Ivory Coast retakes Gbagbo area

Red Cross workers retrieve bodies from Yopougon, Abidjan, Ivory Coast (4 May 2011)Red Cross workers have been retrieving bodies left in the streets of Yopougon

Government forces in the Ivory Coast say they are now in control of the whole of the main city of Abidjan.

Supporters of ousted President Laurent Gbagbo had been holding out in Yopougon district but a military commander said they had now been defeated.

The district was the scene of heavy fighting during the struggle between Mr Gbagbo and President Alassane Ouattara.

PM Guillaume Soro, visiting the site later, said the streets there were “littered with bodies”.

“At the militia headquarters we saw an improvised cemetery. I can imagine the slaughter that took place,” he said.

“I’m still under shock after seeing all these dead, all these bodies.”

The Reuters news agency reports that Red Cross officials have collected nearly 70 bodies so far.

Commander Cherif Ousmane said the whole of Yopougon, in Abidjan’s business district, was “now definitively occupied by us”.

Local people said the Gbagbo fighters had terrorised the neighbourhood.

“They were armed and they did whatever they wanted,” one man told Reuters.

Other residents said food and water had been in short supply and infrastructure damaged by the fighting.

More than 1,000 are believed to have been killed since Mr Gbagbo refused to accept defeat in November’s presidential election.

He was arrested in April at the presidential residence in Abidjan and is being detained in the north of the country.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Drug hope for muscular dystrophy

Muscle fibresSection through muscle fibres
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A drug that can boost muscle strength in mice shows promise as a possible treatment for Duchenne muscular dystrophy, research suggests.

The work could one day lead to a daily pill to treat all patients with the muscle-wasting disease, say Oxford University scientists.

About 100 boys are born with the condition in the UK each year.

It causes progressive muscle weakness, with most patients having to use a wheelchair by the age of 12.

The study, published in the journal PLoS ONE, was led by Professor Dame Kay Davies, of Oxford University.

She said: “We’ve shown that the drug can dramatically reduce muscle weakness in mice.

“These results give us everything we need to go forward into initial clinical trials in humans.”

There is no effective treatment for the inherited disease – steroid and growth hormones help manage the symptoms but cannot protect muscles from decline.

Muscular dystrophyMuscular dystrophies are a group of more than 20 different genetic neuromuscular disordersThe most common, Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), affects about one in 3,500 boysDuchenne muscular dystrophy is caused by problems in a gene on the X chromosome that makes a protein called dystrophin, found in muscle fibresMuscle fibres break down and are gradually lostAnother form – Becker muscular dystrophy – has similar but milder symptoms

The drug was identified by screening thousands of therapeutic compounds for the ability to raise levels of a substance that boosts muscle strength.

The substance – utrophin – seems to compensate for the lack of a key protein, dystrophin, which does not work properly in muscular dystrophy.

The most promising candidate, named SMT C1100, was tested in a mouse model of muscular dystrophy at three laboratories in Oxford, Italy and the US.

Mice given the drug developed stronger muscles that did not tire as easily and could run 50% further in exercise tasks, the PLoS ONE study found.

Preliminary tests in healthy human volunteers raised no safety concerns but suggest a need for further work to improve the drug’s formulation.

Professor Max Parmar, of the Medical Research Council, said: “This study, without necessarily providing us with the final solution, does gives us an important platform from which to move forward and really make a serious progression through clinical trials.”

Dr Marita Pohlschmidt, director of research at the Muscular Dystrophy Campaign, told the BBC: “At this stage in the game this is very hopeful as it really works in the mice very, very well.

“It’s hopeful although you can never tell a family [affected by the disease] when or whether a treatment will come out of it.”

The research was partly funded by the Muscular Dystrophy Campaign and the Medical Research Council.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

France to recover Airbus bodies

The machine that records cockpit conversation lying at the bottom of the seaThe cockpit voice recorder was found earlier this week by crash investigators
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The French justice ministry has ordered a salvage team to recover more remains of the passengers and crew of the Air France Airbus A330 from the depths of the Atlantic ocean.

The aircraft was flying from Rio de Janeiro to Paris when it plunged into the sea.

