Saturday, October 20, 2012

Alicia Keys plays a sexy superwoman in stunning new video

Alicia Keys

ALICIA Keys plays a sexy superwoman in her dazzling new music video Girl On Fire.

The single is the first from her new album, of the same name, and she's set the bar high with a visually stunning promo.
Alicia Keys
Alicia, 31, flaunts off her curves in a series of figure-hugging outfits as she shows she can be a lover, mother and housekeeper all rolled into one.
Green theme ... she plays a powerful woman in the stunning promo
PLANET PHOTOS
The video opens with her reclining on a bed in a tiny top that shows off her bra straps, cleavage and a firm, toned tummy.
She's then shown cleaning up a children's nursery and getting her kids ready for bed - using Mary Poppins magic to send toys flying back into their box.
 

Alicia completes her superwoman act by caring for an elderly woman - before rejecting the overtures of the man in her life when she finally gets the chance to put her feet up and slip on a pair of headphones.
Girl On Fire, the star's fifth album, is due for release next month.

Alicia Keys

It's her first since she became a mum - to son Egypt in October 2010 - and she warns fans they should expect a very different sound this time around.
In a fiery message on her website to announce the album, she wrote: “Girl on Fire is about new beginnings, new perspectives and fresh starts…
“I felt like a lion locked in a cage. I felt like a girl misunderstood ... I felt like it was time to stop making excuses for any part of my life that I wanted to change.
“Once I made that choice I became a Girl on Fire, the lion broke free!!
“Here’s to finding your power! Your FIRE!!"


Justin Timberlake break-up caused Britney breakdown

Lawyer's claim in court

BRITNEY Spears takes her barefoot boys out shopping as a court hears Justin Timberlake blamed for the singer’s troubles.

The American X Factor judge let Sean Preston, seven, and six-year-old Jayden James go shoeless as they ran errands in LA.
As she enjoyed the day with her sons – from marriage to Kevin Federline – childhood sweetheart Justin was being blamed for her breakdown and past drug addiction.
Family lawyer Leon Gladstone told a court that her 2002 split from the singer – who wed Jessica Biel in Italy yesterday – was the start of her troubles.
Acting for the singer’s father, Jamie Spears, in a case brought be her former manager Sam Lufti, Gladstone said that she spiralled out of control, marrying twice and using drugs to get over her heartbreak.
Justin Timberlake and Britney Spears
Lost love ... Justin Timberlake and Britney Spears
He said: “They had a big relationship, and it ended painfully.
“In 2003 her parents noticed that she had changed over the break-up of her and Justin and noticed she was depressed … she went to Vegas and got married to a childhood friend for 55 hours and they saw that she was becoming distant with her parents and become concerned she was using illegal substances.”
Lufti is suing the singer for breach of contract, claiming she agreed to give him 15 percent of her earnings.
He’s also suing her mother Lynne for defaming him in her book Through the Storm – in which she claimed he drugged Britney — and her father Jamie for allegedly punching him.
Britney's parents, Lynne and Jamie Spears, arrive at court
Family affair ... Britney's parents, Lynne and Jamie Spears, arrive at court
Britney has been under a "guardianship order" controlled by her father since a breakdown in 2008 and the lawyer only ever acted in Britney’s best interest.
He said: “This is a story of a close family, but not a perfect one.
“It’s a story of a man who actually wanted nothing more for his daughter than to live and be well.
“It’s a story of a father who has had to step up and take action that he never thought he would have to take....actions that didn’t perhaps endear his daughter to him.”
Earlier this week, Sam Lufti testified that Britney popped up to 30 ampthetamine pills a day. He said: “She liked to use amphetamines. Mostly everything that went wrong was because of this drug.”
 Britney Spears runs errands with her boys

 

French plan to reduce energy bills prompts Big Brother outcry

Heating a French home could soon require an income tax consultation or even a visit to the doctor under legislation to force conservation in the nation's $46 billion household energy market.
A bill adopted by the lower house this month would set prices that homes pay based on wages, age and climate. Utilities Electricite de France and GDF Suez will use the data to reward consumers who cut power and natural gas usage and penalize those whom regulators decide are wasteful.
"It's Orwellian," opposition lawmaker Daniel Fasquelle said by telephone. "The law will create huge inequalities and infringe on people's individual freedoms. It won't work."
Socialist President Francois Hollande is pushing boundaries of privacy and privilege in carrying out a campaign promise to reduce energy costs. France, which built the world's biggest reliance on nuclear power as other nations buckled under public anxiety over atomic energy, is now seeking support to reward homes for "negawatts," or not using a kilowatt of power.
The law would be unique to France and is symbolic to the Socialists, a government official who declined to be identified said Thursday. Households bought 35 billion euros ($46 billion) of energy in 2011, including power, gas and other heating fuels.
The legislation drew criticism from trade unions and industry groups. It will add layers of bureaucracy to a power system already attacked in court and antitrust probes for being oppressive for customers and competitors of EDF and GDF Suez, the former state monopolies that still dominate supply, opponents said.
While the government said the changes won't cut earnings at EDF and GDF Suez, the uncertainty may weigh on their shares that investors have already marked down by 1.2 percent and 2.2 percent, respectively, in the past three months while the Bloomberg European Utilities Index gained 5.2 percent.
The proposed law was adopted by the National Assembly on Oct. 4 and is set for Senate debate later this month. Opposition from Communist members has pushed a Senate commission to postpone its examination until Oct. 23 so some revisions can be made. The draft contravenes the principle of equal access to energy across France and should be completely revised, Communist senators said in a statement late yesterday.
EDF and GDF Suez would be the most exposed because of their dominant positions. EDF supplies power to 28 million household clients in France, while GDF Suez provides gas to 9.4 million customers, giving them respective market shares of 93 percent and 90 percent by volume, according to the regulator.
"It won't be beneficial for the utilities, it will be neutral at best," Emmanuel Retif, analyst at Raymond James Euro Equities in Paris, said by e-mail. "If it were to be beneficial, heating bills would have to rise and that's not what the government is trying to do."
Investor wariness of the planned progressive and social power rates stems from 4.5 billion euros in payment arrears that have accumulated on EDF's books as of June 30, mostly because of renewable energy subsidies.
The draft legislation encourages households to use less energy either by changing their habits or insulating their homes. Thrifty energy consumers will be rewarded with lower rates while wasteful ones will have to pay more. The law is supposed to be financially neutral for utilities, according to the draft.
Power and gas bills in France and elsewhere typically vary according to the size of a dwelling, type of heating and whether it's on a windy Alpine ridge or the warmer Mediterranean coast.
The new French law will add income and the number and age of occupants to the mix. Having a medical condition that requires electricity-powered equipment like respirators or wheelchairs will also enter into the equation.
"The principle is good, but the law raises a whole series of practical problems," Nicolas Mouchnino, head of energy and environmental issues at French consumer group UFC-Que Choisir, said by phone. "It's very difficult to tell the difference with any degree of certainty between energy use that is essential and that which may be superfluous."
The rules could make relations between property owners and renters more antagonistic and open the way for fraudulent claims about energy use, he said.
The law as it stands would create an incentive system for energy use. Households would be granted a base volume of power or gas considered appropriate for the dwelling. This volume would be determined by fiscal and social security authorities from tax returns and other documents such as income statements, studies of local weather and medical records.
Households meeting certain criteria could be among 4 million — a fourfold increase under the planned law — that will be eligible for reduced "social" rates for energy. The rest will have their prices adjusted according to volumes consumed.
The government and regulator will set the reward and penalty incentives under which households using less than their allotted base volume of energy get rebates while those surpassing the limits pay higher rates. The difference could be as much as 60 euros a megawatt-hour, according to the draft.
This could translate into penalties of 600 euros a year for a home "leaking heat" compared to a well-insulated one, according to opposition lawmaker Antoine Herth. Environmental Minister Delphine Batho told senators the government will provide its own simulations of the effects on household bills, which will be "reasonable" so as to act as an incentive.
Renters will be able to deduct from their monthly payments a part of the higher costs of heating a home deemed to have low energy use efficiency, maybe because it's poorly insulated, while the elderly or households with certain yet-to-be specified heating installations will get higher base volumes of energy.
"It's so complicated I don't think it will ever be implemented," said Laurent Langlard, a spokesman on energy issues for the Confederation General du Travail. The biggest union in the energy sector backs lower energy rates for consumers, but this plan is "unworkable," he said.
 
