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/ 4 November 2005
Western Cape Premier Ebrahim Rasool’s bid to change the racial balance of his department could be scuppered if a dispute over 10 posts is not resolved by next Friday. A date hasn’t been set for arbitration between the provincial administration and trade unions, the Public Servants Association and Hospersa.
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/ 4 November 2005
Zimbabwe’s intelligence agents have bugged the phones of Rural Housing Minister Emmerson Mnangagwa, and have been conducting surveillance on his two Harare homes on the instruction of President Robert Mugabe. A senior Central Intelligence Organisation operative told the Mail & Guardian that Mugabe feared his former protégé was planning to defect from Zanu-PF, taking with him disillusioned sections of the ruling party.
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/ 4 November 2005
The Gautrain Rapid Rail Link still faces stiff opposition from within the government as its true costs emerge. The train sailed through one obstacle this week when a court challenge to the structure of the empowerment component in Bombela, the preferred bidder to build and operate the train, was thrown out.
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/ 4 November 2005
Ten years after the world watched in horror as Ken Saro-Wiwa and eight other Ogoni activists were executed by the Nigerian government on trumped-up charges the Ogoni people living in the oil-rich Niger Delta are little closer to justice. Nigeria may be Africa’s biggest producer of crude but in Ogoniland oil from rusting pipelines contaminates farmland and police continue to attack residents.
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/ 4 November 2005
Massively increased levels of public investment lie at the heart of Deputy President Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka’s plans for accelerated and shared economic growth. But its ambitious 6% target for economic growth has been scaled back to 4,5%, at least for the next five years. The 6% growth mark is seen as being attainable only between 2010 and 2014.
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/ 4 November 2005
Ten years ago, 300 people from around the world assembled in the Universal Hall at Findhorn, the veteran green community on the Morayshire coast in Scotland, to launch the Global Eco-village Network. This month, they and others came back to celebrate a movement that is growing rapidly and spreading expertise on sustainability, communal living and post-modern spirituality around the world.
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/ 4 November 2005
At the 18th annual World Petroleum Conference held in Johannesburg recently, a group of 13 protesters from the Free Burma Campaign gathered to demonstrate peacefully against Total Oil’s alleged support for the Burmese military dictatorship. The protest was shut down by police officers, who pushed and dragged the protesters off the sidewalk.
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/ 3 November 2005
Minister of Provincial and Local Government Sydney Mufamadi and provincial leaders will visit Khutsong on Friday, after two days of often-violent protests by residents over proposals to redemarcate the West Rand town. Protests broke out on Wednesday over the possible inclusion of the Merafong municipality into the North West.
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/ 3 November 2005
South African oil company Imvume Management has taken steps to institute legal proceedings against the committee appointed by the United Nations to investigate irregularities in Iraq’s oil-for-food programme relating to accusations of kickbacks against Imvume and sister company Montego.