A post template

No image available
/ 3 February 2005

Rand slumps to worst level of the year

The South African rand traded at R6,1675 — its worst level since November 12 last year — early on Thursday afternoon as funds in London unwound long rand positions. Market analysts said the local unit could be in for a nervous time, possibly weakening further when New York enters the fray.

No image available
/ 3 February 2005

End of the road for Jo’burg’s beggars

Beggars at major intersections in Johannesburg were pulled off the streets on Thursday by the Johannesburg Metro Police in a crackdown forming part of Operation Token Days, which targets the breaking of by-laws. Loud voices, screaming and sirens made a telephone conversation with a metro police spokesperson virtually impossible.

No image available
/ 3 February 2005

Chechen rebels call for ceasefire, accused of bluffing

Chechen rebels called for the first ceasefire of the five-year guerrilla war in Russia’s war-torn republic on Thursday but pro-Moscow officials in Chechnya brushed the move off as a ”bluff” while the Kremlin kept silent over the announcement. ”This is all a bluff,” said the Chechen’s state council chief, Taus Dzhabrailov, of the ceasefire call.

No image available
/ 3 February 2005

Sex trial: Child previously blackmailed others

A child complainant in the sex-crimes trial of Pretoria advocates Cezanne Visser and Dirk Prinsloo had confessed to attempting blackmail others in the past, the high court heard on Thursday. Prinsloo’s advocate Piet Coetzee asked investigating officer Captain Carel Cornelius whether he was aware the girl had previously laid a charge against other people.

No image available
/ 3 February 2005

What will North Korea do next?

The future of a stalled diplomatic drive to end North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme depends largely on how it views United States President George Bush’s State of the Union address, analysts say. Three years ago, Bush grouped North Korea along with Iran and Iraq in an ”axis of evil”, but this time he used more neutral language.

No image available
/ 3 February 2005

Lion murder accused falls ill

Defence counsel for three men accused of feeding a man to lions in Hoedspruit last year had to delay presenting their case on Thursday after one of the accused fell ill. ”Accused number one tells me he’s suffering from chest and throat pains,” Mathews Kekana, counsel for Richard ”Doctor” Mathebula, said outside the Phalaborwa Circuit Court.