Under-five flu vaccine defended

Two young boysThe swine flu virus is targeting the young, and not the elderly, experts say
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Children under five were excluded from this year’s flu vaccination programme on medical and not cost grounds, the Department of Health has insisted.

Health Secretary Andrew Lansley took advice from the independent Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI), the DoH said.

The JCVI dropped a recommendation to repeat last year’s jabs for children in revised advice in July, officials said.

Labour has criticised a lack of protection for young children.

It has also been critical of the axing of the annual flu-jab awareness campaign.

The Daily Telegraph said the decision not to offer jabs was a cost-cutting measure that saved £85m.

But the DoH denied MrLansley had “cancelled” the programme.

“Our influenza immunisation programme has been designed to protect those particularly at risk from serious disease, either from influenza itself or in whom influenza would make their underlying disease worse,” the DoH said.

“This means that we use an age and risk group-based approach in line with most other countries that have seasonal influenza vaccination programmes. We continue to monitor the current situation very carefully and JCVI keeps the policy for seasonal influenza vaccination under review as well.”

And shadow health secretary John Healey accused ministers of leaving children at risk.

He told the Daily Mail: “The serious problem lies with the groups that are most at risk, like children. That has come because the government axed the annual advertising campaign and they cancelled the flu jab plan for the under-fives.

“The thing about this swine flu is that it doesn’t go for elderly people, it doesn’t go for anyone over the age of 60”

Professor John Oxford Virologist

“The health secretary has been silent. The only attention he’s paid to preparations for this winter’s flu outbreak was to axe the autumn advertising campaign to encourage people to get vaccinated and make them aware of the risks.”

But Mr Lansley has insisted that the publicity campaign was not needed.

“There is no additional merit in a vaccination advertising campaign for the general population when there is already a targeted approach for those who need to be called,” he said.

“We urge those who have been contacted to respond positively.”

Figures published by the Health Protection Agency on Friday showed the number of people in critical care with confirmed or suspected flu in England had risen to 460 – more than double the number of a week before.

Of those, 366 were aged between 16 and 64, 51 were aged 65 and over, 26 were under five and another 17 were aged between five and 15.

Of the 27 people to have died from flu this season so far, nine were children. Among the fatalities, 24 had swine flu. Three suffered from another strain, flu type B.

This year’s vaccine protects against H1N1, the same strain of flu behind last year’s swine flu pandemic, and also protects against the H3N2 and B strain.

Mr Lansley told the BBC that people should not be concerned about the vaccine.

“People get confused about swine flu being in the seasonal flu vaccine because they have said if I’ve had swine flu previously I don’t need it, or there were some people who had their own concerns about the swine flu vaccine,” he said.

“The seasonal flu vaccine is decided internationally by the World Health Organisation (WHO), we can see now that this swine flu, plus influenza B plus another flu strain is circulating. The flu vaccine is an effective vaccination against that.

“People who are at risk, and indeed pregnant women and over-65s, should be taking up the offer of vaccination, they have been contacted by their GP surgeries. People should really protect themselves and in the long run, others too.”

Professor John Oxford, a virologist at Barts and the Royal London, said the current statistics for flu cases were “unsettling”.

He said: “The thing about this swine flu is that it doesn’t go for elderly people, it doesn’t go for anyone over the age of 60. It’s going for youth and that’s a rather unusual situation that we’re all grasping with.

“The vaccine campaign in the past have concentrated on the over-65s. From now on they’re going to have to concentrate as well on youth, and young people are the most difficult to persuade either that they’ve got something or to go into their doctor and get something.”

Prof Oxford said he did not think the number of cases would drop soon, and that things would “get worse” over the next week.

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Swiss franc reaches all-time high

US Dollar v Swiss FrancLast Updated at 28 Dec 2010, 16:20 ET USD:CHF twelve month chart$1 buys change %0.9521

-0.01

-1.07
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The Swiss currency has hit its highest ever level against the US dollar.

The dollar dropped to 94.5 Swiss centimes over lunchtime on Tuesday – an all-time low – before recovering slightly.

The US currency fell against most major currencies on Tuesday following weak housing and consumer confidence data.

The Swiss franc has risen against both the dollar and the euro ever since the 2008 financial crisis, thanks to its status as a safe haven within Europe.

