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/ 22 September 2004

Swazis discuss new Constitution

Thousands of people gathered in the small kingdom of Swaziland on Tuesday for the first public talks on the country’s long-awaited new Constitution, criticised by pro-democracy groups for not curbing the king’s powers. The tiny country wedged between South Africa and Mozambique was expected to adopt the Constitution before the end of the month.

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/ 22 September 2004

Aid plea as Haiti death toll tops 700

The interim President of Haiti, Boniface Alexandre, on Tuesday appealed to world leaders for aid as the death toll from the country’s second flooding disaster in four months reached more than 700. Alexandre made his plea at the United Nations in New York after Tropical Storm Jeanne inundated many cities at the weekend and mudslides buried houses.

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/ 22 September 2004

Glimmer of hope for Briton but second hostage is killed

Iraq’s justice minister on Tuesday night pledged to release one high-profile Iraqi woman prisoner and to consider the release of a second in a last-minute concession that may save the life of the British kidnap victim Kenneth Bigley. The sudden change in policy came as an Islamic militant group said it had killed a second American hostage held with Bigley.

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/ 22 September 2004

Open source software challenges big media

The new breed of citizen journalist, the person who blogs, takes photos on their mobile phone and uploads them to a mobLog (mobile weblog), records video, sends it to a video blog and participates in what is commonly becoming known as the "We Media", relies heavily on Open Source Software, often running on Linux servers.

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/ 22 September 2004

The whoring of editorial space

Time for a rant. The whoring of editorial space that masquerades as motoring journalism is the subject. Although the sentiment will sound naïve in the extreme, maybe what we have here is an opportunity to lend some real world meaning to the collective hand-wringing at media’s recent humiliations.

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/ 22 September 2004

Millions are Waiting

History has shown that Johncom management isn’t scared to fire its editors, so Mondli Makhanya’s position at the helm of the <i>Sunday Times</i> will never be completely safe. At this giant, it’s not easy to juggle the demands of readers, advertisers and good journalism to the satisfaction of everyone concerned. Kevin Bloom reports.

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/ 22 September 2004

Vuyo Mahlati

Programme Director: Integrated Rural Development, Southern African Region, W K Kellogg Foundation With a background in development planning, Vuyo now works to uplift the rural poor of Southern Africa. This work is close to her heart, to the extent of personally investing in their craft projects. Her work entails finding growth-oriented opportunities and sustainable funding […]