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/ 18 October 2005
Jurors in United States death penalty cases are often excluded because of race and gender, are not shown critical evidence and tend to be conviction prone, the Death Penalty Information Centre said on Tuesday in a report. ”While most Americans never serve on a capital jury,” the report said, ”everyone is affected by a system that fails to respect those who do serve and that falls woefully short of justice.”
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/ 18 October 2005
United States Federal Reserve chairperson Alan Greenspan said on Tuesday that the world would have to learn to live with high oil prices and their negative impact on economic growth ”for some time to come”. He said the recent shutdown of US oil production and refinery facilities battered by hurricanes was ”an accident waiting to happen”.
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/ 18 October 2005
A private radio station shut down for broadcasting an interview with a separatist was back on the air on Tuesday, but the case was referred to the state prosecutor. Radio Sud FM resumed its normal programmes a day after police arrested journalists and other members of staff following an interview carried early on Monday with Salif Sadio, who calls for the independence of southern Casamance province.
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/ 18 October 2005
An Australian scientific team set off for Antarctica on Tuesday to search for definitive proof in the polar ice cap that human activity is responsible for rising levels of greenhouse gases. The team from the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation will drill 250m below the surface to obtain cylinders of ice containing trapped bubbles of methane dating back to 1750.
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/ 18 October 2005
The strongest collection of qualifiers for an African Nations Cup will be split into four groups at the draw for the 2006 tournament in Cairo on Thursday. Hosts Egypt and holders Tunisia are automatic first seeds with Cameroon and Nigeria completing the top tier ahead of the evening event at the Giza Pyramids on the outskirts of the Egyptian capital.
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/ 18 October 2005
The Swiss pharmaceutical giant Roche said on Tuesday that it was now ready to allow other companies or governments to produce Tamiflu, a drug considered a first line of defence against a potential flu pandemic. It also announced that it would go ahead with a new facility to produce the drug in the United States.
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/ 18 October 2005
Keep politics and politicians out of the civil service and corruption will stop, says United Democratic Movement leader Bantu Holomisa. ”The corruption in local government is there because councillors are emulating their leaders at national level,” he said in a statement on Tuesday.
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/ 18 October 2005
Ethiopia is concerned at the United Nations pull-out from some bases along the tense border with Eritrea, saying on Tuesday that the peacekeepers help ensure war does not break out again. The 3 300 UN peacekeepers have patrolled the border since a two-and-a-half year Eritrea-Ethiopia border war ended in 2000.
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/ 18 October 2005
The last Australian to fight in World War I has died at the age of 106, officials said on Tuesday. William Allan enlisted in the Royal Australian Navy as a 14-year-old and saw action in the Pacific and Indian Oceans during World War I before going on to serve in World War II.
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/ 18 October 2005
Garcon! Clicking one’s fingers to grab the waiter’s attention is by far the worst restaurant etiquette blunder, a British survey revealed on Monday. In a poll of 8Â 683 people for the British food magazine <i>Olive</i>, 38% thought snapping fingers at a waiter was the most embarrassing gaffe possible while dining out.