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/ 16 February 2005

Time for tough love from Zim’s neighbours

Just fifteen years ago, FW De Klerk altered the South African paradigm when he unbanned the African National Congress and released Nelson Mandela. In the years that followed, many other paradigms were shifted and other forms of statesmanship displayed as a transition was successfully negotiated. Two weeks ago, the Zimbabwean election date was announced by Robert Mugabe’s government. Can we expect statesmanship?

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/ 16 February 2005

When God learns from man

Imagine my surprise. After years of popping in and out of synagogue life, I took my interest in Judaism to another level. Not exactly a higher level because, being gay, I had began to drift from the core tenets: family life, procreation and community accountability.

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/ 16 February 2005

Rasta pasta in Cairo

Tropical Africa is the new rage among the gastronomic glitterati of Cairo. Planet Africa opened its door last month in the affluent northern Cairo suburb of Heliopolis. It is the latest and largest example of a surge of interest in African things. It is now de rigueur, mainly among the more youthful set of the Egyptian middle classes, to decorate flats and villas in sub-Saharan African themes.

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/ 16 February 2005

Lost generation feared in Ivorian school chaos

It looks deceptively as if Côte d’Ivoire is at peace again. Many schools have reopened in the rebel-run north and noisy groups of children wearing black and white or gingham check uniforms kick up the dust on their way to class in the morning. But after two and a half years of armed confrontation, the war is far from over. And despite appearances, the schools are not running normally.

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/ 15 February 2005

New crisis looms in DRC

A new humanitarian crisis is brewing in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), where about 56 000 people have fled armed groups, out for lucrative mineral resources, that are murdering, raping and burning crops, a United Nations observer in the region said.

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/ 15 February 2005

Do safer births require a break with tradition?

If Kenya is to reach the Millennium Development Goal of reducing maternal mortality by three-quarters in the next decade, officials may have to call a halt to the work of traditional birth attendants. The risks of allowing them to ply their trade unhindered, says Kenya’s Department of Health, are simply too great.

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/ 15 February 2005

‘McLibel’ trial: UK violated activists’ rights

The European Court of Human Rights on Tuesday condemned the United Kingdom for violating the rights of two activists convicted of libelling United States fast food chain McDonald’s, ending a 15-year legal battle. The decision marked a victory for campaigners Helen Steel and Dave Morris, who were found guilty in the so-called ”McLibel” trial.

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/ 15 February 2005

Tony Leon: ‘I told you so’

Speaking on Tuesday in the debate on President Thabo Mbeki’s State of the Nation speech delivered on Friday, official opposition Democratic Alliance leader Tony Leon mentioned ”many examples of DA warnings that have proved correct”, regarding labour, Zimbabwe, Aids and anti-retrovirals, and the racial transformation of the public service.