No image available
/ 21 November 2005
Australia mopped up a nine-wicket victory over the West Indies to claim the second cricket Test and retain the Frank Worrell Trophy series at Bellerive Oval on Monday. Australia were left with the modest target of scoring 78 runs for victory after being forced to bat a second time following a record 182-run seventh wicket partnership between Dwayne Bravo (113) and Dinesh Ramdin (71) on Sunday’s fourth day.
No image available
/ 21 November 2005
For Tamils erecting lifesized posters to mark the forthcoming Heroes’ Day, when Tiger rebels remember their fallen, the election of Mahinda Rajapakse as new Sri Lankan president is a matter of concern. ”We know Mahinda. He has been a politician for a long time. And we don’t trust him,” said Daruniali Saravanam, owner of a roadside eatery outside Kilinochchi, political capital of the rebels.
No image available
/ 21 November 2005
The second round of Egypt’s parliamentary election was marred by deadly violence and voter intimidation on Sunday as the regime appeared bent on curbing the surge of the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood. The polls that kicked off on November 9 claimed their first victim when the driver for an independent candidate was beaten to death by thugs hired by the ruling National Democratic Party, independent vote monitors said.
No image available
/ 21 November 2005
The woman accusing African National Congress deputy president Jacob Zuma of rape has vowed not to drop the charges, media reports said on Monday. According to weekend reports, police have asked Zuma for blood samples to determine whether the former deputy president could be conclusively linked to the alleged rape.
No image available
/ 21 November 2005
In a visit to Beijing that veered between the solemn and the slapstick, United States President George Bush worshipped at a state-run church in an appeal for China to grant greater religious freedom to its citizens. Reflecting the White House’s policy of cautious engagement, Bush’s lectures about human rights were mixed with entreaties to Chinese President Hu Jintao for greater economic cooperation.
No image available
/ 21 November 2005
Ariel Sharon, Israel’s Prime Minister, has decided to leave the Likud party he founded and force new elections, it was reported in Israeli media on Sunday night. His decision which has been the subject of months of speculation will send a shockwave through Israeli politics and precipitate elections in March.
No image available
/ 21 November 2005
Bigger even than Old Mutual, the government-controlled Public Investment Corporation now owns more than one in every 10 shares on the JSE. It has R460-billion in assets under management and is the country’s largest single investor. Yet its investment policies, largely in the "hot" areas of bonds and blue chip equities, appear conservative, to say the least.
No image available
/ 21 November 2005
Inequality matters. It is often thought that only absolute poverty is important and that if all members of society have a minimum standard of living, the relative distribution of wealth is of no consequence. However, inequalities in income, wealth and opportunity have been found to lead to political instability.
No image available
/ 21 November 2005
I was dropped at Paradiso, the last middle-class area before barrio La Vega, which spills into a ravine as if by the force of gravity. Storms were forecast, and people were anxious, remembering the mudslides that took 20Â 000 lives. "Why are you here?" asked the man sitting opposite me in the packed jeep-bus that chugged up the hill.
No image available
/ 21 November 2005
Kenya’s 11,5-million registered voters go to the polls on Monday in the 42-year-old republic’s first referendum. But the economic hub of East Africa is tense ahead of the ballot on a controversial draft Constitution. Police have shot dead at least 10 people during violent protests against the document in the weeks leading up to the plebiscite.