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/ 16 October 2004

Zim govt rejects Tsvangirai acquittal

While the Zimbabwean government says it accepts and respects the court’s acquittal decision of leader of Zimbabwe’s main opposition party, Morgan Tsvangirai, it says the the verdict is wrong and it may take further legal action. Tsvangirai said the verdict could pave the way for a national reconciliation.

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/ 16 October 2004

Nkobi paid ‘to woo Zulu king for ANC’

Schabir Shaik’s Nkobi group paid almost a quarter of a million rand to woo Zulu King Goodwill Zwelethini from the Inkatha Freedom Party to the African National Congress, according to a document handed to the Durban High Court. The document is the transcript of an interview Scorpions investigators conducted with Shaik’s former business associate, Professor Themba Sono.

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/ 16 October 2004

Tennis ‘ball models’ court controversy

Some say that men’s tennis has lost its glamour — which may explain why a world tournament in Madrid is hiring long-legged models as ball girls. The ”ball models” were picked in a casting session by organisers who say that, by resorting to the gimmickry of boxing promoters, they are merely recognising that tennis is showbusiness.

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/ 15 October 2004

Judge forbids media to identify ‘Mr C’

The judge in the Boeremag treason trial on Friday made an interim order that the media may not publish the name and image of the next state witness, who is expected to start testifying on Monday. Argument on whether the court should grant an order to protect the identity of the witness, now only known as the elusive Mr C, will continue on Monday.

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/ 15 October 2004

Eritrea suspends petrol sales ‘in interests of nation’

Eritrea said on Friday that it has suspended sales of petrol due to soaring oil prices on the world market. The sale of petrol has been suspended since Wednesday afternoon ”in the wake of ever-increasing oil prices on the world market,” in a bid to curb consumption in the Horn of Africa country, which imports all its refined fuel products, said Eritrean Information Minister Ali Abdu Ahmed in Asmara.

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/ 15 October 2004

Blacker than thou

Non-racialism is still emblazoned across our Constitution, is dusted off when electioneering and is lauded at the funerals of white strugglers such as Oom Bey and Ray Alexander, but racial ghettoes and polarisation appear to be on the increase, writes Mike van Graan.