Flight AF 447 was carrying 228 people. Fifty-one bodies were found in 2009.

The French team now hopes that an underwater robot will recover the other remains.

Search and rescue workers have located the crash site on the seabed, near the coast of Brazil, allowing them to recover the flight data and voice recorders.

French officials have now informed the relatives of the dead of their latest efforts.

The liaison officer appointed to help the families explained that they would initially try to salvage one body from the wreckage to determine whether it was feasible to retrieve the others.

However, there are fears that the remains are already in a fragile state after almost two years on the seabed.

Relatives of the crash victims are divided over whether to move the bodies at all, with some arguing for repatriation and others saying the crash site should be the final resting place.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

No release of Bin Laden photos

Eric Holder

US Attorney General Eric Holder: “His killing was appropriate”

President Barack Obama has decided that photos of the dead Osama Bin Laden should not be released.

US officials had been discussing whether to publish pictures of Bin Laden’s body to counter conspiracy theories that he did not die.

But Mr Obama believed the images could inflame sensitivities, saying: “We don’t trot out this stuff as trophies.”

The al-Qaeda leader was shot dead in a raid on Monday by US special forces in northern Pakistan.

The BBC’s Paul Adams in Washington says that President Obama has clearly decided that releasing the photos is not worth the risk.

Mr Obama revealed his decision during an interview with CBS television’s 60 Minutes programme, the network said in a statement.

Mardell’s America

“There is the suspicion that the US never wanted to take Bin Laden alive”

Read Mark thoughts in full

White House spokesman Jay Carney said at a briefing later that Mr Obama believed it was important to make sure that photographs were not “floating around as incitement or as a propaganda tool”.

Mr Carney said the administration had been monitoring world reaction and there was no doubt that al-Qaeda believed Bin Laden was dead.

He quoted Mr Obama as saying: “There will be some folks who will deny it but you will not see Bin Laden walking on this Earth again.”

Mr Obama’s decision contradicted a statement made a day earlier by CIA director Leon Panetta, who said the photos would be released at some stage.

The decision came as US officials began to comb through computer hard-drives, mobile phones and USB sticks found during the US Navy Seals raid in Abbottabad.

US Attorney General Eric Holder said Washington expected to add more names to its terrorism watch-list as a result of data seized from the compound.

Two telephone numbers and 500 euros ($745; £450) were also found stitched into Bin Laden’s clothing in case he needed to make a quick getaway.

Mr Holder said Bin Laden was a lawful military target, whose killing was “an act of national self-defence”.

Critics have raised concerns about the legality of the operation, after the US revised its account to acknowledge Bin Laden was unarmed when shot dead.

Two couriers and one woman also died in Monday’s assault, while one of Bin Laden’s wives was injured.

The 54-year-old Bin Laden – American’s most wanted man – was buried at sea from a US aircraft carrier, say US officials.

President Obama, who watched the raid from the White House on monitors, saw his approval rating jump 11 points to 57% in a New York Times/CBS News poll on Wednesday.

He plans to visit the World Trade Center site in New York on Thursday to remember victims of the 11 September attacks, of which Bin Laden was said to have been the mastermind.

The Pakistani military has confirmed that it is holding survivors of the US special forces operation.

They were being kept at secret locations in the cities of Rawalpindi and Islamabad, said Pakistan army spokesman Maj Gen Athar Abbas.

Some of the survivors were being treated for bullet wounds that were serious but not life-threatening, he added.

The Abbottabad compound, 4 MayThe Abbottabad compound has become a sightseers’ attraction

The BBC’s Aleem Maqbool says the compound where the raid unfolded has now become a sightseers’ attraction.

There is an ice-cream vendor outside and children selling what they claim is wreckage from a US helicopter, which the Americans said they blew up after it apparently malfunctioned during the operation.

The compound in which Bin Laden was killed is just a few hundred metres from the Pakistan Military Academy.

Our correspondent in Abbottabad says either the Pakistani authorities were incredibly incompetent or were harbouring the al-Qaeda leader.

Pakistan earlier rejected US suggestions that Islamabad could not have been trusted in advance with sensitive information about the raid to kill Bin Laden.

