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SpaceShipTwo broke apart incoming mid-air during a psychometric test flight of steps with Fri.

Incomparable of the pilots was killed and the other injured.

Virgin chief Sir Richard Branson says he is "determined to find out what went wrong" and learn from the tragedy.

The US National Transportation Safety Board team had completed its first full day of investigation, Mr Hart said, and would be examining evidence at the scene for four to seven days.

He said the craft's debris was spread over an area measuring five miles from end to end.

He told a news conference the test flight had been "heavily documented" and his team would have to trawl through "extensive data", which was why the full investigation could take "about 12 months or so".

He said there were six cameras on the craft itself, with another three on its launcher, an aircraft called WhiteKnightTwo, although it was unclear whether SpaceShipTwo's cameras had been found.














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The adult female followed "hung back to the undercoat" along an chemical group of teenagers wearing Scream-like masks
A womanhood has made up sexually maltreated by a group of teenagers wearing Halloween masks, police have confirmed.

Four youths wearing Scream-type masks attacked the 22-year-old as she walked along Sunningdale Road in Denton, Greater Manchester on Friday night.

After being dragged to the ground and sexually assaulted, the woman fought off the gang and raised the alarm.

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Is it worth screening for Ebola at airports?

Passengers arriving at a growing number of international airports are being screened for Ebola. But how effective are the tests and will they really help to stop the virus spreading?
Screening is now being carried out at airports in a number of countries including the UK, US, Canada, France and the Czech Republic. People travelling from the West African nations affected by Ebola - Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone - have their temperatures taken and are asked to fill in a health questionnaire.
But when you consider the statistics, it seems the impact of this increased vigilance is limited. "Traveller screening and bans and so forth are really addressing the symptom, not necessarily the root cause, and ultimately controlling the outbreak in West Africa is going to be the most effective way to protect the interests of the rest of the world," says Dr Kamran Khan of St Michael's Hospital in Toronto.
He specialises in infectious diseases and is one of the authors of a paperexamining the potential for this outbreak of Ebola to be spread by commercial air travel.
Khan analysed data for worldwide flight schedules between 1 September and 31 December this year, along with historic data from 2013 to project how many people with Ebola might leave Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.
In the first part of the study, he looked at how efficient it is to screen people taking international flights, and found there were three scenarios to consider.
The first is to screen passengers as they leave a country - this is known as exit screening.
For this there are only three points at which you would need to perform the tests - the airports that serve the capital cities of Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone. Between September and December 2013, that would have meant screening 144,798 passengers.
The second option is to screen those same passengers on direct flights out of the three affected countries when they land at their destinations, which would be airports at one of 15 cities across 15 different countries - this is called entry screening.
The third option is where things start to get tricky.
"There are very few direct flights out of the three countries and therefore most travellers have to pick up a connecting flight," says Khan
"So in order to ensure a country picked up the passengers that originated from one of the West African countries, they would need to screen all international travellers."
That sees the number of airports where screening would be required go up from 15 to 1,238 and the number of passengers that would need to be screened rises to nearly 363 million.
As a result airports would have to scan 2,512 passengers for every one that has had potential exposure to the Ebola virus.

How does entry screening work?

  • Temperatures taken to check whether people have a fever
  • Passengers asked questions such as, "Have you been near anyone with Ebola? Have you cared for anyone with severe illness who died of an unknown cause? Have you been vomiting or do you feel generally unwell? Have you had any contact with dead bodies or been to any funerals?"
  • Anyone with suspected Ebola is taken to hospital
  • In the UK passengers deemed to be at high risk but displaying no symptoms will be contacted daily
  • Travellers told who to call and what to do if they become unwell
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All passengers flying from international airports in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone are already screened prior to take off, and anyone who shows symptoms before boarding their plane should be refused permission to fly.
Therefore screening travellers when they land can only identify people who develop symptoms during their flight - so what are the chances of that happening?
The incubation period for Ebola - the time from exposure to the virus to a person showing symptoms - is on average 9 days. The average flight out of one of the affected West African countries is about six hours, so the window for symptoms to develop on board a plane is small.
Dr Craig Spencer - the doctor who tested positive for Ebola in New York on 23 October - was screened at JFK airport on his return from Guinea on 17 October but he wasn't picked up because he wasn't showing symptoms at the time.
For the same reason, airport tests may not have identified the first person diagnosed with Ebola in the US in the current outbreak either - Thomas Eric Duncan had travelled from Liberia to Dallas where he died.
Khan and his team also wanted to establish how many people infected with Ebola in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone were likely to fly.
The table below shows that even in the countries at the centre of the Ebola outbreak, the chances of someone becoming infected is low and very few of those people will actually fly - especially if exit screening is employed.
On average, across these three countries, one person infected with Ebola would travel every 0.14 months (roughly five days) if there were no exit screening place compared to one every 0.35 months (every 11 days) if exit screening is carried out.

