22/11/2011

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:00:06. > :00:13.Tonight at ten: Hopes of a political breakthrough

:00:13. > :00:15.in Egypt after four days of demonstrations. More violent

:00:15. > :00:25.clashes between protesters and security forces as the regime

:00:25. > :00:26.

:00:26. > :00:28.prepares to give ground. TRANSLATION: As Egypt's and...

:00:28. > :00:33.As Egypt's military leader promises early presidential elections, his

:00:33. > :00:37.troops are in action on the streets. They thought they had beaten the

:00:37. > :00:41.old regime in February, now they think they have to fight it again.

:00:41. > :00:44.This crisis has been brewing for months. We'll have the latest from

:00:44. > :00:46.Cairo, where thousands of people are still protesting. Also tonight:

:00:46. > :00:56.Actor Steve Coogan is the latest celebrity to attack the tabloid

:00:56. > :01:00.press at the Leveson Inquiry. needs to be a privacy law so that

:01:00. > :01:02.genuine public interest journalism is not besmirched by this tawdry

:01:02. > :01:05.muck-raking. The travel firm Thomas Cook under

:01:05. > :01:08.pressure as it seeks more help from the banks.

:01:08. > :01:12.The search for justice for the many victims of Cambodia's brutal Khmer

:01:13. > :01:22.Rouge. And it's been a bad night for

:01:23. > :01:23.

:01:23. > :01:28.Manchester City in the Champions In sport, Andy Murray pulls out of

:01:28. > :01:38.the ATP World Tour finals in London. He doesn't want to risk his groin

:01:38. > :01:47.

:01:47. > :01:50.Good evening. Egypt's military council has

:01:50. > :01:55.responded to the mass uprising of the past four days by promising a

:01:55. > :01:57.faster transition to democratic rule. Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi

:01:57. > :02:02.promised that presidential elections would be held by the end

:02:02. > :02:05.of June next year. But protesters tonight in central Cairo and

:02:05. > :02:15.elsewhere say they won't move until all their demands have been met.

:02:15. > :02:21.

:02:21. > :02:24.Our Middle East editor, Jeremy They used to drum on the fences

:02:24. > :02:28.during the revolution as an alarm when Mubarak's men were drumming --

:02:28. > :02:32.coming and now they are doing it again because the protesters here

:02:32. > :02:36.believe the old regime lives on. Killing people for protesting. The

:02:36. > :02:39.funeral of one of the dead came through the square this morning.

:02:39. > :02:44.The young men fighting the riot police want to finish the job this

:02:44. > :02:47.time. Many Egyptians don't like the street violence. But they don't

:02:48. > :02:52.always like the military and the police trampling over human rights

:02:52. > :02:59.either. And the man the protesters hate most is the head of them

:02:59. > :03:08.ruling military council. Field Marshal Tantawi, get out. Today or

:03:08. > :03:13.tomorrow, go. In a few days he will go. Field Marshal Tantawi appeared

:03:13. > :03:18.on the Egyptian TV defending the military and talking elections.

:03:18. > :03:23.TRANSLATION: I am committed to holding parliamentary elections in

:03:23. > :03:28.time to elect the President of the state by the end of 20th June 12.

:03:28. > :03:31.Before he spoke, they had hanged his effigy from the traffic lights.

:03:31. > :03:36.Breivik -- bringing Presidential elections for the year will satisfy

:03:36. > :03:46.some elections, but it didn't seem to change many minds in the square.

:03:46. > :03:47.

:03:47. > :03:53.And among the families of the dead. See, he says, film, there are

:03:53. > :03:56.people in all the fridges. My son is dead here. And for everyone in

:03:56. > :04:00.Tahrir Square, a fair breeze euphoria was gone by the summer.

:04:00. > :04:04.They are more interested in finishing the revolution, not in

:04:04. > :04:11.military promises they no longer trust. It is the Mubarak regime

:04:11. > :04:15.again, nothing has changed. We don't want to go a lectin, in these

:04:15. > :04:20.elections, it is a sham, nothing will change. I this man is a

:04:20. > :04:27.candidate. There is no appetite to talk to people about elections when

:04:27. > :04:31.people are being and a few hundred yards away, riots went on,

:04:31. > :04:35.casualties rushed away. They believe they won their rights as

:04:35. > :04:39.citizens on the streets and that this is the place to defend them.

