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/ 21 October 2005

SA quivers in rising heat

South Africans should be quivering at evidence that desert trees are “marching” south to escape the heat, a scientist told a landmark national conference on climate change recently. Quiver trees, used for generations by the San to make quivers for their arrows, are shifting towards the South Pole in response to rising temperatures.

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/ 21 October 2005

God bloggers’ power

What would Jesus blog? This was among the questions considered by a conference of God bloggers in California recently, which heralded their growing numbers as potentially the most important development in the spread of Christianity since the Gutenberg printing press began churning out bibles in the 15th century.

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/ 21 October 2005

Orphans under guard

Relief agencies in Pakistan fear children separated from their families in the post-earthquake chaos are at risk from human traffickers and childless couples. Thousands of injured children have been flown by helicopter from the areas worst hit by the October 8 quake that devastated Kashmir and North West Frontier province

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/ 21 October 2005

Justice, the first victim?

Saddam Hussein’s trial before a special tribunal in Baghdad is being portrayed as a watershed moment for the Iraqi people and the global legal system. But critical questions about the conduct of the trial, political interference and the decision to hold it in Iraq rather than under United Nations or international auspices are likely to dog the proceedings and may cast doubt on their legitimacy.

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/ 21 October 2005

MDC’s unedifying war over elections

Zimbabwe’s main opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change, is fighting a civil war over whether to participate in elections for an upper house of Parliament next month. The battle is being fought in full public view as newspapers carry daily reports of party leader Morgan Tsvangirai’s increasingly desperate attempts to block candidates from filing nomination papers.

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/ 21 October 2005

Covering corruption

”Since we started publishing in 1985, the Mail & Guardian has uncovered corruption in both the private and public sectors. Inkathagate, the investigation that told how the state was secretly funding Inkatha as a bulwark against the African National Congress, helped alter the course of the country’s politics,” writes editor of the Mail & Guardian Ferial Haffajee.

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/ 21 October 2005

Robert Mbeki, I presume

Is SABC anchorwoman Lerato Mbele about to be sent for re-education? The manne had to wonder, after Monday’s 10pm newscast. Having revealed that ”President Mbeki” had addressed the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation conference in Rome, she hastily backtracked with ”President Mugabe”; but things got ugly when she apologised for the confusion.

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/ 20 October 2005

UN warns of ‘wave of death’ in Pakistan

The United Nations begged the world on Thursday not to abandon survivors of Pakistan’s earthquake, warning of a second wave of deaths without a dramatic effort on a par with the Berlin airlift to reach stranded villagers. ”We thought the tsunami was the worst we could get. This is worse,” said Jan Egeland, the United Nations emergency relief coordinator.