Against the euro, the Swiss franc was trading slightly below its all time high of 80.35 euro cents, set just before Christmas.

Markets perceive the country as being a safe place to park cash, free of the debt worries that afflict some countries in the eurozone and – to a lesser extent – the UK.

The Swiss government is running a modest budget deficit in comparison to its European peers, while the country as a whole enjoys a big trade surplus with the rest of the world.

The franc has played a similar role to the Japanese yen – another currency that has proved a safe haven in the past two years, much to the chagrin of its government.

Like the Japanese, the Swiss intervened to weaken their currency earlier this year, fearing that a rapid rise would make its exports uncompetitive.

But – just like the Japanese government – the Swiss National Bank eventually gave up the effort in the face of an inexorable inflow of private money into its home currency.

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Envoys meet Ivory Coast leaders

Laurent Gbagbo (L) with Presidents Boni Yayi of Benin (R) and Ernest Koroma of Sierra Leone (C)After meeting Mr Gbagbo, the West African leaders went on to talks with Alassane Ouattara

West African heads of state have met Laurent Gbagbo in Ivory Coast to persuade him to cede power after the disputed presidential election.

Mr Gbagbo is refusing to make way for Alassane Ouattara, internationally recognised as the president-elect.

The delegation has said that if he does not relinquish power, he could be forced out by military intervention.

Meanwhile, a UN soldier was wounded when his convoy was attacked by a crowd in a Gbagbo stronghold.

A UN statement said the peacekeeper was wounded in the arm by a machete. One of three vehicles in the convoy was set alight in the incident in a western area of Abidjan.

‘All went well’

The three West African presidents – Boni Yayi of Benin, Sierra Leone’s Ernest Bai Koroma and Pedro Pires of Cape Verde – arrived in Abidjan during the morning in what was seen as a final chance to urge Mr Gbagbo to step down peacefully.

After the meeting, Benin’s President, Boni Yayi, said “all went well”.

He and the leaders of Sierra Leone and Cape Verde then met Mr Ouattara who is in a hotel with his shadow government protected by around 800 UN peacekeepers.

The hotel is also surrounded by troops loyal to Laurent Gbagbo who says he is not worried by threats to remove him by force and claims he is the victim of a plot involving France and the US.

A Sierra Leone government spokesman told the BBC that the leaders from the Ecowas regional grouping would be offering Mr Gbagbo a way of leaving without being humiliated.

“Outtara won and we insist that Outtara becomes the president of this country and that is the position taken by the West African leaders,” Sierra Leone’s Information Minister Ibrahim Ben Kargbo told the BBC.

Analysis

Ivory Coast is different from Liberia and Sierra Leone. It is a functioning wealthy country with a strong army, so a force will meet some credible resistance.

Furthermore, it doesn’t look as if Ecowas is capable of putting a credible force on the ground: Nigeria is heading towards elections and may not want to put in troops for that long a time; Ghana has elections in 2012 and Senegal has its own problems with dynastic succession. So the key countries that would have to contribute may not have the political stomach and the temerity.

I would have thought an emphasis on sanctions, bank accounts, no-fly zones, seizure of properties – total isolation on the continent – would have been a first step.

But it looks as if there has been a hastiness to demonstrate that “we can deal with Gbagbo” – and in doing so Ecowas, the African Union and the United Nations have actually closed too many doors that limit their options for engagement and manoeuvre.

As the talks continued throughout the afternoon, it emerged that a rally of Gbagbo’s young supporters scheduled for Wednesday had been cancelled.

Youth Minister Charles Ble Goude said the demonstration had been postponed to give the diplomatic initiative a chance but he added that he did not wish to give armed opponents the chance of infiltrating the event and “launching their civil war”.

Refugees escape

Mr Ouattara’s victory in the 28 November election was overturned by the Constitutional Council, a body headed by an ally of Mr Gbagbo, citing claims that results were rigged in the north.

Since the election, the UN has said at least 173 people have died in violence, and scores of others have been tortured.

The threat of escalating violence has prompted almost 20,000 people to flee Ivory Coast for neighbouring Liberia.

The UN refugee agency (UNHCR) says 15,120 people from villages in western Ivory Coast are known to have crossed the border and another 4,000 arrivals have been reported.

Most of the refugees are said to be women and children and almost two thirds under the age of 18.

