Burundi may not be the go-to capital of East Africa, but it is cheap and cheerful, and tourists are starting to cotton on.
Anglo American Platinum has announced that it will cut 6 000 jobs at its SA operations, in a move that risks sparking a resurgence of labour unrest.
Since the 2011 uprising, Egypt’s coastal resorts have begun courting the conservative Muslim tourist.
The Freud Museum in London has launched an appeal on the 157th anniversary of his birth for funds to reupholster the famous couch.
Granta has released its 2013 list of the 20 most promising young British novelists under 40 and for the first time there is a majority of women.
The question is not about who approved the Gupta plane’s landing, but how much influence the family has. Sarah Evans talks us through the latest on the saga.
Expelled ANCYL leader Julius Malema has said that he has no relationship with the buyer of his half-built mansion that was sold for R5.9-million.
The African Progress Panel has revealed its assessment of the challenges that still face many countries in developing their oil and mineral wealth.
Efforts to move the Rand club into 2013 have been made because, like most clubs around the world we are struggling to survive, writes André Hattingh.
So the Gupta family say they organised their landing at a military air base "by the book". Which book? The cheque book?