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/ 9 March 2006

Melbourne Games prepares for drug cheats

The anti-drugs programme at Melbourne’s Commonwealth Games will be the toughest ever, with almost one in four athletes facing dope tests over the next fortnight, organisers said on Thursday. ”This is the most comprehensive programme we have ever had in place,” Games chief executive Mike Hooper said.

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/ 9 March 2006

UN: East Timor faces tough task of fighting poverty

Asia’s newest and poorest nation East Timor faces a tough task lifting itself out of poverty despite social and political gains and rich unexploited oil and gas reserves, a United Nations report said on Thursday. The report painted a bleak picture of conditions in the nation of one million people, where the economy has been shrinking and development indicators only slightly improving.

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/ 9 March 2006

JSE bounces after sell-off

The JSE was in positive territory just before noon on Thursday, having bounced following the previous two days’ sharp sell-off. However, dealers questioned whether the bourse’s recovery was sustainable, saying there was still a lot of negative sentiment in the market.

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/ 9 March 2006

IMF maintains freeze on Zim loans

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) executive board on Wednesday resolved not to restore Zimbabwe’s voting rights and to maintain a freeze on loans to the crisis-hit Southern African nation. Zimbabwe’s Minister of Finance, Herbert Murerwa, had hoped to persuade the fund to release badly needed financial support

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/ 9 March 2006

Injured Birds star grounded

Moroka Swallows’ Tsweu Mokoro, one of the shining luminaries of the current Premier Soccer League programme, is likely to miss the rest of the season with a torn ligament injury. ”I felt a little sick when I heard the news,” said Swallows MD Leon Prins on Wednesday.

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/ 9 March 2006

US cigarette sales hit 55-year low

Cigarette sales hit a 55-year low in 2005 and have fallen by more than 21% since state attorneys general negotiated a landmark settlement with the industry eight years ago. The National Association of Attorneys General said on Wednesday that the 378-billion cigarettes sold in the United States last year marked the lowest number sold since 1951.