:04:39. > :04:48.They want the military to hand over power now and they are furious

:04:48. > :04:52.about a country that can't give They thought they had beaten the

:04:52. > :05:00.old regime in February, now they think they have to fight it again.

:05:00. > :05:04.This crisis has been brewing for months. The cs gas tears at the

:05:04. > :05:13.skin and the eyes and makes it hard to breathe. The demonstrators

:05:13. > :05:19.always come back for more, though. When it got dark there was no let

:05:19. > :05:23.up. Egypt's Revolution in February inspired uprisings in Libya, Syria,

:05:24. > :05:28.Bahrain and Yemen. Now the Egyptians are leading the way again,

:05:28. > :05:34.showing how hard this new Middle East is going to be.

:05:34. > :05:41.Jeremy is in central Cairo tonight. In your view, to what extent will

:05:41. > :05:45.these concessions today start to satisfy people? I think quite a lot

:05:45. > :05:49.of Egyptians will be glad to hear what Field Marshal Tantawi had to

:05:49. > :05:53.offer. Those are the Egyptians not here in Tahrir Square. If I look

:05:53. > :05:58.around, even though it is gone midnight, there are still tens of

:05:58. > :06:02.thousands of people camped in the Square saying they will not leave

:06:02. > :06:07.until the military don't just make concessions, until the military

:06:07. > :06:12.stepped down and hand over to some kind of interim civilian leadership.

:06:12. > :06:16.Also behind me, the whole time I've been standing here, there have been

:06:16. > :06:21.lines of ambulances going back and forth. They are still clashing down

:06:21. > :06:26.towards the Interior Ministry. So the trouble continues here, Egypt

:06:26. > :06:29.continues to be in deep crisis and once again the eyes of this entire

:06:29. > :06:33.region are Ron Tahrir Square, wondering whether the will of the

:06:33. > :06:36.people will prevail or whether the military will get this place back

:06:36. > :06:40.under control. Hard to see how they will do it if the people don't

:06:40. > :06:44.budge. Thank you. Tabloid newspapers have been

:06:44. > :06:47.accused of acting like the Mafia and of bulling victims into silence.

:06:47. > :06:50.That was part of the evidence presented today by the actor and

:06:50. > :06:54.comedian Steve Coogan at the Leveson Inquiry, which is

:06:54. > :07:04.investigating newspaper standards. Our correspondent Nicholas Witchell

:07:04. > :07:04.

:07:05. > :07:09.He is the public performer who says he is not interested in fame. His

:07:09. > :07:17.best-known creation was a bumbling member of the media. It is for 30

:07:17. > :07:21.5:00am, you are listening to... Today's Steve Coogan played himself

:07:21. > :07:25.to condemn media excesses. He said he had lost count of the kiss-and-

:07:25. > :07:29.tell stories and tabloid stings. One of them he said have involved

:07:29. > :07:33.Andy Coulson, the former editor of the News of the World, who later

:07:33. > :07:39.became an adviser to the Prime Minister. There was a girl in Andy

:07:39. > :07:43.Coulson's office who was going to speak to me on the phone and the

:07:43. > :07:50.phone call would be recorded. She would try to entice me into talking

:07:50. > :07:55.about intimate details of her and my life. Mr Coogan said it was time

:07:55. > :08:01.for Britain to have privacy laws. In the interests of protecting

:08:01. > :08:06.genuine public interest journalism, for that reason, there needs to be

:08:06. > :08:10.a privacy law so that genuine public interest journalism is not

:08:10. > :08:15.besmirched by this tawdry muck- raking. Mary Ellen field was of --

:08:15. > :08:19.an innocent victim. She was a business adviser to Elle Macpherson

:08:19. > :08:23.but when stories about her appeared in the papers, the supermodel

:08:24. > :08:29.accused her of leaking them. said you have done 11 things. I

:08:29. > :08:33.said tell me what they are. She would not. I said you can't tell me

:08:34. > :08:39.I've done something and not tell me what I have done. She said I am not

:08:39. > :08:41.allowed to tell you. Later it emerged that the News of the World

:08:41. > :08:45.Phone Hackett Glen Mulcaire had been targeting Elle Macpherson, but

:08:45. > :08:50.by then Mary-Ellen Field had been set for psychiatric treatment and

:08:50. > :08:54.made redundant. And then there was the tragic story of Jim and

:08:54. > :08:59.Margaret Watson. 20 years ago their daughter Diane was stabbed to death

:08:59. > :09:03.by a pupil at her school. But newspaper reports so traduced Diana

:09:03. > :09:07.and the family that their son committed suicide. We need

:09:07. > :09:12.protection, just because a person has died their reputation should

:09:12. > :09:16.not die with them. They should not be besmirched at the will of some

:09:16. > :09:21.sick journalist. That is what they are, sick. Her one other thing that

:09:21. > :09:24.is exercising the inquiry, the outspoken response from the Mail on

:09:25. > :09:28.Sunday to claims yesterday from the actor Hugh Grant. Lord Justice

:09:28. > :09:33.Leveson said the press needed to be careful about attacking witnesses

:09:33. > :09:36.who had given evidence in good faith.

