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/ 20 March 2006

Liberty’s new captain

Watching one of the most awesome cricket matches of all time, Bruce Hemphill was understandably tense. Along with other South African cricket fans, he was pleasantly shocked by South Africa’s win. His appointment to the top job at Liberty came as no less of a surprise. The new chief executive said: "I knew that I was possibly in line for the job, but it came a lot sooner than I anticipated."

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/ 20 March 2006

Getting its own back

Charles Taylor, the fugitive former leader of Liberia who gained notoriety for masterminding brutal armed conflicts in West Africa, is back in the news. Speculation is rife that Nigeria may extradite the former warlord to his homeland. In 2003, Taylor was forced into exile in a peace deal that had the broad support of African Union leaders.

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/ 20 March 2006

Zim children forced to work for food

As standards of living in Zimbabwe continue to deteriorate, the use of child labour on farms has risen sharply, with more than 10 000 children estimated to be working in the agricultural sector. Irin recently reported that new commercial farmers, the beneficiaries of the government’s controversial land redistribution programme, were struggling to pay labourers.

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/ 20 March 2006

Government’s strong medicine

Medicine price reform will, on average, save consumers between 13% and 15% this year compared with 2003 prices, says the Department of Health, saying that pricing reform is working. Medicine costs a total R13-billion and R3-billion annually in the private and state sectors respectively.

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/ 20 March 2006

Making a Plan

If you want to make a quick buck, so the saying goes, stay out of media. If your heart’s set, we could add, stay out of business media. The stumbling blocks to profit in the sector are legion, and it’s not as if there’s a lack of competition. Here Kevin Bloom looks at some brands that have come up with innovative responses to the challenges.

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/ 20 March 2006

Ivorian rebel leader attends Cabinet meeting

Guillaume Soro, leader of the New Forces rebels who occupy the north of war-divided Côte d’Ivoire recently attended his first Cabinet meeting in more than a year. Up to now Soro has refused to travel to the main city, Abidjan, in the government-controlled south since President Laurent Gbagbo’s forces broke a long-held ceasefire agreement in November 2004.

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/ 20 March 2006

Afghans follow cobblestone road away from drugs

In southern Helmand province, one of the main sources of the world’s opium and heroin, turbaned men fit stones into a cobbled road that is meant to lead them away from growing drugs. Crouching, they peer up at a convoy of armoured vehicles and gun-toting American soldiers that rumbles along the first such road in southern Afghanistan, the most dangerous part of this violent land.

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/ 20 March 2006

If the shoe fits …

Can it be true that what you wear on your feet can improve your health, weight, posture, muscle tone and circulation, as the various manufacturers assert? Perhaps the most famous among this modern breed are the R 1 446 Masai Barefoot Technology trainers, worn by Cherie Blair, Jemima Khan and all over by mummies intent on maintaining their yumminess.