Eskom’s ”power alert” messages will be broadcast on South African Broadcasting Corporation television from Thursday night, the electricity utility said in a statement. Meanwhile, the situation at Koeberg nuclear power station will ”return to normal” by August, Minister of Minerals and Energy Lindiwe Hendricks said on Thursday.
The Congress of South African Trade Unions wants the South African Broadcasting Corporation and the African National Congress to clarify whether a senior officer of the public broadcaster made political statements at an off-the-record press briefing by the ruling party.
The March local government elections once again proved that there was no viable alternative to the African National Congress and its allies, the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) said on Thursday. In an evaluation of the March election, the trade-union federation said the opposition had demonstrated that it cannot reach beyond its ethnic strongholds.
Italy’s former prime minister Silvio Berlusconi is still banking on a check of spoiled ballots from last month’s super-tight elections to return him to power, according to a copy of a letter to world leaders reproduced in the media on Thursday. ”I hope to return to government after more than a million spoiled ballots are checked,” the conservative Berlusconi wrote in the letter.
At least three tourists were killed and seven wounded on Thursday when a bomb planted by suspected Islamic rebels blew up a tourist bus in Indian Kashmir’s summer capital, police said. The attack came minutes after Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh ended a meeting in Indian Kashmir’s main city of Srinagar.
Former Enron chief executives Jeffrey Skilling and Kenneth Lay were found guilty on Thursday of fraud and conspiracy charges related to the spectacular 2001 meltdown of the energy giant. Skilling (52) was found guilty of 19 of 28 counts of fraud and conspiracy and faces a maximum penalty of 185 years in jail.
A hard-line Iranian group on Thursday announced the creation of a new "battalion" of "martyrdom seekers" — or suicide attackers — ready to carry out operations against targets. The group, called the Committee for the Glorification of Martyrs of the Global Islamic Movement, made the announcement at Tehran’s main cemetery where hundreds of supporters had gathered.
Heavily armed gunmen fought pitched battles in the streets of the lawless Somali capital on Thursday, rocking the city with a fresh surge in the deadliest violence it has seen in years. Islamic militia and fighters loyal to a United States-backed warlord alliance pounded Mogadishu with heavy fire, sending the death toll soaring.
South Africa’s producer price index (PPI) rose by 5,5% year-on-year in April from a 5,4% increase in March, Statistics South Africa said on Thursday. Commented Mike Schussler, economist at T-Sec: "It’s a bit higher than I expected and I suspect it will have a negative impact on the bond market. But I don’t think it’s the end of the world."
Ugandan troops have killed a gunman who shot dead at least 10 civilians this week in a bloody rampage at a camp for war-displaced people in northern Uganda, the military said on Thursday. Soldiers had been looking for the man, a militia member responsible for guarding the Ogwete camp for internally displaced people, since he fled the area after Monday’s killing spree.