:09:36. > :09:39.Shares in the travel firm Thomas Cook fell sharply today, losing

:09:39. > :09:43.three-quarters of their value, after the news that the firm was

:09:43. > :09:46.trying to borrow more money from the banks. Thomas Cook said it had

:09:46. > :09:50.seen a deterioration of trading due in part to the eurozone crisis and

:09:50. > :09:52.political unrest in Egypt and Tunisia. But it insisted that

:09:52. > :10:02.customer bookings were fully protected. Our business editor

:10:02. > :10:07.

:10:07. > :10:10.Thinking of Thomas Cook I an G macro it, taking a break? As a cold

:10:10. > :10:13.front spreads over the economy and many of us put off decisions on

:10:13. > :10:17.whether to spend big money on holidays and other things, cracks

:10:17. > :10:21.are appearing in Thomas Cook's finances. The famous provider of

:10:21. > :10:26.package holidays shocked investors and customers by saying the

:10:26. > :10:29.business has got a lot worse in the last few days as Brits were Reeve

:10:29. > :10:34.whether the eurozone crisis could take us back into recession and

:10:34. > :10:39.French and Russians decided turmoil in Egypt is a good reason not a

:10:39. > :10:43.holiday there or Tunisia. Given the speed with which your finances have

:10:43. > :10:46.worsened, why should customers should feel it is safe to book a

:10:46. > :10:50.holiday with you? Thomas Cook is a holiday company that has been

:10:50. > :10:56.around for over 100 years. They have sent millions of customers

:10:56. > :10:59.overseas. We have excellent customer relations. I am confident

:11:00. > :11:04.that from next year we will send millions of British holidaymakers

:11:04. > :11:09.overseas. Thomas Cook is the world's second-biggest holiday

:11:09. > :11:15.business, providing 19 million holidays every year. But it has

:11:15. > :11:19.hefty debts, just over �900 million in the spring. Over the past 19

:11:19. > :11:24.months a staggering �2.3 million has been wiped off Thomas Cook's

:11:24. > :11:31.value and after its warning today, its share price plummeted a further

:11:31. > :11:36.75%. I asked the company's boss whether there would be even more

:11:36. > :11:38.pain for the owners. I think investors should have confidence,

:11:38. > :11:43.we are negotiating with the banks, they have always been very

:11:43. > :11:49.supportive. I am very confident that they will give us this extra

:11:49. > :11:55.cushion we need. We dream about it. Thomas Cook's dream is that a

:11:55. > :12:00.troupe of 17 banks will lend it another �100 million to tide it

:12:00. > :12:07.over. Will they oblige? I am certain the banks will extend

:12:07. > :12:10.credit. The damage would be too great to them, especially to them,

:12:10. > :12:15.because there are so many businesses linked to Thomas Cook.

:12:15. > :12:19.But Thomas Cook be killed off by Winters economic Frost? That seems

:12:19. > :12:23.unlikely for a business with such a strong band -- brand, but could

:12:23. > :12:27.there be further frostbite for lenders and investors? That can't

:12:27. > :12:31.be ruled out. Two babies have died from an E-coli

:12:31. > :12:34.infection in Swansea. One infant was infected in the community, the

:12:34. > :12:37.other was a very premature baby who died after contracting the

:12:37. > :12:41.infection at the city's Singleton Hospital. Doctors say the cases

:12:41. > :12:46.were linked. One of the babies was just five days old when she died at

:12:46. > :12:48.the hospital on 4th November. The post of chief coroner will no

:12:48. > :12:52.longer be abolished following opposition from groups including

:12:53. > :12:57.the Royal British Legion. The Government had chosen to scrap the

:12:57. > :13:00.position, which was created in 2009 but has never been filled. The

:13:00. > :13:04.Justice Secretary, Ken Clarke, said he had listened and reflected on