The head of the Pakistani foreign ministry, Salman Bashir, told the BBC he felt the American comments were “disquieting”, adding that the two countries had always co-operated well.

Mr Bashir said it was reasonable to accept the Americans’ violation of Pakistan’s sovereignty on this occasion, for such a high value target, although this exception could not become a rule.

In unusually frank remarks, Mr Panetta told Time magazine: “It was decided that any effort to work with the Pakistanis could jeopardise the mission. They might alert the targets.”

US lawmakers are calling for billions of dollars in aid for Pakistan to be reduced or stopped altogether.

Several governments in Europe also say Islamabad has questions to answer about what it knew.

Map of Abbottabad
Diagram of the compound

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Scots ‘Fukushima iodine’ update

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The latest results on monitoring for pollution believed to be linked to the damaged Fukushima nuclear plant in Japan are expected later.

The data will be the first from testing sites across Scotland and the rest of the UK since updates changed from weekly to fortnightly reports.

The switch followed a decline in very low levels of iodine-131 detected.

The Scottish Environment Protection Agency (Sepa) and Health Protection Agency carry out the monitoring.

Sepa takes air samples from Lerwick on Shetland and from Eskdalemuir, Brydekirk, Kirtlebridge and Eastriggs, in Dumfries.

Monitoring is also done by the agency at sites in Lothian, Renfrewshire and Caithness.

The Health Protection Agency carries out air monitoring in Glasgow.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Scotland’s voters go to the polls

Ballot boxes being delivered in EdinburghBallot boxes were delivered in Edinburgh the day before the polls opened

Scotland goes to the polls on Thursday 5 May to elect a new Scottish government.

Polling stations are open across the country from 0700 BST until 2200 BST.

It follows six weeks of campaigning among the four main parties; the SNP, Labour, the Lib Dems and the Tories.

The Greens are contesting, along with 10 other smaller parties fielding more than five candidates each, and 22 independents are also standing. Results are expected from 0200 BST on Friday.

Voters will return 129 Members of the Scottish Parliament to take their seats in the devolved body’s home in Holyrood.

MSPs are voted in in two different ways – 73 by constituency and 56 by regional vote.

The latter system is designed to ensure the number of seats won by each party reflects the proportion of votes it received more accurately than “first-past-the-post” allows.

A raft of results are expected at about 0200 BST on Friday, with another lot due about 0400 BST.

The full picture on which party will form a government is not expected to fully emerge until late on Friday afternoon.

BBC Scotland’s election result service on TV, radio and online will run through the night on Thursday and the following day.

Derek Bateman and Kenneth Macdonald will keep Radio Scotland listeners informed during the night, while Sally Magnusson and David Henderson will host the TV special. From 0600 BST Jackie Bird and Glenn Campbell will take over the election programme on BBC One Scotland.

BBC Scotland’s news website will follow the results story with minute-by-minute updates on its LIVE: Election page and there will also be a live stream of the TV coverage.

Political editor Brian Taylor will update his blog from the studio broadcasting the live programme. And correspondents will be tweeting throughout the night and the following day.

The vote is taking place on the same day as the AV referendum. A result on that is expected from between 2000 and 2200 BST on Friday.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

‘Success’ in island rat campaign

Brown rat (Paula O'Sullivan)The brown rat has been a catastophic introduction to South Georgia
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Conservationists say they are pleased with early efforts to kill rats on South Georgia, in what is the biggest rodent eradication campaign in history.

No-one really knows how many rats inhabit the island in the South Atlantic, but it could be millions.

Introduced on the ships of sealers and whalers in the 19th and 20th Centuries, the rodents have had a devastating impact on local seabird populations.

But the laying of toxic bait in part of the island seems to have had success.

Some 50 tonnes of rodenticide were spread by helicopters in March over a contained zone hemmed in by glaciers. Subsequent inspections on the ground found only dead rats.

The kill represented just the first phase in the project, and covered a mere 13% of the rat-infested land area of South Georgia.

HelicopterThe helicopters flew back and forth along GPS grid lines to distribute the bait

Nonetheless, the South Georgia Heritage Trust says it has been hugely encouraged by the results.

“Prior to the baiting, if you went out at night, there were rats running everywhere,” explained project leader Professor Tony Martin from Dundee University, UK.

