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/ 3 March 2006

Powers of darkness at play

Security at Cape Town’s Koeberg nuclear power station is in need of a complete rethink, critics have argued following the government’s announcement that one of the nuclear facility’s generators had been sabotaged. ”Three years ago Greenpeace managed to get people into Koeberg undetected,” Institute of Security Studies military analyst Henry Boshoff said.

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/ 3 March 2006

Now for the horse trading

No clear winner has emerged in Cape Town’s municipal poll, opening up the prospect of negotiations for a unity government, with smaller parties such as the Independent Democrats and the African Christian Democratic Party in the pound seats. At 1pm on Thursday, the count of 40% of the overall vote showed the Democratic Alliance in the lead at 51% and the African National Congress with 24,6%.

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/ 3 March 2006

Zuma trial back on track

The rape trial of former deputy president Jacob Zuma will finally go ahead on Monday after his lawyers indicated that they would not oppose the appointment of Judge Willem van der Merwe to hear the case. Transvaal division Judge President Bernard Ngoepe announced that Judge van der Merwe, a white Afrikaner best known for sentencing former apartheid hitman Eugene de Kock to life imprisonment in 1996, would preside over the case.

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/ 3 March 2006

Big-ticket change

The next five years will be make-or-break for local government. National ministries are being re-examined, the future of provinces hang in the balance, and the structure of municipalities are to be revamped as President Thabo Mbeki seeks a stronger hand over the huge delivery backlogs threatening his legacy.

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/ 3 March 2006

Inkatha on the skids

The Inkatha Freedom Party’s decline was set to continue in KwaZulu-Natal as the African National Congress had gained considerable ground in IFP strongholds by the end of Thursday. At the time of going to press the ANC had 43% of the vote and the IFP was at 45%.

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/ 3 March 2006

Forecast shows Africa to face river crisis

Africa’s rivers face dramatic disruption that will leave a quarter of the continent severely short of water by the end of the century, according to a global warming study published on Friday. In the first detailed assessment of climate change on the continent’s waterways researchers found that watercourses on the continent are highly sensitive to shifts in rainfall patterns.

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/ 3 March 2006

Abbas claims al-Qaeda is operating in Gaza

The Palestinian leader, Mahmoud Abbas, said on Thursday that he believes al-Qaeda has infiltrated the occupied territories and could further destabilise the region. ”We have indications about a presence of al-Qaeda in Gaza and the West Bank. This is intelligence information. We have not yet reached the point of arrests,” he said.

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/ 3 March 2006

Fore play in space leaves scientists unamused

A publicity stunt in which a golf ball will be whacked into orbit from the International Space Station has met a chilly reception from scientists, who say the scheme is risky and adds to the growing problem of space junk. Russian cosmonaut Pavel Vinogradov is to take on the role of a celestial Tiger Woods under a deal between a Canadian golf club manufacturer and the cash-strapped Russian Space Agency.

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/ 3 March 2006

Battle for the world’s largest whisky market — India

Sipping a tumbler of Johnnie Walker whisky as he chats with his friends in a hotel bar in Mumbai, Kunal Doshi, a smartly-dressed young solicitor, appears an unlikely warrior. But in the increasingly bitter "whisky war" being fought between the Indian industry and traditional Scottish producers, Doshi (21) has become an unknowing frontline soldier in a foreign assault on the world’s largest whisky market.