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/ 7 September 2004
Two years ago the international community gathered in Johannesburg for the World Summit on Sustainable Development and drew up a plan to protect resources for the benefit of the planet. Last week the government and various civil society organisations gathered at the Johannesburg +2 Sustainable Development Conference to assess progress. We spoke to Environmental Affairs Director General Chippy Olver.
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/ 7 September 2004
Some towns measure time as a state of constant expansion. In Eden, a mill town in North Carolina, life registers in terms of loss: the factories that closed and the jobs that went with them, the lives interrupted. Janice Armstrong lost her job when one of Eden’s last giant textile companies closed its gates. ”The day it closed, our insurance was gone, our pension was gone. It was devastating,” she says.
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/ 7 September 2004
South African Rugby Football Union (Sarfu) president Brian van Rooyen is set to lay a charge of crimen injuria against former Springbok centre Robbie Fleck. The Star reported on Tuesday that Van Rooyen is pursuing the action after derogatory comments attributed to Fleck appeared in an SA Sports Illustrated article.
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/ 7 September 2004
”Africa, to the British upper classes, remains an adventure playground, a deer park and a treasury. And Constantia an enclave of apartheid prospering in a post-apartheid continent.” Africans have good reason to be suspicious of British involvement in their affairs, argues George Monbiot.
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/ 7 September 2004
You don’t lose veterans such as Zinedine Zidane, Marcel Desailly and Lilian Thuram and just pretend nothing happened. After just one 2006 World Cup qualifying match, France must look for victory against the lowly Faeroe Islands on Wednesday to get their campaign back on track.
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/ 7 September 2004
South Africa captain Graeme Smith said his side have the opportunity to become heroes during the Champions Trophy one-day tournaments, which start in England later this week. The Proteas come into the ”mini World Cup” on the back of a 5-0 one-day whitewashing in Sri Lanka.
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/ 7 September 2004
Fast-bowler Darren Gough has rounded on all those who queried whether he should still be playing top-flight cricket after becoming the first Englishman to take 200 one-day international wickets. Gough became the 19th bowler in history on Sunday to reach the 200-mark.
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/ 7 September 2004
Defending champion Justine Henin-Hardenne crashed out of the ,8-million US Open in New York on Monday, losing 6-3, 6-2 in a stunning fourth-round upset to unheralded Russian Nadia Petrova. Henin-Hardenne is the first top seed to lose before the quarterfinals since Billy Jean King was ousted in the third round in 1973.
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/ 7 September 2004
Andre Agassi tried to get this over in a hurry. He wanted a fast day at the US Open, just like Roger Federer. Agassi made short work of marathon man Sargis Sargsian on Labour Day, sweeping out his longtime friend and occasional practice partner 6-3, 6-2, 6-2. The win came after Federer set up an incredibly attractive match-up in the quarterfinals.
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/ 7 September 2004
Fiji’s Vijay Singh won a head-to-head match-up with Tiger Woods to end the American’s record reign atop golf’s ultimate leaderboard. Singh shot a 69 to beat Woods and Adam Scott by three strokes in the Deutsche Bank Championship on Monday, clinching the number-one ranking in the world with his sixth victory of the year.