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/ 24 February 2006

Local and landless

Estate agents insist that foreign buying is not a factor in Cape Town’s property price spike — but circumstantial and anecdotal evidence tends to contradict them. The 10-person Panel of Experts on the Development of Policy on the Regulation of Ownership of Land in South Africa by Foreigners failed to find hard evidence that foreigners had driven up prices.

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/ 24 February 2006

Khoza death proves Aids does not discriminate

Just a few days ago, one of South Africa’s most prominent soccer bosses, Irvin Khoza, chairperson of Orlando Pirates, buried his 30-year-old daughter Zodwa after losing her to HIV/Aids. The ”Iron Lady” was believed to have been infected by her husband and former Jomo Cosmos star Sizwe Motaung, who died in 2001, at 31.

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/ 24 February 2006

Krog: Publishers may sue

Kwela Books is consulting lawyers with a view to suing the University of Cape Town academic Stephen Watson for libel over his controversial plagiarism allegations against Stellenbosch poet Antjie Krog. Random House, the publisher of Krog’s award-winning Country of My Skull, has also said that it is contemplating libel action on Krog’s behalf.

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/ 24 February 2006

Power play over power cuts

Power cuts have become a factor in Cape Town’s municipal poll, with the Democratic Alliance climbing in on a succession of blackouts this week. ”I have never seen such outrage. Now whites are going to vote,” said a senior Western Cape DA member, who admitted the levels of enthusiasm fell short of the intensity of the December 2000 poll that clinched the city for the DA.

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/ 24 February 2006

Blogger bares Rumsfeld’s post-9/11 orders

Hours after a commercial plane struck the Pentagon on September 11 2001 the United States Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, was issuing rapid orders to his aides to look for evidence of Iraqi involvement, according to notes taken by one of them. ”Hard to get good case. Need to move swiftly,” the notes say.

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/ 24 February 2006

Sectarian violence explodes in Iraq

Iraqi authorities struggled to contain a convulsion of sectarian violence on Thursday in which more than 150 people died in massacres, armed clashes, suicide bombs and reprisal attacks on Sunni mosques. Sunni religious authorities said 128 Sunni mosques had been attacked and three clerics killed.

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/ 24 February 2006

Opposition cries foul as Uganda’s polls close

Uganda’s opposition complained of intimidation and interference by the army in their strongholds on Thursday, as voters took part in the country’s first multiparty elections for 25 years. The security forces turned out in large numbers near polling stations, with police expressing concern that there might be an attempt to disrupt the vote.

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/ 24 February 2006

The ANC monolith starts to crack

<img src="http://www.mg.co.za/ContentImages/262374/vote-box_blue.gif" align=left>The African National Congress is fighting its toughest election yet. The ruling party’s monolithic hold on power is showing distinct cracks, as strongholds have splintered from Khutsong in Gauteng, where residents have staged running battles with authorities, to Khayelitsha in the Western Cape, where a feisty group of independents has challenged for power and Matatiele in KwaZulu-Natal where the former ANC mayor has formed a breakaway party.

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/ 24 February 2006

Mince quietly and carry a big schtick

Has Mark Boucher unwittingly unleashed a tidal wave of vaudeville on an unsuspecting Australian cricket team? This was the question on every drama queen’s glossed and outlined lips this week after the Frodo Baggins of South African cricket was quoted in an international magazine urging local fans to give the tourists hell at every opportunity.