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/ 13 April 2006

Heavy fighting breaks out in Chad’s capital

Chadian attack helicopters fired rockets at rebel positions around the capital on Thursday, and tank fire and mortar rounds echoed through the city as government troops attempted to hold off a rebel attack. French fighter jets based in N’djamena could also be heard, but it was unclear if they were overhead or just revving their engines.

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/ 13 April 2006

Fergie continues to confound his detractors

Those with a memory longer than a goldfish will remember when the average Anyone-But-United football fan disliked Sir Alex Ferguson with a passion. They will recall a general disgust with the actions of the groany old Scotsman, who dispensed all too readily with the services of his Irish wolfhound, Roy Keane, last year.

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/ 13 April 2006

JSE turns soft ahead of long weekend

After opening firmer on Thursday morning, the JSE was in negative territory by midday. Traders said there was some profit-taking, but volumes were on the thin side as many players have already left for the long weekend. There was little fresh corporate news, so players will turn to global markets, the rand and commodity prices for direction.

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/ 13 April 2006

Francis still holds the whip hand

After Dick Francis took a tumble in the Grand National in 1956 he stopped racing and became a writer. Now, after a six-year break, he’s writing again. He spoke to Stuart Jeffries. Fifty years ago, Dick Francis was a few yards from winning the Grand National on the Queen Mother’s horse, Devon Loch, when something unexpected happened.

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/ 13 April 2006

Misery thrives in Uganda’s camps

As the sun dips behind the evening clouds, staining the equatorial sky a brilliant orange, seven-year-old Josephine Atim pounds away at rocks with an aging and worn hammer. ”I am breaking these stones to make some money,” she whispers shyly, pausing briefly as dozens of other youngsters continue to smash stones into pebbles to earn a meagre wage.

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/ 13 April 2006

Zim land invaders target SA farmers

A fresh wave of farm takeovers hit the southeastern Lowveld in Zimbabwe this week with Zanu-PF supporters and land officers seizing five plots with a ready-to-harvest sugarcane crop. The farm owners, most of them South Africans, have since appealed to the South African embassy in Harare to intervene, reports the <i>Zimbabwe Independent</i>.

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/ 13 April 2006

Sudan denies involvement in Chad unrest

Sudan denied on Thursday offering any help to Chadian rebels, who were closing in on the capital N’Djamena in an attempt to topple the government of President Idriss Deby. "We do not support any Chadian party against another and we have nothing to do with what is going on in Chad," an army official told Agence France-Presse