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Goldstone swoops on disused mine hostel …
Cape readers will now receive a special edition of the Weekly Mail.
The family would apply to hold the funeral on Sunday or on a day next week.
You have travelled far and suffered much pursuing freedom for your country … Frederik van Slabbert yesterday
Dr Manas Buthelezi of the Evangelical Lutheran Church was last night re-elected president of the SA Council of Churches.
The conference will be hosted by the Institute for a Democratic Alternative in South Africa (Idasa).
Advocate Martin Brassey noted the seminar was also addressed by Sarmcol’s legal team.
The system started operating in 1979, the year after PW Botha became prime minister.
At an unusual Publications Appeal Board review of David Lynch’s Blue Velvet in Pretoria yesterday an uncommon situation arose:
The first major legal challenge to the new Emergency regulations is being launched today by the Weekly Mail and two other applicants.
Consul officials, ANC, Inkatha at sanctions conference
A cruel few seconds of freedom — that’s what the end of the first year of the Emergency meant to about 3 000 detainees.
The Human Rights Commission says that it served subpoenas on newspaper editors, including the editor of the Mail & Guardian, Phillip van Niekerk, because it believed this was the…
The Mail & Guardian has entered the millemium with a bang, bringing to its readers an exciting new redesign and a newspaper jam-packed with even more of Africa’s best reading…
By adopting Die Stem as part of our national anthem, we have robbed Verwoerd of his legacy.
Last week the man who buys everything met the man who’s prepared to sell anything…
Boipatong was just the latest in a series of masscares on the Reef which average tow a month and claim on average 25 lives, reports Beathur Baker.
Last night the government was due to announce its response to the ANC’s 14 conditions for the resumption of talks.
A Japanese ship containing one ton of plutonium – enough to kill South Africa’s entire population, is scheduled to leave the French port of Cherbourg.
The three conglomerates that own South Africa’s media should break up to ensure an independent and outspoken press, urges the ANC leader.