A post template

No image available
/ 11 November 2004

Resources, golds lead JSE higher

After Wednesday’s pullback from record highs, the JSE Securities Exchange (JSE) remained strong at midday on Thursday, led by gains for the gold-mining sector and resources. There were also good gains for industrials. On Wednesday, the all-share and industrial indices reached record highs.

No image available
/ 11 November 2004

Sharon loses his closest enemy

With the death of veteran Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat, Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon has lost his closest enemy, whom he chased, hated and finally isolated for three years in Ramallah. For Sharon, Arafat never qualified as a sufficiently credible Palestinian partner with whom he could bring a peace agreement to fruition.

No image available
/ 11 November 2004

Zimbabweans living abroad banned from voting

Zimbabweans living abroad will not be allowed to vote because ruling Zanu-PF Justice Minister Patrick Chinamasa says the country’s Constitution bars them. He also said the registration of voters living in foreign countries is impossible because of a ban on senior Zanu-PF members from travelling to Western nations.

No image available
/ 11 November 2004

Leaders hope for Middle East peace

World leaders reacted to the death on Thursday of veteran Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat by accepting him as a symbol of his people’s cause, but differed sharply over his contribution to the Middle East peace process. They united, however, in calling for an end to the long-running Israeli-Palestinian conflict via a peace settlement that would include the creation of an independent Palestinian state.

No image available
/ 11 November 2004

Nedcor confirms earnings forecast

South Africa’s largest commercial banking group, Nedcor, has confirmed its previous earnings forecasts for the financial year to the end of December, saying on Thursday it expects its headline earnings per share (excluding translation gains or losses) to be between 6% and 19% lower than the 502 cents per share reported in 2003.

No image available
/ 11 November 2004

Don’t worry, ThisDay chief is ‘organising things’

Amid conflicting reports about the state of affairs at national daily <i>ThisDay</i>, its executive director Gbenga Oni-Olusola dismissed suggestions that the newspaper owners were planning to quit, adding that their plans to resume publication "soon" remained on track. Oni-Olusola said the newspaper’s owners were continuing to investigate ways in which they could resuscitate the newspaper.