The atmosphere in Abidjan is tense, says the BBC’s John James, with everyone fearing a military intervention in the coming weeks.

Ivorians had hoped these elections would close the chapter on the country’s most difficult 10 years, but instead they have opened up a new period of instability, he adds.

United Nations patrol in Ivory Coast

Pressure is mounting on Ivory Coast’s Laurent Gbagbo

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Israeli ex-footballer Cohen dies

Tamir Cohen outside Ichilov Hospital on 21 DecemberAvi Cohen’s son, Tamir (c), who plays for Bolton Wanderers, flew to Israel to be at his father’s bedside

Former Israeli international footballer Avi Cohen has died from head injuries sustained in a motorcycle accident.

His son, Tamir Cohen, who plays for Bolton Wanderers in the English Premiership, said his father was pronounced brain dead by doctors at Ichilov Hospital in Tel Aviv.

Avi Cohen, 54, was gravely injured in the accident in last week.

The defender was the first Israeli to play in the English top flight when he signed for Liverpool in 1979.

“To our great sadness, a health ministry committee was in the hospital today and confirmed that our father is indeed brain dead. Which is to say, he has died,” Tamir Cohen said, the Reuters news agency reported.

The Bolton midfielder and Israeli international had flown to Israel from England following his father’s accident.

Avi Cohen was one of Israel’s best-known players in the late 1970s and early 1980s.

He made 24 appearances for Liverpool, scoring one goal in the match against Aston Villa which secured the team the 1979-80 league title.

Avi Cohen began his playing career with Maccabi Tel Aviv before joining Liverpool, then returned to Maccabi. He briefly played at Glasgow Rangers before ending his career with Maccabi Netanya.

He captained his country and was chairman of the Israeli Professional Footballers Association for the past eight years, and was a regular local radio and television pundit.

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‘Last chance’ for Ivorian leader

Supporters of Ivory Coast presidential claimant Alassane Ouattara hold the national flag in front of the Ivory Coast embassy in Paris December 27, 2010On Monday, supporters of Alassane Ouattara took over the Ivory Coast’s embassy in Paris

The African Union has asked Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga to lead its efforts to resolve the political crisis in Ivory Coast.

The AU said Mr Odinga had been asked to “follow through the crisis”, a month after the country’s disputed polls.

The Union and other international bodies say incumbent President Laurent Gbagbo is not the legitimate winner.

Meanwhile, supporters of his rival, Alassane Ouattara, briefly took over the Ivory Coast embassy in Paris.

Some 20 protesters spent six hours in the building on Monday calling for Mr Gbagbo to step aside, before leaving peacefully, French television reported.

The move came after France, the former colonial power, recognised Mr Ouattara’s proposed envoy as the country’s ambassador.

Mr Ouattara’s victory in 28 November polls was overturned by the Constitutional Council, a body headed by a Gbagbo ally, citing claims that results were rigged in the north.

As pressure mounts on Mr Gbagbo to step aside, a delegation of heads of state – from Benin, Sierra Leone and Cape Verde – from the West African body Ecowas is planning to travel to the country on Tuesday.

The regional group has warned Mr Gbagbo of possible military intervention if he does not hand over to Mr Ouattara, who has been recognised internationally as the victor.

Mr Gbagbo’s Interior Minister Emile Guirieoulou told a news conference that his government would “welcome the three heads of states as brothers and friends, and listen to the message they have to convey”.

Map

Armed and ready for Ivorian intervention?

Correspondents say the AU’s appointment is another setback for Mr Gbagbo, as Mr Odinga has been hawkish on the crisis, and was the first African leader to call for military action.

Mr Odinga has said he planned to talk to Mr Gbagbo, but would wait for the outcome of the Ecowas talks before deciding his next move.

“[Mr Gbagbo] has of course portrayed himself as a democrat all his life, that’s why he lived very many years in France in exile,” Mr Odinga told the BBC. “So I think I’m going to try to impress upon him that the time has come for him to lead by example.”

“This, I think, is something that needs to be said and to tell him also that he risks becoming an international pariah if he tries to continue to cling to power. Going by the current trends he will have no friends left any more anyway.”

Mr Odinga was named Kenya’s prime minister in 2008 in a coalition government after weeks of political unrest.

