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/ 9 February 2005

Psychiatry head to treat Cresta slasher

The psychiatry head of the Gauteng health department will consult a mentally ill woman after she attacked a fellow patient at a hospital. Departmental spokesperson Popo Maja said on Tuesday the woman, being held at Sterkfontein mental hospital after she slit the throat of a pensioner at the Cresta shopping centre in Johannesburg, would be visited on Thursday.

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/ 9 February 2005

The people shall profit

”Comrades are not entitled to participate in the country’s economy according to the M&G‘s series on the African National Congress Youth League and linked business interests published in the past year. In this way, the notion that being young, black and successful is unacceptable (more so if you have the remotest links to the youth league) is being peddled in the media,” writes Fikile Mabula.

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/ 9 February 2005

Runaway truck kills 38 in Angola

At least 38 people, including many children, were killed and 70 injured on Tuesday when a truck rammed into a crowd watching a carnival parade in the southern Angolan town of Lubango, the Roman Catholic radio station Ecclesia reported. Witnesses said that the truck’s brakes apparently failed.

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/ 9 February 2005

Handshake halts the violence

Israel’s Prime Minister Ariel Sharon announced an unqualified end to all Israeli military attacks on the Palestinians on Tuesday as part of a historic ceasefire that formally ends more than four years of brutal intifada, suicide bombings and the destruction of occupied towns.

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/ 9 February 2005

Matric success begins before school

It is that time of the year again where the matric results are scrutinised, pulled apart and defended or doomed. Education officials vow to spend more money on improving the teaching situation for Grades 11 and 12. But is this where they should be concentrating their efforts, asks Elsie Calitz.

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/ 9 February 2005

Too little money for the big ideas

Early Childhood Development (ECD) in South Africa has come a long way since the inception of Ntataise about 25 ago. In 1980, when the organisation started, ECD opportunities and preschools for children in disadvantaged rural areas were virtually non-existent. Jane Evans, director of Ntataise, looks back.

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/ 9 February 2005

‘Illness of unknown origin’ and ‘pockets of rubber’

HIV/Aids is a serious subject, and is not usually much fun. But this time it was. In this remote spot of southern Côte d’Ivoire, it was as if the circus had come to town. Under the banner of the Aids lexicon project, a team of specialists were here to introduce local language equivalents for words like "Aids" and "contraceptives" to promote a better understanding of the virus among the country’s rural population.