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/ 11 July 2007

SA to honour Albert Luthuli

The South African government announced on Wednesday a series of events marking the 40th anniversary of the death of former African National Congress president Albert Luthuli, the first African to win the Nobel Peace Prize. The anti-apartheid icon, who received the 1960 Nobel Prize for his role in the struggle against white-only rule, died on July 21 1967.

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/ 11 July 2007

Ethiopia unveils new find of ancient fossils

Ethiopian scientists said on Tuesday they have discovered hominid fossil fragments dating from between 3,5-million and 3,8-million years ago in what could fill a crucial gap in the understanding of human evolution. Archaeologist Yohannes Haile Selassie said the find included several complete jaws and one partial skeleton.

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/ 11 July 2007

Court annuls De Beers-Alrosa antitrust decision

The European Union’s Court of Justice on Wednesday annulled a European Union (EU) antitrust decision that had prevented South African giant De Beers from buying rough diamonds from Russian rival Alrosa. The EU court said that European Commission efforts to curb business between the two diamond operations was ”manifestly disproportionate”.

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/ 11 July 2007

London suicide bomb plotters jailed for life

A British court sentenced four men on Wednesday to 40 years in jail each for an al-Qaeda-directed attempt to carry out suicide bomb attacks on London’s transport system on July 21 2005. Muktah Said Ibrahim, Yassin Hassan Omar, Ramzi Mohammed and Hussein Osman were found guilty on Monday of conspiracy to murder in connection with the botched attacks.

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/ 11 July 2007

Three in court over drowned baby

Three women arrested for allegedly drowning and burying a child in a yard are to appear before a magistrate in closed chambers in Mamelodi, Pretoria, on Wednesday. Inspector Paul Ramaloka said a 34-year-old woman, her aunt and a neighbour would appear in chambers where they are expected to confess to the killing.

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/ 11 July 2007

Joy at Zimbabwe price slash ebbs fast

Shops in Zimbabwe’s normally thriving eastern border city of Mutare are fast running out of stock. Seven days after President Robert Mugabe’s government began a blitz on shops and businesses, forcing them to slash prices by half, Mutare’s biggest stores look in part like they’ve been decimated.