There were all sorts of ways of being taken for a ride at the first Cape Town International Book Fair. There was no parking to be had if you were foolish enough to be late by more than 10 minutes for this crazy, excitable fiesta, which meant that you had to tack back into the traffic that was inching towards what was called the overflow parking.
South Africa’s Unidentified Flying Objects Resource (Saufor) will host its second annual Unbind Your Mind UFO conference in celebration of World UFO Day on July 1 in Cape Town. Cristo Louw, founder of Saufor, said in a statement on Monday: "The time is ripe for the South African public to be informed about the true nature of the UFO issue."
Abortions based on gender selection will remain legal in China after lawmakers could not agree on a planned law to criminalise the practice, state press reported on Monday. The planned amendment to the criminal law would have allowed jail sentences of up to three years for people involved in abortions based on the sex of the foetus, the China Daily reported.
Last month, it was announced that Wilfred Emmanuel-Jones was among the 100 candidates on British Conservative Party leader David Cameron’s so-called ”A-list” of Tory candidates. Emmanuel-Jones was described by the press as ”Britain’s only black farmer”. But actually there’s at least one other black farmer in Britain today — and his name is David Mwanaka.
Arthur Malvin, a composer and lyricist who won two Emmy Awards for his work with Carol Burnett and Frank Sinatra, has died. He was 83. Malvin died at his Century City home on June 16 after a long illness, said his daughter, Janet Malvin. Malvin won an Emmy in 1968 for writing music for a Frank Sinatra television special, A Man and His Music + Ella + Jobim.
This may be China’s ”year of Africa”, but as Premier Wen Jiabao toured the continent signing resource deals and promising development assistance, considerable ambivalence was evident in South Africa’s response. Anxiety over the competitiveness of the domestic manufacturing sector in the face of China’s extraordinary export performance jostles for space in the minds of policy-makers.
South Africa’s communications regulator has been rocked by allegations that councillors regularly violate the Icasa Act by participating in activities of stakeholders in the Information and Communication Technology sector. Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (Icasa) councillor Mamodupi Mohlala included the allegation in a letter of response to an inquiry about her work.
About 100 families were left homeless on Monday morning after a fire destroyed their shacks in Alexandra, northern Johannesburg. Emergency services spokesperson Malcolm Midgley said residents of the shacks at the corner of 8th Street and Selbourne Avenue had tried in vain to put out the fire that was raging through the settlement.
Somalis marked their 46th anniversary of independence quietly on Monday in Mogadishu, fearing the Islamic militants who control their capital would frown on celebrations. In past years, public events were held in Mogadishu and other towns to mark independence day.
The world’s largest steel group Mittal Steel on Monday denied that it would sell its 52% stake in Mittal Steel South Africa as part of the deal to merge with world’s second largest steel maker Arcelor. "We firmly deny this rumour and it couldn’t be further from the truth," said Mittal Steel spokesperson Paul Weigh in a statement.