“A week after the bait went down – not a sign of a single rat. We even put out little batches of bait pellets that were particularly attractive to the rats. We saw them being taken for the first few days, and then there were no more pellets taken.”

First surveyed by the great explorer Sir James Cook in 1775, the UK overseas territory is rightly famed for its wildlife.

Thousands of tourists visit the 170km long island to see its seals, penguins, albatrosses and other birds.

Pipit (Ewan Edwards)The pipit is Earth’s southern-most songbird

But as abundant as these animals appear, their populations are as nothing compared to the days before industrial sealers and whalers used the British protectorate as a base for their ships and processing plants.

Although these industries have long gone, their legacy remains in the form of the brown rat which leapt on to shore and ran riot across the island.

The rodents kill the fat chicks of ground-nesting seabirds. They eat them alive – albatrosses, petrels, prions; anything the rats can get their teeth into, and that includes chicks that may be several times their size.

Particular concern surrounds the South Georgia Pipit (Anthus antarcticus), the most southerly songbird on the planet; and the South Georgia Pintail (Anas georgica georgica), a duck species found only on South Georgia.

South Georgia brown rat

“These simply will not nest in the presence of rats,” said Dr Mike Richardson who chairs the steering committee of the South Georgia Heritage Trust Habitat Restoration Project.

“Rats have driven them into small refuges, which tend to be the small offshore islands around South Georgia’s coast. But on the mainland, all along its north coast, South Georgia has become a no-go area for these birds.”

Rat eradication has been tried on other islands around the world, notably off New Zealand and Australia – but nothing on the scale being attempted in South Georgia.

South Georgia brown rat

Ordinarily, such a campaign would probably be impossible, such is the size of the landmass and the number of rats present. But the sub-Antarctic island is marked by numerous glaciers that divide up the territory into convenient killing zones that can be cleared one by one. The rats cannot cross the ice tongues and so conservationists can be sure rodents from neighbouring zones will not re-infest baited areas at a later date.

The March baiting campaign used two helicopters to cover 150-sq-km of ground centred on Thatcher Peninsula. The bait pellets, donated by Bell Laboratories in the US, were spread from large hoppers slung beneath the aircraft. The helicopters flew back and forth along GPS grid lines, ensuring every hectare was littered with about 2kg of rodenticide.

Glacier (Ruth Fraser)The glaciers act as barriers to the rats

This first phase cost about £1.6m, and the South Georgia Heritage Trust calculates the project will require a further £5m and two campaign seasons to completely remove the rodents from the island.

Inevitably, there is collateral damage in the form of birds and other wildlife also consuming the bait. But the shape, colour and size of pellets have been carefully designed to minimise accidental deaths.

And Professor Martin says these small losses have to be set against the benefits to nesting populations that will accrue in the years ahead.

“When Captain Cook first set foot on the island in 1775 this was perhaps the most important seabird breeding island in the world,” he told BBC News.

“By far the majority of the birds have been removed by one agent – rats – which man introduced. What we’re doing is turning back the clock two centuries to try to get the island back to where it was; and it’s something we do believe can be accomplished.”

South GeorgiaSouth Georgia was even richer in wildlife before the whaling settlements (far view)

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UK voters set to go to the polls

Ballot box being brought to polling station in London
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Voters across the UK are set to go to the polls in a series of national and local elections as well as a referendum to decide the way MPs are elected.

Elections for the Scottish Parliament, the Welsh Assembly and the Northern Ireland Assembly will be held as will polls in 279 English councils.

The public will also be asked if they want to keep the first-past-the-post system for Westminster elections or switch to the alternative vote.

Polls open at 0700 BST closing at 2200.

In addition, local authority elections are being held in Northern Ireland while there is a UK parliamentary by-election in the constituency of Leicester South.

Contests are also taking place to elect mayors in Leicester, Mansfield, Middlesbrough, Torbay and Bedford.

The BBC weather forecast suggests that most of the UK will remain dry on Thursday with above average temperatures, but that there is a chance of rain in Northern Ireland.

