A post template

No image available
/ 30 September 2005

Brewing what comes naturally

Tony Blair’s continuing suzerainty of Downing Street fills decent people with a mixture of fear, disdain and an almost uncontrollable need to belly-laugh. Watching Blair drum out his hypo-crisies and half-truths, all his bogus compassion and credible pomposity, you wonder where he gets it all.

No image available
/ 30 September 2005

India’s new tourist attraction

India has always had an embarrassment of riches for the traveller: marble Moghul tombs, grand palaces, palm-fringed beaches and Himalayan treks. Now the country has a new tourist attraction on offer: the village. To anyone who has spent time in India’s villages, paying to sun oneself while cattle loll and cowpats dry under the sky might seem a little far fetched.

No image available
/ 30 September 2005

Divide and rule

There is now near-universal agreement that the Western occupation of Iraq has turned out to be an unmitigated disaster; first for the people of Iraq, second for the soldiers sent by scoundrel politicians to die in a foreign land. The grammar of deceit utilised by George W Bush, Tony Blair and sundry neocon/neolib apologists to justify the war has lost all credibility.

No image available
/ 30 September 2005

Stix still holds the field

It may be that the enduring memory about Solomon ”Stix” Morewa will be when, as the president of the South African Football Association (Safa), he was told to quit or be fired by the government-appointed Pickard commission into irregularities in the game. That would be, however, only one of the chapters in a biography of a man who did more good than harm.

No image available
/ 29 September 2005

Nigerian archbishop warns of break with mother church

Nigeria’s Anglican archbishop said on Thursday that Nigerian churches might cut ties with the Church of England if it did not revise its stance on homosexuality, which accepts gay priests in same-sex partnerships. ”As of now, we have not yet reached the point of schism, but there’s a broken relationship,” Archbishop Peter Akinola told reporters in the capital, Abuja.

No image available
/ 29 September 2005

Kebble won’t step into son’s shoes

Roger Kebble, father of slain mining magnate Brett Kebble, is not planning to step into his son’s shoes. ”I’m just a fairly simple miner. I will stick to my knitting. I don’t think I’m going to step into those shoes,” Kebble told a press conference at his son’s home in Inanda, Johannesburg, on Thursday.