 

"We will deal with it": Fergie reacts angrily after Rio Ferdinand refuses to wear Kick It Out anti-racism T-shirt

The Man United manager says the defender let him down

Not in my name: Rio refuses to wear anti-racism shirt 
Sir Alex Ferguson has reacted angrily after Rio Ferdinand refused to wear a Kick It Out anti-racism T-shirt at Old Trafford on Saturday.
The Manchester United manager had claimed on Friday that all of his players would wear the shirts in accordance with the country-wide FA initiative - and even criticised Reading striker Jason Roberts for saying he would refuse to .
However, prior to the Red Devils' 4-2 win over Stoke, Ferdinand wore a red United tracksuit top rather than his the black 'one game, one community' T-shirts sported by his team-mates.
Ferdinand eventually took his training top off to reveal he was wearing a United training shirt, with the DHL sponsors logo.
Speaking to MUTV, Ferguson said: "I am disappointed. I said yesterday that the players would be wearing it in support of the PFA and that every player should adhere to it.
"And he goes and lets us down. We will deal with it, don't worry."

On Corsica, the intrigue of crime and politics claims another life

In Napoleon's birthplace, riven by feuds between bandits and nationalists, a brilliant lawyer's murder brings deep pessimism


Corsica, France
Corsica has a long history of violence, with many of the murders blamed on disputes and tit-for-tat score-settling by criminal gangs. Photograph: Patrick Frilet/Rex Features
Even by Corsican standards of cold-bloodedness, the assassination of Antoine Sollacaro was shocking.
Not because it was especially brutal on an island where a father was recently gunned down in front of his young children and a woman was shot eight times in the back outside a shopping centre last year. Not even because it was that unusual; Sollacaro's murder was the 16th this year in Corsica. Hours before he was killed, another body had been found in a car up one of the island's many mountains.
Sollacaro's murder was shocking because he was a lawyer, recognised as a brilliant advocate and a man who defended Corsican nationalists, traditionally associated with such violence. "I'd have been more surprised if the priest was shot in his church," one lawyer said after the killing. "To shoot a lawyer, this is very symbolic."
Marc Maroselli, the president of the bar, described the murder as intolerable. "It is cowardly and shows the slide into deadly madness that is covering Corsica in blood," he said.
Islanders living with the daily drip-drip of violence believed Sollacaro's profession was his protection, that it conferred some kind of guarantee in the Corsican underworld's code of conduct. Except that on Wednesday morning it didn't.
Sollacaro, 63, was driving to work in his black convertible Porsche when he decided to pop into a Total petrol station just outside the Corsican capital, Ajaccio, to buy his morning newspaper. His vehicle was still moving when a BMW motorcycle came alongside. The pillion rider drew an automatic pistol and fired at least five shots into the lawyer's head and several more into his body. As the car hit a wall with Sollacaro slumped dead over the wheel, the assassin sped off.
Murderous violence is nothing new in Corsica. The Ile de Beauté, famed for its mountains, pine groves and sandy beaches, has a heart of darkness and a history of collective and individual slaughter. The island has been a battleground since the first century BC with Carthaginians, followed by Greeks, Etruscans, Romans, Vandals, Visigoths, Saracens and other invaders spilling blood over this extraordinarily lush and beautiful rock in the Mediterranean. It was, after all, Corsica that spawned one of the ultimate international braggarts and bullies, Napoleon Bonaparte.
Between 1821 and 1852, the "vendetta" code of honour is believed to have led to 4,300 murders. In the 1950s, the crime and bloodshed was linked to the French Connection, a network of international heroin smugglers. In the 1970s, it was dominated by nationalists and organised criminals and some people who were both.
The nationalists have struggled against Paris's rule since 1768 when Corsica became French – it is one of the country's 27 administrative regions today – but the movement reached its apogee in 1998, when members killed the prefect Claude Erignac, the French government's highest representative on the island. Sollacaro famously defended the man convicted of Erignac's murder, Yvan Colonna, and a number of other leading nationalists.
Since the start of 2007, there have been around 100 killings and at least another 100 attempted murders, most blamed on disputes and tit-for-tat score-settling between mafia-like gangs of what the local people call "bandits".
Few of the killers make it to court. Most are themselves killed in revenge, creating an endless spiral of violence and bloodshed that becomes deeply personal. The French magazine L'Express said this made Corsica, with a population of just over 300,000 but where there are an estimated 30,000 weapons, the "bloodiest" region in western Europe, and more crime-ridden than Sicily.
On Friday, Sollacaro's coffin made the slow and winding 63km journey from Ajaccio south through the mountains and pine forests to his birthplace, the former fishing port of Propriano. As the bells of Notre Dame de la Miséricorde jangled and the luxury motor cruisers and yachts at the port jiggled in their moorings, up to 1,000 friends, relatives, colleagues and residents gathered outside the already packed church to pay their respects.
The lawyers donned their fur-trimmed robes and looked grim. Hard men with red eyes embraced and wept. Elegant, tanned women in stilettos fiddled with gold jewellery.
Given the autumn sun and the occasion, the dress code adopted by most mourners, dark glasses and tailored black suits, was entirely appropriate. Given the setting and circumstances, it became cinematic and vaguely ominous.
Afterwards, the mourners lined up to offer their condoléances according to local tradition: to the women of the family inside the church, the men outside. Some spoke of a "gangrene" or "cancer" on the island, but most said that it was not a time for talk. Jacques, aged 81, a retired sheep farmer, shook his weatherbeaten face but could not find many words to say.
"I don't know what's happened to Corsica, it is terrible to see what has happened to our island. Nothing will ever be the same."
He added: "In the past, murders have been over questions of honour, but now life is cheap. Where is the honour in this killing? Young people use bullets to resolve their differences, but bullets resolve nothing."
Pierre-Louis Maurel, a former president of the bar in the northern city of Bastia, said he was a lifelong personal friend of the dead man.
"Antoine was a lawyer, a defender of men," he said. "We do not know if he was targeted as a man or as a lawyer. If he was targeted for his advocate's robes, then it is very symbolic; it is nothing less than an attack on democracy, liberty and justice. It means the killers respect nobody and nothing. I hope this is not true, but I fear it is. As lawyers, that makes us very afraid."
Many Corsicans blame the French establishment for the island's plight, complaining they have been abandoned to crime, rising unemployment, poverty and economic decline, which they say has left the island's youth disaffected, dangerous and fodder for organised crime.
President François Hollande has described the violence as unacceptable and tomorrow his Socialist government is expected to announce measures to combat it.
If there is stupefaction on Corsica, there is widespread incomprehension elsewhere. "Nobody understands what's going on here and it's impossible to explain," said one French reporter at Sollacaro's funeral on Friday.
"Before, it was the nationalists fighting for independence, then it was nationalists fighting each other, and some were also bandits who started fighting each other for different reasons. Then people started getting killed, not because they were involved in anything but because they knew people who were ..." his voice trailed off. "As I say, impossible to explain."
Veteran Corsican journalist Jacques Renucci described a sense of collective resignation and pessimism. "People here are not in fact particularly shocked by the killing, sadly. What they're shocked about is that someone so high-profile was targeted," he said.
Renucci added: "Every time Corsicans say 'never again', and it happens time and time again. They hark back to a golden age on the island when everyone lived happily together, but it is a myth, a fiction.
"The truth is we have always killed each other, and I am not optimistic that we're about to stop."

