South African-born Zimbabwean nationalist leader Ruth Chinamano has died, family members said on Monday. She was ”in her 70s”, they said. Chinamano began organising women’s demonstrations against colonial and Rhodesia rule in Harare’s Highfields township, a place often cited as the birth of Zimbabwe’s nationalist movement.
Iraqi insurgents are waging an all-out war on the country’s vital oil industry, which has lost nearly -billion in revenue since last year’s United States-led invasion. Osama bin Laden ordered his supporters to sabotage oil facilities in Iraq and the Gulf, in an audio tape attributed to the al-Qaeda leader broadcast on an Islamist website last month.
Crude futures fell sharply on Monday on the first trading day of the new year as milder winter weather across the north-eastern United States eased demand on heating oil in the high-usage area. Mid-morning in Asia, crude for February delivery fell 70 cents to ,72 per barrel in electronic trade on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
The man who brought the Yugo and Subaru to the United States and built a gull-wing sports car bearing his name has a new project — selling Chinese-made cars in the US. Chery Automobile, owned by the Chinese government, has signed a deal with the privately held Visionary Vehicles of New York to sell Chery’s cars in the US.
Readership of the online journals known as blogs (short for web logs) grew significantly in 2004, driven by increased awareness of them during the United States presidential campaign and other major news events, according to a study released on Sunday. Twenty-seven percent of online adults in the US said in November they read blogs.
Anthony Sampson, who passed away recently, was a fine journalist and an award-winning author of several books dissecting Britain, the oil industry and the arms trade. He was also the editor of Drum magazine in the 1950s. And nearly 20 years ago, he played a crucial role in the survival of a new, fearless tabloid, The Weekly Mail (WM), the Mail & Guardian‘s forerunner.
”I am chatting on the phone with a friend. I tell him I have met this cool man from Cape Verde. ‘Tsk tsk tsk,” he goes. ‘There you go, joining the multiple-partner risk-group for Aids.’ ‘Thank you, Dr Killjoy,’ say I. ‘On political grounds, I refuse to toe the line of the American religious right and George W Bush.”’ A single woman may only have sex twice a year but she’ll still be lumped with high risk.
I remember standing, in those last exile years, in the garden of the Jamaican ambassador to England, and witnessing a confrontation between Trevor Huddleston and Anthony Sampson. Why is this of any interest? Well, both of these very English Englishmen had been around in my life for as long as I could remember. Now they have both moved on—to a better world, some would say. Or to dust, just like Sophiatown, as others would have it.
At least two Cabinet ministers in Zimbabwe are suspected of passing official secrets to Western intelligence agencies seeking to spy on President Robert Mugabe’s government, the state <i>Sunday Mail</i> reported. Several officials are believed to have divulged confidential information to "hostile intelligence agencies".
<li><a class=’standardtextsmall’ href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?cg=BreakingNews-Africa&ao=177308">Zim ruling party shuns big names</a>
About 1,8-million survivors, mainly in Indonesia and Sri Lanka, are in need of food, says the United Nations. Help is likely to reach those in Sri Lanka within three days but an estimated one-million Indonesians may have to wait much longer, warn officials.