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/ 6 September 2004
Botswana’s diamond miners, on strike since August 23, returned to work on Sunday although wage talks have not been finalised and will continue. The strikers reported for work on the advice of an international union movement based in Brussels. This move will not stop trials for contempt of court and on the legality of the strike.
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/ 6 September 2004
South Africa’s online publishing industry is attracting millions of highly educated, high-earning users, mostly from Johannesburg and under 34 years old, the Online Publishers’ Association announced on Monday. More than 3,5-million users supported the industry in August, clocking up 106-million page impressions.
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/ 6 September 2004
The body of a five-year-old girl who went missing on Saturday was found on Sunday in the Lower Crossroads area of Cape Town, SABC news reported. Police said Sihle Rhani disappeared on Saturday but her family did not report it to police and went searching for her themselves.
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/ 6 September 2004
A man was shot and killed in the Johannesburg city centre on Monday morning, police said. The man, in his early 40s, was accosted by four men on the corner of Claim and Bree streets just before 7am. When the men saw a police vehicle they shot the man in the back of the head and ran away.
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/ 6 September 2004
The South African government must explain how it will secure property values in affluent areas if it plans to build low-income homes and flats in those suburbs, the Democratic Alliance said on Sunday. The Sunday Times reported that the Housing Department plans to build low cost housing near established suburbs to encourage different income groups to live together.
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/ 6 September 2004
The battle to determine which South African cities will host the 2010 Soccer World Cup is on. After the announcement in May that South Africa had won the bid to host the biggest single sporting extravaganza, it was assumed that all 13 stadiums listed in the bid book as existing or to be built for the World Cup would get the nod. Not so, says South African 2010 Bid Company CEO Danny Jordaan.
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/ 6 September 2004
Indian film directors are recruiting young, fair and blonde leading ladies from abroad to reach out to a larger international market, it was reported on Monday. A slew of new Bollywood films feature usually little-known actresses from Britain, South Africa and the United States, The Telegraph newspaper reported.
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/ 6 September 2004
Swazi King Mswati III, Africa’s last absolute monarch, has picked a 16-year-old girl as his new wife, bringing to 12 the number of official spouses, sources in the royal household said on Sunday. A source confirmed a report in The Times newspaper that said the teenager was a Miss Teen Swaziland finalist who took part in the annual reed dance last week.
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/ 6 September 2004
A Californian man has been arrested for allegedly using global positioning system technology to stalk a former girlfriend. Ara Gabrielyan is said to have attached a mobile phone with the tracking system to the woman’s car, allowing him to follow her movements.
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/ 6 September 2004
Turkey’s devout Muslim leader, Tayyip Erdogan, has defended his government’s plans to criminalise adultery, despite protests that have shown the issue is dividing the country. Erdogan, whose AK party has its roots in political Islam, said at the weekend that outlawing marital infidelity is a vital step towards preserving the family and ”human honour”.