When Salama Ali started investigating the disappearance of two younger brothers last year she made an awful discovery - not only were radicalised young Kenyan men leaving to join the al-Shabab militants in neighbouring Somalia, but women were being seized and trafficked by the group as sex slaves.
Salama's search for information about her brothers had to be carried out quietly and confidentially, as any hint of a connection with the al-Qaeda-linked al-Shabab can arouse the suspicion of the security forces.
So she met discreetly with other women in Mombasa and the surrounding area, sharing stories and seeking information about male relatives who had vanished.
"We discovered there were lots of us," Salama says.
But Salama also uncovered something very different - stories of women who had been taken to Somalia against their will.
The women were both young and old, from Christian and Muslim communities, from Mombasa and other parts of Kenya's coastal region. They were usually promised high-paid work in another town or abroad, and then kidnapped.
Last September Salama trained as a counsellor and set up a secret support group for returning women. Word spread and soon women began seeking her out and asking to join the group.
Americans should learn Russian toinfluence Trump, Kerry says
Image copyrightAFPImage captionRussia had difficult relations with John Kerry and the Obama team
Americans who want to influence the new US government should learn Russian, US ex-Secretary of State John Kerry says.
He was speaking at Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government.
He strongly criticised President Donald Trump and his team, who are being investigated over alleged Russian interference in the 2016 election.
Russia's Foreign Ministry responded by saying the former US administration should have read the poems of Soviet propagandist Vladimir Mayakovsky.
Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova singled out a Mayakovsky poem which glorified Russian as the language of VI Lenin, who led the communist revolution in 1917.
Russia is marking the centenary of the revolution, which resulted in Cold War rivalry between the USSR and the US.
"I'm often asked what the secret is to have a real impact on government. Well, it's recently changed. I used to say, either run for office or get a degree from Harvard Kennedy School. With this White House I'd say, buy Rosetta Stone and learn Russian," Mr Kerry said on Wednesday.
Rosetta Stone is an online language-learning resource.
In a Facebook post, Ms Zakharova said it was a mistake that Russia had not given the US state department under ex-President Barack Obama a collection of Mayakovsky poems.
Image copyrightAFPImage captionMaria Zakharova admires a poet and artist who pioneered Socialist realism
She quoted a verse from Mayakovsky's long poem from 1927 called To Our Youth, which translates as:
"Even if I were an elderly black man I would learn Russian, without being despondent or lazy, just because Russian was Lenin's language."
The poem suggests that Russian can serve as a lingua franca binding the diverse nations of the Soviet Union in a new communist order.
Image copyrightALAMYImage captionVladimir Mayakovsky (pictured) promoted the Soviet revolution of Bolshevik leader VI Lenin
Mayakovsky is still much-admired in Russia for his poetry and avant-garde Socialist realist posters.
He made searing criticisms of the US after touring North America in 1925, comparing its cultural diversity to the Tower of Babel.
"I don't know which Russian language textbooks should be bought for 'this' US administration, but for the 'last one' it would be best to get a little volume of Vladimir Vladimirovich [Mayakovsky], on the eve of the 1917 centenary," Ms Zakharova wrote.
Russian President Vladimir Putin has revived some elements of Soviet life, including pro-Kremlin youth movements and displays of military hardware.
In 2005 he called the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 "the greatest geopolitical catastrophe" of the 20th Century.
SOURCE :- BBC
Manchester attack: Police not sharing information with US
Image copyrightNEW YORK TIMESImage captionThe New York Times says this evidence was gathered at the scene of the attack
Police investigating the Manchester Arena bomb attack have stopped sharing information with the US after leaks to the media.
UK officials were outraged when photos appearing to show debris from the attack appeared in the New York Times.It came after the name of bomber Salman Abedi was leaked to US media just hours after the attack, which left 22 dead.Theresa May said she would tell Donald Trump at a Nato meeting that shared intelligence "must remain secure".Meanwhile, the Queen has been to the Royal Manchester Children's Hospital visiting some of the injured as well as members of the emergency services.While there she paid tribute to Manchester and the "extraordinary" way the city had responded to Monday's attack at an Ariana Grande concert, in which 116 people were also injured.Families' distress In total eight men are now in custody following the bombing carried out by Manchester-born Abedi, a 22-year-old from a family of Libyan origin.The arrests have been "significant" while searches of premises have also yielded items "important to the investigation", Greater Manchester Police said.It has also emerged two people who had known Abedi at college made separate calls to a hotline to warn the police about his extremist views.A Whitehall source said Abedi was one of a "pool" of former subjects of interest whose risk remained "subject to review" by the security service and its partners.In other developments:
Two men were arrested following a search of an address in the Withington area of Greater Manchester on Thursday morning, taking the number of people held to eight
The Conservatives and Labour are to resume general election campaigning on Friday
Greater Manchester Police hope to resume normal intelligence relationships - a two-way flow of information - soon but is currently "furious", the BBC understands.Its chief constable Ian Hopkins said the recent leak had caused "much distress for families that are already suffering terribly with their loss.".The force - which is leading the investigation on the ground - gives its information to National Counter-Terrorism, which then shares it across government and - because of the Five Eyes intelligence sharing agreement - with the US, Australia, Canada and New Zealand.
