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/ 8 January 2005

UN says Darfur foes support temporary ceasefire

The United Nations said on Friday the Sudan government and Darfur rebels have responded positively to a temporary ceasefire plea to allow a planned polio vaccination campaign to go ahead next week. But Sudan’s Foreign Minister, Mustafa Osman Ismail, raised fears that rebel groups fighting government forces in Sudan’s western Darfur region are planning to launch attacks ahead of Sunday’s peace deal signing ceremony to end the country’s 21 year southern civil war.

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/ 8 January 2005

Mississippi Burning case finally reaches trial

Forty years after three civil rights workers were killed on a dirt road in Mississippi on a night that came to symbolise the racial hate of the American South, an elderly leader of the Ku Klux Klan appeared in court on Friday to be formally charged with their murder. Edgar Ray Killen appeared handcuffed and in an orange prison jump suit to plead not guilty to three counts of murder.

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/ 8 January 2005

Pentagon to rethink its tactics in Iraq

The Pentagon has ordered a comprehensive review of its Iraq strategy in the face of mounting casualties and an increasing strain on the United States army and its reserve ranks, it was reported on Friday. A retired four-star general, Gary Luck, is due to arrive in Iraq next week to conduct an ”open-ended” rethink of tactics, troop levels and the training of Iraqi forces.

  • Allawi to lock down Iraq on election day
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    / 8 January 2005

    Abbas raises ceasefire hopes

    The favourite to win the Palestinian presidential election, Mahmoud Abbas, on Friday night called for an end to ”the chaos of guns” in Palestinian society and expressed optimism that a ceasefire in the four-year uprising would be agreed by all factions. An Israeli was killed on Friday near Nablus by the al-Aqsa Brigades, suggesting Abbas will have trouble reining in even his own faction.

  • Abbas views Sharon as partner
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    / 8 January 2005

    Arms deal ‘smells of corruption’

    South Africa’s official opposition Democratic Alliance has called for a judicial commission headed by a respected judge to probe "the serious questions" that continue to hang over Auditor General Shauket Fakie and President Thabo Mbeki involving South Africa’s arms deal, following press reports of a "cover-up" and alteration of an official arms deal report.
    <li><a class=’standardtextsmall’ href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?cg=Insight-National&ao=177542">Arms report sanitised</a>

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    / 8 January 2005

    Wave-ravaged countries win debt payment relief

    The world’s leading industrial nations on Friday night agreed to suspend debt payments from countries in south-east Asia affected by the tsunami disaster. Responding to the damage caused by the wave, the G7 nations announced an immediate debt moratorium and promised further assistance when they meet in London next month.

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    / 7 January 2005

    Sudan says rebels are undermining peace deal

    Sudan accused ethnic minority rebels in the Darfur region on Friday of trying to sabotage peace with the south by stepping up operations ahead of the signing of a final deal with southern rebels. Security authorities have uncovered a ”subversive plot”, claimed Foreign Minister Mustafa Osman Ismail, quoted by the state-run Sudan News Agency.