No image available
/ 26 January 2004
United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan said on Monday the world had the capability but ”lacked the will” to prevent the mass slaughters of the 1990s, in opening remarks in Stockholm to the first international genocide conference in more than 50 years.
No image available
/ 26 January 2004
The man at the steering wheel of the National Electricity Regulator, Dr Xolani Mkhwanazi, has asked not to have his contract renewed. The nuclear physicist, who has also spent time at the Centre for Scientific and Industrial Research, has not explained his decision to leave the company he has headed since 1999.
No image available
/ 26 January 2004
The Boeremag treason trial resumed on Monday on a lighter note after a delay of more than two months when one of the accused asked for his discharge because of an administrative bungle about his identity. The cross-examination of a state witness, police spy Johannes Conrad Smit, resumed on Monday.
No image available
/ 26 January 2004
Election violence broke out in Gamalakhe township near Port Shepstone on Sunday evening with shots being fired and three people injured, police said on Monday. The Inkatha Freedom Party sent a statement to the media on Monday saying its members had been attacked in Gamalakhe.
No image available
/ 26 January 2004
The head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, Mohamed ElBaradei, gives notice on Monday of the existence of a nuclear black market of ”fantastic cleverness” supplying countries illicitly seeking to develop a nuclear bomb.
No image available
/ 26 January 2004
President Robert Mugabe did travel to South Africa last week, but the 79-year-old leader did not go there for emergency medical treatment, and was on holiday. ”The president is as fit as none of his detractors can ever hope to be in their lifetime,” said the the state-controlled daily Herald newspaper.
No image available
/ 26 January 2004
The JSE Securities Exchange South Africa (JSE) was a mixed bag just before midday on Monday, in trade that was fairly quiet ahead of key economic data releases due out later in the week. While gold stocks dragged on the downside, a weaker rand saw heavyweight dual- listed stocks keep the bourse in the black overall.
No image available
/ 26 January 2004
South African Department of Labour inspectors continued their surprise visits to companies over the weekend in an effort to make sure that the country’s companies adhere to labour-law legislation. The inspectors slapped two East London companies with nine contravention notices and two prohibitions.
No image available
/ 26 January 2004
Bafana Bafana players have gone and done it again — just as the Ephraim ”Shakes” Mashaba saga came to a close last week. The players in Tunisia started a mini revolt, demanding that their contracts be revisited before their kick-off against Benin on Tuesday. It is not the first time the payment issue has come up for discussion at a crucial tournament.
No image available
/ 26 January 2004
Cash-strapped homeowners whose properties are repossessed and sold by their banks are likely to get a better deal in future, thanks to recent interventions by the Ombudsman for Banking Services, Advocate Neville Melville, who became deeply concerned by the particulars of a complaint received by his office.