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/ 6 September 2005
A woman accompanies her boyfriend to a party. They quarrel. She walks to find a telephone to call her mother to collect her. She comes upon a petrol station where she seeks to persuade the attendant to allow her the use of the phone. As this negotiation proceeds, a police car draws into the petrol station. A sergeant in full uniform enquires as to her problem and offers to drive her home.
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/ 6 September 2005
Many commentators have acknowledged South Africa’s commitment to the promotion and recognition of women. They have also reminded us that the challenge of pursuing equality is far from full achievement. There are several facts that emphatically illustrate the remaining challenges.
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/ 6 September 2005
The delay in the release of the second set of the black economic empowerment codes of good practice is causing "a marked confusion" in the market, an industry source told the <i>Mail & Guardian</i>. The drafting of the empowerment codes has been under way since December last year, when the first set of codes was released for public comment.
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/ 6 September 2005
The usual Western Cape black economic empowerment (BEE) beneficiaries were left in the cold as the Cape Town council selected new blood in its second shot at its empowerment transaction of prime beachfront land at Big Bay, Bloubergstrand. In all, 17 parcels of land, mostly sized between 2 400m2 and 2 600m2 have been sold at prices ranging from R2,7-million to R3,4-million.
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/ 6 September 2005
A savvy investment banker and businesswoman is about as close as one can get to choosing an ideal candidate to run the investment arm for South Africa’s economic engine room, Gauteng. Nomhle Canca slipped quietly into her job as CEO of Blue IQ Investments Holdings last September.
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/ 6 September 2005
Since the advent of democracy a decade ago in South Africa, efforts have been made to give the country’s majority black population opportunities in the farming sector. During the colonial era and under apartheid, blacks were dispossessed of land — and often prevented from buying it.
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/ 6 September 2005
Alastair Kirk stopped going to school when he was 11. He is now 20, and not exactly a dropout — he went on being educated at home, sitting down every day to work through booklets of maths, english, science, history, geography, all couched in a unique style. ”Here are examples of interrogative sentences,” states one booklet in the curriculum he used, Accelerated Christian Education.
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/ 6 September 2005
Tropical storms have doubled in destructive potential in the past 30 years because ocean surfaces have become warmer, according to a leading climate researcher. This is the first time that an increase in the size, duration and power of tropical storms has been linked to global warming.
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/ 6 September 2005
Four Arab Israelis shot dead by a soldier opposed to the closure of the Gaza Strip settlements are not victims of ”terror” because their killer was Jewish, Israel’s Defence Ministry has ruled, and so their families are not entitled to the usual compensation for life.
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/ 6 September 2005
On May 8 1994, my husband was brutally murdered by armed militias in Rwanda. His parents, sisters, his uncles, aunts and cousins were also killed. My name was on a list to be killed the next day. At midnight I escaped, carrying my three small children and two others whose parents had also died.