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/ 13 September 2004
The Israeli prime minister, Ariel Sharon, accused extremist rabbis and settler leaders on Sunday of inciting a civil war against his government’s plan to withdraw all Jews from the Gaza Strip and some parts of the West Bank. Sharon banged the table at the weekly meeting of the Cabinet as he denounced his opponents’ call to soldiers to disobey orders to remove the settlers.
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/ 13 September 2004
One of the most powerful hurricanes of recent times rolled across the Cayman Islands on Sunday and is due to hit Cuba on Monday after causing more than 60 deaths in the Caribbean. Ivan was producing winds of about 250km and seven-metre waves by the time it struck the Cayman Islands on Sunday afternoon, swamping the coastlines of the vulnerable British dependency and threatening the 45 000 inhabitants.
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/ 13 September 2004
Two Spanish men were gored to death by fighting bulls on Sunday during the bull-run at the local fiestas in Ampuero, a town about 50km east of the northern port city of Santander. Eleven other people were injured in the traditional Ampuero bull-run — similar to the San Fermin festivals of Pamplona — as the bulls rampaged up and down streets closed for the event.
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/ 13 September 2004
Barefoot and dirty, Nkosinathi Gumede took his place in the front row at a concert by conductor and pianist Justus Frantz. The 11-year-old from the impoverished and crime-ridden township of Alexandra in northern Johannesburg appeared enthralled as the flamboyant German began directing his Philharmonia of the Nations through well-known works from Dvorak and Rossini.
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/ 13 September 2004
Reading difficulties can be traced to different parts of the brain in Chinese and Western children, a team of American scientists say. In China, dyslexia appears to have a different physical origin, because the script, also used in Japan, is symbol rather than alphabet-based. The discovery casts doubt on the widespread assumption that dyslexia has a universal cause.
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/ 13 September 2004
At least four people were killed and 13 wounded when United States forces made a new assault on Iraq’s flashpoint city of Fallujah early on Monday, with fighter jets blowing up a civilian car and house, medics said. Four dead bodies, ravaged by the missile strike, were taken straight to the cemetery for burial after a US warplane struck a civilian car driving along a new motorway west of Fallujah.
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/ 13 September 2004
The tour bus trundles deeper through the veld and the passengers ready their cameras in anticipation. Various animals live here, but the visitors are only interested in taking pictures of the people. To the left, some are queuing for taxis; to the right, women hang washing amid a sprawl of shacks. Straight ahead is an open-air market.
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/ 13 September 2004
Dual-listed telecommunications group Telkom on Monday announced the repurchase of 22,257-million Telkom ordinary shares — or 4% of issued ordinary shares — through the order book operated by the JSE Securities Exchange South Africa.
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/ 13 September 2004
The four-day old strike at oil and chemicals group Sasol’s Secunda plant has ended. This comes after Sasol’s management reached an agreement with trade union Solidarity, in terms of which the trade unions will take part in the internal investigation into the explosion at the Secunda plant on September 1.
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/ 13 September 2004
Iran on Sunday flatly rejected demands to abandon its uranium enrichment programme, as a leading hawk in the Bush administration warned that the United States would act to prevent Tehran obtaining nuclear weapons. The escalation came as France, Germany and Britain joined forces with Washington for the first time to demand a halt to Iran’s fuel enrichment work.