In a report also harshly critical of weekend polls in Ethiopia’s remote Somali state, the European Union said on Thursday that Ethiopia’s disputed May 15 elections did not meet international standards in several key respects, including post-vote investigations into fraud.
South African retail group Massmart on Thursday reported a 16% increase in headline earnings per share to 341 cents for the year ended June 2005, from 293,1 cents for the corresponding period a year ago. A final dividend of 72 cents per share was declared, making a total dividend of 183 cents from 159 cents a year ago.
A radical Shi’ite cleric called on his followers on Thursday to end clashes with Shi’ite rivals so that stalled talks on a new Constitution can proceed. Clashes continued for a second day after the cleric’s office in Najaf was burned and four of his supporters were killed.
Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas accused Israel on Thursday of wrecking the prospects of peace after soldiers killed five militants and officials unveiled plans to expand the largest West Bank settlement. The shootings were Israel’s first deadly operation since the historic pull-out of settlers from Gaza.
Actor Brock Peters, best known for his heartbreaking performance as the black man falsely accused of rape in the American movie <i>To Kill a Mockingbird</i>, died on Tuesday at his home after battling pancreatic cancer. He was 78. Peters was diagnosed with the disease in January and had been receiving chemotherapy treatment.
A senior US military officer on Wednesday predicted that al-Qaeda fighters in Iraq will move to the ”vast ungoverned spaces” of the Horn of Africa once conditions in the country get too tough for them. The warning came from Major General Douglas Lute, director of operations at the US’ central command. ”There will come a time when Zarqawi will face too much resistance in Iraq and will move on,” he predicted.
More than two dozen prominent European film directors, writers and journalists have published an open letter calling for the release of Judith Miller, a New York Times reporter who is today spending her 50th day in jail for refusing to identify confidential sources.
Those who thought the latest series of Big Brother in the United Kingdom plumbed the depths of tackiness apparently haven’t seen anything yet. The programme’s inventor, John de Mol, was on Wednesday night due to launch a new Dutch reality show in which a woman searches for a potential sperm donor.
Americans are getting fatter at a pace never seen before while government-led attempts to hold in bulging waistlines are doomed to failure, a report claimed on Wednesday. More than 119-million people, 64,5% of the US population, are now considered overweight or obese, according to the Trust for Americans’ Health.
International ratings agency Fitch Ratings on Thursday upgraded South Africa’s long-term foreign-currency rating to "BBB+" from "BBB" and short-term to "F2" from "F3". The long-term local-currency rating has also been upgraded, to "A" from "A-". The outlook for the ratings is stable.