With black economic empowerment (BEE) codes of good practice and industry charters set to impact on businesses in South Africa, auditing and advisory firm KPMG is to conduct annual BEE surveys, it announced in a statement on Friday. The surveys will be conducted as at December 31 each year, starting with 2005 and the results of the first survey are scheduled to be released in June.
Manchester United have done a record-breaking shirt sponsorship deal with American insurance giant AIG but it is Premiership leaders Chelsea who are in the market for some protective cover this weekend. Jose Mourinho’s side are in need of the nerve-calming tonic that a victory over West Ham in Sunday’s London derby would provide.
Life assurer Old Mutual was on Thursday ordered to pay a yet-to-be-determined amount of compensation to a black employee labelled a ”kaffir” by a colleague. ”At the heart of this matter lies a view, shared by far too many people, that the word ‘kaffir’ is not as hurtful as some others [Africans in particular] would have it,” Labour Court Judge Elna Revelas said in a ruling handed down in Cape Town.
The shooting dead of British cameraman James Miller by an Israeli soldier in Gaza was murder, an inquest jury found on Thursday. The jury also said Israeli authorities had ”not been forthcoming” about how and why Miller (34) was killed by a single shot fired by the soldier.
Life expectancy for women in Zimbabwe has plummeted to just 34 years, by far the lowest in the world according to data released on Friday by the World Health Organisation. Women in the Southern African nation and in nearby Swaziland are the only ones in the world who are not expected to live into their forties.
The French President Jacques Chirac is about to unveil what he hopes will be his greatest legacy to the nation — a â,¬260m riverside monument to himself as the ”great defender” of African and Asian indigenous culture. In the shadow of the Eiffel Tower on Paris’s left bank, workmen are putting the finishing touches to Chirac’s decade-long pet project, the Musée du Quai Branly.
United States President George Bush authorised a senior aide to the Vice-President, Dick Cheney, to leak classified intelligence on Iraq to the New York Times reporter Judith Miller, according to court documents made public on Thursday. Lewis ”Scooter” Libby, Cheney’s former chief of staff, told a grand jury that the authorisation from Bush was ”unique in his experience”.
A former Senate aide who wrote a sexually explicit blog about her relations with officials on Capitol Hill is facing a lawsuit for invasion of privacy. Jessica Cutler, whose short-lived blog astonished Washington in 2004, is being sued by Robert Steinbuch, a former legal counsel to the Ohio Republican senator Mike DeWine.
The holy city of Najaf was rocked by a car bomb on Thursday that killed at least 10 people and wounded 40, threatening to increase tensions between Iraq’s Shia and Sunni Arabs. The explosion took place on a crowded street near the shrine of the imam Ali — one of Shia Islam’s most revered sites.
British defence and aerospace giant BAE Systems said on Friday it was holding negotiations on the sale of its 20% stake in aircraft maker Airbus to Franco-German counterpart EADS. "Discussions are at an early stage and a further announcement will be made if and when appropriate," said BAE.