Prevalence of Ebola

GuineaLiberiaSierra LeoneTotal
SOURCE KAMRAN KHAN
Population estimate
11,745,189
4,294,077
6,092,075
22,131,341
Number of active cases of Ebola (21 September 2014)
292
1,707
737
2,736
Estimated prevalence per 100,000
2.49
39.75
12.1
18.11
Monthly outbound travellers Sept-Dec 2013
14,732
12,781
14,237
41,750
Projected number of infected travellers per month, without exit screening
0.37
5.08
1.72
7.17
Projected time to one internationally exported case, without exit screening
2.7 months
0.2 months
0.6 months
0.14 months
Projected time to one internationally exported case, with exit screening
8 months
0.4 months
3.9 months
0.35 months
Governments have long known how hard it is to identify passengers carrying infectious diseases - they've tried it before.
In 2003 an outbreak of Sars - severe acute respiratory syndrome - began in Guangdong province in China. In the following months cases were reported in Hong Kong, Singapore and Vietnam.
The World Health Organization issued a global health alert for Sars as it became clear that the disease was being spread by global air travel.
In response, Canada introduced screening at airports and passengers were asked a series of questions.
"700,000 people filled in a questionnaire of whom about 2,500 answered 'yes' to one of the questions. Those people were all referred for medical investigation and none of them had SARS," says David Mabey, professor of communicable diseases at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and co-author of a British Medical Journal paper Airport Screening for Ebola.

  • Temperatures taken to check whether people have a fever
  • Passengers asked questions such as, "Have you been near anyone with Ebola? Have you cared for anyone with severe illness who died of an unknown cause? Have you been vomiting or do you feel generally unwell? Have you had any contact with dead bodies or been to any funerals?"
  • Anyone with suspected Ebola is taken to hospital
  • In the UK passengers deemed to be at high risk but displaying no symptoms will be contacted daily
  • Travellers told who to call and what to do if they become unwell
line
All passengers flying from international airports in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone are already screened prior to take off, and anyone who shows symptoms before boarding their plane should be refused permission to fly.
Therefore screening travellers when they land can only identify people who develop symptoms during their flight - so what are the chances of that happening?
The incubation period for Ebola - the time from exposure to the virus to a person showing symptoms - is on average 9 days. The average flight out of one of the affected West African countries is about six hours, so the window for symptoms to develop on board a plane is small.
Dr Craig Spencer - the doctor who tested positive for Ebola in New York on 23 October - was screened at JFK airport on his return from Guinea on 17 October but he wasn't picked up because he wasn't showing symptoms at the time.
For the same reason, airport tests may not have identified the first person diagnosed with Ebola in the US in the current outbreak either - Thomas Eric Duncan had travelled from Liberia to Dallas where he died.
Khan and his team also wanted to establish how many people infected with Ebola in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone were likely to fly.
The table below shows that even in the countries at the centre of the Ebola outbreak, the chances of someone becoming infected is low and very few of those people will actually fly - especially if exit screening is employed.
On average, across these three countries, one person infected with Ebola would travel every 0.14 months (roughly five days) if there were no exit screening place compared to one every 0.35 months (every 11 days) if exit screening is carried out.