US risks drawing Beijing's ire with military cruise in disputed waters

USS George Washington enters South China Sea as display of naval strength and support of smaller Asian nations claims


US carrier strike group cruises in South China Sea
The nuclear-powered USS George Washington aircraft carrier cruising the disputed South China Sea. Photograph: Brian H. Able/EPA
A US aircraft carrier group cruised through the disputed South China Sea on Saturday in a show of American power in waters that are fast becoming a focal point of Washington's strategic rivalry with Beijing.
Vietnamese security and government officials were flown onto the nuclear-powered USS George Washington ship, underlining the burgeoning military relationship between the former enemies.
A small number of journalists were also invited to witness the display of maritime might in the oil-rich waters, which are home to islands disputed between China and the other smaller Asian nations facing the sea.
The visit will likely reassure Vietnam and the Philippines of American support but could annoy China, whose growing economic and naval strength is leading to a greater assertiveness in pressing its claims there.
The United States is building closer economic and military alliances with Vietnam and other nations in the region as part of a "pivot" away from the Middle East to Asia, a shift in large part meant to counter rising Chinese influence.
The Vietnamese officials took photos of F-16 fighter jets taking off and landing on the ships 1,000-foot-long flight deck, met the captain and toured the hulking ship, which has more than 5,000 sailors on board.
The mission came a day after Beijing staged military exercises near islands in the nearby East China Sea it disputes with US ally Japan. Those tensions have flared in recent days.
China claims nearly all of the South China Sea, where the US says it has a national interest in ensuring freedom of navigation in an area crossed by vital shipping lanes.
Vietnam, the Philippines and several other Asian nations also claim parts of the sea.
The disputes attracted little international interest until the late 1990s, when surveys indicated possible large oil reserves.
American rivalry with China has given the disputes an extra dimension in recent years.
The US navy regularly patrols the Asia-Pacific region, conducting joint exercises with its allies and training in the strategic region.
The trip by the George Washington off the coast of Vietnam is its third in as many years.
A second aircraft carrier, the USS John C Stennis, has also conducting operations in the western Pacific region recently, according to the US Pacific Fleet.
Captain Gregory Fenton said the mission was aimed in part at improving relations with Vietnam and ensuring the US had free passage in the South China Sea.
China's military buildup, including the launch of its own carrier last year and rapid development of ballistic missiles and cyber warfare capabilities, could potentially crimp the US forces' freedom to operate in the waters.
The United States doesn't publicly take sides in the territorial disputes among China and its neighbors.
"It is our goal to see the region's nations figure out these tensions ... on their own, our role of that to date is to conduct freedom of navigation exercises within international waters," Fenton said in an interview on the bridge.
Although claimant countries have pledged to settle the territorial rifts peacefully, the disputes have erupted in violence in the past, including in 1988 when China and Vietnam clashed in the Spratly Islands in a confrontation that killed 64 Vietnamese soldiers.
Many fear the disputes could become Asia's next flash point for armed conflict.
Vietnam is pleased to accept help from its one-time foe America as a hedge against its giant neighbor China, with which it also tries to maintain good relations.
Still, the Hanoi government reacted angrily to recent moves by Beijing to establish a garrison on one of the Paracel islands, which Vietnam claims. The United States also criticized the move by Beijing, earning it a rebuke from the government there.
"China will take this (cruise) as another expression by the United States of its desire to maintain regional domination," said Denny Roy, a senior fellow at the East-West Center in Hawaii.
"The US also wants to send a message to the region that it is here for the long haul ... and that it wants to back up international law."
While most analysts believe military confrontation in the waters is highly unlikely anytime soon, they say tensions are likely to increase as China continues pressing its claims and building its navy.

Romney and Obama stay off campaign trail to prepare for final debate

President goes to Camp David and GOP rival studies in Florida as Ryan and Biden headline rallies in battleground states


romney obama capmaign
Monday night's debate could provide a final chance for the candidates to land a few blows in front of tens of million voters. Photograph: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
For the second Saturday running, Barack Obama and Mitt Romney went to ground to prep for a televised debate that could prove crucial in a tight White House race now entering its home straight.
President Obama hunkered down in Camp David ahead of the third head-to-head with his Republican rival. He is due to remain their until Monday night's encounter, leaving the donkey work of the campaign to his deputy Joe Biden, who hit the stump in Florida on Saturday.
Likewise, Romney was leaving nothing to chance ahead of the foreign policy debate, having slipped up on the topic in the last match-up between the pair – an occurrence that seemingly arrested his momentum ahead of the November 6 vote.
Romney is due to spend the weekend in Florida boning up on the issues. Meanwhile his vice-presidential pick, Paul Ryan, is due to campaign in the Democratic-leaning battleground of Pennsylvania on Saturday.
Political pundits have by-and-large scored the two presidential debates in this race 1-1, with Obama winning the second after a poor performance in the first initially handed the electoral running to Romney.
Monday's debate, due to be held in Boca Raton, Florida, and moderated Bob Schieffer of CBS News, is dedicated solely to foreign affairs.
It should be a strong area for the president, as he consistently tops polls as to which of the candidates is more trusted on international affair. During his tenure at the White House, Obama has pulled American troops out of Iraq and presided over drawdown in Afghanistan – both popular measures in a country grown weary by more than a decade of war.
Additionally, terror chief Osama bin Laden was assassinated by a US crack team under the president's watch, providing a further boost to his claims of competence in pushing forward US objectives overseas.
But the timing of the debate isn't great for the White House incumbent, coming just weeks after a confused response from the administration over a deadly attack on the US consulate in Benghazi, Libya.
The assault resulted in the death of four Americans, including ambassador Chris Stevens. It also, so the Republicans claim, raised questions over Obama's foreign policy and leadership after conflicting messages over who was responsible for the assault were initially released.
On Friday, Ryan continued to needle the president over claims that he should have known earlier that militants were responsible for the consulate siege, and not, as some in the administration appeared to initially think, that it was the work of protesters angered by an anti-Islam film produced in the US.
Ryan told Wisconsin radio station WTAQ that the Benghazi attack and its handling by the president represented the "absolute unravelling of the Obama administration's foreign policy".
But some believe that the Republican ticket has already overplayed the attack for political advantage.
An attempt to press the president over the semantic point of whether he actually called it an "act of terror" the day after the siege, backfired on Romney in the second debate.
Meanwhile, the White House has been trying to put some distance between Obama and the initial confusion over who was behind the Benghazi killings, seemingly shifting the blame for the response on the State Department.
On Monday, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said she took responsibility over the response.
"In the wake of an attack like this, in fog of war, there's always going to be confusion," she explained.
It is likely that any exchange over the Benghazi incident at Monday's debate will be closely watched for inconsistencies. But whether or not the Republicans can make enough of it to overturn a perceived advantage for Obama on foreign policy remains to be seen.
Meanwhile, Obama and Biden have been focusing their attack on Romney's apparent policy shifts on issues such as women's health, dismissively referring to moves by the Republican hopeful to appeal to the centre as "Romnesia".
With the race now bending into the home straight, Monday night's debate could provide a final chance for both White House contenders to land a few blows in front of an audience of tens of million voters.
Perhaps of equal importance, both will be eager to avoid any verbal missteps or gaffes that could provide the 24-news networks with the equivalent of a water-cooler moment to play relentlessly in the days leading up to 6 November.

M5 crash deaths: fireworks organiser charged with manslaughter

Geoffrey Counsell, 50, from Somerset faces seven counts of manslaughter after 34-vehicle pile-up in November 2011

M5 crash deaths: fireworks organiser charged with manslaughter
Emergency services at the scene of the fatal collision near junction 25 of the M5 in November 2011. Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty Images
The organiser of a fireworks display that was taking place next to the site of a motorway pile up that claimed seven lives has been charged with the manslaughter of the victims.
Geoffrey Counsell, 50, from Somerset, will appear before magistrates in Bristol next month accused of seven counts of manslaughter.
On Friday 4 November last year, seven people died and 51 people were injured on the M5 near Taunton in Somerset following a collision between 34 vehicles.
A statement released on Friday night by Avon and Somerset police and the Crown Prosecution Service revealed that Taunton Rugby Club, which hosted the display, would not be prosecuted. Nor would any of the motorists involved.
But the statement said: "The Crown Prosecution Service has authorised Avon and Somerset police to charge Geoffrey Counsell with seven counts of manslaughter following the deaths of Anthony and Pamela Adams, Maggie and Michae
l Barton, Malcolm Beacham, Terry Brice and Kye Thomas in a collision on the M5 in November 2011.
"Since the collision we have worked closely together to thoroughly investigate the circumstances of the collision and to carefully consider all the evidence. This has been a complex process which has also involved working with Taunton Deane Borough council and seeking the views of expert witnesses.
"Having considered the evidence … the CPS decided there was sufficient evidence to charge Geoffrey Counsell, the provider of the fireworks display at Taunton Rugby Club on the night of the collision, with manslaughter.
"It was clear from the investigation carried out by Avon and Somerset police that there was insufficient evidence to prosecute for driver error and therefore no action will be taken against any motorists.
"The CPS also considered the culpability of Taunton Rugby Club and reached the conclusion that there is insufficient evidence for a realistic prospect of conviction."
Counsell is due to appear on 12 November.