:13:04. > :13:12.the concerns. The Legion told him a chief coroner was needed to improve

:13:12. > :13:16.the handling of inquiries into Two mental health trusts have been

:13:16. > :13:20.criticised for failing so that led to the deaths of an elderly couple

:13:20. > :13:24.in Swindon. To me the Cup bludgeoned his parents to death in

:13:24. > :13:30.2007. A report found that the incident could have been avoided if

:13:30. > :13:35.appropriate care had been delivered. The authorities knew that Timothy

:13:35. > :13:40.Cook was dangerous, but his delusional and violent behaviour

:13:40. > :13:44.made him a risk to other people. But when he moved in with his

:13:44. > :13:48.parents, Bob and Elsie Crook, they were not told. He battered them to

:13:48. > :13:55.death and dumped their bodies with the household rubbish. They did not

:13:55. > :13:58.know what his diagnosis was, the fact that he had been violent, the

:13:58. > :14:03.fact that police and medical staff were all concerned about their own

:14:03. > :14:08.safety. No one told my parents. four years after the fatal attack

:14:08. > :14:13.and a couple's bungalow in Swindon, a report has concluded that their

:14:13. > :14:19.deaths could have been avoided if the NHS had given their son the

:14:19. > :14:24.care he needed. This 300 page report lists what it calls the

:14:24. > :14:28.persistent failures of the NHS to treat him if the crook, not just in

:14:28. > :14:33.Wiltshire, where he killed his parents, but also in Lincolnshire,

:14:33. > :14:37.where he lived -- Timothy Cook. It says there was poor communication

:14:37. > :14:41.between the two areas and no overall strategy to help him. The

:14:41. > :14:47.report acknowledges that Timothy Crook was a difficult patient who

:14:47. > :14:50.tried to avoid a medical help. But it says he was allowed to slip

:14:50. > :14:56.through the safety net. Tonight, both trusts apologised to the

:14:56. > :15:00.family. We accept entirely the report and the criticism of our

:15:00. > :15:05.organisation, and have been working hard since then to make reparation

:15:05. > :15:09.and improve the quality of services we provide in Swindon. The Avon and

:15:09. > :15:14.Wiltshire Trust was criticised in another report today. Carl James

:15:14. > :15:18.was stabbed and killed by a schizophrenic friend, also in

:15:18. > :15:24.Swindon in 2007. But campaigners say that rather than blaming

:15:24. > :15:28.patients, the system should be improved to help them. Murders by

:15:28. > :15:32.people with mental health problems are rare. We do hear about them in

:15:32. > :15:37.the media, but people should bear in mind that they are rare. But not

:15:37. > :15:42.rare enough for Janice Lawrence. She feels today's report into her

:15:42. > :15:46.parents' deaths should have gone further to prevent similar

:15:46. > :15:54.tragedies for other families in the future.

:15:54. > :15:56.Coming up on tonight's programme: It as an own goal!

:15:56. > :16:01.An early scare for Manchester United against Benfica in the

:16:01. > :16:04.Champions' League. It's taken over 30 years to

:16:04. > :16:11.prosecute some of the leaders of the Khmer Rouge, the brutal regime

:16:11. > :16:14.which ruled Cambodia in the 1970s. Under the Marxist leader Pol Pot,

:16:14. > :16:18.the regime enforced policies which led to huge loss of life. Pol Pot's

:16:18. > :16:20.deputy, Nuon Chea, is now being tried by a court which is backed by

:16:20. > :16:25.the United Nations. He denies charges including genocide, and

:16:25. > :16:35.insists that the Khmer Rouge was serving the interests of the people.

:16:35. > :16:36.

:16:36. > :16:41.Our correspondent reports from Phnom Penh.

:16:41. > :16:46.From a cross Cambodia, memory converges on the capital. On a

:16:46. > :16:52.motorbike taxi, a mother who lost four children and her husband.

:16:52. > :16:57.TRANSLATION: I feel pain and anger, but it is up to the court now to

:16:57. > :17:05.decide what happens. In this public bus, survivors and

:17:05. > :17:09.former Khmer Rouge travel together. Here a victim. All hope their

:17:09. > :17:13.journey to cord might help reconciliation. Including this man,

:17:13. > :17:17.who ordered the deaths of a couple who fell in love without a party's

:17:17. > :17:22.permission. Sitting around them, those who knew nothing of the past

:17:22. > :17:25.and those who can never forget it. One of the things you are accused

:17:25. > :17:29.of doing is ordering the killing of two people because they fell in

:17:29. > :17:32.love without the party's permission. Why did you do that?