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US man jailed over web suicides

William Melchert-Dinkel in a February file photoA judge said Melchert-Dinkel, shown in February, was not the only factor in the victims’ deaths
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A US man who helped persuade an English man and a Canadian woman to commit suicide after finding them online has been given a jail term in Minnesota.

Ex-nurse William Melchert-Dinkel, 48, was convicted in March over the deaths of Mark Drybrough, 32, from Coventry, and Nadia Kajouji, 18, from Ontario.

The judge ordered him to spend an initial 320 days in prison and then for the next 10 years return to jail on the anniversaries of his victims’ deaths.

His lawyer plans to lodge an appeal.

Melchert-Dinkel, who wiped away tears as he was sentenced, apologised in a statement read by his lawyer, Terry Watkins, and said he felt “shame and remorse”.

The official sentence handed down by Judge Thomas Neuville was six-and-a-half years in jail, with most of it suspended unless Melchert-Dinkel violates the terms of his probation over the next 15 years.

The sentence was structured in such a way that he will have to spend two-day spells in prison on the anniversaries of the deaths of Mr Drybrough and Ms Kajouji over the next decade.

The judge said that while Melchert-Dinkel’s actions were directly related to the victims’ deaths, other factors were also involved.

Ms Kajouji’s mother, Deborah Chevalier, told the Associated Press news agency she was disappointed the sentence was not longer.

Mark DrybroughCoventry man Mark Drybrough, 32, hanged himself in 2005

Melchert-Dinkel had faced a maximum jail term of 15 years on each count of aiding suicide.

During his trial, the court heard he was obsessed with suicide and hanging.

Prosecutors claimed he hunted down his victims on the internet for “the thrill of the chase” and gave them advice and encouragement, while posing as a female nurse.

US prosecutors said Melchert-Dinkel acknowledged having taken part in online chats about suicide with up to 20 people and entering into fake suicide pacts with about 10, five of whom he believed killed themselves.

Mr Watkins has said his client intends to appeal against the conviction on the grounds his remarks were shielded by the free speech protections of the US constitution.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

Syrian tanks ‘deploy around city’

Men appear to break into a compound in Deraa on 1 May in this still image taken from amateur video (Unverified)Activists say security forces are conducting mass arrests in Deraa

Tanks are heading for the central Syrian city of Homs, local activists say, after anti-government protests were held there last night.

Some 1,000 people chanted slogans in support of the southern city of Deraa, where troops are rounding up hundreds of men in house-to-house raids.

Around the country, 2,843 people are confirmed as detained. Campaigners say the total could be 8,000 and that some have been subjected to torture.

The US calls the crackdown “barbaric”.

Rights groups say about 560 people have been killed across the country in protests against the repressive rule of President Bashar al-Assad.

The government says that the demonstrators are militant criminals and not – as evidence from the ground suggests – ordinary civilians calling for political reform.

The protests, which began on 15 March, pose the most serious challenge to four decades of rule by the Assad family in one of the Arab world’s most repressive and tightly controlled countries.

Foreign journalists are barred from Syria, and reports cannot be verified.

Activists in Homs have told the BBC that security forces had fanned out inside the city, and that army tanks were heading towards it.

The deployment in Homs comes a day after Syrian tanks and troops reportedly surrounded the nearby coastal city of Baniyas.

BBC map

Deraa, the southern city where the protests kicked off in mid-March, has been under siege since the weekend.

On Wednesday, there were fresh reports of gunfire and more arrests of men aged between 15 and 40. More than 800 protesters have so far been rounded up in Deraa alone.

The army is still not allowing anyone into the city, and supplies of food and medicine are running low, residents say. Communication lines are still down, but electricity has been restored in most areas, they add.

On Tuesday, US state department spokesman Mark Toner said the use of tanks, arbitrary arrests and power cuts in Deraa was “quite barbaric and amounts to the collective punishment of innocent civilians”.

The authorities say they have found rebel arms caches in Deraa. But the protesters insist their movement is entirely peaceful.

Despite the government crackdown, Syrians are continuing to protest in several cities and towns.

In the capital, students at Damascus University staged a sit-in at the faculty of economics.

They have issued a statement condemning “the massacres, killings and the arrests committed against peaceful demonstrators.”

