormitories where they were rehoused temporarily.

Malkhaz Kordzaia, who was forced to flee Abkhazia, told Reuters news agency the government was set on "destroying and humiliating Georgian people".

Lasha Chkhartishvili, a leader of the opposition Conservative Party who has been organising protests for refugees' rights, said the refugees were "doomed to starvation" in the countryside.

Hong Kong in huge cocaine seizure

Slabs of the cocaine concealed inside wooden planks seized in Hong Kong Wrapped slabs of cocaine were concealed inside hollowed-out planks

Customs officials in Hong Kong have seized a huge haul of cocaine worth $33.4m (£20.8m) bound for China.

The 290kg (639 pounds) of cocaine were found in 88 hollowed-out planks imported from Bolivia.

Officials said it was the second-largest drugs haul ever in the territory.

The discovery highlights the concerns of the authorities about growing recreational drug use in mainland China.

The drugs were hidden in a "sophisticated" and "well thought out" way, Hong Kong customs officials said.

"They hollowed out some of the wood planks and put it inside some of the genuine ones. And then inside those wood planks, hollowed out ones, they put the three pieces or three slabs of cocaine," said John Lee, head of the Customs Drug Investigation Bureau.

Plastic wrap and glue had been used to try to confuse sniffer dogs, and carbon paper was used to try to dull the perception of X-ray machines.

The shipment left Bolivia on 29 December 2010, was trucked to Chile and then shipped in containers to Taiwan, from where it was flown to Hong Kong.

Officials had delayed revealing the discovery in the hope that someone would come to collect the cargo. No arrests have yet been made.

Experts have said that China's growing wealth is spurring recreational use of drugs.

The scale of the latest haul highlights the growth of party culture in Beijing and in China's large coastal cities.

Hong Kong's largest ever cocaine haul was made in April last year, when 372kg (820 pounds) of the drug were found in a village.

Chimpanzee and gorilla heads seized in Gabon

Part of the animal parts seized in Gabon in January 2011 Those arrested for the possession of illegal animal body parts are expected to appear in court this week

One of the biggest hauls of illegal ape parts in Central Africa has been seized by officials in Gabon, the global campaign group WWF says.

Five people were arrested for the cache which included the head and hands of an endangered gorilla, 12 chimpanzee heads and 30 chimpanzee hands.

WWF called for a tough judicial approach to act as a deterrent.

Africa's wildlife is often poached for the profitable bushmeat trade or for use in traditional good luck charms.

Gabon's rainforests teem with wildlife, including lowland gorillas and forest elephants - and national parks make up around one tenth of the country.

'Highly disturbing'

The raids were conducted by Gabon's water and forestry and defence ministries with the help of various environmental aid groups.

Conservation Justice, one of the environmental groups involved, said the crackdown is significant.

"The problem of illegal wildlife poaching and trade is not specific to Gabon; such specialised dealers exist throughout Western and Central Africa. But these arrests demonstrate that stopping them is possible with effective law enforcement," Luc Mathot, from Conservation Justice, said in a statement.

Other confiscated items include 12 leopard skins, a portion of lion skin, snake skins and five elephant tails.

"The massive collection of protected species confiscated in this operation is highly disturbing," WWF's Africa great ape manager David Greer said.

"To my knowledge, there has not been a seizure of great ape body parts of this magnitude in Central Africa in the last 10 years."

According to WWF, the suspects are expected to appear in court this week.

Experts say in rural areas of Central Africa, bushmeat provides up to 80% of protein in peoples' diets.

There are also markets in Central and West Africa where animal parts are sold for use in juju (black magic) and traditional remedies.

Web images to get expiration date

Man in fancy dress Many people come to regret the images they post to Facebook

Help is at hand for anyone who has ever forgotten about embarrassing images they posted to a social network or website.

German researchers have created software called X-Pire that gives images an expiration date by tagging them with an encrypted key.

Once this date has passed the key stops the images being viewed and copied.

Creators plan to levy a small charge to use the tagging system and put a digital lock on digital pictures.

Naked online

"More and more people are publishing private data to the internet and it's clear that some things can go wrong if it stays there too long," said Professor Michael Backes of the Information Security and Cryptography department at Saarland University, who led development of X-Pire.

Dr Backes said development work began about 18 months ago as potentially risky patterns of activity on social networks, such as Facebook, showed a pressing need for such a system.