The DNA detective helping to reunitefamilies
Image copyrightMARTIN SPAVENImage captionJulia Bell has no genetics background but has an extensive knowledge of how to analyse data
A man left abandoned as a baby in a cinema toilet 61 years ago has tracked down his siblings with the help of a so-called "DNA detective". But what do they do?
"There's an analogy I like to use: I can crack any safe, some will just take longer than others," Julia Bell tells the Victoria Derbyshire programme.
She helps people - many of whom have no knowledge of who their parents or siblings are - track down their long-lost relatives.
Many of her cases involve American soldiers, or GIs, who were stationed in the UK during World War Two, she says.
Indeed, Julia says she is approached by someone who has discovered their father was in fact an American GI about once a month.
"More children were fathered by American servicemen than many people imagine," she says.
Image copyrightGETTY IMAGES
Julia is also currently helping a woman who, as a baby, was left in a box at London's Kings Cross railway station, while another case involves a baby left on a train in 1928.
So how does it work?
'Searching for 44 years'
"It starts with a spit test, a DNA test, which I get people to do," Julia says. "That's sent away for testing."
She then uses uses three direct-to-consumer DNA databases to cross-reference the data and then the detective work begins.
Julia - who currently is not charging clients - says she begins looking at patterns within the database to try and establish matches.
She then uses contacts around the world to try to identify relatives - however distant they may be.
Image copyrightTOMMY CHALMERSImage captionTommy Chalmers (left), Pat McBain (centre) and Robert Weston (right) outside the house where their father lived
When Robert Weston contacted her - 61 years after being abandoned in a cinema - he said he "had been searching for a long, long time - 44 years or so" without success.
Julia asked him to provide a DNA saliva test and searched on the database in the hope of finding a distant relative.
"There will be somebody on there - fourth cousins or something - for nearly everyone out there," she explains.
Initially there were more distant matches, but Julia was able to find and test a second cousin.
"I asked her if she had any male cousins and she said 'Tommy'," Robert explains. "He agreed to be tested and he turned out to be my half-brother."
But he says: "You need a huge dollop of luck with all this."
Image copyrightROBERT WESTONImage captionThe Birmingham Evening Despatch carried the story of Robert being found on its front page in 1956
On occasion, it is possible to trace relatives even further back.
The Salvation Army's family tracing service has reunited relatives who have been out of touch for more than 80 years.
It says it reunites 10 people every single working day, with an 89% success rate.
It also protects the privacy of the person being sought by promising it will not pass on personal details unless permission is granted.
Julia says while most cases can eventually be solved, a small number will permanently draw a blank.
Even then, she says a person can get some information, including an estimate about their ethnicity. But she says as DNA databases increase in size, the odds of closer matches get better all the time.
'Very sensitive cases'
Julia has no genetics background, saying you instead need to be "smart and logical" and know how to work with data.
"I have a knowledge of science but my background was in teaching in Singapore," she says.
"My mother didn't know who her father was and that's how I got into this, helping to look for her dad."
She adds: "I found someone in the states [US] who works in ancestry who helped show me how to do this.
"She helped me with seeing the patterns and using my intuition. She put the pieces together and I realised I was good at this.
"[My mum] found her father had died four years earlier. But she had a sister and now she's in touch with her family in the south of the US."
Image copyrightREUTERS
Where there is a success, she says third parties are "generally" positive when they find out they have relatives they never knew - although cases of abandoned babies can be "very sensitive".
"I might not always be the one to break the news, sometimes it could be a social worker."
A running theme, however, is that many long-lost relatives - despite their different upbringings - often share habits or interests.
"One set of people I matched turned out to both be astrophysicists," she says.
Robert Weston and his half-bother Tommy share the same sense of humour, she adds.
"It's like they've known each other their whole life."