<img src="http://www.mg.co.za/ContentImages/262374/vote-box_blue.gif" align=left>Official opposition Democratic Alliance leader, Tony Leon, held out the olive branch to Independent Democrats (ID) leader Patricia de Lille. The DA leader said party was willing, on a case-by-case basis, to enter into opposition coalitions or to participate in minority governments in municipal councils.
The Democratic Alliance was leading the race in the closely contested Cape Town metro council with just over 95% of the vote captured and audited by 10.30pm on Thursday. A final result would not be available before Friday morning, provincial electoral officer Courtney Sampson told reporters.
How do you turn a paper clip into a house? Not a tiny wire house suitable for an ant, but a real one made of bricks? Tricky, but Kyle MacDonald is halfway there. MacDonald, a 26-year-old Canadian, has harnessed the power of the Internet to his advantage. MacDonald’s idea was to take his favourite childhood game and make it into a business.
Google lost yet more of its shine this week after a senior executive admitted growth at the company was slowing. Shares in Google fell 13% in early trading on Wall Street after chief financial officer George Reyes told an investor conference in New York that ”growth will slow”, although he added: ”Will it be precipitous? I doubt it.”
The Democratic Alliance failed to regain most of the hinterland municipalities in the Western Cape it lost to the African National Congress through floor-crossing, despite its aggressive ”Take back your city” campaign. Instead, Patricia de Lille’s Independent Democrats emerged as potential queenmakers in several finely balanced rural municipalities.
Vodafone wiped £28-billion off the value of its business recently as it warned that tough competition in its core European markets, regulatory price cuts and the effect of new technology, such as free calls on the Internet, will hurt profits. The news, the company’s third warning about tough trading in four months, sent its shares into reverse, increasing pressure on embattled chief executive Arun Sarin.
The African National Congress appeared to have substantially increased its majority in the local government poll, while the Democratic Alliance, hit by voting for other opposition parties, had not done as well as as it hoped. These appear to be the major trends of Wednesday’s voting for South Africa’s 284 municipalities.
The World Trade Organisation’s (WTO) Hong Kong Ministerial Conference changed practically nothing. The result was meagre at best and the tough decisions on market access have been postponed. Why is the Doha round sleepwalking closer to collapse?
During World War II, the future South African prime minister John Vorster was interned as a Nazi sympathiser. Three decades later, he was being feted in Jerusalem. In the second part of a remarkable special report, Chris McGreal investigates the clandestine alliance between Israel and the apartheid regime, cemented with the ultimate gift of friendship — A-bomb technology.
Israelis have always been horrified at the idea of parallels between their country, a democracy risen from the ashes of genocide, and the racist system that ruled the old South Africa. Yet even within Israel itself, accusations persist that the web of controls affecting every aspect of Palestinian life bears a disturbing resemblance to apartheid. The Guardian Middle East correspondent Chris McGreal reports.