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/ 7 July 2006

Henin-Hardenne’s missing peace

”Sometimes I think I might be the oldest 24-year-old in the world,” Justine Henin-Hardenne says with a faint smile. In the midst of explaining how she survived terrible adversity to emerge as the most iron-willed competitor in women’s tennis, Henin-Hardenne seems to feel the trauma of her past with renewed intensity.

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/ 7 July 2006

FF Plus to question Manuel on Cape fuel levy

The FF Plus said on Thursday that it would ask Finance Minister Trevor Manuel to investigate the constitutionality of an intended provincial fuel levy. The party’s minerals and energy spokesperson, Willie Spies, said he would ask Manuel to investigate whether the planned fuel levy for the Western Cape would be justifiable in terms of Section 228(2) of the Constitution.

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/ 7 July 2006

UN-backed operations displace thousands in DRC

As government soldiers dozed in the abandoned market stalls and excited United Nations peacekeepers celebrated reaching the town of Tchei in the Democratic Republic of Congo, a handful of civilians squatted in a mud hut. The dozen or so — those too old, young or ill to flee — were being kept under close guard and were all that was left of the population of 10 000 who lived in Tchei before the attack.

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/ 7 July 2006

Australia wins ‘world cup of beer’

The Socceroos may have been eliminated from the World Cup by Italy but an Adelaide brewer says fans can console themselves with the fact that an Aussie ale has won a "beer world cup". Coopers Brewery said it won a drink-off organised by British industry magazine <i>Off Licence News</i> involving, where possible, a representative beer from each of the 32 World Cup nations.

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/ 7 July 2006

7/7, one year later: Britain remembers

Britain will fall silent on Friday to remember the 52 people who died and hundreds more who were injured when four suicide bombers blew themselves up on London’s public transport system exactly a year ago. A day-long series of prayers and commemorative events has been planned to pay tribute to those who lost their lives.

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/ 7 July 2006

Can this university survive?

One year after it came into being, Walter Sisulu University (WSU) is facing financial disaster. This follows the recent award of a staff salary increase for which the university has no budget. Documents in the possession of the Mail & Guardian show that WSU management, headed by interim vice-chancellor Nicky Morgan, strongly opposed any increase.

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/ 7 July 2006

Take a taxi to 2010

Traffic jams are on the increase and the public transport system seems to be stuck in a rut. Critics question whether South Africa’s transport infrastructure can handle the pressure of three million World Cup visitors when it is already struggling to cope with domestic demands.