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/ 24 January 2004

Safa, Bafana talk money

The South African Football Association (Safa) met Bafana players after their morning training session in Sousse, Tunisia on Friday, to give them feedback on their request for a consolidated payment for the African Cup of Nations tournament.

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/ 24 January 2004

Time to kick some Aussie…

South Africa will play Australia in two internationals over the next year in an agreement announced by the Australian Soccer Association (ASA) on Saturday. The ASA said the Socceroos will play South Africa in London on March 30 and meet again in South Africa on February 9 next year.

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/ 24 January 2004

Will they stay or will they go?

England cricket officials said Friday they had delayed making a decision on whether to tour Zimbabwe later this year because they want to study the advice of the British government. The England and Wales Cricket Board (ECB) have set themselves a deadline of next Thursday to decide.

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/ 23 January 2004

Anti-bomb buses will save Israeli lives

Israel has come up with a new system aimed to stop suicide bombers boarding buses before blowing themselves up, by detecting the explosives they are carrying. The system takes the form of a turnstile fitted with shields that contain sensors which can detect explosive materials a distance of up to a metre from the bus.

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/ 23 January 2004

Wedding guest tells of blaze horror

A man who escaped from a fire that engulfed a wedding pavilion and killed at least 45 people in southern India on Friday, said he could hear people crying out from the flames. ”We could hear a lot of shouting from inside asking for help. We could do nothing because the fire was blazing,” he said.

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/ 23 January 2004

German chancellor wraps up SA visit

German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder on Friday wrapped up his visit to South Africa with a tour of a health centre named after a black activist and lunch at a German-run factory. President Thabo Mbeki applauded Schroeder’s ”concern to support our continent to meet its political and social goals”.

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/ 23 January 2004

Union accuses police of causing traffic jams

The labour union that has been trying to ”blockade” Cape Town International airport on Friday accused the police of causing traffic jams there. ”The police have started pulling out cars of all our comrades with aims to issue them with tickets,” said a South African Transport and Allied Workers Union spokesperson.