Gaddafi's last moments: 'I saw the hand holding the gun and I saw it fire'

Former rebel fighters in the Libyan city of Sirte recall the capture and killing of their reviled dictator a year ago

Gaddafi-death-Sirte
An anti-Gaddafi fighter points at the drain where Muammar Gaddafi was hiding before he was captured in Sirte on 20 October 2011. Photograph: Thaier al-Sudani/Reuters
Moustafa Zoubi trained his battered Kalashnikov on a large storm water pipe, his gun barrel darting between the shadow at its entrance and a frantic commotion on the ridge above. Fighters were scrambling in every direction, shouting commands and barking orders for reinforcements into their mobile phones. One radio call in particular was repeatedly shouted: "Call sign one."
Some of the frantic men nearby took cover behind a grass berm, looking towards an area past a twisted and smouldering convoy of cars and trucks for the source of the incoming gunfire. Others made for nearby buildings. All the time, gungho men in war-ravaged trucks were arriving, tyres squealing on the hot black bitumen as they neared the maelstrom on the outskirts of the Libyan city of Sirte.
The recent arrivals were turning up with news urgently passed on to them in phone calls from their colleagues as far away as Misrata and Tripoli. The man they had all been hunting was cowering in the foul-smelling hole in front of them.
Captives from the firefight still raging around them had given up their boss, the new arrivals were told. He had nowhere left to run.
Zoubi's heart seemed to pound through his chest as he focused his Kalashnikov and every bit of concentration he could summon on the shadow in front of him. The gunfire crackling in the distance no longer mattered. Along with everyone else, he was focused solely on the momentous drama that was about to play out.
A hand tentatively emerged from the drainpipe. Seconds later another slowly appeared from the shadow into the midday light. One hand briefly dropped to the ground, and the men outside responded with screamed orders. "Keep coming," someone said. Someone else fired into the air.
A man's head appeared from the gloom – sporting a signature black curly mass of hair.
The rebels surged forward and grabbed the man by the arms, pulling him clear of the pipe and hauling him to his feet. One pulled his hair back, forcing his face to lurch violently towards the sunlight.
"Muammar! Muammar!" one of the rebels screamed.
"What's this?" asked one of modern history's most infamous tyrants. "What's this, my sons? What are you doing?"
Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, wearing matching tan pants and shirt, by now soaked in blood, stopped briefly and looked around, seemingly bewildered. He had little more than a few seconds to take in his surroundings before being grabbed by each arm and wrenched away from his final, ignominious refuge.
The self-anointed Godfather of Libya, King of Kings of Africa, and Leader Who Lived in All Libyans' Hearts, looked unsteady on his feet as he was led away, his hair unkempt, wild and partly matted in his own blood, and his legs trembling with each step.
A mob grew around Gaddafi as he was frog-marched through the sand. While he was being taken towards a group of rebel trucks, one fighter crouched in the dirt behind the frightened captive and sodomised him with a bayonet.
"Haram alaikum!" screamed Gaddafi, his voice hoarse and his eyes darting wildly. Loosely translated: "It's a sin what you are doing!"
Blood from the vanquished leader's various wounds was now caking his shirt. Blows rained down on him. Every one of his captors seemed to want a piece of the hobbled tyrant. Things were slipping fast out of control.
Rebels from everywhere were converging on this industrial area outside Sirte, a city that had become associated with his rule. The rebels held their telephones forward like candles, filming every move of the increasingly desperate and terrified 69-year-old. Gaddafi was thrown on to the front of a white car bonnet, his bloodsoaked head locked between the knees of a militiaman from nearby Misrata.
He slipped off the bonnet, his ravaged body unable to cope with the constant battering. The militiaman hauled him back up.
Around this time, someone filmed the gruesome shot of what seemed to be a mortally wounded Gaddafi, an image that would quickly be broadcast worldwide.
From this point, none of the dozens who were recording the scene seemed able to hold their mobile phones steady. Torn between wanting to watch things unfold with their own eyes and recording for posterity the momentous scenes playing out on what would be a famous day – 20 October 2011 – the men surrounding Gaddafi all seemed to choose the former.
Adam Zawbi, a 20-year-old Misrata fighter, saw what happened next. "I had just got there," he said. "We got a call that Gaddafi was captured and we went straight to the area. There were lots of guys shouting and Gaddafi was in the centre of the road. I saw the gun. I saw the hand holding it and I heard it fire."
"I know who did it," he later said, as we drove between the central Libyan coastal city of Zlitan and his home city of Misrata. "I know his first name anyway." I got the impression that the young medic, by then a veteran of eight grinding months of frontline warfare, knew a

She doesn't know her mum is dead: Disabled daughter of Cardiff hit-and-run victim is on "dream holiday" in Florida

Police also made an appeal for information about a mystery Renault Clio and confirmed the van driver physically assaulted people with a weapon between crashes

Tragic: Karina Menzies was mown down as she walked home from school with her daughter 
A disabled little girl whose mother was killed in a horrific hit-and-run rampage is on a "dream holiday" in Florida and is unaware that she has died, it has been revealed.
Karina Menzies, 32, was mown down outside a fire station near her home in Cardiff.
Just hours before she was hit by a white van as she walked home, the mum-of-three had tweeted thanking the Dreamflight charity taking her daughter to America.
She wrote: "completely blown away by the opportunites u have given my child,cannot thank u enough n i kno [daughter's name] is havin a ball!! Xx" (sic)
 The revelation came as police made an appeal for information about a mystery car seen driving on the wrong side of the road shortly before the crashes.
Detectives are continuing to question a 31-year-old man on suspicion of her murder as well as investigating reports that he deliberately knocked people down in the Welsh capital with a white Iveco van.
Detective Superintendent Paul Hurley confirmed reports that the suspect left his vehicle and physically assaulted people between the crashes and also carried a weapon.
The officer said: "We are aware the suspect assaulted people outside his vehicle," and he added police were "looking to identify and recover" the weapon.
He said no firearm was involved and there was no suggestion anyone had been stabbed.
Mr Hurley urged witnesses to get in touch and asked for information about a black Renault Clio seen driving on the wrong side of the road of Western Avenue, not far from Cowbridge Road West, where one crash happened.
The horrific events began when police received calls about an incident in Crossways Road in Ely at 3.30pm.
This was soon followed by other reports of hit-and-run collisions in several locations in the west of the city, including Grand Avenue, Cowbridge Road West and the Leckwith Retail Park.
There was no full registration details for the Clio but officers said it carried on 05 plate.
Fourteen people were injured in the crashes, nine remain in hospital.
Five are children and two adults remain in a critical condition.
Seventy officers are working on the investigation.
Karina Menzies 
Karina Menzies 
Floral tributes have been laid at the scene where Ms Menzies was killed.
Among those paying their respects this morning was local Labour MP Kevin Brennan.
He said: "It's absolutely shocking what has happened and the fact that someone has appeared to use a vehicle as a weapon.
"Karina was a well-liked mother who had three children.
"One of her children is disabled and is currently on a dream holiday in Florida.
"This incident is beyond senseless and has rocked the whole community."
The scene in the Ely area of Cardiff where a 31 year old man has been arrested after a hit and run incident that has left at least 11 people injured
 
