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/ 22 October 2004
Welcome to ”Be a Regular Guy,” the new reality show for United States presidential candidates. John Kerry swaps his senator’s suit for khaki camouflage and hunter’s rifle to go on a goose hunt, and lures cameramen into his hotel room to snap him rooting for the Boston Red Sox.
Kerry closes Bush lead in Florida
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/ 22 October 2004
Swedes worship crayfish, holding large parties every summer to celebrate the little red shellfish in a feast that is as important for its rituals as its gastronomic delight. But as the crayfish fishing season draws to a close in Swedish lakes and the breeding season gets under way, researchers are expressing concerns that stocks may once again be under threat from a deadly plague that could be spreading out of control.
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/ 22 October 2004
While the European Union attempts to buttress its frontiers against illegal immigration, Spain is discovering that even the most sophisticated police technology is unable to stem the tide at its southern border, a gateway for thousands of Moroccans and sub-Saharans seeking to enter Europe every year.
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/ 22 October 2004
Evidence in a forensic report suggests Zuma’s financial state was so parlous that he could never repay ‘loans’.
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/ 22 October 2004
The re-election of Patrice Motsepe as head of the National African Federated Chamber of Commerce (Nafcoc) for two more years means that the anti-Motsepe faction must find a leader willing to put his or her money where his or her mouth is. Despite gripes about the Nafcoc head, Motsepe’s re-election proves that his power and influence is still acknowledged.
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/ 22 October 2004
It’s been revealed that only one in 10 learners who register for sector education and training authority (Seta) learnerships finish their courses. National Skills Authority data up to June this year show that only 9 502 of a total of 70 000 of registered learners have completed their learnerships since the system was implemented in March 2001. These figures equate to a completion rate of 14%.
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/ 22 October 2004
The Reverend Frank Chikane will stick with President Thabo Mbeki as head of his office almost until the end of his term. Cabinet has announced that Chikane’s contract has been extended for another three years. His appointment was one of a number of senior appointments approved by Cabinet at its meeting this week.
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/ 22 October 2004
After almost a month as number 2070 in a morgue fridge, Simon Mangaliso Radebe will recapture his humanity on Saturday when he is buried at the Roodeport Cemetery in Soweto. Radebe made headlines after Johannesburg paramedics allegedly refused to take him in their ambulance because he was ”too dirty”and flea-ridden. Radebe died in the Johannesburg city centre where the paramedics had left him.
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/ 22 October 2004
South African National Parks (SANParks) is reconsidering a management plan that will see between 400 and 1 000 elephant culled in the Kruger National Park annually for at least five years. At a high-level indaba held this week to discuss burgeoning elephant populations, SANParks director of conservation services, Hector Magome, said it was time to dust off a plan that was launched in 1999 but shelved amid controversy.
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/ 22 October 2004
President Thabo Mbeki answered questions in the National Assembly on Thursday for the first time in almost a year, but he refused to allow robust exchanges on HIV/Aids, the economy and Zimbabwe to divert him from his script. Question time was still under way as the M&G went to press, but its opening half was dominated by a renewed attack on what Mbeki described as racist assumptions about rape and sexual behaviour generally.