The city was quiet but the soldiers sitting and swaying inside the Stryker were animated by their favourite debate: was it better to be five metres or 20 metres from an explosion? The front gunner belonged to the 20-metre school, figuring the greater distance reduced your chances of losing limbs to the blast.
President Thabo Mbeki’s announcement of the retirement of Chief Justice Arthur Chaskalson means there will be a new incumbent by the second half of this year. He or she will inherit a right mess. A few weeks ago it might have been hoped, thanks to the adroit handling of the African National Congress’s January 8 statement by Judge Chaskalson, that the crisis had passed …
South African business retained its confidence, but that buoyancy may be tempered in the months ahead by high oil prices and runaway consumer spending.
On Thursday, the South African Chamber of Business (Sacob) released its Business Confidence Index for February at 126,9, but the index was recorded ahead of last week’s Budget and does not include this week’s spike in the oil price and continued consumer spending.
I watched the first episode of the new SABC3 weekly newspaper drama, <i>Hard Copy</i>, with more than a modicum of interest. I’d heard there’d been some squabbling between the SABC and e.tv, each one claiming it first thought up the idea of a programme set in a local newspaper. In fact, SABC television wins hands down with <i>Final Edition</i>, aired 18 years ago.
In a stinging critique of the British government’s Commission for Africa initiative, the NGO Action Aid cautions Prime Minister Tony Blair that the first step in supporting Africa’s development "must be to do it no harm". The NGO acknowledges Blair’s "good intentions", but derides United Kingdom policy and practice. Africa’s problems have constituted complex barriers to development that it cannot tackle alone.
Wealthy nations must “fulfil their pledges” to increase aid to developing countries to meet the United Nations millennium development goals – including curbing the spread of HIV – within the next decade, according to a report Investing in Development. The report will be presented to the Group of Eight industrialised nations at its meeting in July and to the UN General Assembly in September.
Uganda is adopting sexual abstinence-only programmes financed by the United States that could undo its successes. Human Rights Watch warns that the new policies, which promote abstinence until marriage rather than condom use, leave not only young unmarried people but also women married to unfaithful men without the knowledge they need to protect themselves from infection.
The development economist Guy Mhone, a Wits professor of public and development management, passed away at a Pretoria hospital on Tuesday, at the age of 62. Born in Luanshya, Zambia, and raised along the border with Malawi (the country of his citizenship), Mhone resisted colonial Central African Federation repression and then the brutality of the Banda era.
China must restrict its textile exports to avoid destabilising world trade with a flood of cheap goods, the European trade commissioner, Peter Mandelson, warned last week. Speaking in China for the first time since taking on the European Union trade portfolio, Mandelson said many developing nations were unwilling to enter a new round of negotiations because they feared China would seize the lion’s share of benefits.
With demonstrators shouting religious slogans outside, United States Supreme Court justices this week argued and fretted over whether the Ten Commandments displayed on government property cross the line between church and state. Arguments in cases from Texas and Kentucky were the court’s first consideration of the issue since 1980, when justices ruled that they could not be displayed in public schools.