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/ 20 March 2005

Namibian Parliament bids farewell to Nujoma

Namibian President Sam Nujoma on Saturday hailed his country’s 15-year record of democracy and peace, as he gave his farewell speech to Parliament before he steps down. He praised the members of the former Constituent Assembly who elected him as head of state in 1990 and who drafted the country’s Constitution after its independence.

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/ 20 March 2005

New weekend hours for Dept of Home Affairs

Department of Home Affairs offices will be open on the weekend starting from April 1, the department said on Saturday. ”This is to accommodate those who cannot visit our offices during the normal office hours by providing them with extra opportunities to access our services,” said a departmental spokesperson.

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/ 20 March 2005

French bitter over wine study

A British institution will this week rubbish France’s perennial claim that its unique soil and climatic conditions are responsible for producing some of the world’s finest wines. Two economists have concluded that environmental conditions are not important when it comes to producing memorable wine.

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/ 20 March 2005

Texas cheerleaders face bump-and-grind ban

Cheerleaders and band majorettes in Texas could soon be barred from performing bump-and-grind routines in an effort to make Friday-night football games more "family friendly," according to a Bill working its way through the state legislature. Representative Al Edwards proposed last week to bar "sexually oriented" performances.

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/ 20 March 2005

Bomb at Pakistan shrine kills at least 27

At least 27 people were killed and 18 wounded when a bomb exploded on Saturday at a gathering of minority Shia Muslims in a remote town in south-west Pakistan. Thousands of worshippers had congregated at the shrine of a Shia saint near the town of Naseerabad, about 336km south of Quetta, when the bomb went off outside at about 10.20pm.

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/ 20 March 2005

Strong quake hits southern Japan

A powerful earthquake jolted southern Japan on Sunday, killing an elderly woman and injuring at least 381 people, disrupting transport and prompting a tsunami warning that was later cancelled. Buildings swayed, and aftershocks continued to rattle the region. Genkai, an island off the coast of Kyushu, was evacuated after homes collapsed and roofs caved in.

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/ 20 March 2005

Aids ‘carries the face of a woman’

The Aids pandemic carries the face of a woman, former president Nelson Mandela told thousands of people gathered at Fancourt, George, on Saturday night for his second Aids benefit concert. The purpose of the 46664 concert was to give a voice to the women of Africa in the fight against Aids, he said.

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/ 20 March 2005

America’s hidden Afghan detention centres

Washington likes to hold up Afghanistan as an exemplar of how a rogue regime can be replaced by democracy. Meanwhile, human rights activists and Afghan politicians have accused the US military of placing Afghanistan at the hub of a global system of detention centres where prisoners are held incommunicado and allegedly subjected to torture.