One of the last shipments to a United States research base in Antarctica before the onset of winter darkness was a year’s supply of condoms, a New Zealand newspaper reported on Monday.
Zimbabwe’s Movement for Democratic Change on Saturday insisted that its leader had sent a letter to President Thabo Mbeki asking him to step down as Zimbabwe mediator.
World crude prices are expected to reach per barrel by the end of summer, Iran’s representative to the Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) was quoted as saying on Sunday.
Cape Judge President John Hlophe allegedly told two Constitutional Court judges to rule in favour of African National Congress president Jacob Zuma if they wished to secure their futures, a newspaper said on Sunday.
As the classic form of the elegy shows, memory can be especially potent when allowed to coalesce around the loss of a loved one.
Artillery battles between allied Somali-Ethiopian troops and Islamist insurgents killed at least 12 people on Sunday around Mogadishu’s sprawling Bakara Market.
Three British divers who were among a group swept away during a dive off Indonesia have been found safe after they managed to swim to a remote beach on a neighbouring island.
Correctional Services Minister Ngconde Balfour questioned escapee Annanias Mathe at the Pretoria prison on Saturday to learn more about the circumstances of Mathe’s latest attempt to escape.
Hillary Clinton on Saturday suspended her bid to become America’s first woman president and vowed to help Barack Obama in his fight to win the White House for the Democratic party.
The United Nations has systematically exaggerated the scale of the Aids pandemic and the risk of the HIV virus affecting heterosexuals, says Professor James Chin, a former senior Aids official with the World Health Organisation.