Islamic militia captured the Somali town of Jowhar on Wednesday as fighters from a United States-backed alliance of warlords fled one of their last strongholds in the war-ravaged country. Heavily armed gunmen loyal to the Islamic courts were seen patrolling the town, about 90km north of the capital Mogadishu, which they captured earlier this month.
More safe blood is needed in Africa, said the World Health Organisation (WHO) on World Blood Day on Wednesday. ”The need to collect enough blood and to make it available for patients is more acute in developing countries, and particularly in Africa,” said Dr Luis Gomes Sambo, the regional director of the WHO regional office for Africa.
The European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company (EADS), builder of Airbus jets, plunged into a stock market vortex on Wednesday, losing about €7-billion in the first few hours of trading on further production delays to its super-jumbo A380 flagship and a profit warning.
Fifty-five people are dead or missing from flash floods that ripped through south-western China’s Guizhou province early this week, the government said on Wednesday. At least 25 people were confirmed dead from the flooding in mountainous areas of Guizhou, while another 30 people were missing, the state flood-control headquarters reported.
The JSE was firmer at midday on Wednesday, having bounced after Tuesday’s sell off. By 12.21pm, the all share and all share industrial indices added 0,82% and 0,93% respectively. Resources rose 0,9% and the gold mining index jumped 2,09%, but the platinum mining index lost 0,57%.
Wide swaths of asphalt, clean blue-and-white buildings and a canapé with a lot of glass: the border crossings from Dubrovnik, Croatia, into the Montenegrin coastal city of Herceg Novi is well-prepared for a stream of visitors. Semi-tractor trailer rigs form a short line; cars and buses quickly pass through.
The towns of Rouen, Le Havre and Dieppe form the outermost limits of what is known as the ”magic triangle” in the French Normandy. In the north, the commune of Etretat and its white chalk cliffs attract millions of tourists every year. In the south, the river Seine meanders in large curves through undulating countryside, flanked by Norman monasteries, towards its estuary.
The Zimbabwe government has stationed soldiers and police on roads leading into cities to prevent farmers from moving maize to a black market for the grain in urban areas, forcing them to instead sell to the state-owned Grain Marketing Board, independent news service ZimOnline reported on Wednesday.
George Gregan will start on the reserves bench for the first time in 10 years and Stirling Mortlock will captain Australia against England in their second rugby Test on Saturday. Coach John Connolly made three changes on Wednesday for the Telstra Dome Test in Melbourne following Australia’s 34-3 win last Sunday in the first Cook Cup match at Sydney.
Eager to cash in on its stunning wildlife and scenery, Kenya is revamping its maligned film policy and luring filmmakers with incentives in a bid to become the Hollywood of Africa. Mindful of the stiff competition offered by South Africa and Nigeria, Kenyan officials are determined to see the lucrative movie business, which now directly employs 41 000 people in full- and part-time jobs, grow.