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/ 14 January 2005
One expects the great issues of Europe to be played out in Brussels, or perhaps Strasbourg, or the national capitals, possibly even on the streets, but certainly not in the football stadiums. Yet, that is what is happening on race. You would barely know it. Football is not accorded that kind of significance in national life: it’s just a game.
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/ 14 January 2005
There are nine days of Test cricket left in England’s tour of South Africa, but only bright-eyed optimists and Centurion tourism officials can believe we will see more than six of those days unaffected by rain. Given the meteorological history of the pretty venue south of Pretoria, the fourth Test at the Wanderers is suddenly looking like a soggy decider.
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/ 14 January 2005
The Congress of South African Trade Unions has applied to the Zimbabwean government to send a high-powered delegation on a fact-finding mission to the country, two months after officials from the labour organisation were deported. But, said Zimbabwe Minister of Labour Paul Mangwana: ”They have no business to do in my country.”
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/ 14 January 2005
Mark Thatcher, the son of the former British prime minister Margaret Thatcher, left South Africa a free man on Thursday night after agreeing to pay a R3-million fine for his role in a coup plot which could have landed him in jail for 15 years. He flew to London and was thought to be bound for the United States to join his wife and two children after pleading guilty to funding an attempt by mercenaries to topple the government of Equatorial Guinea.
Mark Thatcher pleads guilty
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/ 14 January 2005
Graphic details emerged on Thursday night of the allegations made by the boy accusing Michael Jackson of molestation, including an explicit account of how he was allegedly plied with alcohol and masturbated by the pop star. Jackson faces 10 counts of child molestation and conspiracy.
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/ 14 January 2005
Balancing on the edge of the wooden catamaran, Anura Aparekkag stares long and hard at the blue waters lapping at the sides of his boat. ”No fish today. No fish yesterday. They are too scared to come back here,” he says. In the two hours since leaving the sands of Koggala, the 5m vessel has plied the waters along the coast in a futile search for fish that once could be scooped out of this ocean by hand.
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/ 14 January 2005
Pedro Almodóvar’s new movie, <i>Bad Education</i>, is among his most acclaimed ever. Simon Hattenstone meets the maestro from Madrid.
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/ 14 January 2005
The discovery of a genetic difference between rhesus monkeys and humans may help find a way to stop HIV infection developing into Aids, researchers said on Monday. British scientists funded by the Medical Research Council (MRC) say they have identified a gene that prevents the rhesus monkey from getting infected by the HI virus
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/ 14 January 2005
The insurance industry refers to ”acts of God”. Does last month’s tsunami qualify? How does the worst natural disaster for half a century square with the ideas of a divine plan and divine providence? How could a merciful and just God allow the tectonic plates under the Indian Ocean to shift so catastrophically? The Mail & Guardian asked local religious leaders for their views.
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/ 14 January 2005
Spoornet CEO, Dolly Mokgatle’s resignation was the climax of a war with Maria Ramos over the rail giant’s management and strategic direction. Mokgatle was swept out of the second hardest executive job in the country this week, because she couldn’t hold her own against the woman who has the hardest — her boss, Maria Ramos.