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/ 9 September 2005

D-Day looms as IMF board meets

Zimbabwe’s Reserve Bank governor has left for Washington in a bid to prevent the country’s expulsion from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). Should the IMF demand compulsory withdrawal, it would be only the second time in history that the Fund has expelled a member.

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/ 8 September 2005

ANC promises floor-crossing ‘shock’

The African National Congress is expecting more MPs from all political parties, including at least six from the Democratic Alliance, to join it before midnight on September 15. Briefing the media at Parliament on Thursday, ANC Chief Whip Mbulelo Goniwe said there were ”many people who have shown interest in joining the ANC”.

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/ 8 September 2005

Bribed cops still on the beat

The Booysens policemen who were filmed accepting bribes from alleged illegal immigrants were still on the beat on Thursday, four days after Gauteng police management were alerted to the alleged corruption. And while two of the policeman were clearly shown accepting bribes in the Special Assignment programme, Gauteng police say this may not be enough to secure their successful prosecution.

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/ 8 September 2005

Alleged baby killers judged by their fellow inmates

Even though the men charged with killing baby Jordan Leigh Norton have been assaulted by fellow prisoners for a third time, a prosecutor argued on Thursday that they would be safer behind bars. Prosecutor John Ryneveld made the assertion in his closing submissions in a bail application by Sipho Mfazwe, Mongezi Bobotyane and Zanethemba Gwada.

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/ 8 September 2005

Open-source secrets laid bare

Ever since computer programmers began collaborating online to build software applications, the ”open source” movement has been developing into a serious rival to the multinational software companies. Since the term was coined in the late 1990s, open source has rapidly matured from an egalitarian approach to software design into a movement whose practices underpin the internet.

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/ 8 September 2005

Google’s soul search

If there’s one company that gets people talking technology, it’s Google. Many love it, and a handful hate it — but more often than not, we are interested in it. Not only does Google organise our information, but it shapes the way we think about the web. Indeed for many, it is the telescope through which they see the world.