Prevalence of Ebola

GuineaLiberiaSierra LeoneTotal
SOURCE KAMRAN KHAN
Population estimate
11,745,189
4,294,077
6,092,075
22,131,341
Number of active cases of Ebola (21 September 2014)
292
1,707
737
2,736
Estimated prevalence per 100,000
2.49
39.75
12.1
18.11
Monthly outbound travellers Sept-Dec 2013
14,732
12,781
14,237
41,750
Projected number of infected travellers per month, without exit screening
0.37
5.08
1.72
7.17
Projected time to one internationally exported case, without exit screening
2.7 months
0.2 months
0.6 months
0.14 months
Projected time to one internationally exported case, with exit screening
8 months
0.4 months
3.9 months
0.35 months
Governments have long known how hard it is to identify passengers carrying infectious diseases - they've tried it before.
In 2003 an outbreak of Sars - severe acute respiratory syndrome - began in Guangdong province in China. In the following months cases were reported in Hong Kong, Singapore and Vietnam.
The World Health Organization issued a global health alert for Sars as it became clear that the disease was being spread by global air travel.
In response, Canada introduced screening at airports and passengers were asked a series of questions.
"700,000 people filled in a questionnaire of whom about 2,500 answered 'yes' to one of the questions. Those people were all referred for medical investigation and none of them had SARS," says David Mabey, professor of communicable diseases at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and co-author of a British Medical Journal paper Airport Screening for Ebola.

Abuse inquiry: Fiona Woolf is 'unsuitable' as head, groups say

NAPAC's Peter Saunders: "This is not about the personal integrity of Mrs Woolf"

