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/ 15 January 2004
Ethiopia’s fledgling film industry is turning its attention to fighting the HIV/Aids virus. Documentary filmmaker Kidane Yilak tells why he felt compelled to make Hidden Tears, the country’s first film addressing the stigma and discrimination prompted by the virus, and the threat posed by HIV/Aids.
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/ 15 January 2004
The official opposition has proposed a tax rebate system for both individual taxpayers and corporates to boost employment levels and spur economic growth. The Democratic Alliance’s leader, Tony Leon, introduced a "solutions at work" document on Thursday.
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/ 15 January 2004
A parliamentary commission in Morocco has unanimously recommended a new family code putting wives on a more equal footing with their husbands, officials said on Thursday. The legal age at which girls can marry will be raised from 15 to 18 and polygamy will be permitted only under highly restrictive conditions.
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/ 15 January 2004
Preparations are under way for the establishment of South Africa’s first Aids museum, to be located at the Chris Hani Baragwanath hospital in Soweto. Historian and organising committee member Sue Krige said they are currently in talks with international donors to secure the funding.
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/ 15 January 2004
Among the cases that will come before the Competition Tribunal next Wednesday is the proposed merging of two former Rouxcor Holdings subsidiaries into Nedbank. Nedbank acquired all shares in Retail Brands and Continental Beverages after their holding company defaulted on its obligations to the bank in December 2000.
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/ 15 January 2004
The late Colonel Sanders, whose bearded, down-home visage adorns chicken restaurants from Kentucky to Karachi, is headed for a new frontier — the mountains of Tibet.
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/ 15 January 2004
The African National Congress in Gauteng said on Thursday it will take its election campaign to white areas to ensure it increases its support. The provincial party’s head of elections, Paul Mashatile, spoke confidently about the province’s achievement since 1994, saying: ”Gauteng is a better place to live in now.”
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/ 15 January 2004
Kibera slum, near the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, is at a considerable distance from the Indian city of Mumbai, where the World Social Forum is scheduled to begin in just two days. Nonetheless, the 700Â 000 inhabitants of this slum, said to be Africa’s largest, will provide one of the summit’s talking points when it gets under way.
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/ 15 January 2004
In spite of volatile markets, South Africa’s unit trust industry showed strong growth in 2003, with net inflows doubling to a record R38,9-billion, according to data from the Association of Collective Investments. Local unit trust assets rose by R50,5-billion over the year.
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/ 15 January 2004
The latest available figures on research and development in South Africa show that expenditure is slightly up, but it has not reached the government’s target of 1% of Gross Domestic Product, according to South Africa’s science and technology department.