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/ 7 September 2007

Africa’s wasted energy

A 12-year study by the World Bank using new technology has found that African countries flare enough gas each year — 40-billion cubic metres (BCM) — to power half the continent’s electricity needs if put to productive use. Just one country, Nigeria, flares 23 BCM annually.

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/ 7 September 2007

After the inferno

The Greek poet George Seferis wrote: ”Wherever I go Greece wounds me.” But nothing would wound him more than the sight of his beloved country today after fires that have erupted across its length and breadth and consumed thousands of hectares of forest and farmland, devastated four million olive trees and gutted about 6 000 homes.

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/ 7 September 2007

Report on water half-baked

The Water Research Commission has published a controversial report showing that one of Tshwane’s main water sources is heavily polluted with toxic chemicals, but it has apparently been ”doctored” on the orders of a Tshwane metro official. The commission is a scientific body that reports to the Department of Water Affairs and Forestry.

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/ 7 September 2007

What Dali Mpofu didn’t say …

When South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) boss Dali Mpofu led the public broadcaster to quit the South African National Editors’ Forum last week in protest against the ”profit-driven” media’s treatment of Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang, he neglected to mention a commercial interest that might have clouded his own judgement.

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/ 7 September 2007

SABC: Simply incredible

A confidential market research survey has found that South Africans think the South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) treats government officials with kid gloves and tends ”to cover up” government’s wrongdoings. The Mail & Guardian has a copy of a report, titled Qualitative Overview of Current Affairs Programmes, compiled by research firm Plus 94 in March 2007.

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/ 7 September 2007

Progress in Wisser nuke trial

The surprise resolution of the case of Gerhard Wisser — the South African resident implicated in a secret ring of nuclear technology smugglers — has paved the way for further international trials of people involved in the so-called ”Khan network”. The trial of Wisser and his co-accused, Dieter Geiges, was expected to last up to three years.

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/ 7 September 2007

The road from Basra

It seems so very long ago. On April 6 2003, the day the city of Basra was finally occupied by British troops, there was a febrile, uncertain sense of excitement. On Monday, the British soldiers followed the same route, as they retreated from Basra Palace in the city centre to relocate to the air base outside the city.