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/ 3 December 2007
Two former leading lights of Zimbabwe’s struggle era can testify to how tough life can be for those who try to chart their own course outside the liberation movement. In 1988 Edgar Tekere was sacked as secretary general of Zanu-PF and formed the Zimbabwe Unity Movement, pledging to stop what he saw as Zimbabwe’s slide into ”one-party tyranny”.
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/ 3 December 2007
Enigmatic as it may appear, there are clear reasons for the popularity of ANC deputy president Jacob Zuma. Any lingering doubts were cleared up last weekend, when the majority of ANC national conference delegates nominated him for president. Even the ANC’s Women’s League has lined up in support of Zuma, who has long received the support of the South African Communist Party.
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/ 3 December 2007
Cosatu has threatened to mobilise its members if the NPA charges Jacob Zuma before the ANC conference. The Mail & Guardian‘sMatuma Letsoalo spoke to Cosatu deputy general secretary Bheki Ntshalintshali.
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/ 3 December 2007
Venezuelans have rejected President Hugo Chávez’s bid to win new powers and run for re-election for decades to come in an unprecedented defeat that could slow his socialist revolution in the Opec nation. In a fiercely contested referendum on Sunday, voters said ”No” to reforms that would have scrapped term limits on Chávez’s rule.
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/ 3 December 2007
The bid by Koni Media to buy Avusa, formerly Johncom, has highlighted a long-time BEE fascination with newspapers. From a business point of view, there are other lucrative and less troublesome areas for investment and BEE investors need cash flow to pay back the money they have raised, writes Reg Rumney.
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/ 3 December 2007
She can sell books — but can she sell a politician? Barack Obama confirmed recently that Oprah Winfrey will join him in his campaign in three key states next month for the Democratic Party’s nomination for the United States presidential election. The Obama team anticipates a huge demand for tickets for one of the US’s most popular television celebrities.
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/ 3 December 2007
When a soldier moves on from our realm to the next, the platoons go silent. A sense of disbelief hovers, but we dare not lose focus on the mission. Prayers and faith are paramount in the arsenal. A hip-hop soldier blessed with intellect, armed with a razor sharp tongue and a microphone, Mr Fat carved his imprint in the hearts of many.
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/ 3 December 2007
As the tiny ball of burning crimson drops behind the sand dunes it leaves a dark, almost silent landscape worthy of its name: Rub’ al-Khali, the Empty Quarter. No sooner has the sun gone down than a long necklace of golden lights flickers on in the valley below and the improbable sound of an Islamic preacher can be heard calling the faithful to prayer.
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/ 3 December 2007
It has taken the Movement for Democratic Change eight years to go from a being potent symbol of change to an organisation torn apart by divisive, childish rivalries and personality cults. And as the situation deteriorates, the party’s fractious and self-important leadership may irrevocably turn the once vibrant party into an empty shell, its once inspiring name and slogans into bywords for indecision and ineptitude.
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/ 3 December 2007
Australians do not know whether they have just committed a very bold act or a very small one. By throwing out their conservative prime minister, John Howard, in Saturday’s election they may have dramatically tipped their nation away from the insularity, fear and materialism that he had encouraged.