Victims' groups have told Home Office officials they are "unanimous" in the view that the head of an inquiry into historic child sex abuse should resign.
The inquiry would be a "dead duck" if Fiona Woolf remained chairwoman, Peter Saunders from National Association for People Abused in Childhood said.
Victims have called for her to step down because of her social links to ex-Home Secretary Lord Brittan.
A spokesman said PM David Cameron was "absolutely clear" she can do the job.
The inquiry will look at whether public bodies and other institutions did enough to protect children from sexual abuse from 1970 to the present day.
Speaking after a meeting between victims' groups and officials from the inquiry, campaigners called for Mrs Woolf to be replaced and for a statutory inquiry to be set up with powers to seize documents and compel witnesses to give evidence.
Fiona Woolf, pictured with David Cameron last year, has come under pressure to resign as head of the inquiry
A statement from Alison Miller, of Leigh Day Solicitors, said child abuse survivors' representatives were "unanimous" that Mrs Woolf was unsuitable to lead the inquiry.
Mr Saunders, from NAPAC, said Mrs Woolf was someone "we would not be able to work with", adding that it was "essential" it became a statutory inquiry.
Dr Liz Davies, who was a social worker in Islington and acted as a whistleblower there, said victims from the London borough had adopted a policy of "absolute non co-operation" with the inquiry as it stands.
"Something really has to change," she said.
'Entirely inappropriate'
The NSPCC was also at the meeting in London, which began at about 10:30 GMT. The charity has declined to give explicit backing to Mrs Woolf, a corporate lawyer.
Home Affairs Select Committee chairman Keith Vaz told the BBC he had written to Mrs Woolf asking her to return to the committee next week to "clarify outstanding points".
It comes after the first person appointed to lead the inquiry - Baroness Butler-Sloss - stepped down in July after concerns were raised about the fact that her late brother was attorney general during the 1980s.
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AnalysisRoss Hawkins, BBC political correspondent
The voices of abuse survivors were always going to be vital.
The phone hacking inquiry proved that victims have a moral authority like no other and their opinions will be heard.
Yet survivors and their representatives at today's meeting said they had no contact from the Home Office or the inquiry until last week.
Survivors are concerned about the way the inquiry has been established, its powers and its terms of reference.
One survivor - Phil Johnson - said that when he asked for his travel expenses to be repaid, he was told that could not be guaranteed.
So a victim of abuse summoned to meet officials had to leave his Eastbourne home after rush hour - to avoid the highest train fares - then run from the station to get to the meeting in time.
He said: "I think the victims are being taken for granted."
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A victim of historical child sexual abuse has already launched a legal challenge to Mrs Woolf's appointment, claiming she is not impartial, has no relevant expertise and may not have time to discharge her duties.
BBC legal correspondent Clive Coleman said senior or former judges were the obvious choices as chair of long inquiries as they were used to hearing and analysing vast amounts of testimony from multiple witnesses.
However, our correspondent said victims and survivors must have confidence the chair is "divorced from the contentious subject matter of the inquiry and key people who may figure in it".
'Substantial cloud'
Earlier this month Mrs Woolf, who is Lord Mayor of London, disclosed that she lived in the same street as Lord Brittan and had dinner with him five times between 2008 and 2012 - but said he was not a "close associate".
Lord Brittan may be called to give evidence to the inquiry. He denies any wrongdoing in the way the "dossier" on alleged high-profile paedophiles was handled in the 1980s.
On Thursday, MP Mr Vaz said letters from Mrs Woolf showed her appointment was "chaotic". He said a letter from Mrs Woolf about her links with Lord Brittan was re-written seven times until the final version gave a "sense of greater detachment".
Former Labour home secretary David Blunkett told BBC Radio 4's The World at One there was now a "very substantial cloud" over whether Mrs Woolf could continue as head of the inquiry.
He said revelations about the way the letters had been edited put a "very different complexion" on the situation.
The letters: What they said and when
Mrs Woolf on:First draftDraft fiveFinal version
First meeting Lord Brittan
Invited by Lady Brittan to dinner at their home in 2008
Invited Lord and Lady Brittan to dinner at her home on 9 January 2008
Invited Lord and Lady Brittan to dinner at her home on 9 January 2008
How many people were there?
Approximately eight
Six
At least four other people
Subsequent dinner parties with the Brittans
One at her home, then a further exchange in 2011
Two further dinner parties at her home with other guests, then dinner parties at their home on 10 November 2009 and 15 February 2012. "From my recollection there were no other guests who attended"
Two further dinner parties at her home with other guests, then dinner parties at their home on 10 November 2009 and 15 February 2012. "From my recollection there were at least four other guests who attended"
Coffee with Lady Brittan
Met on about two occasions for coffee
Met on a small number of occasions for coffee, dates not always recorded in diary but last recorded was on 23 April 2013 at Lady Brittan's home
Met on a small number of occasions for coffee, dates not always recorded in diary but last recorded was on 23 April 2013 at Lady Brittan's home
Working with Lady Brittan
"Both Lady Brittan and I are lay magistrates and from recollection we may have sat on the same bench on at least one occasion, although I am unable to say when this occurred"
"Lady Brittan and I also served as lay magistrates on a bench of some 200 magistrates. I do not recall serving in the same court at the same time but it is possible that this did happen on a rare occasion"
"We also served as lay magistrates on a bench of some 140 magistrates in total. I do not recall serving in the same court at the same time but it is possible that this did happen on a rare occasion"
Mr Cameron's official spokesman said the prime minister's view that Mrs Woolf should lead the inquiry "has not changed".
"The prime minister is absolutely clear he thinks she can do this job with integrity and impartiality," he added.
Labour's shadow home secretary, Yvette Cooper, said Home Secretary Theresa May had "totally failed" to get the inquiry going.
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Abuse inquiry: How we got here









Mrs Woolf is under pressure to resign due to her links with Lord Brittan
1 July - MP Simon Danczuk calls on former Home Secretary Leon Brittan to say what he knew about paedophile allegations passed to him in the 1980s
7 July - Government announces independent inquiry into the way public bodies investigated and handled child sex abuse claims. Baroness Butler-Sloss chosen as head
9 July - Baroness Butler-Sloss (pictured) faces calls to quit because her late brother, Sir Michael Havers, was attorney general in the 1980s
14 July - She stands down, saying she is "not the right person" for the job
5 September - Lord Mayor of London Fiona Woolf named the new head of the inquiry
11 October - Mrs Woolf discloses she had five dinners with Lord Brittan from 2008-12
22 October - Abuse victim launches legal challenge against Mrs Woolf leading the inquiry, amid growing calls for her resignation