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/ 7 January 2005

No more action against graffiti racist

The Western Province Cricket Association (WPCA) is not considering a civil claim against the English cricket fan who scrawled swastikas and racist graffiti on seats at Newlands. ”The less we have to do with this person the better,” WPCA president Norman Arendse said on Thursday after Matthew Weller was fined R4 000 or six months in jail.

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/ 7 January 2005

SACP launches Slovo programme

The South African Communist Party has launched a year-long programme to commemorate Joe Slovo’s life, South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) radio news reported on Thursday. Slovo, the SACP’s former chairperson and South Africa’s first housing minister, died on January 6 1995.

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/ 7 January 2005

Moyo’s election appeal depends on party decision

Zimbabwe Minister of Information Jonathan Moyo’s bid to appeal against his exclusion from the ruling Zanu-PF’s primary elections in Tsholotsho will not succeed once the party’s central committee adopts the decision to reserve the seat for a woman candidate, Zanu-PF’s secretary for administration said on Thursday.
<li><a class=’standardtextsmall’ href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?cg=BreakingNews-Africa&ao=177561">Sunday Times article upsets Moyo</a>

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/ 7 January 2005

Arms report sanitised

New evidence of serious irregularities in South Africa’s multibillion-rand arms deal has emerged from confidential documents wrestled into the public domain by defence contractor Richard Young. The documents were given to Young last month after a marathon legal battle.

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/ 7 January 2005

SA aid is ‘miles ahead’

The South African government has strongly denied that it was slow in reacting to the tsunami disaster in South-East Asia. Opposition parties and the public have criticised the government for taking too long to help victims of the disaster, comparing it with civil society organisations that sprang into action when the extent of the devastation became apparent.

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/ 7 January 2005

The shame of being alive

”I have been waiting for over a week for the opportunity to sit down and put together my thoughts on our experiences in Thailand, but now that I do have the time it seems like an odd thing to do. This may be because I want it to be far away, I want very much to move on.” A South African survivor of the Asian tsunami disaster tells his story.

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/ 7 January 2005

US doctors accused over Guantanamo abuse

Doctors at Guantanamo Bay and Abu Ghraib used their medical knowledge to help devise coercive interrogation methods for detainees, including sleep deprivation, stress positions and other abuse, it was reported on Thursday. An article in the New England Journal of Medicine shows doctors were active participants in the abuse of prisoners.

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/ 7 January 2005

Woman joins art-thief son in dock

The mother of Europe’s most prolific art thief was in court in France on Thursday, charged with throwing many of the invaluable paintings her son had stolen into the local canal. She also allegedly forced works of art down the waste-disposal system at their home in Alsace, eastern France, and put others out for the rubbish collectors to take away.