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View Full Version : Michaela Harte was strangled say Mauritius police



costello1977
11th January 2011, 12:52
Michaela Harte was strangled say Mauritius police


http://news.bbcimg.co.uk/media/images/50737000/jpg/_50737396_mickeyhartedaughterswedding.jpg


The daughter of Tyrone gaelic football manager Mickey Harte was strangled, police have said.
Michaela McAreavey, 27, was found dead at the Legends hotel in Mauritius where she was staying while on honeymoon.
The 27-year-old Irish woman had married John McAreavey, a member of Down's gaelic football team, on 30 December. He is not a suspect.
Police in Mauritius intend to question six people about the killing later on Tuesday.
Disarray
They said that they are examining CCTV footage from the complex.
A post-mortem examination carried out on Tuesday found that there were marks on Mrs McAreavey's neck.
Police have also said that Mr McAreavey was in the restaurant when his wife was murdered.
It is understood she had gone back to the room to get some biscuits and when she failed to return, Mr McAreavey went to look for her and found her dead body.


An official from the Irish Embassy in Pretoria in South Africa is to arrive on Tuesday to assist Mr McAreavey.
The hotel is in the centre of the fishing village of Grand Gaube, not far from Grand Bay in the north-eastern corner of the island. The couple booked in last Saturday and were due to leave on Sunday.
Superintendent Yoosoof Soopun, from the Mauritius Police Force, told the Press Association officers were confident of an arrest later on Tuesday.
He said the killer had used an electronic key card to enter the room.
"There was no forced entry into the room," he said.
"Whoever killed her definitely used an electronic card."
Mrs McAreavey taught Irish at St Patrick's Academy in Dungannon, County Tyrone, and was a former contestant in the Rose of Tralee (http://roseoftralee.ie/catalog/) pageant.
She was very close to her father and was at his side on the three occasions his team won the all-Ireland championship at Croke Park, Dublin, in 2003, 2005 and 2008.
He left the couple at Dublin Airport on their journey to Mauritius following their wedding.
Gaelic football is one of the most popular sports in Ireland with players and managers often afforded celebrity status.
'One in a million' Fr Gerard McAleer, who managed the Tyrone team along with Mickey Harte, has been comforting the family.

He attended her wedding last month and said he had known her "all her life".
Fr McAleer said the tragedy was "compounded by the distance involved and the frustration of nobody being there with John".
He said members of the Harte and McAreavey families were travelling to Mauritius on Tuesday.
Fr McAleer said he had "exhausted" his vocabulary trying to articulate his feelings about Michaela.
"Michaela was just one in a million, she was a wonderful role model," he added.
"Not only did she want to teach Irish, she wanted to teach Religious Education.

"We often talked about the struggle between good and evil in the world and the importance of faith and coping with tragedy and grief and giving some kind of shape to our lives.
"To think this is the fate that awaited Michaela is beyond us."
The priest said he had talked to Mickey Harte after hearing of Michaela's death on Monday.
"I met Mickey yesterday immediately after I heard the news and he said 'She packed so much into her young life and we have so much to be thankful for' - how gracious in such a moment of intense grief."
NI Deputy First Minister Martin McGuinness said: "Michaela was always close to her father's side during many great days for Tyrone football.
"Her enthusiasm for her native county, for which she was an excellent ambassador, knew no bounds."
First Minister Peter Robinson and the SDLP leader Margaret Ritchie have also sent their condolences to the Harte family.



Mauritius



An island in the Indian Ocean, it was a British colony from 1810. It gained independence in 1968.
A relative economic success story, its tourism industry is particularly strong. It is a common honeymoon destination for couples from the UK.
The Foreign Office says that petty crime is common on the island though most crime is non-violent.


I have to say that I can't begin to think what would make a make lift his hands to a woman, so I can't fathom strangling one.

I would skin the filth that did this to such a lovely young lady.

Words fail me in my attempts to describe the anger and sorrow that I feel, all I can say is that my heart goes out to the family.

costello1977
11th January 2011, 12:57
I should have added that this is seen as a major event here in Ireland and it could have political implications given that the murder was carried out on foreign soil!