The scene in the Ely area of Cardiff where a 31 year old man has been arrested after a hit and run incident that has left at least 11 people injured 
Scores of tributes have been paid to Ms Menzies on social networking sites.
Facebook user Katy Johanna Benson wrote: "Rest in piece Karina Menzies. Sleep tight beautiful angel and may the scum responsible for this senseless, evil murder be brought to justice. Cant imagine what her family are feeling."
Facebook user Marine Thomas wrote: "r.i.p karina i didnt know u personally but from what ive heard u were a fab mum and will be missed very much :( this is a cruel world we live in and its always the good ones that go first. sleep tight angel."
Facebook user Jeff Cornwall wrote: "I never knew you but such a vile tragedy I live not far from this awful mess rest in peace pet."
Ely sub-postmaster Shady Taha, 29, had just served two girls aged about 10 and a woman in her mid-20s moments before one of the hit-and-runs in Grand Avenue, immediately outside a row of shops.
He said: "All of a sudden I heard a bang. I looked out and across the road one girl was on the floor and the other girl was screaming.
"I heard a van speed off but I did not see it."
Karina Menzies
 
Karina Menzies 
Lynda Paterson, who lives in Cowbridge Road West, described the scene outside her house as chaotic.
"I was going to pick my children up from school and I could see there were police and someone was lying on the floor, on the pavement," she added.
"I could see police running back and forth along the road and I now know a child had been hit."
Other eyewitnesses said pedestrians were deliberately targeted by someone driving a white van.
"We had a customer in our shop who said the van mounted the kerb like the driver wanted to run down young kids with their parents," a female shop worker in Grand Avenue, who did not want to be named, said.
The A&E department at the University Hospital of Wales was initially shut to anyone not involved in the incident but has now reopened.
Dr Grahame Shortland, medical director at the hospital, said those being treated mostly had fractures and head injuries.
The crime scenes included Ely fire station, an area near the Merrie Harrier pub in Llandough on the outskirts of Cardiff, where the suspect was arrested, and Leckwith Retail Park - next to the Cardiff City Stadium.
Superintendent Julian Williams said: "This is a tragic incident that has affected a large number of people, and we thank the people of Cardiff for their help and support.
"Incidents like this are extremely rare here, as they are across South Wales, and we want to reassure the public that a significant number of officers are working on the investigation, including a number of specialist resources.
"Whether the actions were deliberate or reckless is a matter for the inquiry and the person will obviously be spoken to."
Anyone with any information about the incidents is urged to contact police on 01656 655555.

The victims

Police have released details of the 14 victims of a hit-and-run rampage in Cardiff.
The youngest was a toddler aged 23 months while the oldest was a 49-year-old woman.
There were five different crash sites - spread out over an area of around three miles - and officers believe the terrifying spree lasted around 30 minutes.
Here are details of the sites and the casualties:
:: Crossways, Ely
Boy, aged 9 - arm and leg injuries
Girl, aged 8 - head injury
Woman, aged 29 - walking wounded
:: Reptile Centre, Ely
Woman, aged 22 - leg injuries
Girl, aged 2 - facial injuries
Man, aged 24 - minor injuries
:: Ely Fire Station
Woman, Karina Menzies, aged 32 - killed
Girl, aged 23 months - observations only
Girl, aged 8 - head injury
:: Grand Avenue Shops
Man, aged 32 - multiple injuries
Girl, aged 10 - arm injury
Girl, aged 12 - back injury
:: Leckwith Retail Park
Woman, aged 27 - head injury
Woman, aged 49 - multiple injuries

Is Kanye going to propose to Kim this weekend? The Keeping Up With The Kardashians producer thinks so!

Ryan Seacrest says we might know by Monday if the rapper and reality star are engaged. We want to know NOW!
Ryan Seacrest: he's not just a shiny face! He's also a big gossip 
You know when people put up a really cryptic Facebook status and then refuse to tell you what it means? It's very annoying. But Ryan Seacrest has done the celeb version of that by hinting that Kim Kardashian's about to get engaged ... then stopping talking. Annoying, Ryan!
On his breakfast radio show, Ryan Seacrest's co-host was talking about a news story, saying Kanye was "desperate to propose to Kim" and had already picked out an engagement ring.
KIM KARDASHIAN 
Ryan, who is the producer of all of the Kardashian's shows, including Keeping Up With The Kardashians and Kourtney and Kim Take Miami (which is currently being filmed) then hinted: "I think we could definitely see an update on this story on Monday." Oooh! If anyone knows, it'd be Ryan, and this is the biggest hint we've had yet.
Kim's in Rome with Kanye at the moment as part of his surprise for her 32nd birthday. "I got whisked away to Rome for a birthday week surprise," she blogged yesterday. "Italy is so beautiful! Best Birthday ever!!"
KIM KARDASHIAN 
So if Kanye proposed, Kim's keeping quiet. He'll probably have to propose again on camera for her TV show.
Kanye's reportedly designed a ring for Kim already, and she's already talked about what kind of wedding she wants (on an island, private) . Kanye's even committed his desire to see Kim "in a white dress" to song (obviously) and Kim's tried on her sister's wedding ring for size . Oh, and they've been househunting too.           
Kim Kardashian 
There's only one thing left ... she needs to get divorced from her last husband Kris Humphries. Small detail. But not one that'll stand in the way of Kim and the Kardashian empire, we're sure.
Want to know who has got married? That'll be Justin Timberlake and the lady with the hottest bum in Hollywood, Jessica Biel. Come right this way for details.

You can't hide: Police identify Leeds United fan who ran onto pitch and attacked Sheffield Wednesday keeper

The suspect, who has been named on social media sites but not by police, has yet to be arrested after former England goalkeeper Chris Kirkland was shoved in the face


A hooligan who ran on to the pitch and assaulted a goalkeeper during a Championship football match last night has been identified by police.
The suspect, who has been named on social media sites but not by police, has yet to be arrested after former England goalkeeper Chris Kirkland was shoved in the face amid ugly scenes at the game between Sheffield Wednesday and Leeds United at Hillsborough.
The FA is also investigating crowd trouble at the Yorkshire derby and is awaiting the referee's report.
Kirkland, who was playing for Sheffield Wednesday, was assaulted by a Leeds fan after the visitors had equalised.
The shocking scenes were broadcast live on Sky Sports and fans were quick to condemn the trouble on Twitter and Facebook. That led to a suspect being named on sites, and a mobile phone number being circulated.
Leeds United fan 
  South Yorkshire Police's senior investigating officer, Detective Inspector Mark Monteiro, said: "With the public's assistance we have clearly identified the offender who ran on to the pitch during last night's game between Sheffield Wednesday FC and Leeds United FC and who is suspected of assaulting the Sheffield Wednesday goalkeeper.
"We are dealing with the complaint made by the player and we are currently taking statements, collating evidence and making inquiries to locate and arrest the offender.
"We are also using CCTV footage from around the ground to identify suspects who may have been responsible for other offences before, during or after the match.
"I'd like to thank the supporters and general public who have provided information and assisted with our inquiries."
An FA spokesman said: "The FA condemns the scenes at Hillsborough last night. We have begun an immediate investigation and have been in contact with both clubs.
"We would call for the authorities to identify and bring before the courts anyone who was involved in any form of criminal disorder."
Chris Kirkland (hidden) of Sheffield Wednesday receives medical treatment on the pitch after being assaulted by a Leeds United fan
 
Kirkland required medical treatment before he could continue.
There were five arrests for various offences including public order before and after the game, while three people were ejected from the ground and 12 were subject to dispersal orders.
Leeds issued a statement after the game pledging to identify the man involved in the incident.
It read: "Leeds United Football Club would like to publicly apologise and condemn the action of the fan who came on the pitch and attacked Sheffield Wednesday goalkeeper Chris Kirkland.
"The club will fully co-operate with the police and the football authorities in identifying the individual concerned.
"After the week football has endured there is no place for this type of behaviour and the majority of Leeds supporters will be ashamed of his actions."
The match was marred by vicious chanting from some Leeds fans about Wednesday manager Dave Jones, who was cleared of child abuse allegations in 2000.
Wednesday fans replied with songs about two Leeds fans killed in Turkey in April 2000. Leeds supporters responded by throwing bottles on to the field and clashing with police.
Jones called for Leeds fans to be banned from "every away ground".
He went on: "You talk about racism, the chanting, that's a form of racism. And then (for the Leeds players) to go and wave at them... not in my book. You don't wave at them after that.
"I thought it had gone out of our game. The authorities have to look at it and sort it. I'm talking about an incident when we should be talking about the football. We're talking about vile animals. That's what they are. We talk about racism, but that, we need to sort that."
Anyone with information is asked to call police on 101 or Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.

