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/ 7 February 2005

Still no sign of editor’s seven-year-old son

A seven-year-old autistic boy who went missing on Sunday in Berario, north-west Johannesburg, had still not been found on Monday morning, his father said. The editor of the Sowetan Sunday World, Thabo Leshilo, father of Ofentse Leshilo, said this is not the first time his son, who is extremely hyperactive, has gone missing.

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/ 7 February 2005

Marvellous mud

If you’re after spa treatments, luxury safari lodges and chocolates on your pillow, then Mali is not for you. Even wildlife is not really on the agenda, bar a few hippos and crocodiles lurking in the boundless Niger river. But if you fancy a mind-boggling ethnic mosaic, seeing mud architecture that could have been designed by Gaudí and immersing yourself in the passions of an ancient cosmology — then this is your kind of place.

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/ 7 February 2005

Imperial island

When my boyfriend tells people that he proposed to me at the site of Napoleon’s tomb on St Helena Island, they smile as though humouring a macabre child. "Er, lovely," they say, wondering why he chose one of the remotest pieces of land on Earth for such a question — not to mention the spot where a French corpse was once interred.

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/ 7 February 2005

AU dodges ‘who is more African’ debate

Presidents Thabo Mbeki, Hosni Mubarak and Olusegun Obasanjo have steered clear of the controversy over Nigerian academic Dayo Oluyemi-Kusa’s assertion that South Africa and Egypt were not black enough to represent the continent on the United Nations Security Council. "The president would never get involved in commenting on something like this," said Mbeki’s spokesperson.

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/ 7 February 2005

Making a little go a long way

This is the time of year when the recurring issues of academic and financial exclusions at higher education institutions surface. This has seen some students given access and others not; and where difficult choices are made between equally pressing priorities. All this has to be done while the playing fields remain uneven.

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/ 7 February 2005

Who can tango the loudest?

I suppose we should continue to be afraid – very afraid. The British-American-sponsored version of democracy, that is free and fair elections across Iraq, is being celebrated with jubilation and gusto across the world through CNN, the independent international news network rivalled only by al-Jazeera. The question is, which one of these networks brings more balance to what we are receiving through the testimony of our eyes.

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/ 7 February 2005

Bush’s Budget axe to fall on poor

United States President George Bush is proposing to reduce spending on public health and social welfare in the US to help pay for tax cuts and the war in Iraq, according to early reports of Monday’s White House Budget. Bush inherited a budget surplus from Bill Clinton but is now running deficits of over -billion.

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/ 7 February 2005

Bush targets the cherished monthly cheque

United States President George W Bush’s two successful presidential campaigns have proved that social security is no longer the sacred cow of American politics.
For generations, it was considered politically fatal to touch the government-run pension system. But two weeks into his second and final four-year term, Bush made social security reform the centrepiece of his domestic agenda.

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/ 7 February 2005

Scientists should listen to poor, not politicians

Gordon Conway, the newly appointed chief scientist at the United Kingdom Department for International Development, has used his first public speech to call on scientists to listen to the world’s poor. Conway said it is imperative that development agencies such as his own listen closely to the demands of the poorest in developing countries — and not only to scientists and politicians there.