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/ 18 January 2005
Sales in the local new vehicle market climbed to a record 22% last year, showing signs that the economy is arguably at its best in decades, eQuals group executive Loffie Geyser said on Tuesday. Geyser warned that the current mood of over-spending — due to low interest rates and the overall buoyant economic mood — could have a negative impact within the next 12 to 24 months.
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/ 18 January 2005
The share price of SABMiller plc, one of the world’s largest brewers, has reacted positively to the group’s trading update, gaining 1,45% or R1,35 in early trade on Tuesday on the back of evidence of continued strong growth in the brewer’s beer volumes. At 10.30am, SABMiller was quoted on the JSE Securities Exchange at R97,65.
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/ 18 January 2005
The Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (Icasa) is set to host public hearings this week on the draft value added network service (Vans) regulations in preparation of a managed liberalisation which gets under way from February 1.
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/ 18 January 2005
The Department of Health on Monday urged the public to report pharmacists not abiding by the maximum R26 dispensing fee rule for medication. The government insists this is the legal maximum that pharmacists may charge. ”We urge South Africans to refuse to be subjected to this exploitation,” the department said.
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/ 18 January 2005
The president of Harvard University has provoked a furore by arguing that men outperform women in maths and sciences because of biological difference, and discrimination is no longer a career barrier for female academics. Lawrence Summers, a career economist who served as treasury secretary under former United States president Bill Clinton, has a reputation for outspokenness.
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/ 18 January 2005
More than 500-million people can escape poverty and tens of millions can avoid otherwise certain death if the United States, Japan and other rich nations keep their promises to vastly increase development aid over the next decade, a report said on Monday.
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/ 18 January 2005
Insurgents in Iraq intent on derailing elections due in less than two weeks stepped up a campaign of violence across the country on Monday, claiming dozens more lives in shootings and car bombings. A campaign of assassinations has claimed victims from north to south Iraq.
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/ 18 January 2005
New evidence of alleged attacks on opposition supporters in Zimbabwe has been passed to British newspaper The Guardian by activists who say they are being subjected to systematic violence, intimidation and sexual abuse in the run-up to elections in March. In one case, a woman who chaired a constituency group said she was covered in paraffin and set alight.
Fraud, violence in election
No word from SA govt on Zim ‘spy’
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/ 18 January 2005
Both established and emerging farmers are facing massive losses and possible bankruptcy as the drought tightens its grip on the country. Crop failures and lower market prices are making it impossible for farmers to afford wages. Almost a third of the 3Â 000 workers on wheat farms in the Western Cape may be retrenched.
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/ 18 January 2005
From a case of child prostitution in the White House and secret military experiments at the Montauk United States air force base — including time travel and mind control — to an unidentified flying object being spotted in an official Nasa picture from Mars, Ian Fraser uncovers all this and a whole lot more.