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/ 2 February 2005
Fifa is launching its first-ever Beach Soccer World Cup this year, world football’s governing body said Tuesday. Twelve countries are expected to compete in the competition, which is likely to take place in Brazil later this year. A new Fifa subsidiary is being set up in Barcelona, Spain, to work alongside the existing beach-soccer federation.
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/ 2 February 2005
Parliamentary elections will be held across Zimbabwe on March 31, President Robert Mugabe has announced amid fears the polling could be as violent and flawed as the last vote. In the 2000 parliamentary elections, the opposition came close to toppling Mugabe’s Zanu-PF, despite electoral rules seen as biased in the ruling party’s favour.
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/ 2 February 2005
A Bundesliga player on Tuesday said that he was offered a €15 000 bribe by a mystery caller if his team won a match during the 2003 season. The revelation made by Ranisav Jovanovic is the latest twist in the match-fixing scandal that has rocked German football as it prepares to host the 2006 World Cup.
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/ 2 February 2005
International Olympic Committee president Jacques Rogge defended the Vancouver Organising Committee on Tuesday, saying the Olympic brand needs to be protected from improper use. Rogge said the organising committee was right to ask local business’ to stop using Olympic names and logos.
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/ 2 February 2005
Manchester United produced one of the performances of the season to beat Arsenal 4-2 at the champions’ Highbury ground in London on Tuesday after twice coming from a goal behind and so put a massive dent in their rivals’ title challenge. Defeat left the Gunners 10 points behind Chelsea ahead of their London rivals’ match away to Blackburn on Wednesday.
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/ 2 February 2005
Both British Prime Minister Tony Blair and Chancellor Gordon Brown have taken a big political risk in setting an ambitious programme on Africa — and will certainly struggle to disguise any failure to make progress in 2005. Most governments that hold the presidency of the Group of Eight nations opt for relatively small targets, in order to claim victory.
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/ 2 February 2005
Washington has publicly welcomed the British Africa initiative, and the Bush administration says it has already started working towards the same goals. But on the road to African development, the United States is clearly going its own way.
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/ 2 February 2005
There was an impromptu strike at AngloGold Ashanti’s Tautona mine in Carletonville on Tuesday evening, due to problems with a shift boss and the manner in which mine workers’ grievances against him had been handled, the National Union of Mineworkers said on Wednesday.
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/ 2 February 2005
The total number of liquidations recorded for 2004 was 3Â 510, a 14,1% decline on the 2003 total of 4Â 086, Statistics South Africa said on Wednesday. The 14,1% decline was due to a decrease of 34,2% (from 857 to 564) in compulsory liquidations and a drop of 8,8% (from 3Â 229 to 2Â 946) in voluntary liquidations.
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/ 2 February 2005
South Africa have it all to do in the second Standard Bank one-day international at Goodyear Park on Wednesday, following their two-one defeat in the Castle Lager/MTN Test series against England, and their 26 run defeat in the first match at the Wanderers on Sunday.