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/ 19 May 2006

UN calls for Guantánamo closure

The United States should shut Guantánamo Bay and give detainees access to a fair trial or release them, a United Nations human rights watchdog said on Friday. The UN committee against torture voiced concern that detainees were being held at the camp for long periods without judicial scrutiny of the reasons for their detention,

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/ 19 May 2006

We, the corporations

Civilisation has a new enemy. He is a former coca grower called Evo Morales, who is currently the President of Bolivia. Recently he stood before the European Parliament to explain why he had sent troops to regain control of his country’s gas and oil fields. Bolivia’s resources, he says, have been ”looted by foreign companies”, and he is reclaiming them for the benefit of his people.

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/ 18 May 2006

Employers to take hard line in security talks

Employers plan to take a hard line in talks set for Friday to bring an end to a nearly two-month long security industry strike. A joint statement by security sector employers said their continued participation in the talks was dependent on the South African Transport and Allied Workers’ Union agreeing to call off the strike and bring an end to violence associated with the dispute.

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/ 18 May 2006

Mboweni to sit on IMF committee

Governor of the South African Reserve Bank Tito Mboweni has been appointed to a ”committee of eminent persons” to review the finances of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the IMF announced in Washington on Thursday. The fund is facing a long-term shortfall in the financing of its administrative budget as the result of a decline in its level of lending.

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/ 18 May 2006

Thousands march against job losses

Thousands joined marches throughout the country on Thursday to protest against job losses, but the impact of the one-day strike varied across the sectors of the economy. The strike, called by the Congress of South African Trade Unions, was felt hardest in the mining industry, followed by car manufacturers, retailers and the textile industry.

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/ 18 May 2006

Strike could cost economy R2-billion

A nationwide strike on Thursday could have cost the economy over R2-billion and defeated the aims of striking unions, business and economists said. The strike would have had a negative impact on job creation and poverty alleviation, said chief operations officer at the Business Unity of South Africa, Vic van Vuuren.

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/ 18 May 2006

Zim demolitions-blitz marked with songs, tears

Songs, plays and heart-rending testimonies on Thursday marked the first anniversary of Zimbabwe’s demolitions blitz, which left hundreds of thousands homeless and destitute. Reti Chakadenga, a former house owner now living among the destitutes on the banks of a river on the outskirts of Harare, sniffed and battled to hold back tears.

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/ 18 May 2006

Door opened to review floor-crossing

South African President Thabo Mbeki has opened the door to a review of floor-crossing legislation — which allows MPs, members of the provincial legislatures and local government councillors to defect from their political parties — but said the matter was ”eminently political” and should be dealt with by MPs and not the executive.