Voodoo and raucous rhythms

A year ago, a powerful earthquake brought death and destruction to poverty-stricken Caribbean country of Haiti, killing 230,000 people and leaving 1.5 million homeless.

Twelve months on, Mike Thomson from BBC Radio 4’s Today programme returned there to meet a voodoo artist using the bones of earthquake victims in his work. But first, he witnessed the spectacle of a ‘rara’ street band winding its way through the streets of Port au Prince.

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WARNING: This slideshow contains images of human bones.

Photography and audio by Mike Thomson. Slideshow production by Paul Kerley. Publication date 9 January 2011.

More audio slideshows from BBC Radio 4:

The funeral photographer

Saving the Spitfire

The Archers at 60

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

Computers for all?

XO-1.75 laptopThe OLPC project hopes to release a dedicated tablet computer by 2012
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Everybody is trying to grab a piece of the tablet action at the gadget geekfest known as the Consumer Electronics Show.

Among them, the One Laptop Per Child (OLPC) project, whose mission is to bring low-powered, low-cost devices to the developing world.

They have just launched a hybrid computer that turns into a tablet, but plan to release a dedicated device by 2012.

The new $165 (about £106) XO-1.75 laptop will start shipping after the summer to countries around the world to bring school children into the computer age.

Its precursor cost around $199 (about £128) and OLPC says around two million have now been distributed.

The big challenge with the new laptop was to reduce power consumption.

OLPC chief technology officer Ed McNierney told BBC News they have slashed the wattage from five watts to two by using low powered ARM-based chips from Marvell technology.

“When I ask, ‘How long do you think your battery has to last when you have no place to plug it in?’ we know that is a big problem to solve,” he said.

“With this new design we can get between seven to eight hours of battery life. When we move to a tablet it will be 10 to 12 hours.”

The XO-1.75’s motherboard, which holds the chips and other components, sits behind the laptop screen, making it easy to twist around and use as a tablet device.

The other half of the laptop houses the keyboard and battery.

Even though OLPC did not have a tablet to show off like the scores of other companies here at the show, Mr McNierney talked about the focus that will drive the design.

“One of the major issues we have to deal with is making it unbreakable”

Ed McNierney Chief technology officer, OLPC

“A lot of tablets are designed for entertainment and consumption, but that is not what we do,” he said.

“We really think the tablet needs to be a fully-functioning educational experience that is designed for creating, sharing, editing, enjoying and collaborating with other children and teachers.”

The XO-3 tablet will have a screen the same size as Apple’s popular iPad at 9.7in (25cm).

The particular market OLPC caters for has, in part, led to the tablet being delayed until next year.

“One of the major issues we have to deal with is making it unbreakable,” Mr McNierney said. “Not many people would give their iPad to a six-year-old child and even fewer would give their iPad to a child that lives in the desert.

“We need to have unbreakable display screens, long life components and a system that can be sealed with no openings to let in dust, sand and water.”

The device will also include a cover to protect the screen and a solar panel to help solve power issues.

Chip-maker Marvell has sponsored OLPC’s tablet project to the tune of $5.5m (£3.5m).

The firm’s chips and processors will power a number of tablets including that of OLPC.

But what will really make this device compelling is the price – $100.

“The overall price is going to get competitive for all tablets as prices keep coming down,” said Weili Dai, co-founder of Marvell.

XO-1.75 laptopsThe laptops have to be robust and cheap to produce

OLPC’s Mr McNierney said the drive to cheaper components is largely down to Apple and the success it has had with its iPad. To date, over 7.5 million have been sold, accounting for nearly half of all tablet sales last year.

“I think they have re-ignited the market in a way that is going to create huge volumes for the components we use.

“One of the most important pieces in our current laptop designs and tablet designs is the NAND storage and solid state components. Prices on those systems have dropped dramatically because everyone is buying them.

“The same is true for touch screens. We didn’t think we could afford those [but] the prices have dropped by about 50% in the last year and it is that volume across the industry that is great for us.”

Ms Dai said she thought that as prices continued to come down, tablets would become more ubiquitous.

“What I see is one step further as these type of devices are used everywhere. I use the term ‘smart furnishing’.

“We will need a different type of tablet for different applications, such as our home lighting systems, security systems, home appliances and entertainment systems,” added Ms Dai.

