After eight years of unprecedented economic growth and equity and bond market strength, investors have started to question whether emerging markets will be able to maintain their positive momentum. Annual inflows into emerging market funds reached record levels of more than $15-billion last year.
Idan Halili, just 19 years old, has written a feminist critique that has astounded established feminist voices around the world. Her analysis takes the form of a letter sent to the Israeli army asking for exemption from compulsory service, based on a feminist rejection of militarism.
Michelle Wie, the hottest thing in women’s golf, will be the star draw at next week’s SK Telecom Open where she will bid to make her first halfway cut against men in eight appearances. The teen prodigy will be the third high profile woman golfer after Laura Davies of England and Japan’s Ai Miyazato to feature on the Asian Tour.
Nepal’s royal regime cracked down on protesters recently in an attempt to stifle further disruption after two weeks of demonstrations aimed at toppling the country’s monarch, King Gyanendra. Security forces shot dead at least two people in the south-east of the country and announced a shoot-on-sight 18-hour curfew in Kathmandu, in a clear attempt to scuttle opposition plans.
Click on image for full-size view.
Six people died on the East Rand after they were thrown from a moving train by suspected security guards targeting scab labour during a protracted strike, police said on Tuesday. Police were alerted late on Monday that ”people were being thrown off the train” between two stations at Benoni, about 20km east of Johannesburg, spokesperson Eugene Opperman said.
Adidas, the German sportswear manufacturer, is suing the tennis Grand Slams and the sport’s governing body in a dispute over their three-stripes trademark, the Wimbledon organisers said on Tuesday. The All England Lawn Tennis and Croquet Club (AELTCC) said it would vigorously defend the action, which is set to go to court in May. Papers were served against the club last week, chief executive Ian Ritchie said.
Iraqi prime minister-designate Jawad al-Maliki said on Tuesday that he expected to have his Cabinet line-up ready for approval in two weeks as hectic lobbying began for key ministerial posts. ”I believe that in the next 15 days we can have a new government and present it to Parliament,” Maliki told state television.
”We just tried to keep alive from day to day and not … be beaten too much. People just lived from one day to another and mostly lost hope.” These are the words that Joachim Joseph, a Holocaust survivor, told to the Mail & Guardian Online to describe his early introduction to a world of death, fear and survival at a Dutch concentration camp during World War II.
Iran warned on Tuesday it will sever relations with the United Nations atomic watchdog if sanctions are imposed over its nuclear drive and vowed a military attack would merely send its activities underground. Despite the tough rhetoric, diplomats in Vienna said a high-level Iranian delegation was to hold last-minute talks on Wednesday with the UN atomic agency.