The balance in the internal White House debate over Iran has shifted back in favour of military action before President George Bush leaves office in 18 months. The shift follows an internal review involving the White House, the Pentagon and the state department over the last month.
Zimbabweans are shopping like there’s no tomorrow. With police patrolling the aisles of Harare’s electrical shops to enforce massive price cuts, the widescreen TVs were the first things to go, for as little as R283 ($40). The police and groups of ruling party supporters could be seen leading the charge for a bargain.
A large public gathering of civil society organisations and government officials in the Swiss capital city of Berne on July 7 marked the halfway point to the 2015 date for achieving the United Nations Millennium Development Goals. The Berne event highlighted one critical dimension of the strategy needed to achieve the goals set by world leaders in 2000.
This is going to sound like a story I’ve made up to make a point. But it’s the truth. Last week I accidentally went on Iranian cable telly. I thought it was just AN Other cable telly station, and arrived to review Carl Bernstein’s book about Hillary Clinton. So we were sitting there, chatting away nicely waiting to start, when a woman ran on and said: "Can I just do your jacket up?"
Michel Hayek, a butcher’s boy who has risen to the status of an Arab media celebrity, has the knack of making accurate predictions in an anxious and uncertain Lebanon looking for answers. "I believe everyone has what I have. It’s a sense like your eyes, or your ears. If I feel something strongly, I follow my instinct," says the man nicknamed the "Nostradamus of the Middle East".
The former unionist turned businessman and media mogul, Marcel Golding, hardly ever grants interviews. But he recently spoke to journalist and member of Parliament Ben Turok in a wide-ranging interview about his company, its owners and the ordinary workers who are benefiting. Turok started by asking him about when he first conceived of a trade union-owned company.
Virgin Money has turned one. The newborn got off to a brilliant start. But, its toddler years might prove to be a bit more challenging. So far, Virgin has signed up 180 000 card holders. This is ahead of its original business forecast of 150 000 cards in the first year.
The promulgation of certain sections of the new Children’s Act on July 1 has caught the attention of the public and media. Some have applauded, others have said it is controversial and they are up in arms about it. Those in favour say the Act deals effectively with the pragmatic concerns of our time — HIV/Aids, burgeoning numbers of orphans, writes Ann Skelton.
David Cronin’s recent article ("EU aid puts health on the back seat", July 3) leaves one with the impression that the European Union is failing poor countries and alleges a "lack of focus on health and education" by EU donor support that "will put the achievement of the United Nations millennium development goals in jeopardy". This is simply untrue.
"There is no magic wand that can solve transport issues," says Rehana Moosajee, the Johannesburg mayoral committee member for transport, "but we can begin to change things." While road rage, safety, traffic congestion, public transport strikes and minibus-taxi violence have grabbed media headlines, solutions to transport crises are quietly under way.