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Jo murder left ‘hole of despair’

The Yeates family, with Jo Yeates second right, on her 18th birthdayChris Yeates, second left, pictured with Jo and his parents, said she was a “personal inspiration”

The brother of murdered landscape architect Jo Yeates has told how her death has created a “surreal hole of despair” in his life.

Chris Yeates described his sister as a “personal inspiration” and said he was confident police would find her killer.

The 28-year-old said: “All my memories of Jo are positive and I’ve etched these into my mind.”

The body of Miss Yeates, 25, was found in a lane near Bristol on Christmas Day, a week after she disappeared.

Post-mortem tests revealed she had been strangled.

Mr Yeates said the discovery of his younger sister’s body had given him “an acceptance of the situation” but not closure.

In a statement, he said: “I got to say a final emotional goodbye to Jo and the despair I had was replaced with a wave of deep sadness.

“The last couple of weeks I have been spending time with my partner and her son, comforting each other and trying to get our heads around what has happened whilst supporting my parents as much as possible.

“The tremendous amount of support we have had from family, friends and the general public has been truly overwhelming and brings a sense of slight elation at an otherwise tragic time.”

His partner Alla Ritch described Miss Yeates as a “perfect beacon of light and a great example to us all to live every day to our fullest potential”.

She added: “It seems that only the darkest of all souls could literally put her bright light out like this.

Jo Yeates and Greg Reardon

Miss Yeates was reported missing on 19 December and found dead on Christmas Day

Timeline: Jo Yeates murder

“Nothing in the world is going to change what happened to Jo, but I hope that whoever is responsible will be stopped from doing any more harm to innocent people.”

Miss Yeates was last seen alive on 17 December. She spent the evening in the Bristol Ram pub with colleagues before visiting a supermarket to buy a pizza on her way home to the Clifton area of Bristol.

Her boyfriend Greg Reardon reported her missing on 19 December after he returned from a weekend away.

Her snow-covered body was found in Longwood Lane, Failand, by dog walkers.

On Saturday, Miss Yeates’ parents, David and Theresa Yeates, from Ampfield, near Romsey in Hampshire, said their lives had been “changed for ever” the day she disappeared.

A book of condolence has been opened at Christ Church Clifton, close to the flat in Canynge Road that Miss Yeates shared with Mr Reardon.

On Saturday afternoon, players from Bristol City Football Club warmed up ahead of their match with Sheffield Wednesday wearing shirts showing Miss Yeates’ picture and a police contact number.

A £10,000 reward has been offered through Crimestoppers for information leading to a conviction and The Sun newspaper has added its own £50,000 reward.

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New law will keep the Queen’s head on stamps

StampsThe government confirmed last year that Royal Mail would be sold off
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A law is set to be passed guaranteeing that UK stamps will continue to feature the Queen’s head – even if Royal Mail enters foreign hands.

At present, there is no legal obligation to show the monarch’s image, although Royal Mail has always done so.

Postal Affairs Minister Ed Davey said any potential buyer would have to be “mad” to drop it, but the new law would provide a “safeguard” just in case.

German and Dutch operators are expected to be leading bidders in the sell-off.

Mr Davey held talks with Buckingham Palace after learning that draft legislation, paving the way for a sell-off, would give the Queen a veto over any use of her image but would not insist her head be shown.

Now it has emerged that amendments to the Postal Services Bill will be put forward next week to close that potential loophole.

Mr Davey told the Mail on Sunday: “After listening to views of members of both Houses of Parliament and the palace, we have agreed this additional safeguard.”

The newspaper had previously claimed there was “anger” at the Palace over the situation, but Mr Davey said his department and royal officials had “worked extremely well together to prepare for this initiative”.

Labour had accused the government of being deliberately vague in the draft legislation, suggesting that “the fewer strings they attach, the more money they will get from a foreign buyer”.

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Probe into grooming of teen girls

Mohammed Liaqat, 28, and Abid Saddique, 27Mohammed Liaqat (left) and Abid Saddique, 27 were convicted of rape
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The issue of the grooming of vulnerable teenage girls for sex is being investigated by the Child Exploitation and Online Protection Centre (Ceop).

The work coincides with the jailing of two Asian men who abused several girls aged between 12 and 18 in Derby.

Former Home Secretary Jack Straw has been criticised for suggesting there was a racial element to grooming.

Ceop was set up in 2006 and its staff include police officers and members of organisations such as the NSPCC.

