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/ 30 August 1996

Justice Ministry cracks down on money

laundering Tebello Radebe Justice Minister Dullah Omar is confident that several key laws to curb the easy pickings made by embezzlers, thieves, insider traders, and fraudsters will be in place before year-end. “This will be the culmination of a process we started two years ago to review our legal system because we inherited many laws […]

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/ 30 August 1996

KwaZulu-Natal skeletons creep out of the

closet Ann Eveleth Joseph Mdluli’s death in detention in Durban 20 years ago made international headlines. His son, who was in detention at the time, later told a judge during the trial of the late Harry Gwala he had heard the name “Joseph” being shouted round the prison one night. It was only later he […]

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/ 30 August 1996

Party banners fly at varsity for first

time At Stellenbosch, blacks are running for office. And that’s not the only thing that’s different about this year’s student elections, report Joshua Amupadhi and Thandi Lewin In a first for the new South Africa, political parties — the African National Congress, the National Party and the Freedom Front —are taking part in student elections […]

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/ 30 August 1996

Day of the assassin promises to thrill

Pronounced guilty, Eugene de Kock will now have his turn to incriminate members of the old security forces, writes Eddie Koch The day of judgment had come. Yet there was no air of anticipation in the courtroom. No murmurs of approval in the gallery as the judge delivered his verdict. Not a single family member […]

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/ 30 August 1996

Stals: Between a rock and a hard place

Mungo Soggot Reserve Bank Governor Chris Stals’s key annual address this week drew consensus among economists that South Africa’s top banker is caught between a rock and a hard place. But while there was agreement that the economy’s vital statistics — huge imports, a shaky balance of payments, and crippling debt levels — were far […]

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/ 30 August 1996

New South Africa fails its pensioners

The most vulnerable groups in South Africa — the poor, the elderly, the disabled and the abandoned — are being hit hard by burgeoning problems in social security offices across the country, as they struggle to claim their state grants from demoralised, ill-informed and sometimes deceitful civil servants. This year, the implementation of the new […]

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/ 30 August 1996

Supreme court backs Sasol secrecy

Mungo Soggot SASOL has won an extraordinary case against a magistrate who ordered the synthetic fuel company to disclose documents relating to a devastating mining accident which killed 53 workers. A commission of inquiry into the explosion — which took place at the company’s Middelbult colliery in 1993 — was suspended last year when the […]

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/ 30 August 1996

New minister plays follow-my-leader

Lionel Mtshali will be sailing outgoing minister Ben Ngubane’s old boat — but not rocking it. HAZEL FRIEDMAN reports FROM arts and culture to agriculture. That’s where the outgoing Minister of Arts, Culture, Science and Technology, Professor Ben Ngubane, is heading when he assumes his new post as minister of finance and agriculture in the […]

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/ 30 August 1996

A reputation under fire

Giles Foden TS ELIOT’S youthful poems collected as Inventions of the March Hare appear at a time when the reputation of this notoriously difficult — and massively influential — modernist poet faces reassessment. Though American-born, Eliot was known to be politically and religiously conservative. Accusations of anti-Semitism have recently been made, sparking debate in literary […]

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/ 30 August 1996

Corpses stack up as Zim strike continues

Andrew Meldrum in Harare A SHOWDOWN is looming for President Robert Mugabe’s government as 60 000 civil servants continue to strike for pay rises of more than 20%. With hospitals overstretched, mortuaries overflowing and airports in chaos, the strike, now in its second week, is the biggest and most disruptive since Zimbabwe’s independence in 1980. […]