"Many people join social networks because of social pressure," said Prof Backes. "They tend to post everything on the first day and make themselves naked on the internet."

"Only a small fraction of people are active every day," he said. "The majority are passive users, they do not contribute apart from their initial phase and afterwards they do not seem to care or perhaps they just forget."

However, he said, social networks never forget and images posted to sites, be they embarrassing or not, were visible forever.

Date stamp

To help solve this problem, the X-Pire software creates encrypted copies of images and asks those uploading them to give each one an expiration date.

Diary page, BBC The software lets people give a fixed life to the pics they post online

Viewing these images requires the free X-Pire browser add-on. Currently only a version that works with Firefox is available. Those without the viewer will be unable to see any protected image.

When the viewer encounters an encrypted image it sends off a request for a key to unlock it. This key will only be sent, and the image become viewable, if the expiration date has not been passed.

Images given an expiration date with X-Pire have been successfully uploaded to Flickr, Facebook and many other websites, said Prof Backes.

This testing was essential because the different ways that sites treat uploaded images added lots of complications.

"Facebook, for instance, does a huge amount of post-processing and whatever protection you deploy has to cope with that treatment," he said.

The X-Pire program should be available in late January and will cost 2 euros (£1.68) a month. Those who stop paying will not see their images suddenly become viewable, he said, instead they will just not be able to put expiration dates on new images.

More than 100 alleged mobsters arrested in northeast US

breaking news

US federal agents have arrested more than 100 suspected mobsters in multiple investigations into New York's organised crime families.

The majority of the arrests were made on Thursday morning throughout New York City, New Jersey and other areas in the north-eastern US, FBI officials said.

The arrests are tied to charges of murder, extortion and narcotics.

Attorney General Eric Holder is expected to discuss details of the case at a news conference later on Thursday.

"Early this morning, FBI agents along with our law enforcement partners began arresting over 100 organised crime members for various criminal charges," FBI investigator Diego Rodriguez told a local NBC News affiliate in New York City.

Officials said alleged leaders of the Gambino, Genovese, Lucchese, Bonanno, Colombo and DeCavalcante families were among those who had been arrested.

"It was very broad scope," New York FBI spokesman Robert Nardoza told the AFP news agency.

Early morning arrests

Some of the arrests were made as the result of information obtained through federal probes and informants, local media reported.

The sweep began before dawn on Thursday with federal agents arresting a range of individuals being investigated, from suspected small-time bookers to senior leaders, the New York Times newspaper said.

The arrests are reportedly part of one of the largest mafia crackdowns conducted by federal authorities in the US.

Mafia families in the US have seen a sharp decline in fortunes in the the past 10 years as the result of court testimony from informants, who have begun breaking their code of silence in recent years.

South Korea agrees military talks with North

A North Korean soldier, centre watches southern soldiers at the border village of Panmunjom, 19/01 Relations between North and South Korea nosedived during 2010

South Korea has agreed to high-level military talks with the North, after months of tension on the peninsula.

The South said it would join the talks only if the agenda included the two events that have soured relations - the sinking of a southern warship in March, and the shelling of a southern island.

Pyongyang denies torpedoing the Cheonan warship, and says it was provoked into shelling Yeonpyeong island in November.

On Wednesday, the US and China urged the two sides to reopen talks.

The North had made several offers of talks earlier this month, but they were all dismissed by Seoul.

Officials at the South's defence ministry said the North made its latest offer of talks in a telegram sent to southern Defence Minister Kim Kwan-jin, signed by the North's Armed Forces Minister Kim Young-chun.

The South's Unification Ministry said the offer included a commitment to "exchange views" about the shelling of Yeonpyeong and the sinking of the Cheonan.

The ministry said the offer had been accepted, but that the North must give assurances that it would "take responsible measures" over the two incidents.

'Fence-mending'

On Wednesday, China's President Hu Jintao and US President Barack Obama released a joint statement urging Korean dialogue after a meeting in Washington.

Analysis

South Korea has rejected previous calls from the North for talks. So what has changed?

It is suggested that the North has finally agreed to "exchange views" with the South on the sunken warship and the island which was bombarded. That falls short of the apology demanded by Seoul, though it is movement.

In the coming weeks, preparatory talks are expected about discussions between more senior figures, whether military or ministerial. Seoul may walk away if it feels that Pyongyang is still "insincere".

