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/ 15 May 2006

Revolution in the Camden air

He has been called a terrorist by Washington but for three and a half hours on Sunday in London he could do no wrong. An adoring audience of British left-wingers and the Latin American diaspora cheered, clapped, sang and laughed as Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez denounced United States President Bush and capitalism and praised London mayor Ken Livingstone and the Pope.

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/ 15 May 2006

ANC avoids media before Zuma meeting

Members of the African National Congress evaded the media on Sunday evening when they changed the venue for their national executive committee meeting from Luthuli House to the Esselen Park training centre in Kempton Park. Jacob Zuma’s role in the ANC was expected to be discussed at the meeting.

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/ 15 May 2006

Gang violence in São Paulo claims 67 lives

At least 67 people were killed over the weekend in the largest organised attack yet by drug gangs against Brazilian police and security forces, officials confirmed early on Monday. The apparent offensive by organised crime groups was launched on Friday night and continued until Sunday in Brazil’s commercial capital, São Paulo, and outlying regions of São Paulo state.

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/ 15 May 2006

Super sexy Sasol

Embraced by Nazi Germany and perfected in apartheid South Africa, Sasol’s Fischer-Tropsch process, which converts gas or coal to liquid, is now the sexiest thing in energy. In a post-9/11 world beset by sustained high fuel costs, concerns over energy security and growing environmental pressures, Sasol finds itself alone as the market leader in the conversion of both coal and gas to liquid fuels.

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/ 15 May 2006

Blurred by the lens of ideology

One of human civilisation’s best moments must have been the day when two foes decided that, instead of clobbering each other with clubs to decide whose argument was better, they would defer to a wise elder to arbitrate. And even more importantly, that they both would live with the sage’s decision.

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/ 15 May 2006

Europe’s new divide

Tourists and young couples ambling through the historic centre of Krakow on a warm spring afternoon were stopped in their tracks by a sight reminiscent of the era of martial law. As drinks flowed in the open-air cafes of Poland’s ancient royal capital, a phalanx of armed police in full riot gear inched its way slowly through the medieval city.

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/ 15 May 2006

No impotent minds required

”The Native Club contributions by Sandile Memela and Ebrahim Harvey were thought-provoking. I am not an intellectual; I am just an ordinary black citizen with questions to ask and a keen interest in the realm of ideas. I agree with Memela that we do not need intellectuals whose sole obsession is to criticise the government at every turn,” writes Gladwell Monageng.

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/ 15 May 2006

Back to the bubble

World stock markets finally expunged the memories of one of the worst bear markets in history recently when they surpassed the levels reached ahead of the collapse of the dotcom bubble in 2000. The most widely used yardstick of equity performance around the globe, showed that a recovery in developed economies coupled with boom conditions in emerging markets has created a new record for shares.

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/ 15 May 2006

More than just a public convenience

It has soft lights, gleaming red and blue surfaces and a soothing video projection on the wall showing swirling underwater bubbles. Welcome not to an art hotel, but to Europe’s trendiest public toilet. The super-loo, which opened in Berlin on May 4, is the last word in chic public architecture.