Staff Reporter
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/ 27 February 2006

Hopes fade for survivors in collapsed building in Dhaka

Rescuers recovered another body from a collapsed building in the Bangladeshi capital on Monday, raising the death toll to 19, as Parliament passed a law imposing jail terms for building code violators. Firefighters and soldiers found the body of 25-year-old construction worker Humayun while searching for survivors in the debris for the third consecutive day.

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/ 27 February 2006

Kebble’s ‘missing’ money

Assets of Rand Gold & Exploration worth more than R2-billion were sold during Brett Kebble’s last year as chief executive, Business Day reported on Monday. It said the proceeds of these sales could not be traced. These details emerged partly from pre-liquidation applications brought in the Johannesburg High Court by Rand Gold & Exploration.

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/ 27 February 2006

Any room for the poor?

Sizwe Mathabula (not his real name) lives in a high-rise building in Hillbrow. He works as a nightwatchman, guarding an inner-city office block three nights a week. He supplements this income by selling vegetables on the city’s pavements. In a typical month, he clears about R800, which he uses to support his wife and their two young children.

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/ 27 February 2006

How Gary lost his glitter

British former pop star Gary Glitter, charged with committing "obscene acts with children" in Vietnam, has fallen a long way since his 1970s heyday as the leader of the glam-rock gang. Glitter (61) was the dazzling king of the glam era, characterised by performers in sequinned dress and extreme make-up.

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/ 27 February 2006

Kibaki on borrowed time

If corruption was the lubricant that in the past oiled Kenya’s politics, it is now the enfant terrible that gobbles up its progenitors. Three weeks ago, this horrible child of Kenya’s politics strolled into town, scalping no less than three of President Mwai Kibaki’s ministers and his personal assistant.

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/ 27 February 2006

Summit brings Côte d’Ivoire leaders to the table

The main players in Côte d’Ivoire politics — seeking to end the crisis in the West African nation, meet on Monday for the first time on Ivorian soil since the country was torn apart by civil war. The former French colony has been split down the middle since the conflict erupted in September 2002, with troops loyal to President Laurent Gbagbo controlling the south while the north is in rebel hands.