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/ 29 November 2004

Gesture of compassion from writers

One year after music stars took to the stage in Cape Town to raise HIV/Aids awareness, the literary world’s glitterati is making its mark, coming together to help fight the pandemic. Salman Rushdie, John Updike and Gunter Grass are among the 21 authors featured in Telling Tales, an anthology of short stories compiled by Nobel laureate Nadine Gordimer.

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/ 29 November 2004

All dogs feel the same in the dark

We’re talking about the failure of power here. But I guess I would be the last one to know about it. Like the rest of us. Last Monday a whole electricity substation in Hurst Hill went up in flames, leaving large parts of Jo’burg in total darkness. Everything became manual again, like the old days. Like you were still living in Sophiatown. Everything had to be done with paraffin stoves and candlelight.

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/ 29 November 2004

SA fast-tracking recruitment of foreign doctors

The South African Government is fast-tracking the recruitment of foreign medical personnel to increase ”capacity building” for the implementation of the anti-retroviral roll-out plan, says Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang. Responding to a question in Parliament asking how many patients in Limpopo and Mpulalanga were receiving anti-retroviral treatment in terms of the plan, Tshabalala-Msimang said 83 and 448 respectively.

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/ 28 November 2004

Prince Harry besotted with South African

Britain’s Prince Harry is besotted with a blonde 19-year-old student in South Africa whose father runs a Zimbabwe game farm, UK newspaper Mail on Sunday newspaper reported. It said Chelsy Davy accompanied Harry during his two-week trip to a polo ranch in Argentina, even staying in the same guest house.

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/ 28 November 2004

Rwanda army masses on Congo border

Rwanda massed thousands of troops on its border with Congo on Saturday as a scramble for mineral wealth risked fresh conflict in Africa’s Great Lakes region.
A clandestine network of plunder — illegally mining precious metals in the jungles of the DRC — has pushed neighbouring Rwanda to the brink of another invasion.

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/ 28 November 2004

Greenhouse effect ‘may benefit man’

Climate change is ‘a myth’, sea levels are not rising and Britain’s chief scientist is ‘an embarrassment’ for believing catastrophe is inevitable. These are the controversial views of a new London-based think-tank that will publish a report on Monday attacking the apocalyptic view that man-made greenhouse gases will destroy the planet.

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/ 28 November 2004

Revealed: How UK was told of coup plan

Britain was given a full outline of an illegal coup plot in a vital oil-rich African state, including the dates, details of arms shipments and key players, several months before the putsch was launched, according to confidential documents obtained by UK newspaper <i>The Observer</i>.
<li><a class="standardtextsmall" href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?cg=BreakingNews-National&ao=126215&t=1">Memo deepens Thatcher link to coup</a>
<li><a class="standardtextsmall" href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?cg=BreakingNews-National&ao=126212">SA mercenary gets 34 years</a>
<li><a class="standardtextsmall" href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?cg=BreakingNews-National&ao=126082">’I feel like a corpse in a river'</a>