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/ 8 September 2004

Wal-Mart boss pips Murdoch in powerbroker list

The readers of glossy society magazine Vanity Fair are likely to raise an eyebrow or two this month after the magazine put the boss of Wal-Mart at the top of its annual New Establishment power list. Lee Scott, who has helped build Wal-Mart into the world’s biggest retailer with a pile-it-high and sell-it-cheap philosophy, is a surprise entry.

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/ 8 September 2004

Zimbabwe police arrest rights activist

Zimbabwe police arrested a prominent civil-rights leader on Wednesday for taking part in a protest against a new law clamping down on rights groups, a police spokesperson said. Lovemore Madhuku, the head of the National Constitutional Assembly, was picked up ”for the illegal demonstration held last week”, said a police spokesperson.

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/ 8 September 2004

Sudan arrests opposition militants

Sudan has arrested scores of Islamist militants from the party of detained opposition leader Hassan Turabi, accusing them of subversion and arms trafficking involving an unnamed neighbouring country. Security forces nabbed Popular Congress party officials in the latest crackdown by the government against its rivals.

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/ 8 September 2004

African poverty summit kicks off

Heads of state from 17 African countries on Wednesday attended the opening of an African Union summit in Burkina Faso to craft a jobs creation plan to lift hundreds of millions out of poverty. The summit was addressed by Burkina Faso’s President Blaise Compaore, who welcomed his fellow leaders to the two-day meeting.

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/ 8 September 2004

Survey says SA is a nation of givers

South Africans appear to be a nation of givers — in an average month, a massive 93% of people part with time, money or goods to assist a cause or an individual. According to a national survey almost R930-million was mobilised during October and November 2003 for development and anti-poverty work.

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/ 8 September 2004

New Somali Parliament faces enormous challenges

The swearing-in of Somalia’s transitional Parliament on August 22 in the Kenyan capital, Nairobi, and the first meeting of the MPs days later may have gone smoothly, but the real challenges facing the war-ravaged Horn of Africa country have just begun. ”History is littered with dishonoured Somali peace accords,” said an analyst.

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/ 8 September 2004

Fly-eating droid causes a buzz

A British-built robot generates its own power by gobbling flies, but it has a stinky downside — it needs human sewage as bait to catch the insects and then digest them. EcoBot II, made by robotics experts at the University of the West of England in Bristol, tucks into the flies in eight microbial fuel cells which are loaded with human sewage.

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/ 8 September 2004

Royal trip?

A number of cannabis plants have been found, and destroyed, in the park surrounding the Norwegian royal palace which is home to King Harald and Queen Sonja, official sources said on Wednesday. ”There were some hash plants. We have no idea who might have put them there,” said palace spokesperson Wenche Rasch.