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/ 1 December 2004
The Supreme Court of Appeal’s ruling on the development of the common law definition of marriage to include same-sex marriage was criticised by the ChristianView Network on Tuesday. ”The decision undermines the status of the good moral institution of marriage, by equating it with immoral homosexual relationships,” the organisation said in a statement.
Appeal for same-sex marriage succeeds
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/ 1 December 2004
Spending on Zimbabwe’s feared security police is set to surge to Z,8-billion (,6-million) in 2005, according to expenditure estimates released on Tuesday. President Robert Mugabe’s government refuses to discuss the operations of the Central Intelligence Organisation. Funding for the shadowy force appears under a ”special services” category in the budget for his own office.
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/ 1 December 2004
An unpublished first novel by Truman Capote, long thought lost, has been found in a box of photographs and documents abandoned by the author in 1966. The handwritten manuscript of the novel, Summer Crossing, goes on sale on Friday at Sotheby’s in New York, where it carries an estimate of 000 to 000.
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/ 1 December 2004
The Ukrainian opposition broke off negotiations with the government on Tuesday night, saying that they preferred ”people power” to further talks, as international pressure grew for fresh elections. ”We are stopping talks with the authorities,” opposition MP Taras Stetskyv told thousands of supporters gathered in central Kiev. ”We will talk with them only from the position of people power.”
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/ 1 December 2004
Iraq’s Shia parties have built a powerful political alliance uniting moderates with extremists and seem likely to dominate next month’s general election. The coalition, formed in weeks of private negotiations, will put forward a joint list of candidates.
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/ 1 December 2004
George Bush’s victory in the United States presidential election will be challenged in Ohio’s supreme court on Wednesday, when a group of Democratic voters will allege widespread fraud. President Bush clinched re-election by winning the state of Ohio on November 2 by a margin of 136 000 votes over the Democratic candidate, John Kerry.
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/ 1 December 2004
A United Nations panel has called for the UN’s main decision-making body, the security council, to be expanded from 15 to 24 members, giving broader representation to developing countries. The proposal is part of a package of 101 recommendations aimed at transforming the UN in an age of terrorism and in the wake of the international rifts over the Iraq invasion and occupation.
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/ 1 December 2004
"Have you ever kissed another girl?" "Have you ever been to a prostitute?" "What, you really own porn?" "Why did you want to try it with two guys?" "You’re sure it doesn’t hurt?" "What does a lap dance feel like?" "Who had the biggest penis?" "Who was your best lover?" "Do you fantasise about my friends?" "Ever had an affair?" Everyone in a long-term relationship must ask or answer at least one of these questions at some point in the first year.
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/ 1 December 2004
Earlier this year, <i>The Economist</i> asked whether or not India’s decade had at last arrived. Recent trends suggest it may be China’s, but with an average gross domestic product growth rate of almost 6% since 1992, and predictions of 8% for the foreseeable future, few have bet against India’s emergence as a global economic power. A proposed free trade agreement might not have much impact.
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/ 1 December 2004
”It’s a question of money,” said one of the many truck drivers milling about the main border crossing between Benin and Togo. ”Most of the girls are simply after money, and if I decide it’ll be without a condom, then it’ll be without a condom.” As soon as school ends each day, teenage girls in this Togolese border town head for the border post to sell sweets, bread and sometimes more, to the 1Â 000-odd truckers and travellers who pass through each day.