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/ 17 February 2005
An increase in sin taxes and the fuel levy are predicted in this month’s Budget speech, according to a tax expert at financial services firm Deloitte. ”In line with prior years, we expect inflationary increases on most alcoholic beverages, with low increases on traditional African beer,” said Duane Newman.
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/ 17 February 2005
A villager in northeastern Zimbabwe was killed when five landmines he dug up to use against marauding elephants exploded in his arms, news reports said on Wednesday. Christian Munetsi had planned to use the mines to protect his maize field from elephants that roam the remote Rushinga district.
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/ 17 February 2005
An environmental protester facing indecent exposure charges arrived at Auckland’s District Court naked — but dressed before he entered the courtroom on Thursday. Computer technician Simon Oosterman (24) was charged during the Auckland Naked Bike Ride last Sunday, an event he organised to protest society’s dependence on the car.
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/ 17 February 2005
Distell Group, South Africa’s largest listed wine and spirits producer, increased its marketing and advertising spending by 17% for the six-month period to end-December 2004, compared to a year earlier, in a bid to overcome extremely competitive conditions in the South African alcoholic beverages market, according to managing director Jan Scannell.
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/ 17 February 2005
The loud squawking noise came in the middle of the night. For a week a middle-aged couple in Wacken, a village in the state of Schleswig-Holstein in northern Germany, were woken by the piercing crowing of a cockerel. Eventually Jens Nagel and his wife complained to the police, but despite three separate visits to the house, officers were unable to find the bird.
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/ 17 February 2005
Johannesburg Metro Police have arrested nine staff members in their crackdown against corruption, spokesperson Wayne Minnaar said on Wednesday. He said that investigations were finalised on Tuesday and by Wednesday, two of corrupt policemen had appeared in the Johannesburg Magistrate’s Court.
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/ 17 February 2005
There is a crisis in literature. Readers have stopped reading, and drawn instead to other perhaps more modish forms of entertainment. Sales are down, authors are despondent, salons are closing and literary lunches have become drab affairs. But United States publishers have come to the rescue.
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/ 17 February 2005
Hundreds of thousands of Lebanese turned Wednesday’s funeral of their former prime minister Rafik Hariri into a huge public demonstration against three decades of Syrian occupation. During a 5km procession through the capital, Beirut, mourners chanted ”We need Syria out”, and ”We don’t want Bashar [Assad, the Syrian president]”.
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/ 17 February 2005
Revelations that South Africa attempted to stop a Southern African Development Community (SADC) judicial delegation, declaring the mission “unnecessary”, have resulted in confusion about the country’s approach to the upcoming election in Zimbabwe. The legal team was meant to precede and inform a broader SADC observer mission.
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/ 17 February 2005
The Constitution is clear on the transformation of the legal system: "The need for the judiciary to reflect broadly the racial and gender composition of South Africa must be considered when judicial officers are appointed," And it gives the job of considering to the Judicial Service Commission, which tries very hard to fill vacant posts with black candidates, and women. It doesn’t always have an easy time of it.