The Grey Blur
11th January 2011, 13:08
you're an imbecile. i feel sorry for the family and the poor girl but this does not belong on the forum.

costello1977
11th January 2011, 13:12
you're an imbecile. i feel sorry for the family and the poor girl but this does not belong on the forum.

What? Why not?

Sure, maybe not the politics forum, but why not discuss the fact that a young woman was strangled on the Maritius, a "safe" holiday resort, one which is exclusive and rich yet has a ghetto and a dangerous side?

And by the way, you should be ashamed of yourself using terminology to describe me as mentally retarded?


Psychology . a person of the second order in a former classification of mental retardation, above the level of idiocy, having a mental age of seven or eight years and an intelligence quotient (http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/quotient) of 25 to 50.

la lucha sigue
12th January 2011, 19:00
While of course this is a personal tragedy for a Western family, its nothing compared to the poverty imposed on the working class of Mauritius. I find it much more repulsive that someone would celebrate their marriage in such luxury on an island where people live in slums than I find the actual killing of this woman. I also find it more repulsive that those arrested were evidently tortured by the State authorities. But maybe that's just me.

ComradeOm
12th January 2011, 19:10
I should have added that this is seen as a major event here in Ireland and it could have political implications given that the murder was carried out on foreign soil!It has zero political implications


I find it much more repulsive that someone would celebrate their marriage in such luxury on an island where people live in slums than I find the actual killing of this womanI'm impressed that you've gone to the trouble of ranking those things that you find 'repulsive'. Where does littering come on this list? Or does it depend the corporation that produced the wrapper?

costello1977
12th January 2011, 20:40
While of course this is a personal tragedy for a Western family, its nothing compared to the poverty imposed on the working class of Mauritius. I find it much more repulsive that someone would celebrate their marriage in such luxury on an island where people live in slums than I find the actual killing of this woman. I also find it more repulsive that those arrested were evidently tortured by the State authorities. But maybe that's just me.

Aye, wee Michaela Harte has been robbing the working class for hundreds of years, and considering she taught in a wee Irish school YOU have never heard of and that she and her husband, and their families have had to save for years to pay for a wee bit of luxury, yeah she deserved stiffed.

I can't believe that you would defend house breakers and put the boot into an innocent woman, murdered for a couple of quid.


It has zero political implications

Considering the amount of coverage it has received, as it was covered on UK news as well, the pressure is now on the Government in the south to bring the body back swiftly.

You'll also note that I posted that before 3 people were charged on this issue, which has very much so resolved the matter for the Irish government. You might care to remember the Irish woman pushed off a balcony in Spain a good few years ago. It was first declared suicide until the body was brought home and the state carried out its autopsy.

Moreover, if half the eegits on here had any sense this would be a great time to bring pressure on Maritius to change things so that workers wouldn't feel the need to augment their wages through theft, but sure, your all happy to see the petty bourgeoisie, who are probably going to be working class again soon anyway, getting killed, but when the lumpen scum gets retribution for hooding and theiving you bleeding hearts make you cry your eyes out.

RedHal
12th January 2011, 20:57
a workers revolution should happen because a pretty white women gets killed by lumpens in a poverty stricken country? And I thought only the beourgious media were the ones who put white women on a higher pedestal, could you get out of bed when princess diana died?

costello1977
12th January 2011, 21:01
a workers revolution should happen because a pretty white women gets killed by lumpens in a poverty stricken country? And I thought only the beourgious media were the ones who put white women on a higher pedestal, could you get out of bed when princess diana died?

You can hardly compare an Irish teacher who had to get her and her husbands family to pay for their wedding to a woman kept by the state.

Who put her on a pedestal? Im saying use the opportunity to highlight the problems that would force someone to take a life so rashly, your reading all sorts of meanings into what I write.

In the end of the day, the wee girl shouldn't have been killed. No need at all. I find it funny how some on here don't care for this woman and her family, but were the first ones crying when two armed imperialist soldiers were stiffed in Ireland two years ago.

Hypocrits!