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/ 12 November 2004

Arafat laid to rest amid chaos

Yasser Arafat was laid to rest in a marble-and-stone grave at his battered Muqataa headquarters in the West Bank town of Ramallah on Friday after his flag-draped coffin was borne through a sea of emotional Palestinians who swarmed the helicopter that brought him from a state funeral in Egypt.

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/ 12 November 2004

Angola’s Dos Santos hints at election in 2007

President Jose Eduardo dos Santos said late on Thursday that Angola’s first post-war presidential election should be held a year after parliamentary polls. While he did not give a date, his ruling Movement for the Liberation of Angola (MPLA), maintains that elections be held in 2006 on the proviso that a new Constitution is approved.

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/ 12 November 2004

Powerful quake hits Indonesia

At least 16 people were killed and 100 injured, many seriously, on Friday after a succession of earthquakes measuring at least six on the Richter scale rocked an island in eastern Indonesia, police said. The quake, which was felt in the nearby country of East Timor, left hospitals struggling to cope with the wounded.

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/ 12 November 2004

Tale of a stray dog wins hearts in Thailand

A heart-warming comic book about a stray dog on the streets of Bangkok who won the heart of Thailand’s much-loved King Bhumibol Adulyadej, hit the kingdom’s bookstores on Friday, said the publisher. The king himself penned the original story of Tongdaeng, or ”Copper” who was sent to the royal palace as a tiny puppy.

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/ 12 November 2004

Rapes, atrocities in Côte d’Ivoire, says France

Foreign residents in Abidjan were subjected to at least "37 serious atrocities, including three or four attested rapes", a French representative in Côte d’Ivoire, Catherine Rechenmann, said on Friday. In Paris, a French military source said several dozen white women were raped.
<li><a class=’standardtextsmall’ href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?cg=BreakingNews-Africa&ao=125415">Westerners plucked from chaos</a>
<li><a class=’standardtextsmall’ href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?cg=BreakingNews-Africa&ao=125394">Côte d’Ivoire leaders in SA</a>

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/ 12 November 2004

‘Uncle Sam’ will continue to wield power

Tucked between Fidel Castro Street and Robert Mugabe Avenue in Namibia’s capital of Windhoek lies Sam Nujoma Drive, named after the southern African country’s outgoing president and independence hero. He may be stepping down in four months after a third term as Namibia’s founding president, but there is little doubt that Sam Nujoma will continue to wield power in the arid southern African country.