A post template

No image available
/ 22 November 2007

Bangladesh faces second wave of death

The Bangladesh government pledged on Thursday to feed more than two million people left destitute by Cyclone Sidr amid warnings the country faces acute food shortages after the storm ravaged crops. The pledge comes as officials and relief agencies struggle to get desperately needed rice, drinking water and tents to remote villages.

No image available
/ 22 November 2007

Johnson urges Lions to learn lessons from SA

Martin Johnson has urged the British and Irish Lions to be creative with their selection policy when it comes to picking a squad for the 2009 tour of South Africa. An enduring fascination is that players who have not shone or even played at all for England, Scotland, Ireland and Wales can become stars when they put on the red shirt of the Lions.

No image available
/ 22 November 2007

Fighting in DRC kills 20 rebel soldiers

Fighting flared in the Democratic Republic of Congo’s powder keg east on Wednesday, as the army battled insurgent troops after killing 20 rebel soldiers who staged a pre-dawn attack. Men loyal to cashiered general Laurent Nkunda launched a raid on an army position near Rutshuru, the headquarters of an eponymous district in the troubled Nord-Kivu province.

No image available
/ 22 November 2007

NZ father convicted for smacking son

A New Zealand father has been convicted of assault for smacking his eight-year-old son on the bottom in what is believed to be the first case under a controversial new law. "One time, maybe you could have got away with this, but you can’t do that now," Judge Anthony Walsh told the 33-year-old man on Wednesday.

No image available
/ 22 November 2007

Bar brawl

One way of looking at the alarming chasm that has opened up between South Africa’s black and white advocates is that Western Cape Judge President John Hlophe is entirely to blame. If he had stepped down quietly over the payments he received from Oasis Asset Management, the argument goes, members of the Bar in Johannesburg and Cape Town would not be at one another’s throats.