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/ 17 July 2006

London policemen won’t be charged for killing Brazilian

British prosecutors said on Monday that they had ”insufficient evidence” to charge police officers with any crime for shooting to death a Brazilian man they mistook for a suicide bomber last year. However, the Crown Prosecution Service said London’s Metropolitan Police will be prosecuted as a whole under health and safety laws for the killing of Jean Charles de Menezes.

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/ 17 July 2006

Mumbai blasts: Rare mixture of explosives used

A rarely used mixture of high explosives, fuel oil and ammonium nitrate was used in the Mumbai train blasts last week that killed 182 and wounded hundreds, the lead investigator said on Monday. Anti-Terrorism Squad chief KP Raghuvanshi declined to comment on whether the mixture, which included the high explosive RDX, could be linked to a specific group.

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/ 17 July 2006

Stuttering Burundi peace talks resume

Stalled peace talks aimed at bringing a final end to Burundi’s 13-year civil war resumed on Monday but prospects for progress remained unclear with mediators silent on the matter. After a weekend of meetings with both the government and the National Liberation Forces rebels aimed at ending a stalemate , mediators reconvened the two sides.

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/ 17 July 2006

Saccawu plans pickets at Shoprite Checkers

The South African Commercial Catering and Allied Workers’ Union (Saccawu) will embark on lunchtime pickets at Shoprite Checkers shops throughout the country from Tuesday. Union chairperson Mike Tau told reporters in Johannesburg on Monday the decision stemmed from the company and the union failing to reach agreement over an across-the-board wage increase.

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/ 17 July 2006

Zim medical interns down stethoscopes

At least 250 Zimbabwean medical interns have gone on strike at the financially troubled country’s state hospitals, demanding a more than 700% pay increase, a spokesperson said on Monday. ”The strike started off slowly on Thursday last week, but now everyone has joined in,” said Kudakwashe Nyamutukwa, president of the Hospital Doctors’ Association.

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/ 17 July 2006

Indian donkeys do their bit for world peace

A group of Indian villagers presided over the marriage of two donkeys at an ancient Hindu temple in southern India in a bid to promote world peace, a report said on Monday. The wedding took place on Sunday evening in the Sri Thirumoola Natha Swamy Temple in Tamil Nadu state, the United News of India news agency reported.