Staff Reporter
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/ 14 July 2004

Aids orphans place strain on households

A new report, compiled by the United States and the United nations, warns that more than one in five children in Botswana, Lesotho, Swaziland and Zimbabwe will be orphaned by Aids. The report further found that 20% of Southern African households with children are taking care of one or more Aids orphans.

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/ 14 July 2004

Activists denounce govt Aids drug decision

South African activists on Wednesday decried the government’s decision against recommending the use of a key anti-Aids drug that can prevent the virus from being passed by infected mothers to their children. The South African government’s drug council has said it won’t recommend that nevirapine be used by itself.

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/ 14 July 2004

Paramedics: We’re not like tow-truck drivers

”I hope you don’t get car sick in the back there,” says paramedic Stewart Masson squeezing the speeding response car between a slow moving truck and a causeway bridge, his speedo nudging the 160kph mark, the siren sending peak hour motorists scattering like ants. The scanty information provided to the emergency operator had only said that a taxi and a Golf had crashed.

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/ 14 July 2004

Philippines pulls troops out of Iraq

Supporters of a Filipino hostage in Iraq cheered Manila’s life-saving decision to withdraw troops from the war-torn nation, but the move was criticised by Washington and its allies, who said the United States-led coalition will suffer. Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said he was ”extremely disappointed”.

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/ 14 July 2004

Two arrests after severe nightclub beatings

Two men were arrested in Pretoria on Tuesday following the violent beating of two teenagers at a nightclub in Hatfield in Pretoria over the weekend, police said. Eight more people are expected to be arrested shortly in connection with the assault of the 16-year-old and 19-year-old boys outside the Good4Fellas nightclub.

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/ 14 July 2004

De Beers fined R61m in price-fixing case

De Beers pleaded guilty on Tuesday to charges in a 10-year-old price-fixing case under an agreement that will clear the way for the diamond giant to resume selling diamonds directly in the lucrative United States market. The South African company agreed to pay a R61-million fine after pleading guilty to conspiring to fix prices.

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/ 14 July 2004

Ill-fated internet bank pulls out of France

Egg, the internet bank majority owned by Prudential, is pulling out of France to try to entice buyers for the remainder of the business, which has been up for sale since January. Shutting down the French operation will cost Egg £113-million, taking the total amount of money invested in the ill-fated French venture to £280-million.