No image available
/ 10 November 2003

The cream of Corne Krige

Springbok captain Corne Krige found himself back in the midst of the World Cup action in Sydney last night — as a guest on the legendary Australian show <i>The Cream</i>. Stirring things up a bit he said "Rugby is a unique sport where you can do that. Smash the bloke on the field but shake hands afterwards and have a beer with him."

No image available
/ 10 November 2003

The Green Army’s luck is over

The Irish, armed only with Guiness and hope, turned up in their thousands (unlike the Aussies and French, there were 15 000 unsold tickets) to see what was supposed to be the closest of the four quarter-finals yesterday. But, alas, the Irish looked much like South Africa during their defeat against the All Blacks the night before.

No image available
/ 10 November 2003

The Welsh go up in smoke

They came here with a record as bad as Puff the Magic Dragon. They leave with a reputation for breathing fire. If tries are what people come to see, Wales were the winners last night. But will that thought console them on the flight home? The final score was Englaand 28, Wales 17.

No image available
/ 10 November 2003

And the beast!

Ugly can sometimes be good. Neither Winston Churchill or Mother Theresa would have won any design contests, but both managed to get the job done a helluva lot better than most. Fiat’s Multipla falls into the same category. This car just has to be the ugliest sunovabitch built, ever.

No image available
/ 10 November 2003

And then there were four

Clearly New Zealand and France are headed for the World Cup final on November 22. It is written in the stars, for the stars, by the stars. Australia and England, whose stars are falling fast, will have to scrabble about in one of those awful third/fourth play-off games on the Thursday before the final.

No image available
/ 10 November 2003

The devil finds work

The Very Reverend Njongonkulu Ndungane, bebop-quiffed Archbishop of Cape Town, has been the only native bishop to welcome the gay and humble Gene Robinson to the ranks of primates of the Anglican Church. He has cautioned the dark-skinned heirs of the missionary tradition up and down the continent and across the globe to show Christian charity.

No image available
/ 10 November 2003

Target the poorest first

The Democratic Alliance sees broad-based economic empowerment as imperative and desirable. After decades of apartheid unemployment is at 42% and three out of five South Africans live below the poverty line. About 40% of the population have completed only primary school, while 18% have no schooling at all.

No image available
/ 10 November 2003

Big holes in Kimberley process

Serious doubts have been cast on the ability of the year-old Kimberley process to rid the global market of conflict diamonds, which have prolonged the worst of the modern conflicts in Africa. Researchers estimate that one in five diamonds traded can be classified as conflict diamonds. The global industry is worth an annual $7-billion.