:17:32. > :17:37.TRANSLATION: It was the wrong thing to do, but the decision was made by

:17:37. > :17:42.those above me. He says had he disobeyed, he would

:17:42. > :17:50.have been killed. These are images of some of the lives destroyed.

:17:50. > :17:55.Even children could be declared enemies of the people. This was

:17:55. > :17:58.Nuon Chea, the number two in the Khmer Rouge hierarchy. Now he is a

:17:58. > :18:03.frail old man listening to a prosecutor's denunciation. They

:18:03. > :18:07.murdered, tortured and terrorised their own people. They even banned

:18:07. > :18:11.love between human beings, that one noble quality that comes to the

:18:11. > :18:15.human heart more naturally than any other. But today, the court heard

:18:15. > :18:25.the voice of the man once called Brother Number Two, and it was

:18:25. > :18:26.

:18:26. > :18:30.defiant. What the prosecution has said is untrue, he declared. He had

:18:30. > :18:34.served the people and wanted to build a society that was clean and

:18:34. > :18:38.independent. This trial is controversial among some survivors

:18:38. > :18:45.because there are only three defendants. This woman's parents

:18:45. > :18:50.were killed after being herded to this temple. 3 is not enough. Three

:18:50. > :18:55.men for the lives of 2 million Cambodians, including my parents,

:18:55. > :18:59.is not enough. There is no magical number, but three is not enough.

:18:59. > :19:03.Going back to Nuremberg, no war crimes trial has ever achieved

:19:03. > :19:09.absolute justice. The number of victims, the scale of the crimes,

:19:09. > :19:12.is simply too great. And in Cambodia, there will not be any

:19:12. > :19:16.ground accounting. Perhaps the best that can be achieved here is to

:19:16. > :19:22.write into the memory of this nation the facts of what happened,

:19:22. > :19:25.so that they might act as a warning from history.

:19:25. > :19:29.There should be a cap of �10,000 on individual donations to political

:19:29. > :19:32.parties. That is one of the recommendations of the Committee

:19:32. > :19:36.for Standards in Public Life, which also wants taxpayers to pay more to

:19:36. > :19:39.finance parties. The committee's inquiry was set up in response to

:19:39. > :19:47.the controversy about political funding. Our deputy political

:19:47. > :19:50.editor James Landale is at Westminster.

:19:50. > :19:55.Does it all mean that they are happy to accept these

:19:55. > :19:59.recommendations? There has been concern about the way parties are

:19:59. > :20:01.funded for many years, whether by rich individuals or which trade

:20:02. > :20:05.unions, the suspicion being that they may be getting something in

:20:05. > :20:08.return. The Standards Committee thinks it has come up with a

:20:08. > :20:12.possible solution. Their rules would be that nobody would be able

:20:12. > :20:17.to donate more than �10,000 a year. Trade union members would have to

:20:17. > :20:20.choose to give to a party rather than it being automatic. That would

:20:20. > :20:25.lead to a substantial loss of income for the parties, so the

:20:25. > :20:32.committee says the taxpayer should give the parties around �23 million

:20:32. > :20:35.a year, which comes out at about 50 pence per elector. That is the plan.

:20:36. > :20:40.The three largest political parties in the government are not happy

:20:40. > :20:44.with it. The Conservatives think the cap on donations is to hide.

:20:44. > :20:49.Labour do not support the Union forms -- reforms, and none think

:20:49. > :20:53.now is the time to ask the public to give politicians more money. So

:20:53. > :20:58.the chances of it happening are slim, but that does not mean the

:20:58. > :21:02.problem will go away. Sir Christopher Kelly believes it will

:21:02. > :21:05.take another scandal to force the politicians to act on this.

:21:05. > :21:08.A British soldier killed in Afghanistan on Sunday has been

:21:08. > :21:12.named as Private Thomas Lake from the 1st Battalion The Princess of

:21:12. > :21:15.Wales's Royal Regiment. The 29- year-old from Watford was on foot

:21:15. > :21:20.patrol in the Nahr-e Saraj area of Helmand when an improvised

:21:20. > :21:28.explosive device detonated. Today his mother said "he died doing

:21:28. > :21:31.something he loved and believed in". President Obama has warned that the

:21:31. > :21:36.average American family will pay $1,000 more in tax each year unless

:21:36. > :21:40.Congress backs his budget plans. This follows Congress's latest

:21:40. > :21:44.failed attempt to tackle America's growing debt problem. A special

:21:44. > :21:49.committee set up to find a way ahead announced last night that it

:21:49. > :21:57.could not reach agreement. The debt problem is now set to dominate the

:21:57. > :22:01.presidential election. Americans are hungry for their

:22:01. > :22:06.politicians to do something, so on the menu today, an awkward meeting

:22:06. > :22:10.in a diner for one President, one ordinary family and scores of press.