Caught by the real boys in Blue: Chelsea star Frank Lampard fined and given points after admitting speeding

The footballer's lawyer urged the court not to ban Lampard as he needed to drive regularly to see his children who live with his former partner

England and Chelsea footballer Frank Lampard has been fined £850 and handed six penalty points on his licence after he admitted speeding at 84mph on a 50mph road.
Staines Magistrates' Court was told that the 34-year-old midfielder had changed his plea from not guilty to guilty after being sent video footage of the offence, which happened on the London-bound carriageway of the A3 Esher Bypass in Claygate on January 17 this year.
Prosecutor David Owen told the court a police "speed scope" caught Lampard's Land Rover travelling at 34mph over the limit, and the player later confirmed in writing that he had been at the wheel.
Lampard, who was absent from court, was defended by Nick Freeman who urged the bench to consider points rather than a ban, as the footballer needed to drive regularly to see his children who live with his former partner.
Mr Freeman said: "I think this is one of the few roads where there is a 70mph limit one way and a 50mph limit the other.
"To be honest, he [Lampard] doesn't recall the offence."
In March 2011 Lampard served a 60-day driving ban after being clocked at 91mph on the same stretch of the A3.
Mr Freeman told the court that more points on his licence would act as an incentive to drive within the law, because any further offence inside three years would mean an accumulation of 12 points and a 12-month ban.
He said this was "hugely significant", adding: "He [Lampard] had made a massive effort since the offence you heard about, to comply with the speed limits.
"He has been using his cruise control and is particularly disappointed in himself. He has had his driving licence since he was 17.
"This will be a Sword of Damocles hanging over him and it would be a very heavy sword, as he would be off the road for 12 months rather than six."
Lampard, of Tregunter Road, Chelsea, west London, was also ordered to pay £130 costs and a £15 surcharge.

House fire tragedy: Two neighbours arrested on suspicion of murder after mum, 20, and two young children die in blaze

The woman and two relatives - a boy aged four and a two-year-old girl - were pronounced dead by firefighters while a 23-year-old man and a 15-month-old baby were taken to hospital
Tragedy: Firefighters at the scene of the house fire in North Wales 
Detectives investigating a house fire which killed a young mum and two children have arrested their neighbours on suspicion of murder.
The victims - a 20-year-old woman, a boy aged four and a two-year-old girl - died after the blaze broke out in their first-floor flat in Maes Y Groes, Prestatyn, last night, a North Wales Police spokeswoman said.
She added that the arrested pair live underneath them on the ground floor and were a man, aged 45, and a woman, aged 42.
Prestatyn House Fire
.

The force said the female victim was related to the two children but was not their mother.
The dead woman's 15-month-old baby boy is in a critical condition in hospital and her 23-year-old boyfriend is also in hospital being treated for serious injuries.
The man is not related to the two dead children, North Wales Police said.
Prestatyn House Fire
.
 
Prestatyn House Fire
.
Detective Superintendent John Chapman said: "We would appeal for anyone who may have seen anything suspicious in the Maes y Groes area of Prestatyn yesterday evening to get in contact as soon as possible by calling us on 101.
"We are deploying family liaison officers to work closely with the next of kin at this difficult time.
"There is a team of dedicated officers working on specific lines of inquiry in relation to this incident."
Firefighters were called to the scene at 10pm last night and recovered the five people.

Andrew Mitchell: The Tory Chief Whip has laid down his job for the Chancellor

Andrew "Plebs" Mitchell's resignation took a little heat off freeloader George Osborne
Outgoing Chief Whip Andrew Mitchell
No greater sacrifice can a Chief Whip make than to lay down his job for the Chancellor.
Andrew "Plebs" Mitchell 's resignation took a little heat off freeloader George Osborne.
But the ConDemNation government is a rolling disaster. Blunder upon blunder exposes how out of touch this clique are.
Mitchell looked down his nose at police and admits he swore.
Osborne's a hypocrite for wanting a free ride after smearing welfare claimants as scroungers. And Cameron, riding to country suppers on a retired police horse, is an incompetent PM.
His mob get all the big decisions wrong. Reckless cuts plunged Britain into a living standard-destroying recession.
He's put the NHS up for sale.
Today I'll be compering speeches at London's TUC march for A Future That Works.
One Nation Ed Miliband now has a glorious chance to offer a better tomorrow.

By Steve White, Adam Aspinall Comments Cardiff hit-and-run horror: White van maniac aims at mums and kids... then smashes into them

Many witnesses were shaking as they described the three-mile trail of carnage that left a woman dead and 11 other people injured
Shock: Activity on streets of Cardiff 
Shocked witnesses wept today as they told how pedestrians were deliberately mown down when a van driver went berserk.
Many were still shaking as they described the three-mile trail of carnage that left a woman of 32 dead and 11 other people – including seven children – in hospital, some with serious injuries.
They were stunned as the driver deliberately ploughed into innocent pedestrians in five separate incidents as it sped through Cardiff’s crowded streets.
A man of 31 was being held on suspicion of murder last night as it was revealed that the horrific rampage in the city’s Ely and Leckwith areas followed a forecourt bust-up at an Asda petrol station at around 3.30pm.
A white van suddenly screeched off, tyres smoking, and began mounting the pavement, driving at terrified pedestrians and children on their way home from school.
Two women were said to have been dragged 250 yards after being hit.
It was also claimed that after smashing into other victims, the driver stopped, then reversed over them.
Gail Harford, 40, said: “He was backing up over them again – it’s too horrendous for words.”
Shopkeeper Phil Jones added: “The van aimed straight at a mum and two children walking on the pavement and mowed them down.”
Three of the injured were named as mum Annie Lewis, 22 and her daughter Amelia-May, two.
Witnesses said Annie and partner Adam, 23, were pushing Amelia-May in her pram when they were “deliberately” targeted after the van swerved across four lanes.
Amelia-May was left covered in blood from facial injuries which were not thought to be life threatening.
Pictured here is Adam Lewis 23 with his daughter Amelia-May Lewis
Student Annie, who suffered a broken leg, was put in one of the fleet of ambulances at the scene.
Retail worker Adam was shocked but uninjured and travelled to hospital with them.
His grandmother Maureen Lewis, 80, said: “It was total mayhem out there – the driver of the white van was driving fast and furious at anyone in his path.
Adam, Annie and Amelia were hit by the white Transit further down the road.
“I just didn’t know what the hell was going on. The driver was just running people down at random.”
Fighting back tears she added: “Thank God Annie and Amelia-May weren’t killed.”
A fleet of ambulances struggled to keep up with the stream of casualties.
And the A&E department at the University Hospital of Wales had to be closed to anyone not involved in the incident.
Crashes were reported at a number of locations, including Grand Avenue in Ely, Cowbridge Road West, and Leckwith Retail Park.
The condition of the injured was not known late last night. Ely sub-postmaster Shady Taha, 29, had just served two girls and a young woman moments before the collision in Grand Avenue.
He said the girls aged about 10 and the woman, in her mid-20s, had been browsing birthday cards in his store before stepping out on to the pavement
He said: “All of a sudden I heard a bang. I looked out and one girl was on the floor and the other girl was screaming. I heard a van roar off but I did not see it.”
Lynda Paterson, who lives on Cowbridge Road West, said the scene outside her house was chaotic.
Map of Ely area in Cardiff, Wales 
She added: “I was going to pick my children up from school and I could see there were police everywhere and someone was lying on the pavement.
"The officers were running back and forth along the road and I now know there was a child who had been hit.”
Police were also called to Crossways Road and Sloper Road. Ely Fire Station was sealed off by a team of forensic officers.
Leckwith Retail Park, next to Cardiff City’s football ground, was also temporarily closed.
The altercation that is believed to have sparked the rampage was witnessed by Dr Elizabeth Haywood – wife of Labour politician Peter Hain.
She said: “I was filling up with petrol and I saw a taxi driver going to help another guy who had been hit on the head with a steering wheel immobiliser. I think he got hit as well.
“The guy who was hitting them walked over to his white van which was parked at the petrol pumps.
"I checked his registration number and meanwhile the taxi driver ahead of me at the pump got back into his car shaken up and drove off.
“Just as I was making the phonecall to the emergency services the white van that had been sitting there suddenly sped off, screeching and with smoke coming from the tyres.
"The next thing I heard was a scream and a thump.
There was a woman who was in front of his van who was hitting the front of his bonnet because he had hit her. She then went under the wheels of his van.
“So we were all screaming ‘back-up, back-up’. There were a lot of people there. So he did back up and then he ran over her again.
“This other woman came up to the van to get him to stop and he ran over her as well and he dragged them both to the corner of the roundabout and out into the road which leads back on to the main road and he hit another man coming the other way who opened his car door to stop him.

