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/ 25 August 2004

Pentagon blamed over jail ‘sadism’

An official report on the Abu Ghraib abuse scandal on Tuesday blamed a failure of leadership at the Pentagon for negligence over prison conditions and confusion over interrogation rules which led to Animal House sadism in the Iraqi jail. The report did not pin direct responsibility on the United States defence secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, by name, nor did it find any top officials legally culpable.

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/ 25 August 2004

Blowin’ the gaff: Dylan to tell all

”’Times they are a-changin”’: The once famously private 60s legend Bob Dylan, whose music moved a generation, is poised to tell all in a memoir to be published this autumn. Dylan, who at the age of 63 is planning to go on tour with Willie Nelson this summer, is set to focus on significant and influential periods of his life in the first of three books called simply Chronicles: Volume One, according to his publisher.

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/ 25 August 2004

Russia on alert after double jet crash

The wreckage of a Russian airliner, which went missing on Tuesday night with 46 people on board, has been found near Russia’s southern city of Rostov-on-Don, emergency officials said on Wednesday, hours after another airliner, which crashed at the same time, was found south of Moscow with all 44 aboard dead.

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/ 25 August 2004

People, parks and partnerships

For many years, during apartheid, the Ndumo Game Reserve in KwaZulu-Natal was an area the local Mathenjwa community avoided, a place that held the animals they were not privileged enough to enjoy. But, when the Ndumo Wilderness Camp was erected in 1995, the community gained a stake in the wildlife that previously had held no interest for them.

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/ 25 August 2004

Weighing the human footprint

American conservationist Mike Fay is a man on a mission: to save Africa’s remaining wild places from further human depredation. To do this, he and co-pilot Peter Ragg will criss-cross the African continent to measure how heavily the human “footprint” has been imprinted in 93 major eco-regions. Maureen Brady meets these human eagles on World Environment Day.

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/ 25 August 2004

All creatures great and small

The next time you wake up to find fresh molehills dotted around your garden, you’ll probably see red, but think twice before you scream blue murder. That pesky mole may well be one of several endemic South African species, now critically endangered. But the Red Data Project seeks to change all that.

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/ 25 August 2004

Movies, madness, meat and muti

"Feel like sending United States troops some goodies to help them in their fight against Everyone Else? Yes, I’m being ironic, but it’s still interesting to see the facilities set up to help the US troops online. (Whereas back in South Africa, 89% of the South African National Defence Force isn’t going to be around soon, and our government just shrugs)." Ian Fraser finds some interesting stuff online.

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/ 25 August 2004

Six sides advance in Champions League

Last season’s runners-up, Monaco, as well as Inter Milan, Liverpool and Deportivo reached the group stage of the Champions League on Tuesday. Monaco hammered Slovenian side Hit Gorica 6-0, after winning the first leg 3-0. Inter Milan put on an impressive display to defeat Basel 4-1 and advance.