However he dismissed the possibility of power-sharing between Mr Gbagbo and Mr Ouattara, saying that the election commission, not the constitutional court, was the only legitimate authority to determine the winner.

The BBC’s John James says the atmosphere in Abidjan is tense; while less violent than a few days ago, everyone fears a military intervention in the coming weeks.

Ivorians had hoped these elections would close the chapter on the country’s most difficult 10 years, but instead they have opened up a new period of instability, adds our correspondent.

Mr Ouattara earlier called for a general strike on Monday as part of his protest, but many residents in the main city of Abidjan appeared to ignore the request.

United Nations patrol in Ivory Coast

Pressure mounts on Ivory Coast’s Laurent Gbagbo

However later in the day the message seemed to have spread, with AFP news agency reporting disruption to public transport and isolated street barricades springing up.

His supporters are still hoping that the strike may take hold on Tuesday, as the call came fairly late on Sunday evening, our reporter says.

Mr Ouattara and his shadow government are currently in an Abidjan resort, protected by about 800 UN peacekeepers.

Mr Gbagbo, who has accused the US and France of leading a plot against him, insists he is legally president.

“Did the Ivorians elect me or not? That’s the only question. I’m not looking for compromise. Truth is not looking for compromise. I want truth,” he said.

The UN has said at least 173 people have died in violence, and scores of others have been tortured.

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NI water chaos affecting thousands

Frozen water jointNI Water has taken 14,000 calls in the past five days

NI Water has received more than 14,000 calls from people affected by frozen and burst water pipes.

The company is making bottled water available at depots in Londonderry and Craigavon for anyone who has been without a mains supply for 24 hours.

It said some customers may experience a temporary loss of supply or a drop in pressure as repairs are made to pipes.

The Roads Service said it did not carry out salting overnight, but warned of excess water on roads.

The service said many gullies were still blocked with frozen ice allowing water to accumulate on roads.

It has advised motorists to continue to be extremely vigilant.

NI Water said it had received more than 32,000 calls this month and staff had repaired 400 burst water mains.

The main areas affected include Belfast, Londonderry, Dungannon, Omagh, Armagh, Newry and Craigavon.

The SDLP has called for an emergency meeting of the Executive to discuss the impact of the extreme weather conditions on homes and businesses.

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Nigeria violence death toll rises

Jos residents in a camp for displaced people, 26/12Residents who have fled the violence are now living in refugee camps
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At least 80 people are now known to have died in violence around the Nigerian city of Jos in recent days.

Officials revised the death toll from about 40 after consulting hospitals.

Bombings struck mainly Christian areas of Jos on Christmas Eve, and Christian and Muslim youths clashed two days later. Security forces have been drafted in from neighbouring states.

Religious leaders have accused local politicians of using religion to stir up trouble between communities.

Jos has been a flashpoint for sectarian trouble in recent years.

Officials from Nigeria’s emergency management agency (Nema) said at least 80 people had died and more than 190 had been injured in the violence.

Ayo Oritsjafor, head of the Christian Association of Nigeria, said local politicians were trying to exploit religion to whip up trouble.

“I believe there are politicians in this country who know the weaknesses of our people,” he told the BBC.

“Some of them are creating these kind of problems to make Nigeria ungovernable.”

National and local elections are set for next April, and politicians are frequently accused of stirring up trouble to further their ambitions.

Meanwhile, a radical Muslim sect reportedly said they carried out the Christmas Eve bombings.

A website apparently belonging to the Boko Haram group, which staged an uprising in the city of north-eastern city of Maiduguri in 2008, said it launched the attacks to “start avenging the atrocities committed against Muslims”.

Jos Violence

map

Deadly riots in 2001, 2008 and 2010City divided into Christian and Muslim areasHausa-speaking Muslims living in Jos for decades still classified as settlersSettlers find it difficult to stand for electionCommunities divided along political party linesJos violence: Q&A

But police chief Abdulrahman Akano cast doubt on the claims, saying it was not Boko Haram’s usual method.

“Anybody can post anything on the internet,” he told the AFP news agency.

Boko Haram members who took part in the 2008 uprising were armed mostly with sticks and home-made rifles.

Security forces put down the uprising and killed about 800 people, including the group’s leader.

