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/ 15 October 2007

Eid biryani is the best

Eid al-Fitr — the festival of fast-breaking, which falls at the end of Ramadan — arrived faster than I had expected. On Friday, the last day of the fast, work passed in a blur and then it was time to leave for my family’s home in Durban. Soon after I was being smothered in hugs by my siblings — and it was time for Eid.

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/ 15 October 2007

Price: UCT’s vice-chancellor designate

Confident insider predictions about who the University of Cape Town would appoint as its next vice-chancellor have proven to be wide of the mark. The UCT council will announce today that Max Price takes over the reins when current vice-chancellor Njabulo Ndebele’s second term comes to an end in June next year.

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/ 15 October 2007

Beating schizophrenia

Pete Bullimore will never forget the day he opened his front door to a French spy. The spy, he recalls, was disguised as a social worker. “My wife and I had applied to become foster carers, but when the social worker turned up, I was warned that she was actually a spy. It was the first of many destructive, frightening and uncontrollable voices from within that began to bombard my life,” he recalls.

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/ 15 October 2007

A minaret too far for Europe

North of Berne, in an idyllic Alpine valley, cowbells tinkle, a church steeple rises, and window boxes tumble with geraniums. It has always been like this. But down by the railway station the 21st century is rudely intruding and the villagers of Wangen are upset. ”It’s the noise, and all the cars. You should see it on a Friday night,” complains Roland Kissling, a perfume buyer for a local cosmetics company.

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/ 15 October 2007

Faith, funding and the poor

I recently had the opportunity of being part of two interesting discussions that have a bearing on the debate about whether faith-based organisations have the capacity to influence policy and, more generally, the religion-state relationship in South Africa. The feeling in the room was that victims of trafficking, who, as a certainty, would be sexually and physically abused, writes Cassiem Khan.

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/ 15 October 2007

Flick a switch and make a difference

International research has shown that households can save as much as 10% of their annual electricity bill by reducing their ”phantom” power or standby power consumption. But South Africa has no research examining this energy- sucking phenomenon and shows little interest in the international community’s moves to curb standby power waste.

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/ 15 October 2007

Student fees under fire

A special task team representing South African universities is expected to report to Education Minister Naledi Pandor early next year about the feasibility of government regulation of tuition fees. The task team was set up under the auspices of Higher Education South Africa, which represents all universities, following a request by Pandor earlier this year that the sector consider whether fees should have a ceiling or be determined within certain parameters.

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/ 15 October 2007

‘People are afraid to speak out’

President Thabo Mbeki has told the nation in the past that if anybody has evidence of police National Commissioner Jackie Selebi’s involvement with organised crime figures they should bring it to him. Safety and Security Minister Charles Nqakula said the same. People are afraid to speak out.

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/ 15 October 2007

Expect more babies in boxes at Bara

A struggling behemoth hamstrung by bureaucracy and underfunding is how doctors at Chris Hani Baragwanath describe the country’s largest healthcare facility. Last week photographs of babies in a cardboard box at Bara prompted the national and Gauteng departments of health to announce the appointment of a surgical strike management team to look at ways of improving the running of the hospital.

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/ 14 October 2007

In memory of Thomas Sankara

October 15 marks the 20th anniversary of the assassination of Thomas Sankara, the president of Burkina Faso — a stark reminder that we are still in the state Odinga Oginga called Not Yet Uhuru. We will be remembering that if Africa suffers today, it is because yesterday its best political minds, and its most fiery and committed sons and daughters, were assassinated.