By Tom Parry, Lucy Thornton Comments 'I'd hear his voice in my head': Ben Needham's grandad talks of his two decades of pain

Speaking exclusively to the Daily Mirror, he recalled how he spent endless hours searching land around the remote rundown farmhouse

Nervous: Ben's mum Kerry and her dad Eddie 

They were words which shook Eddie Needham awake in the middle of the night 21 years ago.
He and his family had spent days and nights searching for his grandson Ben on Kos when he heard the toddler speak to him in his sleep, pleading: “Please come and find me, Grandad, I’m here.”
Back on the Greek island, Eddie, now 63, says those words still haunt him today.
So too does the guilt he feels that Ben ever disappeared at all – he had persuaded daughter Kerry to up sticks and join the rest of the family in Greece in the first place.
Now the retired builder hopes the search led by UK police will finally end their nightmare.
Yesterday he returned to the spot where he last saw his fun-loving 21-month-old grandson playing.
Speaking exclusively to the Daily Mirror, he recalled how he spent endless hours searching land around the remote rundown farmhouse where Ben disappeared in 1991.
He said: “The biggest thing that’s haunted me is I used to hear him in my head, ‘I’m here, Grandad. Come and find me, I’m here’.
"I searched everywhere; the ravine, the brambles, the outbuildings, the well.
“I had to give up searching for Ben for my own sanity. It was sending me mad. I couldn’t think or operate properly.”
Eddie and his wife Christine, now 60, fell in love with Kos during their first holiday abroad together in September 1990 and quickly made the decision to sell up in Sheffield and move to their island idyll.
They bought a second-hand caravan, a battered old Land Rover and headed off with their sons Stephen, then 16, Danny, 10, and their pet dog.
Eddie said: “We drove there and for two days in France we went in the wrong direction.
"We spent Christmas Day in a motorway service station and had turkey Chris had cooked but that was it because the gas ran out.
“When we got to Kos we had a great life at first, fishing all the time catching octopus and eels and cooking them. We thought, ‘What a life!’”
Son Danny, now 33 and a singer, chipped in: “I loved it too. It was brilliant, I got to swim and play on the beach.”
But the family, who are incredibly close, desperately missed their first grandchild and Kerry.
They constantly wrote letters home to 19-year-old Kerry telling her about their new wonderful life.
Danny explained: “We told her Ben would have a fabulous life over there. It was so free and not at all like England with all the crime.
“Kerry’s heart had been broken by Ben’s dad and we told her to come out. She agreed and we picked her up from the airport.”
The family rented a small olive grove and set about starting the renovations.
Eventually Stephen and Kerry decided they wanted some independence and moved into an apartment together with Ben.
Kerry got a job as a waitress and Christine looked after Ben when she was working.
On the morning of July 24, 1991, Kerry went to work and Christine and Danny pushed Ben in a pushchair on the half-an-hour trip to visit the building site.
It was the tot’s first trip there to see his grandad Eddie and uncle Stephen working, while a digger driver moved rubble.
It was only after work had finished for the day that it became apparent Ben was missing.
Eddie said: “The last time I saw Ben he was playing just outside.
"He had a stick and was poking the mud and throwing water over himself.
“For some reason I thought Danny was outside with him but Danny said he was inside eating.”
A South Yorkshire police dog searches the area
 
It was Christine who eventually raised the alarm.
But in a devastating misunderstanding Eddie’s Greek boss said Stephen must have taken him when he’d left earlier on his motorbike.
Back then there were no mobile phones allowing the family to quickly check.
In the days that followed local police led the hunt for Ben, feared accidentally buried under the mountain of rubble when the digger was clearing the site.
Eddie recalled: “I had to stand and watch as police got a JCB and tipped the pile of building dirt from the site next door very slowly.
"Every bucketful felt as if my guts were falling out.
“They moved the dirt from A to B, and the police expected Ben’s body to roll out. Then they moved it back again.
"There was never a proper investigation or a proper search. It was never treated as a crime scene.
“There was a man from the BBC based in Athens at the time and he said he could try and get heat-seeking equipment from the UK to search but the police officer in charge said ‘no’ because he didn’t think Ben was on the island.
“He said if he was the birds would have alerted them as they come in huge numbers even if a small animal is dead.
"He said the ground was too hard for someone to have buried him.”
Referring to the fresh search, Eddie went on: “If they find anything I will be angry because they could have stopped two decades of pain and suffering of not knowing.
“Every time we left Kos I felt as if we were leaving him behind all over again.”
The guilt they still carry remains the most crippling aspect their ordeal.
“I feel so much guilt because I wish I had been strong enough to say ‘no’ we are not moving abroad, I still blame myself,” Eddie said.
“If we hadn’t persuaded Kerry to join us with Ben this would never have happened and he would still be with us.
"It was us who wanted Kerry to come live with us.”
Fighting back tears Christine added: “We told her to come out as it would be a wonderful life for her and Ben.

Eyes on the prize: Kell Brook staying focused and "ready to explode" against Hector Saldivia

Kell Brook knows he must stay focused on his next opponent, Hector Saldivia, or he'll miss out on world title opportunities - and possible superfights with Amir Khan and Ricky Hatton
Ready to rumble: Kell Brook and Hector Saldivia face off at the weigh-in
Sheffield fighter Kell Brook insists he's remaining focused on the task in hand against Hector Saldivia, despite knowing victory could see him thrust into big-money superfights with fellow Brits Ricky Hatton and Amir Khan.
Brook's bout against Saldivia - an IBF welterweight world title eliminator - could catapult "The Special One" into the upper echelons of the welterweight division
Both Hatton, making his comeback after retirement, and Khan, looking to rebuild his reputation after losing his own light-welterweight belts in July, have been cited as possible opponents for the unbeaten Brook.
His promoter, Eddie Hearn, admitted tentative talks had started with Khan's camp and, should Brook beat Saldivia tonight and then take the belt early next year, a domestic tear-up would surely be on the cards.
The 26-year-old is not looking that far ahead, preferring to concentrate on the immediate Argentinian wall ahead of him, but does acknowledge big things will lie ahead if he gets the job done.
"I don't think about those two at all but there is me, Amir Khan, Ricky Hatton and some mega-fights out there," he told Press Association Sport.
"Hector Saldivia is on my radar and I am fighting him on Saturday and that's all that is on my mind."
Brook is heading to the Motorpoint for what will be his sixth fight out of Hearn's Matchroom stable, and his third bout in a row at the Steel City's main arena.
It is a far cry from his first appearance under Hearn, which came at Hillsborough Leisure Centre against Lovemore Ndou in June last year.
Since then he has taken to the ring at Ponds Forge and also in Atlantic City when he saw off Luiz Galarza on the undercard to Khan's controversial loss to Lamont Peterson.
"I've come over some hurdles and learned along the way," Brook added. "I have boxed into America and now I am coming to the finished article and am ready to explode."
His new-look physique gives a nod to that. He has been put through a rigorous 12-week training programme designed to leave no stone unturned after his close shave against Carson Jones in July.
"I'm in the best shape I have ever been in. It's the best I have ever felt and the easiest I have made the weight. I'm feeling strong and I can't wait for Saturday night," Brook said.
"You never stop learning and I have taken my body to places it's never been before. It's been crying in pain, not wanting to be there but it's had to go there because that's what I have been told to do."
The winner of tonight's duel will then await news from Brooklyn where Devon Alexander will meet the current belt holder, Randall Bailey, with the two winners likely to meet in the spring.

