Staff Reporter
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/ 11 March 2005

Peaceful end to Cosatu’s Zim picket

About 200 members of the Congress of South African Trade Unions (Cosatu) who picketed at the Beit Bridge post near Musina on the border with Zimbabwe dispersed peacefully on Friday afternoon. ”The situation at the border was very tense and there was a strong police presence, but it was a peaceful demonstration,” said Cosatu’s Limpopo provincial secretary.

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/ 11 March 2005

Solidarity to probe Harmony accidents

The trade union Solidarity said on Friday that it is undertaking a full investigation into accidents at Harmony Gold’s mining operations in the Free State, which it said have claimed 13 lives over the past six months. The union had what it called "incisive" talks with the principal inspector of mines for the Free State in Welkom earlier on Friday.

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/ 11 March 2005

President tightens media laws in The Gambia

The Gambia’s media is outraged by the promulgation of two new press laws it says were signed in secret by President Yahya Jammeh to muzzle freedom of expression as the country gears up for elections next year. Jammeh has approved the two laws, which were passed by Parliament in December, despite a storm of protest at home and abroad.

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/ 11 March 2005

How the tsunami hogged the headlines

The Asian tsunami attracted more media attention in the first six weeks after it struck than the world’s top 10 ”forgotten” emergencies did over a whole year, according to a report from Reuters. Other emergencies — from the devastating wars in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Sudan to HIV/Aids — have been neglected by world’s media.

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/ 11 March 2005

Casanova leaves lonely hearts in the lurch

A dinner date Romeo wooed lonely Hong Kong women over the internet, then took them for expensive meals and fled, leaving them to pay the bills, a news report said Friday. The sly charmer took them out for lavish dinners, then asked to use their mobile phones to make a business call and fled shortly before the bill was due to arrive, The South China Morning Post reported.

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/ 11 March 2005

Pyjama-clad Jay Leno mines Jackson trial

Hours before the judge in the Michael Jackson case was expected to rule on whether comedian Jay Leno can tell jokes at the singer’s expense, The Tonight Show host found a way to slip in a quip without opening his mouth. After arriving ”late” for the taping of Thursday’s show, Leno stepped out of a black limousine wearing SpongeBob SquarePants pyjamas.