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/ 22 August 2006

Chinese twin girls find each other in the US

At their first meeting they held hands nervously, played with their dolls to break the ice and then wouldn’t let each other go. The three-year-old girls, Mia Funk from Chicago and Mia Ramirez from Miami, looked and acted just like sisters. Now, in a remarkable tale of coincidence, two sets of parents are working out how to bring up the twin girls living 2 240km apart.

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/ 22 August 2006

US senator slams SA’s Aids response

Barack Obama, the only black United States Senator, criticised South African leaders on Monday for their slow response to HIV/Aids, saying they were wrong to contrast ”African science and Western science”. Aids activists say Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang is creating confusion by pushing traditional medicines and a recipe of garlic, beetroot, lemon and African potatoes to combat HIV/Aids.

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/ 22 August 2006

New Zealand eager to hit rarefied heights in SA

New Zealand completed their first training session in South Africa with a clearer idea of how tough it will be to achieve only their second series victory on Springbok soil. Only Sean Fitzpatrick’s 1996 All Blacks have come away from the tough, rarefied conditions of South Africa with victory and with the Tri-Nations won, the team are treating the two Tests as a mini-series.

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/ 22 August 2006

Italy may lead UN force for Lebanon

Italy has offered to lead a United Nations force for Lebanon, but a week after a truce calmed Israel’s war with Hezbollah guerrillas, few other countries with proven military capacity have made substantial commitments. European Union countries are meeting on Wednesday to discuss concerns about clear rules of engagement for the force.

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/ 21 August 2006

Israel’s military democracy

”I have argued recently that Israel’s attack on Lebanon was premeditated: Hizbullah’s capture of two soldiers gave Israel’s government the excuse to launch an assault it had been planning since 2004. Both George W Bush and Tony Blair knew that it would happen and gave it their approval,” writes George Monbiot.

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/ 21 August 2006

New beef over old bones

African communities close to Mapungubwe in Limpopo are demanding the return and reburial of hundreds of human skeletons — including those of 12 former rulers — removed from the famous archaeological site to the University of Pretoria. Mapungubwe mountain was the centre of an African empire the size of Swaziland, encompassing about 200 settlements, between 600AD and 1300AD.

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/ 21 August 2006

Behind the war of words

Tensions between Congress of South African Trade Unions president Willie Madisha and its general secretary Zwelinzima Vavi ran so high that mediators were called in to settle their conflict. At its heart is a fight for the political direction of the federation, which has been drawn four square into the succession battle. Recently, communist leader Blade Nzimande was pulled into the fray.

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/ 21 August 2006

Diarrhoea kills 150 in flood-hit Ethiopia

Diarrhoea has killed 150 people and infected nearly 12 000 in flood-ravaged Ethiopia, the United Nations said on Monday, as aid agencies and governments struggled to deliver food and supplies to tens of thousands left homeless. Flash floods that began swamping villages and towns earlier this month have already killed about 900 people.