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/ 1 February 2008
Senegal and South Africa were eliminated from the African Nations Cup after a 1-1 draw in their last Group D match in Kumasi on Thursday. Both teams needed a win to revive slim hopes of reaching the last eight but finished behind Tunisia and Angola in the standings.
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/ 1 February 2008
Millions of Chinese faced a humanitarian crisis on Friday, as petrol and food reserves dwindled and yet more bad weather was forecast for a country paralysed by record-breaking cold and snow. More than 160 counties and cities in central China were suffering blackouts and water shortages, Xinhua news agency said.
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/ 1 February 2008
Unidentified gunmen opened fire on the Israeli embassy in the Mauritanian capital Nouakchott early on Friday, police said. The attackers exchanged fire with guards at the embassy. A nearby bar in the centre of Nouakchott was also hit before the assailants fled.
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/ 1 February 2008
When Jackie Selebi steps into the Randburg Regional Court on Friday, he faces a case cast in a matrix of evidence that appears solid enough to withstand the vacillations of Glen Agliotti, the prosecution’s fragile star informant. He also faces the ghost of Brett Kebble. Unlike most accused, Selebi knows the details of the case against him.
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/ 1 February 2008
Following hot on the heels of the competition authorities’ investigation into price fixing in the bread industry comes the announcement that dairy processors are set to appear in the dock for collusion. The Competition Tribunal announced this week that it would be holding a pre-hearing into alleged collusion by eight dairy processors next Thursday, during which evidence will be assessed and hearing dates set.
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/ 1 February 2008
South Africa’s broadcasting regulator, Icasa, is under fire from all sides after the launch of what it terms a rogue broadcaster — and with potential legal challenges mounting. When Icasa licensed five subscription broadcasters in September last year, the introduction of competition to the sector was heralded as a milestone.
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/ 1 February 2008
"Get out … of your own way!" said the transcendental meditation guru Maharishi. TM devotees believe that their daily dive into "pure consciousness" is the ultimate form of renewable energy. Alec Erwin might want to sign up for a course because at present we are in danger of consolidating the very policy choices that got us into this mess.
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/ 1 February 2008
Last week’s Eskom blackout and the“stability pact” that will reduce theutility’s power supply to South Africa’s mines by 10% have forced mining companies to take stringent cost-cutting measures, including retrenchments. The Mail & Guardian has established that the mining group with the most marginal operations, Harmony, plans to retrench 10% of its 43 000-strong workforce.
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/ 1 February 2008
It’s not the economy, stupid. An unexpected economic boom in South Africa is not the cause of electricity crisis, despite repeated government claims to this effect. In reality, the total national demand for power has grown only slightly over the past year, while Eskom’s generating capacity has shrunk dramatically.
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/ 1 February 2008
Yordanka Hristova was once called ”the bride of all Cubans” and was so popular on Fidel Castro’s island that Cuban families named their daughters after her. Forty years on, the 64-year-old Bulgarian pop diva keeps the gossips guessing about her relationship with the revolutionary icon himself, saying all that matters is her love for Cuba and her admiration for its leader with the beautiful brown eyes.