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/ 22 January 2004
Bare bones will be the only exposed human body parts on show when the first exhibition of contemporary British art opens in Iran next month. Although the exhibition takes British art in the 20th century — from Henry Moore to Damien Hirst — as its theme, the British Council has selected the works with scrupulous care for Iranian sensitivities.
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/ 22 January 2004
A white farmer has been killed in Zimbabwe, the first in almost 18 months, the predominantly white Commercial Farmers Union said on Wednesday. The body of Peter Sivertsen, believed to be in his 70s, was found ”mutilated … in a hole in the ground” by a neighbour in the central town of Kwekwe.
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/ 22 January 2004
Ariel Sharon has been left one step away from corruption charges and being forced from office by the indictment of a businessman on Wednesday for allegedly paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to the Israeli prime minister’s family for political favours.
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/ 22 January 2004
Zimbabwe’s destruction and descent towards starvation and madness continues, helped almost singlehandedly by the South African government which clearly has little or no morals any more, writes Ian Fraser. Read the AP report entitled "Zimbabwe cruelty extends to domestic animals", and Cathy Buckle’s latest letter called "Little begging girl".
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/ 22 January 2004
Rape makes people act weird. It really does. Take these two reactions to the accusation against Judge Siraj Desai. This first: "I think he did it. I know this sounds stupid, but I just know. I looked at his eyes in a photo, and I can tell."
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/ 22 January 2004
Remember those schoolyard crazes? When one kid would arrive with a yo-yo/dingbat/tamaguchi and everyone else would just have to have one? Oom Krisjan’s thoughts strayed back to his schooldays recently when he saw all the little ones lining up for their first day of grind.
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/ 22 January 2004
Australian cricket chiefs said on Thursday they would not consider moral issues when deciding whether to tour Zimbabwe later this year, unlike their English counterparts. Cricket Australia spokesperson Peter Young said his organisation’s expertise was limited to cricket and left moral questions to the government.
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/ 22 January 2004
Shaun Pollock became the most fiendish of bludgeoning bashers with bat in hand when he mercilessly destroyed the Eastern Province Jumbos attack at Kingsmead on Wednesday. He helped the KwaZulu-Natal Dolphins to a formidable 45 overs total of 272 for four wickets in their Standard Bank cricket match.
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/ 22 January 2004
A goal in each half gave Santos three full points although they did not deserve it when they beat Dynamos 2-0 in a Castle Premiership match at Athlone Stadium on Wednesday night. This win puts Santos second on the log — a point behind Ajax Cape Town.
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/ 22 January 2004
Roger Federer says his breakthrough Wimbledon triumph last year has made him hungry for more Grand Slam titles and he wants to realise that at the Australian Open. The Swiss world number two had few concerns in reaching the third round in a straight sets victory over United States qualifier Jeff Morrison on Thursday.