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/ 4 October 2004

Sudanese president opposes Darfur autonomy

Sudanese President Omer Hassan al-Bashir has opposed calls by United Nations personnel to grant autonomy to the war-torn Darfur region. "I will "strongly oppose any idea by outsiders at implementing the self-rule model in Darfur," al-Bashir warned in a meeting organised by the Sudanese Women General Union on Sunday.
<li><a class=’standardtextsmall’ href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?cg=BreakingNews-Africa&ao=123017">PAP to send mission to Darfur</a>

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/ 4 October 2004

Former Enron accountant faces more questions

A former in-house Enron accountant who signed off on a year-end 1999 alleged sham sale of several barges to Merrill Lynch told prosecutors he thought the deal was wrong from the beginning. Now he awaits questioning from the lawyer representing his former boss, Sheila Kahanek, who is one of six defendants on trial for fraud and conspiracy stemming from the deal.

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/ 4 October 2004

Cancer patient grew new jaw on his back

Doctors in Germany have rebuilt a man’s face after growing a new jaw on his back. By the fourth week after receiving the pioneering transplant the patient was able to enjoy his first solid meal for nine years. The 56-year-old man tucked into a hearty dinner of bread and sausages in a hospital in Kiel, Germany.

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/ 4 October 2004

Death toll from Jeanne rises to nearly 2 000

The death toll from floods unleashed by Tropical Storm Jeanne rose sharply to nearly 2 000 people, with many still missing, as officials said they found hundreds more bodies in Haiti’s devastated northwestern region. The new toll stands at 1 970 dead and 884 missing, said Dieufort Deslorges, a spokesperson for Haiti’s civil protection agency.

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/ 4 October 2004

The war on Wal-Mart

From the outside, the local community association on the west side of Chicago doesn’t look much. The only sign on the shabby one-storey building is a piece of paper stuffed inside a clear plastic jacket on the front door. The building was supposed to be a temporary home but somehow years have gone by and the organisation is still there.

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/ 4 October 2004

Locusts continue relentless advance

Some wore buckets on their heads, others swung sticks, and those who could sheltered indoors, praying for an end to the locust invasion which on Sunday swept through Mauritania’s capital, Nouakchott. The swarm devastated crops and the city’s few parks, and left residents feeling besieged and impotent in the face of west Africa’s worst locust infestation for over a decade.