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/ 28 August 2004

Zim 70: Two released

Two of the 70 suspected mercenaries arrested in Zimbabwe on suspicion of plotting a coup in oil-rich Equatorial Guinea were released on Friday after they were acquitted of all charges. Prosecutors claimed Harry Carlse and Lourens Horn, both South Africans, were hired to inspect a consignment of weapons intended to be used in the alleged plot. But Magistrate Mishrod Guvamombe said the state failed to prove its case against the men.
<li><a class=’standardtextsmall’ href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/pd.asp?ao=121194">Mark Thatcher: The money trail</a>

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/ 28 August 2004

Bulls gain the moral highveld

The Blue Bulls pulled off a magnificent victory to surge into a seven point lead at the top of the Currie Cup table, beating the Sharks 41-27 with an inspiring performance by Springbok scrumhalf Fourie du Preez. Du Preez scored one of his sides’ five tries and had a hand in at least two others as the Bulls made their intentions of winning a third consecutive title under coach Heyneke Meyer clear.

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/ 27 August 2004

Kenyan minister dies during interview in Germany

Kenya’s tourism and wildlife minister Emmanuel Karisa Maitha has died of a heart attack during a press interview in Germany, reports said on Friday. After Maitha collapsed during an interview with Deustche Welle in Frankfurt on Thursday, he was taken to hospital, but doctors failed to resuscitate him, wrote the East African Standard newspaper.

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/ 27 August 2004

Simon Mann guilty

A Zimbabwean court on Friday ruled that Briton Simon Mann was guilty of attempting to buy arms for an alleged coup plot in oil-rich Equatorial Guinea but absolved 66 other suspected mercenaries. Magistrate Mishrod Guvamombe said: ”The action by the accused [Mann] amounts at the most to attempting to purchase firearms. The accused is found guilty …”

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/ 27 August 2004

Investors ‘concerned’ about BEE policies

Government’s regulations concerning black economic empowerment (BEE) policies have made investment in South Africa unattractive for both foreign and local investors, Democratic Alliance leader Tony Leon said on Friday. Leon said he had recently returned from a visit to the United States, where he was surprised by the frequency and urgency with which American business leaders and politicians raised concerns about BEE in South Africa.

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/ 27 August 2004

SA, E-Guinea mull Thatcher extradition

Equatorial Guinea and South Africa are discussing the possibility of extraditing Mark Thatcher, son of the former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher, accused of bankrolling a coup plot in Malabo, an official said on Friday. A formal extradition request has not yet been lodged by the Equato-Guinean authorities, said the official.