Sultan Mohammadu Sa’ad Abubakar, the spiritual leader of Nigeria’s estimated 70 million Muslims, played down the Boko Haram link.

He called on all Nigerians “not to succumb to the moves and practices of the few destructive elements that really don’t want peace in this country”.

The city of Jos lies in Nigeria’s volatile Middle Belt – between the mainly Muslim north and largely Christian south.

Jos has been blighted by sectarian violence over the past decade, with deadly riots in 2001, 2008 and this year.

The clashes usually pit Muslims against Christians, but analysts say the underlying issues are political and economic.

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India steps up new year security

An Indian policeman stands guard outside a government office in MumbaiThe security forces are especially alert to danger during holidays

The Indian government has stepped up security measures after it said it had received information that militants were planning attacks.

It said the attacks were planned to take place during this weekend’s new year celebrations.

Police in several major cities, including Delhi and Mumbai, as well as Goa, a popular tourist destination, have been put on high alert.

Nationwide security alerts have become a common part of life in India.

It is not possible to judge whether they are based on firm evidence or understandable caution.

Since November 2008 this country has lived in the shadow of the attacks on Mumbai (Bombay), in which 10 gunmen, allegedly from a Pakistani militant group, killed 166 people over the course of three days.

Many believe it is only a matter of when, not if, such a dreadful event occurs again on the streets of an Indian city.

The security forces are especially alert to danger during holidays and large public gatherings.

There were fears that the Commonwealth Games that took place in Delhi in October might be bombed.

Last week the Mumbai police issued pictures of four men it said were planning an attack over Christmas.

The latest warning is apparently based on intelligence reports that militants from the same group blamed for the Mumbai attacks, the Lashkar-e-Taiba, or Army of the Pure, had sent more men into India.

There is no way of verifying these reports.

Police have been told to be on high alert in major cities, tourist resorts and hotels.

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Star Wars sequel saved for future

Star Wars sequel The Empire Strikes Back is to be preserved by the US Library of Congress in its National Film Registry.

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

Water chaos affecting thousands

Frozen water jointNI Water has taken 14,000 calls in the past five days

NI Water has received more than 14,000 calls from people affected by frozen and burst water pipes.

The company is making bottled water available at depots in Londonderry and Craigavon for anyone who has been without a mains supply for 24 hours.

It said some customers may experience a temporary loss of supply or a drop in pressure as repairs are made to pipes.

The Roads Service said it did not carry out salting overnight, but warned of excess water on roads.

The service said many gullies were still blocked with frozen ice allowing water to accumulate on roads.

It has advised motorists to continue to be extremely vigilant.

NI Water said it had received more than 32,000 calls this month and staff had repaired 400 burst water mains.

The main areas affected include Belfast, Londonderry, Dungannon, Omagh, Armagh, Newry and Craigavon.

The SDLP has called for an emergency meeting of the Executive to discuss the impact of the extreme weather conditions on homes and businesses.

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

Skiier dies following avalanche

A Southampton man dies in hospital after being caught in an avalanche while skiing in France.

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

US struggles after snow storms

Blowing snow shrouds a British Airways aircraft following a blizzard at Newark Liberty International Airport, New Jersey. Photo: 27 December 2010 Many flights are still experiencing severe delays, US officials say
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Airports have reopened in the north-eastern US after blizzards caused some 7,000 flights to be cancelled over the busy post-Christmas travel period.

Services have now resumed into and out of New York, Boston and Philadelphia.

But officials warn it could take days to clear the flight backlog for tens of thousands of stranded passengers.

Analysts say the storm and its aftermath could cost the airlines up to $100m (£64m). The blizzards also disrupted rail and road traffic.

The conditions were blamed for a car crash in Maine in which a 59-year-old man died, and for stranding two buses carrying some 50 passengers on a New Jersey motorway.

National rail operator Amtrak – who earlier shut its New York-Boston route – now announced a limited resumption of services.

The US National Weather Service says the monster snow storm is the result of a low pressure system which originated off North Carolina.

However, forecasters are now expecting milder weather for the rest of the week, which could help in speeding up the clearing of snow.

Stranded passengers at JFK. Photo: 27 December 2010Many passengers had to camp out on floors in terminals

Three airports serving New York – JFK, La Guardia and Newark Liberty International Airport – and also Boston’s Logan and Philadelphia International reopened on Monday evening.

