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/ 10 October 2003

Big business has ‘collective amnesia’

Big business has both a moral and legal duty to pay reparations for apartheid, advocate Dumisa Ntsebeza said on Friday. Ntsebeza was speaking at the Black Management Forum’s annual conference in Cape Town, while in the United States a Washington court prepares to hear argument next month against calls to dismiss
a South African apartheid litigation case.

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/ 10 October 2003

A blow for the little guy

Some of our Justice System’s most watershed and exciting decisions have ended up as mere legal jargon that Joe Average could not be bothered with, unless he found himself in a sticky situation. That is why this column will start off by celebrating decisions that the taxi passenger, the law professor and the quadriplegic should all be able to relate to, writes Fikile-Ntsikelelo.

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/ 10 October 2003

‘Our leaders forgot us’

"I dreamed there was a helicopter flying, flying, and it went straight for my head. A bomb fell. The people around me — all of them — died. And the police came and they told me to take the corpses and stack them". Poppy Buthelezi had this recurring nightmare after she was shot in the back on June 16 1976, the first day of the Soweto uprising.

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/ 10 October 2003

Pathetic fallacies

The mantle of Britain’s Greatest Living Novelist settled on Martin Amis young and has grated and gratified ever since. The sneering young man is older, wiser. But when it comes to plot, he’s driving harder than ever, Emma Brockes in London.

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/ 10 October 2003

Zim journalist attacked over T-shirt message

A senior journalist for Zimbabwe’s Financial Gazette, Cyril Zenda, has reported to the Media Institute of Southern Africa (Misa) that he was robbed and attacked by a vigilante group in Harare last week. Zenda told MISA-Zimbabwe that he was spotted by a vigilante group known as Chipangano when he got off a bus at the main bus terminus in Harare.

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/ 10 October 2003

A soul thing

He goes simply as Jay, believes that "reading is a soul thing", and is the young author of <i>A Man Called Stan</i> (iUniverse). This novel moves back and forth through the life of the titular Stan, from his youth and first sexual experiences to his "mid-life crisis", old age and death.

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/ 10 October 2003

Nerves of steel

Von Holdt has produced a book that will probably become a classic of labour history. Detailed yet never boring, it is carefully constructed and well-research-ed. Some may object that it is one-sided (from the workers’ point of view) but he can hardly be faulted for the unwillingness of many in management or the white unions to talk to him. Anthony Egan reviews.