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/ 5 February 2004
Andy Roddick tasted Grand Slam success. He was ranked number one. No one serves the ball faster. One gap on his resume? A Davis Cup title, something he and the United States can move closer to by beating Austria in a first-round match in Uncasville, Connecticut.
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/ 5 February 2004
Rival skippers Ricky Ponting and Sourav Ganguly on Thursday gave cautious approval to a proposed world-best cricket tournament. Cricket Australia confirmed it had given in-principle agreement to the International Cricket Council idea, which would pit the world’s best team against a Rest of the World XI.
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/ 5 February 2004
One of South Africa’s cricketing greats, Jonty Rhodes, has joined Standard Bank as a business banker. Jonty, whose live-wire antics on the pitch enthralled millions of cricket fans both locally and internationally, has been appointed as an account executive in Standard Bank’s business banking division in KwaZulu-Natal.
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/ 5 February 2004
Athletics South Africa on Thursday announced further incentives for athletes in the Absa Series, over and above the R5 000 incentive for every athlete who achieves an IAAF A Standard, which Absa announced on January 27. The incentives comprise appearance fees and place-related fees.
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/ 5 February 2004
Collectively, the householders of the world could be about to put the cat out. Lion numbers have dropped by 90% in 20 years. The other big cats are going fast. How long before all the Earth’s mega species disappear from the wild, and is there anything we can do about it?
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/ 4 February 2004
Sasol has discovered a promising new oil field in relatively shallow water at Ebouri, off southern Gabon, the company announced on Wednesday. The South African oil giant already has a 27,75% share in the 15 000 barrel-a-day Etame oil field, in the same region, which started operating in 2002.
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/ 4 February 2004
A member of parliament from Zimbabwe’s main opposition Movement for Democratic Change (MDC) party has died from apparent torture wounds, his party has announced. The MDC alleges that the MP was abducted and severely beaten by a group of about 40 ruling Zanu-PF supporters.
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/ 4 February 2004
Apart from selling sunflowers and sheep to finance their alleged coup plot, the Boeremag also talked of ”hijacking” a grain harvest and arranging a cash-in-transit heist. According to a police spy, financing for the alleged coup would have included a crop of sunflowers and 200 sheep donated by farmers.
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/ 4 February 2004
More than 14 000 people living with Aids in Nigeria who had been receiving anti-retroviral drugs subsidised by the government are running out of supplies, an HIV/Aids activist group said on Tuesday. ”By June 2003 some centres had stopped administering the drugs,” the president of Aids Alliance Nigeria said.