Oprah is a Zulu. Her words, not Lemmer’s. "I feel so at home here," she told the press during her visit last week. Why? "I went in search of my roots and had my DNA tested, and I am Zulu." Dok Rabie says he’s thrilled for Oprah and her long-lost neefies en niggies, but isn’t sure how she got such a detailed diagnosis since DNA testing can only identify four large racial groups.
As a president with a penchant for foreign policy, Thabo Mbeki probably envisaged that his toughest speeches, his defining moments, would come as he spoke at the podium of the United Nations or on the panels of the G8. Instead, his defining moment, his toughest speech, came in Cape Town this week in Parliament.
Jacob Zuma took the first step in a thousand-mile journey this week when he made it clear that his sights are still fixed on the country’s presidency. Zuma has until the African National Congress’s next national conference in 2007 to mount a challenge for the ANC leadership, as a bridge to the highest office.
The military tribunals of suspected terrorists held at Guantánamo Bay were a ”tremendous failure”, a United States military lawyer told Congress on Wednesday. Navy Lieutenant Commander Charles Swift was testifying before the first full Senate hearing on the Bush administration’s treatment of detainees since the ”war on terror” began.
Six masked men who took 70 students and three teachers hostage at an international school in northwestern Cambodia on Thursday have released some of their captives, a government spokesperson and police said. The men have also demanded a 12-seat van from authorities.
Pope Benedict XVI will issue a condensed version of the Roman Catholic Church’s 865-page catechism, or book of official teaching, on June 28, the Vatican said on Wednesday. The late Pope John Paul II asked the present pontiff, then Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, in 2003 to prepare a compact edition of the catechism.
Two-thirds of judges and magistrates must ultimately be black in order to reflect the country’s racial demographics, new justice department director-general Menzi Simelani said on Wednesday. Referring to a lack of female and black judges, he said: ”There is a clear misrepresentation”.
Pre-orders for JK Rowling’s latest Harry Potter novel have exceeded half a million one month before the release of the sixth volume. A total of 568 000 copies of Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince have been ordered online and at American syndicated store sites, such as Borders.com, said online retailer Amazon.com.
Bafana Bafana coach Stuart Baxter believes ”nerves of steel” could be the deciding factor in the crucial World Cup qualifying game against Ghana on Saturday — and South Africa should be at a distinct advantage in this respect. ”It’s invariably easier rising to the occasion and playing with spirit and aggression in home games,” said Baxter.
The firing of Deputy President Jacob Zuma was only a bid to divert attention from the government’s multi-billion rand arms deal, activist Terry Crawford-Browne charged on Wednesday. Browne said that instead of acknowledging that the state succumbed to European pressures to buy armaments, President Thabo Mbeki was making Zuma a ”sacrificial lamb”.