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/ 18 February 2007
Australia have lost their place at the top of the world one-day international rankings after New Zealand batted superbly to register a thrilling five-wicket victory over their rivals on Sunday. South Africa, who beat Pakistan 3-1 in a recent home series, have become the first team to replace Australia at the top of the rankings since they were introduced in October 2002.
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/ 18 February 2007
The KwaZulu-Natal department of housing unveiled a R37-million housing project at KwaHlabisa in the north of the province on Saturday. The project was scheduled to see more than 1 000 low-cost houses being built before the end of the year, said spokesperson Bheko Madlala.
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/ 18 February 2007
The African National Congress was selling ”face time” with Cabinet ministers and government officials in an effort to raise funds, the Sunday Times reported. The scheme already had 2Â 000 paid-up members and promised businesses knowledge of ”upcoming government decisions”.
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/ 18 February 2007
Widespread desertions from Zimbabwe’s army and police are weakening President Robert Mugabe’s security forces as large strikes loom because of the country’s deepening economic collapse. With inflation now at a global record of 1Â 600 per cent, the <i>Observer</i> can reveal that soldiers and police officers who cannot feed their families are leaving their posts in large numbers.
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/ 18 February 2007
An astonishing picture of life inside Baghdad’s schools has been revealed by a group of Iraqi teachers who have travelled to the United Kingdom to gain respite from the daily bloodshed they witness. One, Suad Saleem Abdulla, described how she pulled her own children close every morning and said goodbye as if it was the last time she would ever see them.
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/ 18 February 2007
In Baquba, in the Iraqi province of Diyala, unpleasant questions get answered very quickly. There is a startling pop, and then: ‘Who fired that shot? Did you fire that shot?’ One of the United States soldiers of Bravo Company of the 1/12 Cavalry is shouting at the accompanying Iraqi army troops, hoping against hope, it appears, that a weapon has been accidentally discharged.
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/ 17 February 2007
The top hat is extinct, for better or worse. The man who wears one may treasure its sleek lines or feel emboldened by a particularly lecherous tilt of its brim, but history and passing carnivals have conspired against him. Today’s fop, stepping out in hat and tails, is in truth just a large inverted magic trick, a bipedal rabbit kicking in the footlights of modernity as he dangles by his ears from that ana-chronistic bowl.
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/ 17 February 2007
Zimbabwe President Robert Mugabe has accused Britain of refusing dialogue with its former colony, and said he expects ties to improve after Tony Blair steps down in 2007. ”The Blair government is a queer government, and Blair behaves like a headmaster, old fashioned, who dictates that things must be done his way,” said Mugabe.
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/ 17 February 2007
Two British tourists were killed after being knocked down by a speeding car at an intersection near Cape Town’s V&A Waterfront, South African Broadcasting Corporation news reported on Saturday. Officials said the driver had apparently been speeding in the 60kph zone.
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/ 17 February 2007
For some it is a sign that the conservatives are preparing to move into opposition. For others, it represents the right’s attempt to reclaim satire from the cosy clasp of the liberal elite. This weekend Rupert Murdoch’s Fox News Channel, home of all that is ”fair and balanced”, launches the Half Hour News Hour.