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/ 22 October 2007

A new axis

India and South Africa have become close allies in the past decade — but it was not always so. Mahatma Gandhi’s brushes with South African racism are well known, and independent India was an early and vocal critic of apartheid. “Our links with South Africa may stretch back several centuries,” writes the Indian high commissioner to South Africa, Rajiv Bhatia.

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/ 22 October 2007

UK backs plan to split Taliban from within

The British government has thrown its backing behind an ambitious Afghan strategy to split the Taliban by securing the defection of senior members of the militant group and large numbers of their followers. The strategy, spearheaded by the Afghan President, Hamid Karzai, reflects a significant shift in British policy, and is showing initial signs of success.

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/ 22 October 2007

Carrying on the conversation

New Fort Hare vice-chancellor Mvuyo Tom is under no illusions about the challenges he faces at the country’s oldest historically black university. And he knows he will have to confront at least one of them as soon as he takes over in January. ”Like other black institutions, Fort Hare has been dealing with its disadvantaged history,” he tells the Mail & Guardian.

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/ 22 October 2007

Zimbabwe balks at Wade’s mediation bid

As new opposition accusations of violence emerged this week to threaten Thabo Mbeki’s mediation efforts in Zimbabwe, neither the ruling party nor the political opposition appeared keen on Senegalese President Abdoulaye Wade’s latest bid for involvement in the talks. Wade said earlier this month that he plans to visit Zimbabwe within weeks to “talk with him [President Robert Mugabe] to see what Africa can do”.

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/ 22 October 2007

Pattern of Russia’s power games

In typical he-man style, Russia’s President, Vladimir Putin, ignored an alleged assassination plot and went ahead with a visit to Tehran recently. Iran says the plot story was propaganda fabricated by its enemies, which may well be true. Historically speaking, Russians need no outside help doing away with their leaders. They manage perfectly well by themselves.

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/ 22 October 2007

The big payback?

In 1976 Sindiswa Nunu, then a pupil at Gugulethu’s Isaac Mkhize Secondary, was shot in both legs by the police during the wave of student uprisings that swept the country. She could not walk for three months. Eight years later, while pursuing her diploma in teaching, she was teargassed and detained when Nyanga Bush, a squatter camp near Crossroads in Cape Town.

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/ 22 October 2007

Never had it so good?

President Hu Jintao on Tuesday spoke like Harold Macmillan, the British prime minister of the 1950s, who famously told his people that they had never had it so good. Under Hu’s leadership in the past five years, he said, ”China’s overall strength grew considerably and people enjoyed more tangible benefits. China’s international standing and influence rose notably.”

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/ 22 October 2007

Seeking closer ties

The new geography of trade is the basis for the cooperation between India, Brazil and South Africa, says the Brazilian ambassador, Lucio Pires de Amorim. ”The similarities between the three countries make it mutually beneficial for them to work with one another on key areas that include trade and development. They are three countries with large populations.”