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/ 7 November 2010
Get paid to pee. That’s the deal on offer in Durban, where the city is looking to buy liquid waste to encourage residents to use dry toilets.
Thousands of people staged a march on Wednesday to protest against lavish spending on the Soccer World Cup and the sacking of security staff.
To help welcome guests to the Soccer World Cup, Durban has begun teaching street vendors foreign languages.
World soccer governing body Fifa on Tuesday brushed aside lingering doubts about South Africa’s readiness for the World Cup.
Schoolchildren will ditch their uniforms for soccer jerseys on Tuesday as South Africa marks 100 days to the Soccer World Cup.
Eleven-year-old Sobahle Mkhabase lives in a township but is headed for the red carpet as the star of a new South African film.
SA tourism operators are seeing marketing gold in the Soccer World Cup, a chance to sell the country as a destination to foreign travellers.