They had been closed since early morning, forcing thousands of passengers to camp out on floors in terminals.

Overall, nearly 7,000 flights were cancelled on Sunday and Monday.

Although the worst weather is thought to have passed, many flights are still experiencing severe delays because of strong winds and what remains of the snow.

And airline officials warn that it could take days to rebook passengers whose flights were delayed or cancelled.

“Any airline scheduler will tell you it’s like playing with a jigsaw puzzle where all the pieces keep changing shape,” American Airlines spokesman Ed Martell was quoted as telling the Associated Press.

“In some cases we can’t give them a new seat because we don’t know.”

Six US states – Massachusetts, Maine, Maryland, New Jersey, North Carolina and Virginia – earlier all declared emergencies.

Map locator

Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick warned that the storm was “expected to produce widespread heavy snowfall, periods of zero visibility, high winds, power outages, coastal flooding, and beach erosion”, AFP reported.

Power had already reportedly been cut to tens of thousands of homes in Rhode Island and Massachusetts.

The New York area received up to 51cm (20in) of snow over the last two days.

The southern states of Georgia and South Carolina had their first white Christmas in more than a century.

But Washington DC escaped the blizzard, with only a dusting of snow.

The storm moved to Canada’s Atlantic coast early on Monday. Around 27,000 homes in Nova Scotia and 11,000 consumers in the New Brunswick area were reportedly left without power.

The timing of the snowstorm meant disruption for many thousands travelling after Christmas reunions and hampered the start of the shopping sales season and the return to work for many commuters.

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America North forecast for 28/12/2010

Map Key

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Frost Frost Colour Range

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Pressure Fronts

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Warm Front IllustrationWarm
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Rain Rain Colour Range

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Joanna Yeates strangled, police say

Joanna YeatesJoanna Yeates’ body was found on Christmas Day
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Results of a post-mortem examination are expected into the death of Bristol landscape architect Joanna Yeates.

The 25-year-old’s snow-covered body was discovered by a couple out walking their dogs in Longwood Lane, Failand, on Christmas Day.

Miss Yeates, from Clifton, had not been seen since she was filmed on CCTV at a Tesco store on 17 December.

Police said the death was being treated as suspicious. The family have formally identified her body.

The post-mortem examination is expected to reveal how Miss Yeates died.

An examination began on Sunday, but Avon and Somerset Police warned the process could be lengthy “because of the extreme freezing conditions in which Joanna’s body was found”.

It is also hoped the post-mortem results will help investigators narrow down the period when Miss Yeates died, enabling them to intensively trawl CCTV for clues.

Cameras recording movements across Clifton Suspension Bridge – which links the area where the body was found with Miss Yeates’s flat – are already being studied.

Miss Yeates’s parents, David and Teresa, her brother Chris, and her boyfriend Greg Reardon have visited the scene where her body was found near Long Ashton Golf Club and laid flowers.

Police have appealed for information which may help them fill in the gap between Miss Yeates’s disappearance and the discovery of her body.

She is thought to have returned to the flat she shared with Mr Reardon, 27, on the evening of 17 December.

Her keys, mobile phone, purse and coat had been left behind at their flat.

Forensic examiners said there was no sign of a forced entry or a struggle at the flat.

Mr Reardon was in Sheffield visiting family for the weekend and reported her missing to police when he returned home two days later.

Police said she had been to the Ram pub in Bristol’s Park Street the night she disappeared, but left there at about 2000 GMT.

CCTV images showed Miss Yeates visiting a Waitrose store on The Triangle and then the Tesco Express store, where she bought a pizza.

A receipt for the food was found at her address, but no trace has been found of the pizza or its wrapping and detectives believe its whereabouts could hold a vital clue in the case.

Officers are also keen to hear from people who may have seen anything or anyone acting suspiciously over the past week in the Longwood Lane area.

Map showing Joanna Yeates' last known movements

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Pregnant woman among crash dead

Two men have died and four people have been injured after a traffic accident in Carrickmacross, County Monaghan.

Three cars were involved in the crash, which happened on the N2 just before 1900 BST on Monday.

Two men and a woman are in a “critical condition” at Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital, Drogheda. A fourth person was also injured in the crash.

Two children were also taken to hospital as a precautionary measure.

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