The first donation out of the Free State business sector for the promotion of land reform was handed to the farmers’ union Free State Agriculture on Monday.
A top UN official in Zimbabwe has been summoned to government offices to explain why a UN employee travelled outside the capital without permission, a newspaper said on Friday.
Telecommunications giant WorldCom — faced with a mountain of debt and a growing scandal over accounting irregularities that caused the company’s stock to collapse — filed on Sunday for bankruptcy protection.
An Irish Catholic priest is in hiding in Zimbabwe after being forced to flee for his life when members of President Robert Mugabe’s lawless militia of so-called war veterans drove him out of his parish in eastern Zimbabwe.
Fears that Angola’s Giant Sable Antelope was extinct have been proved groundless, according to a Pretoria academic who this week returned from an expedition to that country.
Desperate for leads to the sniper, police are hoping their voices reach whoever has killed ten people in the Washington area. ”Your children are not safe anywhere at any time,” the purported killer writes in a note.
A second US war against Iraq could cost -billion to 200 billion dollars, up to four times the Pentagon estimate, the White House said, according to a news report on Monday.
Rebels and the government of Ivory Coast will sign a ceasefire on Friday in the capital Yamoussoukro, it was announced after a ministerial mediating team met insurgents in the rebel-held city of Bouake on Thursday.
An Engcobo school principal currently facing seven counts of sexually related charges might be allowed to return to school after the education department cleared him of all alleged crimes.
Fifteen white Zimbabwe farmers have been charged with defying a government ban on farming, the first move against this community since the ban came into force last week.