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/ 30 July 2007

Sudan looks south for peace

Said Alkhateeb, manager of the Strategic Studies Centre in Khartoum and a former general secretary of foreign relations for the ruling Sudanese National Congress party, travelled to Pretoria recently. He spoke to the Mail & Guardian about South Africa as a possible host and mediator in new talks between the Sudanese government and those Darfur rebel groups that refused to sign the Darfur Peace Agreement.

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/ 29 July 2007

Asleep at the Bench?

You wouldn’t know it if you visited Barry Aaron’s Sandton law offices, but South African courts have been setting some fine precedents on how press freedom functions within the carefully poised architecture of the Bill of Rights. Nevertheless, Aaron’s clients pay to keep him in the tawdry pastiche of Nelson Mandela Square, writes Nic Dawes.

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/ 29 July 2007

Unisa process is ‘systematic, transparent and participative’

The Mail & Guardian‘s latest ”exposé” of ostensibly malevolent higher education management (”Education under the axe”, July 13) — this time aimed at Unisa’s academic restructuring — cannot go unchallenged. Unisa wishes to set the record straight and foster a more nuanced and insightful debate on the restructuring of higher education, writes Narend Baijnath.

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/ 29 July 2007

Contador takes the yellow jersey

Spaniard Alberto Contador won the drug-tainted Tour de France in Paris on Sunday when he held on to his 23-second overnight lead on Australia’s Cadel Evans to secure the race’s fabled yellow jersey. Contador becomes the first Spaniard to win the three-week race since Miguel Indurain from 1991 to 1995.

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/ 29 July 2007

The rise and fall of the SABC

Soon after I started working at the SABC in 2002, I was asked to chair a panel to hear the appeal of a Limpopo reporter who had been dismissed for "bringing the SABC into disrepute". The man had killed his wife. He was appealing his dismissal because, as he said, it was his own wife and he had done it "on his own time" — he had been on leave. We rejected his appeal, and later the courts sentenced him to a lengthy jail term.

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/ 29 July 2007

Octogenarian Boy Scout finally honoured

More than a half-century after he finished the requirements to earn the rank, an 88-year-old man was honored as an Eagle Scout, making him possibly the oldest person yet to collect the Boy Scout honour. Walter Hart could not become an Eagle Scout at the time he earned the rank because his service in World War II got in the way.

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/ 29 July 2007

Tintin book deemed too racist for SA

South African publishers have placed restrictions on the comic book Tintin in the Congo following complaints of racism in Britain. The illustrated work by Belgian author-cartoonist Georges Remi, who wrote under a pen name, is the second in a series of 23 tracing the adventures of Tintin and his dog, Snowy.

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/ 29 July 2007

Liberia lifts diamond-mining moratorium

The Liberian government has lifted a self-imposed moratorium on the mining, sale and export of diamonds that had been in place for six years, officials said on Saturday. Deputy Minister of Lands, Mines and Energy Kpandeh Fayia said that, ”as of Monday, people can start applying for mining, selling and broker licences” for the stones.

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/ 29 July 2007

Libya slams Bulgaria over release of Aids medics

Libya on Saturday denounced a decision by Bulgaria’s president to pardon six medics from life jail terms in an Aids case as a ”betrayal” and illegal. ”The detainees should have been detained upon their arrival [in Sofia], and not freed in this celebratory and illegal manner,” Libyan Foreign Minister Abdel Rahman Shalgham said.