By Paul Cockerton Comments "He came back to life without a scratch": Jack Russell terrier is poisoned, buried alive... but STILL survives

Ethan had a whole chain of saviours: the man who dug him up, the firefighters who rushed him off and a vet who nursed him back to life

Lucky: Ethan the Jack Russell 
A Jack Russell terrier has survived after being poisoned and buried alive - and he can thank the man who saw the ground wiggle.
Ethan came back to life on his third birthday after someone tried to kill him.
He had a whole chain of saviours: the man who dug him up, the firefighters who rushed him off and a vet who nursed him back to life.
Sabrina Zamora, president of an animal association in Charleville-Mezieres, 125 miles northeast of Paris, said today the little white dog with a black ear was "flat as a pancake" when he was dug up from his grave on Tuesday near a lakeside pedestrian path.
"It's extraordinary. We only see this in TV movies," said vet Philippe Michon.
"He came back to life and without a scratch. It's rather miraculous."
The vet said when firemen brought the dirt-covered terrier to his office "he was completely cold, he was barely breathing".
Michon used hot water bottles to warm up Ethan's seemingly lifeless body.
The dog was so cold his veins had collapsed and it was hard to find one to hydrate him but within 24 hours the dog was back on his feet.
According to the vet and Zamora, a man walking by just happened to see the ground moving - an apparent result of convulsions from the dog's poisoning. The man then got a shovel and dug the dog up.
Ethan was identified through a microchip that showed all this happened on his third birthday.
His owner says he had given the dog away but police are investigating, Zamora said.
"(Ethan) had an unbelievable chain of luck," Michon said. "If the ground hadn't trembled, no one would have taken a shovel to it."

First picture! Justin Timberlake's married and here's his wedding ring to prove it

Justin and Jessica Biel's wedding was clearly a good party as he emerged this morning clutching a packet of cigarettes, a drink and wearing sunglasses ...

Congrats, Justin! And Jessica. Obviously. 
Justin Timberlake got married last night in Italy , and today he emerged from his suite at the Cala Masciola beach resort to go into the town of Fasano wearing his wedding ring. It's er, gold and circular. Sorry - boy's rings are generally boring.
Although, we can expect it's an expensive ring: Justin was rumoured to have had Jessica's engagement ring custom made. So, basically, it's no Argos last-minute job.
Newly wed Justin Timberlake seen at the lush Borgo Egnazia resort 
Clearly the wedding was a good party - Justin was holding what looked like a packet of cigarettes, a juice and wearing sunglasses.
Justin and Jessica Biel tied the knot last night at 7.30pm in Southern Italy, and celeb guests included Andy Samberg, N*SYNC and apparently, producer Timbaland. We hope he performed at the reception - that would have confused the older relatives ...
Justin Timberlake 
They flew all their friends out in secret to Germany,  then put them on a private plane to Naples, and then took them to the posh beach resort. Sneaky.
Then, they treated them to a pre-wedding party on Thursday night before the big day. Some relatives were also spotted sightseeing, bike riding and generally having the best time ever. Why aren't we related to a celebrity?           
 
JT and Jessica (hang on, will she be Jessica Timberlake now?) have already issued a statement on the wedding to People magazine, saying: "It's great to be married. The ceremony was beautiful and it was so special to be surrounded by our family and friends."
And the whole thing will be in People magazine on Wednesday. We cannot WAIT to see the dress.

Pervert escapes jail after police find hoard of child and animal porn – including videos of sex with an OCTOPUS

Robert Peter Moore, 31, was given a six-month suspended sentence after pleading guilty to possessing child and animal porn - but refuses to accept he has a sexual deviance
Guilty: Robert Peter Moore
A pervert has walked free from court after pleading guilty to possessing a hoard of child and animal porn – including videos of sex with an OCTOPUS.
Robert Peter Moore, 31, had amassed a massive collection of pornography including 35 images and 79 videos of humans having sex with a range of animals also including a pig, a goat and a horse.
Judge Colin Burn declined to view the pictures of the extreme animal porn after prosecution counsel Jeremy Hill-Baker said the images "speak for themselves".
During his mitigation at Bradford Crown Court today, Robin Frieze, for Moore, quipped: "If the prospect of a human being having sex with an octopus speaks for itself then my learned friend certainly has a better imagination than I."
Moore, who does not accept he has a sexual deviance, pleaded guilty to 14 counts of possessing child and animal pornography.
Police had also found 82 indecent images or videos of children on his hard drive ranging from levels one to four in terms of seriousness although it was accepted he had stumbled across that by accident.
Mr Frieze added: "This is an unusual case as there's been no attempt to look for child pornography.
"These images have come to him from a very comprehensive attempt to collect adult porn."
Sentencing Moore, of Long Preston, North Yorks., Judge Burn said: "This is a large collection of pornography which features some very unpleasant images.
"The basis of your plea is that you never meant to collect the child pornography.
"Possessing the extreme pornography, as it is described now, carries a sentence of imprisonment but much more serious are the images of children being abused."
Moore was sentenced to six months imprisonment suspended for two years and ordered to complete 180 hours of unpaid work.
He was also ordered to sign the sex offenders register for seven years.
Because he did not admit that he had a problem he was not eligible for any sex offender treatment programmes which are provided by the probation service.

A make-up free Selena Gomez flies out to see Justin Bieber on tour (we're sure it's nothing to do with those pictures of him getting close to Carly Rae Jepsen...)

She still looks amazing without any slap on. Maybe she left her make-up bag at home in the rush to pack for her flight?
Selena: hot with or without make-up 
Selena Gomez might  not have any make-up on, but she still looks good. That's annoying. Without make-up we look like a scared mole. Then again, we're not a 20 year old millionaire.
Selena was running errands in LA before she boarded a flight at LAX airport (a clever Twitter follower spotted her going through security) and we think she's flying out to see her boyfriend Justin Bieber, who's got a concert in Minneapolis tonight.
We're sure Selena's sudden interest in seeing her boyfriend in action has NOTHING to do with these pictures of him holding hands with Carly Rae Jepsen onstage this week. Nope. Not one thing.           
Selena Gomez going through security at LAX 
It's Selena's second trip to see Justin on his 80 date tour - the first time she flew out to join him in Canada. They went for dinner and played pool in Edmonton, and the nice man who owns the diner they went to said this: "They came in to get a bite to eat. They like to play pool. They’re big pool players. They came down; they were coming to chill out. No disguise. They had one bodyguard with them. I happened to recognize Selena Gomez. I was asking for their ID," he said. That's right: he was checking they were old enough to go in the venue. In Canada, they're OK to go into a bar: the legal age is 18 in Alberta, where Edmonton is. Thanks, Wikipedia!
Selena Gomez 
It's sweet of Selena to go and see Justin, anyway, as he's admitted he gets lonely on tour - and misses his mum. Awww. He told Daybreak: "I do miss her yeah, I mean especially like now being 18 and you know when before when I was round her all the time like every day, so I was getting sick of her and I would look forward to her leaving, like ‘yes mom’s leaving tomorrow!’. And now I’m like, ‘When is mum coming back?’ because I don’t see her that often so you know it’s funny how those things change.”           
Oh, JB. That's not very cool. At all.
Talking of people called Justin (tenuous!) here are all the details on Justin Timberlake's Italy wedding .