A Home Office spokesman said Ceop, which is affiliated to the Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca), would give further details of its work on grooming in due course.

On Friday, Mohammed Liaqat, 28, and Abid Saddique, 27, were jailed at Nottingham Crown Court for raping and sexually abusing several girls aged between 12 and 18, often after giving them alcohol or drugs.

The judge in the case said the race of the victims and their abusers was “coincidental”.

But Mr Straw told the BBC there was a “specific problem” in some areas and called on the Pakistani community to be “more open” about the abuse.

“I would certainly go along with the fact that we need thorough root and branch investigation”

David Niven Child protection expert

He said: “These young men are in a western society, in any event, they act like any other young men, they’re fizzing and popping with testosterone, they want some outlet for that, but Pakistani heritage girls are off-limits and they are expected to marry a Pakistani girl from Pakistan, typically.

“So they then seek other avenues and they see these young women, white girls who are vulnerable, some of them in care… who they think are easy meat.”

Mr Straw’s comments have been criticised by a number of commentators, including fellow Labour MP and chairman of the Home Affairs Select committee Keith Vaz, who called them “pretty dangerous”.

A number of campaigners have spoken of the need for a national investigation into the issue of grooming.

David Niven, a child protection expert and former chairman of the British Association of Social Workers, told the BBC it was an organised crime that needed “a light shone on it”.

“I’m certain that there isn’t a particular ethnic element to it,” he said.

“I would certainly go along with the fact that we need thorough root and branch investigation as to the vulnerability and abuse that occurs against our young people, because people – social workers and police especially – are struggling with it every day.”

Martin Narey, chief executive of Barnardo’s, also called for more research to be carried out.

But he said the issue, in his opinion, was not the targeting of white girls, but of those of all races who were vulnerable and isolated.

Mohammed Shafiq, director of the Muslim youth group the Ramadhan Foundation, said he believed race was an issue.

He said: “I first raised this two or three years ago and I got a lot of stick within the community from people who said I was doing the work of the BNP and stigmatising them.

“Most people didn’t realise the seriousness of it. But now, after a series of court cases, things have changed. I have had a lot of support.”

But he added: “These gangs that operate are criminals. There’s nothing in their culture, there’s nothing in their religion to suggest that this sort of thing is ingrained.”

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French hostages in Niger killed

Map of Niger
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Gunmen have kidnapped two Westerners in the capital of Niger, Niamey, security sources and eyewitnesses say.

The nationalities of the two men have not been confirmed, but witnesses described them as French.

The witnesses said gunmen burst into a restaurant and forced the two to follow them out of the building. No group has claimed the kidnapping.

In recent years a number of Westerners have been seized in Niger by al-Qaeda’s North African branch.

France is already working to secure the release of five French hostages seized in September near Arlit in northern Niger, along with a Togolese and a Madagascan.

Militants from al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM) are believed to be holding them in neighbouring Mali.

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US congresswoman shot in Arizona

Gabrielle GiffordsGabrielle Giffords is a member of the Democratic Party

A US congresswoman has been rushed to hospital after after she and up to 12 people were shot at a public event in Arizona.

Gabrielle Giffords, a Democratic member of the US House of Representatives, was shot in the head at close range. Her condition is unknown.

The gunman was arrested after the shooting at the event at a supermarket in Tucson city attended by hundreds.

Reports say members of her staff were among the other people who were hit.

Ms Giffords, 40, who represents the eighth district of Arizona in the House, is married to space shuttle astronaut Mark Kelly.

She serves on several congressional committees, including those covering the armed services and foreign affairs.

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Headless bodies found in Acapulco

The decapitated bodies of 15 young men have been found in the Mexican beach resort of Acapulco.

Police said they were discovered near a shopping centre, and were all aged between 15 and 25.

Thousands of people have died in recent years as drug-related violence has gripped the country.

President Felipe Calderon has deployed thousands of troops to battle the drug cartels, and claims to be making progress in reducing their influence.

But critics of Mr Calderon’s policies say they have increased the level of violence without reducing the flow of cocaine and other drugs into the US.

Human rights groups have also raised concerns that using the military has exposed civilians to possible abuse.

In this latest violent incident, police responding to a report of a fire at the Plaza Senderos shopping centre shortly after midnight found five abandoned vehicles and the decapitated bodies.

Two messages were left with the bodies.

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