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/ 22 October 2004
The kidnapped director of Care International in Iraq appeared on a videotape broadcast on Friday, weeping and pleading with British Prime Minister Tony Blair to withdraw troops from Iraq ”and not bring them to Baghdad” because ”this might be my last hour”.
British aid worker held in Iraq
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/ 21 October 2004
A new defence lawyer was on Thursday appointed to a group of alleged coup plotters — including South Africans — held in Equatorial Guinea after their previous counsel died of malaria last week. Fabian Nsue Nguema, a member of the bar in Malabo, will replace his colleague Fernando Mico Nsue, who died on October 12.
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/ 21 October 2004
A witness in the Boeremag treason trial, former Bela-Bela farmer Deon Crous, described on Thursday preparations for a coup attempt, including renting cars for car bombs, stockpiling ammunition and making petrol bombs with beer bottles and government-issue condoms.
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/ 21 October 2004
The lawyer representing the man accused of kidnapping and killing Johannesburg student Leigh Matthews has withdrawn from the case, the prosecution confirmed on Thursday. Randburg senior prosecutor Pieter Erasmus said he had received a fax from Louis Weinstein on Wednesday indicating that he had withdrawn from the case.
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/ 21 October 2004
Panic is beginning to set in among drought-hit families in Ethiopia’s Somali region, where poor rains have exacerbated water shortages, the government and aid organisations said on Wednesday. More than four million people live in the dry, remote region, which is made up of nine zones and has a 1 600-km border with Somalia.
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/ 21 October 2004
More than 700 women have volunteered to lie in bed for 60 days to simulate some of the effects of weightlessness, the European Space Agency announced on Thursday. The female test subjects will lie in bed, with their heads slightly tilted downwards at six degrees below the horizontal, for 60 days.
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/ 21 October 2004
Africa’s leading Anglican churchman, Nigeria’s Archbishop Peter Akinola, condemned the worldwide church’s response to the controversy over the ordination of an openly homosexual bishop as wholly inadequate and insulting, in a statement received in Lagos, Nigeria, on Thursday.
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/ 21 October 2004
President Fidel Castro, Cuba’s leader for more than 45 years, broke his left knee and his right arm in a fall, and urged the Caribbean country’s population of 11-million to stay calm, a government statement said on Thursday. TV cameras captured the incident on Wednesday when the leader stumbled as he was descending a flight of stairs.