:22:10. > :22:15.His matches - he is on the side of the people, the politicians in

:22:15. > :22:19.Washington are blocking progress. You guys work hard. You play by the

:22:19. > :22:22.rules. You are meeting your responsibilities. And if you are

:22:22. > :22:27.working hard and meeting your responsibilities, at the very least

:22:27. > :22:32.you should expect Congress to do the same. It is a monumental

:22:32. > :22:38.failure. Congress can't agree how to cut into America's 15 trillion

:22:38. > :22:42.dollars debt. Underneath the famous dome, a train between the capital

:22:42. > :22:48.and the Senate is running smoothly, but the plan designed to find a

:22:48. > :22:51.compromise has been derailed. The Republicans will not put taxes up,

:22:51. > :22:55.Democrats will not do a deal based on spending cuts. The Republicans

:22:55. > :22:59.believe that with spending being much higher than it has story

:22:59. > :23:05.keeping, we need to restrain spending. The problem is a huge

:23:05. > :23:10.ideological divide in our nation, a value system divide. People need to

:23:10. > :23:15.resolve that over the next months so that a small group of people,

:23:15. > :23:18.extreme in their view, cannot hold American hostage any longer.

:23:18. > :23:21.Failure by Congress to agree to a planning means automatic cuts of

:23:21. > :23:25.more than one trillion dollars to programmes do to each party

:23:25. > :23:28.including a cut of nearly 8% to education, public health and

:23:28. > :23:34.housing and a 10% cut to the military budget, which the Defence

:23:34. > :23:39.Secretary says would tear a scene in national defences. It is a ship

:23:39. > :23:44.without sailors. It is a Brigade without bullets. It is an air wing

:23:44. > :23:49.without enough trained pilots. It is a paper tiger. But even this did

:23:49. > :23:52.not keep them on track. The dire warnings are meant to make sure the

:23:52. > :23:56.politicians are travelling in the same direction. The trouble is,

:23:56. > :24:01.they are more divided between left and right than ever, and they are

:24:01. > :24:05.trapped in a system that demands compromise or grinds to a halt. As

:24:05. > :24:08.the market's worry that this failure suggests was ahead. Going

:24:08. > :24:12.forward, we worry that we are going to hit a crisis moment where we

:24:12. > :24:17.need to deal with this, but we have a group of politicians who have

:24:17. > :24:20.said time and time again that they do not have the will to do it.

:24:21. > :24:26.Super heroes may stop runaway trains, but the Super committee has

:24:26. > :24:29.hit the buffers of America -- and America's debt goes on rising.

:24:29. > :24:34.In football, it has been a bad night for Manchester United and

:24:34. > :24:41.Manchester City in Champions League. City went down 2-0 against Napoli,

:24:41. > :24:45.while United were held to a 2-2 draw by Benfica.

:24:45. > :24:50.The English league leaders walked out into one of European football's

:24:50. > :24:55.most intimidating arenas, Napoli's cauldron of rage. Halfway through

:24:55. > :24:59.the first half, City made their hosts feel even more at home, the

:24:59. > :25:09.head are squeezing through some slapdash defending. But Napoli's

:25:09. > :25:14.

:25:14. > :25:19.defence provided their own gracious hospitality. But City's prospects

:25:19. > :25:26.of progress are now receding faster than their manager's had climbed --

:25:26. > :25:32.hairline. For Manchester United, Phil Jones first scored in his own

:25:33. > :25:36.net. Tonight Dimitar Berbatov barely figured until he wandered on

:25:36. > :25:42.to the end of Nani's crust to make it 1-1. In the second half, Darren

:25:42. > :25:48.Ferguson profited from another cracking cross. 2-1 T United, with

:25:48. > :25:55.them and did themselves with more defensive doziness. For United, an

:25:55. > :25:58.awkward last fixture awaits. There is more on the BBC News

:25:58. > :26:01.Channel including a first look at tomorrow's front pages.