Vehicle monitoring firm Tracker has urged a reporter for The Star newspaper to reveal the identity of a former employee who reportedly leaked confidential information to a crime syndicate. According to the report, a former employee of Tracker claimed syndicates bribed him to hand over secret information identifying cars fitted with tracking devices and where these were located in the vehicles.
Spanish authorities on Monday pledged to use satellite monitoring and a diplomatic offensive to prevent fresh waves of fishing boats full of illegal immigrants setting out from West Africa for the Canary Islands. The move came after a weekend in which a record-breaking 974 illegal African immigrants reached the islands in boats that had set out from Mauritania and Senegal.
United States President George Bush, scrambling to hold on to an increasingly disaffected conservative Republican base, said on Monday night that he was deploying thousands of troops on the US border with Mexico to crack down on illegal immigration.
Edwin Cameron, the HIV-positive Supreme Court of Appeal judge, has called for HIV/Aids to be treated as a "normal" disease in order to counteract the stigma surrounding the virus, and to encourage people to be tested and to seek treatment. In a speech that is already stirring heated debate, Cameron suggested that in some circumstances pre-test counselling should be dispensed with.
We should have been celebrating the 10year anniversary of an extraordinary document, the Constitution. Instead, we were all glued to the television or radio. Inevitably, the verdict totally eclipsed the anniversary; Jacob Zuma stole the show — an exquisitely painful irony, yet also strangely apt.
We publish a translation of the May 1 speech by Bolivian President Evo Morales announcing the nationalisation of that country’s hydro-carbon resources. This translation is based on the Spanish-language text provided on the Bolivian Information Agency website.
More gang violence rocked São Paulo, Brazil’s biggest city, on Tuesday as assailants continued attacks against police and other targets, which now have left at least 99 people dead. Overnight attacks left up to 19 dead.
A year after Operation Murambatsvina, the government’s campaign to purge informal settlements, the lives of thousands of affected Zimbabweans have not changed. Uprooted last year from their homes in the capital, Harare, families have been squeezed into tiny living spaces authorised by the government on the outskirts of the city.
As tomb raiders plunder Iron Age treasures — beads, gold ornaments and even the bones from burial mounds — archaeologists warn that Cambodia’s rich pre-Angkorian heritage will be completely lost within three years. Hundreds, if not more, of the 4Â 000 or so documented sites across the country have already been torn apart.
Striding through the smoke and flames threatening to torch the new Labour project, like a cornered action hero attempting a final comeback, Tony Blair recently showed once again why he is the most resilient politician in Britain. After days of coded revolt from his heir apparent he faced down his party with a powerful performance at his Downing Street press conference and at an evening session with MPs.