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/ 9 November 2004

Arafat’s wife locks horns with leadership

Palestinian leaders arrived in France on Monday night in an attempt to establish the true state of Yasser Arafat’s health, despite the objections of his wife, who has accused them of planning to "bury him alive". But doctors at the Percy military hospital in Paris appeared to pre-empt the leadership’s plans to see Arafat by announcing that he was unfit to receive visitors.
<li><a class=’standardtextsmall’ href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/pd.asp?cg=BreakingNews-InternationalNews&ao=125158">’They are trying to bury Arafat alive'</a>
<li><a class=’standardtextsmall’ href="http://www.mg.co.za/Content/l3.asp?cg=BreakingNews-InternationalNews&ao=125119">Leaders’ visit adds to confusion</a>

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/ 9 November 2004

Racing our expectations

It is trite to say that the majority of judges are white males and that has to change. It is already agreed that this change has to fit the demographics of society. Judges agree that "racism is inimical to our constitutional values. It is destructive of the fair and proper administration of justice and the constitutionally mandated process of transformation" as the Heads of Court said recently.

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/ 9 November 2004

The Public Test

Broadcasters in Africa, often due to their reach, are the genuine mass media — and potentially hold huge influence politically and culturally. Want to know whether your national broadcaster is a genuine "public" broadcaster? Apply this simple test set out by Professor Tawana Kupe.

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/ 9 November 2004

Blaming the Tools

TS Elliot once wrote "And so each venture is a new beginning, a raid on the inarticulate with shabby equipment always deteriorating…" David Bullard likens the tools available to journos in local newsrooms to mining for gold with a teaspoon.

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/ 9 November 2004

Earning power to the people

The City of Johannesburg has been presented with an innovative programme to address child poverty and early childhood development while at the same time regenerating local economies by enabling poor communities to earn money. The Child Nutrition Programme can do more than just feed children. It can change communities.

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/ 9 November 2004

Offsets cause upsets

Both military procurement agency Armscor and the defence industry offsets concluded in terms of the government’s R57-billion arms deal are coming in for sustained flak from a surprising quarter: troubled defence parastatal Denel. Tight budgets, international competition and internal inefficiencies are pushing the conglomerate deeper into the red.

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/ 9 November 2004

Flower could lose power

Buchu tea for your babalaas? Sorry, Baba, it’s a controlled substance, I can’t sell it to you. You want lavender oil to help you relax? Do you have a prescription, Ma’am?
That scenario sounds ludicrous, but amendments to the Medicines Control Act, due to be implemented in the next few months, could spell the end of the R2-billion alternative-health industry.