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/ 2 December 2004

‘Serious incident’ reported in Darfur

A ”serious incident” has occurred between soldiers from the Sudanese army and members of a commission, led by Chad, monitoring a ceasefire in Sudan’s Darfur region, corroborating sources said on Thursday. According to the rebels’ military spokesperson, the ceasefire commission team was attacked by troops from the Sudanese armed forces.

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/ 2 December 2004

Union threatens action over BEE deal

The Food and Allied Workers Union (Fawu), which has slammed a R502-million deal between an agricultural company and a black economic empowerment (BEE) consortium, on Thursday warned it would take industrial action if its concerns were not addressed. The deal was between agricultural services group Afgri and the consortium Agri Sizwe.

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/ 2 December 2004

UK will ‘make G8 presidency count’

Britain will give priority to tackling global poverty, climate change and the Aids epidemic when it assumes the presidency of the Group of Eight nations in the second half of 2005, the government said on Thursday. Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown told parliament that Britain would ”make its G8 presidency count to meet the needs of the developing world.”

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/ 2 December 2004

Mugabe calls for unity at party congress

Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe called for unity at a crucial ruling party congress on Thursday amid tensions within the governing Zanu-PF about the election of a new vice-president. ”The message of unity… has continued to energise us even as our external and internal enemies have been vigorously seeking their dream of regime change,” Mugabe said.

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/ 2 December 2004

DRC demands Rwanda withdraw troops

The vice-president of the Democratic Republic of Congo, Azarias Ruberwa, has called on Rwanda to withdraw troops from his country , after United Nations officials reported possible movements of Rwandan troops crossing the border. Ruberwa, who led a Rwandan-backed rebel group before joining the DRC’s postwar transitional government in September, said his country had taken its case to the United Nations Security Council.

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/ 2 December 2004

Plan to clear mines from elephant routes

A project to clear landmines along paths used by elephants in a wildlife sanctuary in Angola was launched at a conference on landmines in Nairobi on Thursday. If the mines are cleared, an estimated 120 000 elephants in Botswana, whose numbers are growing at 5% annually, would be able to move north to Angola and Zambia during migratory periods.

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/ 2 December 2004

Carol conflict leaves dignitaries in a huff

An egalitarian vicar has left a group of civic dignitaries sitting on their, well, dignity. Pam Potts, chair of Fenland District Council in central England, requested three dozen seats to be reserved at the front of St Peter and St Paul’s Church at Chatteris, near Cambridge, for the council’s annual carol service. Vicar James Thomson refused, telling Potts: ”All are equal before God.”

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/ 2 December 2004

Heath unit was ‘kept out of arms probe’

Former head of the Heath Investigating Unit Judge Willem Heath said his unit would have come to a very different conclusion than the three agencies the government eventually tasked with investigating arms deal irregularities. Speaking after his testimony in the Schabir Shaik fraud and corruption trial, Heath said: ”There was a deliberate attempt by government to keep us out of the investigation.”

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/ 2 December 2004

Oxfam director mired in red tape in Sudan

Sudan has told the local director of the British aid group Oxfam that while his expulsion has been postponed, he must leave the country to fulfill the requirements of his exit visa. This week, the government gave the directors of Oxfam and Save the Children in the UK 48 hours to leave Sudan, accusing them of issuing statements that sent ”signals of support” to rebels in Darfur.

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/ 2 December 2004

More than 100 children killed by mines in Chechnya

Over 100 children have been killed and 600 others were injured by landmines in Russia’s breakaway republic of Chechnya over the past decade, according to the United Nations’ Children’s Fund (Unicef). ”Since 1994 through 2004, 717 children were injured by exploding mines in Chechnya, and 114 of them died,” Unicef spokesperson Anna Chernyakhovskaya was quoted as saying by the Interfax news agency.