No image available
/ 31 January 2005
The African National Congress on Monday came out in support of the Congress of South African Trade Unions’ plans to visit Zimbabwe, while the South African government has criticised the trade federation’s plans. Said ANC spokesperson Smuts Ngonyama: ”Cosatu should go there, but respecting the laws of the country.”
No image available
/ 31 January 2005
The Department of Justice and Constitutional Development will respond on Tuesday to a Sunday newspaper report that claimed an administrative bungle had resulted in the arresting powers of some peace officers being wrongfully withdrawn — rendering illegal certain of their actions, such as the issuing of fines.
No image available
/ 31 January 2005
Iran said on Monday that its current freeze on uranium enrichment will be short-lived but insisted that its nuclear activities pose no risk to the region, as claimed by arch-enemy the United States. Enrichment is a key process that makes what can be fuel for nuclear reactors but also the explosive core of atomic bombs.
No image available
/ 31 January 2005
Russia pledged its ”active” support on Monday for visiting Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas amid growing signs of a revival in the long-dormant Middle East peace process. Abbas said Moscow will play a decisive role in restarting the Israeli-Palestinian talks.
No image available
/ 31 January 2005
Giant soccer clubs Kaizer Chiefs and Orlando Pirates, together with the biggest church in the country, the Zion Christian Church (ZCC), have merged to form a cellular network distribution. ZOK, derived from the first letters of Zion, Orlando and Kaizer, was officially announced at a media briefing in Midrand on Monday.
No image available
/ 31 January 2005
The Department of Public Works is compiling a shortlist of candidates to be interviewed to head the government’s R15-billion Expanded Public Works Programme. The programme’s aim is to create a million jobs over a five-year period — at least 200 000 each year. But the Democratic Alliance said it is all going too slowly.
No image available
/ 31 January 2005
Three collapsed banks reopened on Monday in Zimbabwe under the aegis of a new umbrella banking group that President Robert Mugabe’s government hopes will revive the ailing financial sector. Clients whose money was locked up in the Royal, Barbican and Trust banks queued up from morning nationwide to withdraw their funds.
No image available
/ 31 January 2005
Former Scorpion Gerda Ferreira told the Durban High Court how the Scorpions managed a simultaneous search and seizure operation for documents relating to South Africa’s multimillion-rand arms deal in South Africa, Mauritius and France.
No image available
/ 31 January 2005
Two United States children’s animated characters, Buster the rabbit and SpongeBob SquarePants, have whipped up a storm, with conservative Christians and the new US education secretary scrutinising pro-gay associations in viewing for young children. ”Many parents would not want their young children exposed to [these] lifestyles,” Spellings said.
No image available
/ 31 January 2005
A dog in north-eastern Croatia was being hailed as a hero on Monday after it reportedly raised the alarm to rescue a man who had been buried under a snow drift during a blizzard. The dog barked until his owner followed him to the place where 54-year-old Stjepan Peserlin lay unconscious beneath a pile of snow.