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/ 26 August 2004

Nigeria orders Shell to pay $1,5bn compensation

The Nigerian senate has ordered Anglo-Dutch oil giant Shell to pay ,5-billion compensation for damages caused by nearly 60 years of exploration in the Niger
Delta. The senate adopted the Bill which ordered the payment to members of the Ijaws ethnic group ”for the severe health hazards, economic hardship, injurious affection, avoidable deaths and sundry maladies” resulting from oil spills at Shell facilities.

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/ 26 August 2004

Thatcher was ready to flee SA

The Scorpions arrested Mark Thatcher, son of former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher, because he was planning to move to the United States next week, the elite detective unit said on Thursday. "I can confirm he was planning to leave the country," said spokesperson Makhosini Nkosi.
<li><a class=’standardtextsmall’ href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/pd.asp?ao=121107">Thatcher faces court showdown</a>
<li><a class=’standardtextsmall’ href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?ao=121103">Thatcher released on R2m bail</a>
<li><a class=’standardtextsmall’ href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/pd.asp?ao=121039">’Thatcher met with coup plotter'</a>
<li><a class=’standardtextsmall’ href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?ao=121052">Wayward son of the Iron Lady</a>

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/ 26 August 2004

Billiton’s $3,7-billion dollar venture with JFE

Anglo-Australian mining giant BHP Billiton said on Thursday it was forming a joint venture with Japanese steelmaker JFE steel that will underpin iron ore sales worth ,7-billion over the next 11 years. The joint venture partners will work together to develop and commercialise part of BHP Billiton’s Yandi mine in northwestern Australia.

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/ 26 August 2004

Debswana expects strike to end

An end to the illegal strikes at three of Botswana’s diamond mines was expected on Thursday, mining company Debswana said on Wednesday, but informal talks with the Botswana Mining Workers Union then snagged on the issue of the reinstatement of strikers who had been fired.

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/ 26 August 2004

Police abduct journalists in Najaf

Iraqi police on Wednesday night abducted around 60 journalists in the city of Najaf, after bursting into the hotel where they have been covering the battle in the city for the Imam Ali shrine, and dragging them off at gunpoint. The police moved into the lobby of the Sea of Najaf hotel at 9.15pm on Wednesday night. As they fired shots into the air, they ordered all journalists to leave immediately.

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/ 26 August 2004

Defiant Najaf uprising seems to be near its end

In the colonnaded doorways of Rassul Street, several fighters of the Mehdi army had made their final stand. Their bodies lay in small groups — two here, two there, and five here. For three weeks militia loyal to the Shia cleric Moqtada al-Sadr have defied the extraordinary firepower of the United States military, hiding in the network of alleys surrounding Najaf’s Imam Ali shrine.

  • Police abduct journalists
  • No image available
    / 26 August 2004

    Terror mystery haunts jet disasters

    Russian authorities struggled on Wednesday night to explain how two passenger aircraft had apparently blown up simultaneously in midair on Tuesday night, killing all 89 people on board. The owners of the two aircraft, aviation experts and relatives of the dead said the coincidence was too great for it not to be a terrorist act.

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    / 26 August 2004

    Mark Thatcher faces court showdown

    Mark Thatcher was on Wednesday night facing a legal battle to avoid a lengthy jail sentence after being arrested and charged in South Africa with helping to finance a failed attempt to overthrow the president of a tiny but oil-rich West African state. Police said they had ”credible evidence” that he was involved in backing a coup attempt in Equatorial Guinea.

  • Thatcher released on R2m bail
  • ‘Thatcher met with coup plotter’
  • Wayward son of the Iron Lady