On Tuesday, a late-night demonstration by 1,000 students at Aleppo University – in Syria’s second city – was broken up by security forces using tear gas and firing live bullets, reliable sources say.

No injuries were reported, but dozens of students are being arrested, their mobile phones and laptops confiscated, the sources say.

Syrian men carry bread loaves during a protest against President Assad in Baniyas on 3 May (citizen journalism image)Syrian men carry bread loaves during a protest in Baniyas on Tuesday

More vigils and protests are planned in the coming days.

Amnesty International, and many of the protesters themselves, say the detainees are subjected to beatings and torture.

“The use of unwarranted lethal force, arbitrary detention and torture appear to be the desperate actions of a government that is intolerant of dissent and must be halted immediately,” Amnesty official Philip Luther said.

Last week hundreds of members of Mr Assad’s ruling Baath Party resigned in protest at the crackdown.

European nations have called for sanctions against the regime of President Assad. Washington has already tightened its sanctions against senior Syrian officials.

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Vigilante attack ‘distracts Sony’

Visitors play games on Sony PlayStation 3Sony discovered a breach in the Playstation Network on 20 April
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Sony has blamed the online vigilante group Anonymous for indirectly allowing the security breach that allowed a hacker to gain access to the personal data of more than 100m online game users.

In a letter to Congress, Sony said its network was breached at the same time as it was defending itself against a denial-of-service attack from Anonymous.

Denial-of-service attacks take servers down by overwhelming them with internet traffic.

Sony said that it had been the target of attacks from Anonymous because it had taken action against a hacker in federal court in San Francisco.

It added that the attack that stole the data had been launched separately while it was distracted by the denial-of-service attack, and that it was not sure whether the organisers of the two attacks were working together.

Sony said that it had discovered on Sunday a file planted on one of its servers named Anonymous and featuring the line “We are legion”, which is a phrase used by the group.

The vigilante group has denied being involved in the data theft.

In the letter to members of the House Commerce Committee, Kazuo Hirai, chairman of Sony Computer Entertainment America, defended the way that his company had dealt with the breach.

Sony discovered a breach in its Playstation video game network on 20 April but did not report it to US authorities for two days and only informed consumers on 26 April.

“Throughout the process, Sony Network Entertainment America was very concerned that announcing partial or tentative information to consumers could cause confusion and lead them to take unnecessary actions if the information was not fully corroborated by forensic evidence,” the letter said.

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News Corp hit by lack of big film

AvatarAvatar made more money than any other film
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News Corporation has reported a 21% fall in three-month profits because the film Avatar was making so much money in the same period last year.

Net profit came in at $682m (£414m) in the first three months of 2011.

Advertising revenues declined at the company’s newspapers in the UK and Australia, but improved for its television stations.

News Corp boss Rupert Murdoch said the company had struggled to match Avatar’s takings but predicted improvements.

“The great response to Rio (the movie) and our confidence in our upcoming releases indicate that the difficult comparisons in this segment over the past nine months are now behind us,” he said.

“I’m particularly pleased that our television segment, viewed by the market just one year ago as a challenged business, more than quadrupled its earnings contributions over the prior year quarter.”

News Corp also continued to see losses from its MySpace social media website as advertising and search revenues fell.

Income at its film division was halved to $248m, but the cable programming unit’s income grew 25% to $735m.

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VIDEO: Hague warning on al-Qaeda threat

The death of Osama Bin Laden is “a devastating blow” to al-Qaeda but its terrorist threat remains, Foreign Secretary William Hague has said.

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VIDEO: Prince Charles visits Washington

The Prince of Wales is in Washington for a two-day official visit to the US, during which he will meet US President Barack Obama.

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Man charged over Hicking murder

The scene of the murder in ClarawoodThe scene of the murder in Clarawood Park

A man has been charged with the murder of Richard Hicking in east Belfast.

A 35-year-old man is expected to appear in court in relation to the charge on Thursday.

The body of Mr Hicking, 31, was found in a flat in Clarawood Park at about 1230 BST on Saturday. He had been stabbed to death.

Police have asked for anyone with any information about Mr Hicking’s movements between Thursday and Saturday to contact them.

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.