There is likely to be significance in the timing of this latest move, with the American and Chinese presidents recently calling for measures that would allow the early resumption of multilateral talks on North Korea's denuclearisation.

"The United States and China emphasised the importance of an improvement in North-South relations, and agreed that sincere and constructive inter-Korean dialogue is an essential step," the two leaders said.

And the North's state-run news agency KCNA called for the US to reopen talks with Pyongyang.

"The US would be well advised to re-examine its hostile policy towards the DPRK [North Korea] and make a U-turn towards dialogue and fence-mending," its report said.

The US is among the countries involved in talks over the North's nuclear programme.

Pyongyang pulled out of the talks in April 2009, shortly before conducting a nuclear test.

Southern defence officials said on Thursday that they would propose to Pyongyang reopening dialogue on denuclearisation.

Relations between the two Koreas plunged to new lows after the South's Cheonan warship was sunk in March, with the loss of 46 lives.

An international report later blamed the North for the sinking - allegations denied by Pyongyang.

On 23 November, the North killed four people when it shelled Yeonpyeong island - its first attack on a civilian area since the 1950-53 war ended.

The South responded with a series of military exercises close to the border.

Michaela Harte McAreavey: Fifth hotel worker held over honeymoon bride murder

Thursday, 20 January 2011


John and Michaela McAreavey at the Giant's Causeway in North Antrim

John and Michaela McAreavey at the Giant's Causeway in North Antrim


Related Articles

Police investigating the murder of honeymooner Michaela Harte McAreavey on the idyllic island of Mauritius have arrested another security worker at the hotel where she was killed.

The fifth member of staff at Legends Hotel to be arrested is Seenarain Mungoo (39), with an address at Petit-Raffray, Mauritius.

He was last night being questioned by investigators in relation to the death of Michaela (27), who was found dead in the bathroom of their hotel room by her new husband John McAreavey (26).

Police are probing Mr Mungoo's involvement with the key card used to access her room.

He was initially quizzed during the investigation earlier last week but was released without charge. A police source said: "We believe he could be the last missing link in the puzzle."

If charged, he is expected to be brought into court tomorrow as today is a public holiday.

The revelation came after a fourth man -- Dassen Narainen (26), a security worker at the hotel -- appeared in the District Court of Mapou provisionally charged with conspiracy to commit the murder of the daughter of Mickey Harte.

The suspect was refused bail on police objections and he will have to appear at the same court on January 26.

Mr Narainen was questioned about how the key to Michaela's room was "stolen or substituted" from the control room of the security department on January 7, three days before Michaela was killed.

Raj Theekoy (33), who is also charged with conspiracy, was remanded in custody until his next court appearance, also scheduled for January 26.

Earlier in the day, prime murder suspects Sandip Moneea (41) and Abinash Treebhoowoon (29) were told that police objected to their release on bail.

Legal counsels Sanjeev Teeluckdharee and Ravi Rutnah, for Mr Treebhoowoon, lodged a motion yesterday requesting permission for their client to make a statement regarding the conditions of detention and his rights as a suspect.

In her ruling, Magistrate Bonomally said: "The court has already delivered its ruling last week concerning police brutality and clear instructions were given to prosecution to look into the matter."

The magistrate added that the statement was "inappropriate" at this "provisional stage" and that the defence could put forward the motion when the case was taken up for argument.

When detectives have completed their inquiry, they will hand over any evidence to the director of public prosecutions, who will decide which charges the suspects should face. The case will then go before a magistrate before it proceeds to a higher court, according to police. This process is likely to take some time.

Meanwhile, Tyrone's first match since Michaela's death was postponed last night following a pitch inspection.

Large crowds were expected at Healy Park in Omagh last night to watch Mickey Harte's side play Jordanstown in the Dr McKenna Cup.

The game had been postponed last week, as a mark of respect to the Harte and McAreavey families, but a frozen pitch last night led to its postponement for a second time.

In what was likely to have been a poignant evening, team members were to wear black armbands and lead spectators in a minute's silence.

On Monday, around 3,000 people attended the funeral of the Irish language teacher and mourners continued to pay their respects yesterday, leaving flowers at her graveside.

The newlywed, from near Ballygawley, Co Tyrone, is thought to have been killed as she disturbed a burglary in her hotel room.

She was buried in her wedding dress at St Malachy's Church outside the Northern Ireland village.