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/ 1 April 2005

Wolfowitz ‘the velociraptor’

For fans of Michael Moore, one of the most indelible moments of the film Fahrenheit 9/11 is when Paul Wolfowitz, deputy defence secretary and the intellectual high priest of the Bush administration’s hawks, puts a generous dollop of spit on his comb before smoothing his hair for a television appearance. Iffy grooming habits are the least of Wolfowitz’s worries as he takes on the presidency of the World Bank.

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/ 1 April 2005

The African queen

How long has Aziz Pahad known? And when were his quiet diplomats going to tell us? How much longer were they going to creep about in the Palace of Revolutionary Tranquillity in Harare, keeping mum on the horrible metamorphosis taking place in the dark red velvet antechambers, where mirrored ceilings reflect satin sheets embroidered with the official ”Bob 4 Grace” motif? Of course the truth is out now …

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/ 31 March 2005

US bewildered by two sides of Terri Schiavo

Two images dominated US television screens during the prolonged battle over Terri Schiavo, who tragically plunged into an acrimonious national debate on right-to-die ethics. One showed a pretty brunette smiling into a camera for a family snapshot. The second shows an emaciated woman unable to control her grins and grimaces, blissfully unaware of the arguments over her fate.

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/ 31 March 2005

Terri Schiavo dies

Terri Schiavo, the severely brain damaged woman at the centre of a right-to-die controversy in the United States, died on Thursday in a Florida hospice almost two weeks after her feeding tube was cut off, a spokesperson for her parents said.

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/ 31 March 2005

Court orders miners back to work

Gold Fields has obtained a court interdict to force 30 000 striking miners back to work, the company said on Thursday. ”We must now serve the interdict on the National Union of Mineworkers. But I expect they will be back at work within 24 hours,” said spokesperson Willie Jacobsz.

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/ 31 March 2005

Zim vote: ‘We want a better life’

Chitungwiza’s famous market stalls were empty on Thursday as vendors went to the polls in this poor town on the outskirts of Zimbabwe’s capital, Harare, to vote for a government that will lift them out of destitution. Meanwhile, President Robert Mugabe said his party has always been ready to talk to the country’s opposition.

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/ 31 March 2005

International court prepares for major test

The International Criminal Court was gearing up on Thursday for a possible war crimes investigation in Sudan’s violence-plagued Darfur region — an important case that could confirm the fledgling tribunal’s legitimacy. The United Nations Security Council is expected to vote on Thursday on a resolution that would authorise the prosecution of war crimes suspects