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/ 30 July 2004

Gauteng cracks down on corruption

Steps have been implemented to combat corruption at Gauteng vehicle testing stations, the community safety department said on Friday. This followed allegations that officials were fraudulently issuing roadworthy certificates at the Wynberg testing station. Officials allegedly colluded in this corruption by accepting bribes to ignore the fraud.

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/ 30 July 2004

Truth and optimism

"One senses how [Andrew] Meldrum really wanted to see Zimbabwe as a success story, a beacon of good governance and human rights in Africa; yet he was also a journalist who sought to tell the truth to the best of his ability. Truth won out over optimism." Anthony Egan reviews the deported journalist’s memoirs.

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/ 30 July 2004

In a word

"We’re living in a society where everyone with dreadlocks or an Eryka Badhu headpiece calls themselves poets," says Napo Masheane, member of the Feela Sistah collective. As strangers in foreign lands, Africans are finding visibility through poetry, writes Nadine Botha.

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/ 30 July 2004

Miaow to the movies

As <i>Catwoman</i> opens in August, this month’s movie quiz focuses on cats (and other felines) in the movies. The first five respondents to e-mail us a set of 20 correct answers, along with their names and addresses, will win a long-sleeved Catwoman T-shirt and branded cap. E-mail to <a href="mailto:[email protected]">[email protected]</a> by August 13, putting ‘movie cat quiz’ in the subject line.

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/ 30 July 2004

All the August releases

MOVIE MONTHLY: Take an armchair trip around the globe with <i>Around the World in 80 Days</i>. Or perhaps bone-chilling blood and gore is more your thing in <i>Cabin Fever</i>. Or perhaps feline femme fatale Halle Berry in <i>Catwoman</i> will get you off the couch and off to the cinema. Dave Chislett rounds up this month’s new releases.

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/ 30 July 2004

Group therapy

Successful documentaries go hand in hand with democracy, and South Africa’s contributions to this year’s Encounter’s film festival are a rare and important glimpse into the soul of our nation. Karen Whitty speaks to paricipating local and international directors.