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/ 29 September 2004

‘Angolagate’ follows the money

Switzerland on Wednesday gave French authorities bank documents seized in an investigation of alleged money laundering linked to illicit arms sales to Angola. The Justice Ministry said the handover included information on seven frozen bank accounts and was made possible by a government decision that helping France in its ”Angolagate” inquiry would not compromise Switzerland’s national interests.

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/ 29 September 2004

Mbeki pokes fun at the media

South African President Thabo Mbeki has poked fun at newspaper speculation about his successor, saying two correct predictions had been made. He stated at the South African Local Government Association conference at a convention centre in Cape Town on Wednesday: ”I have been told that some in our media have very recently been involved in a strange debate evidently to answer the question — what happens when Mbeki goes?!”

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/ 29 September 2004

Forgotten Bangladesh suffers the rains in silence

For now, the ”hygiene kit” — soap, candles, matches, two mosquito nets and basic clothing — is all that stands between the family of six and disease as this summer’s catastrophic monsoon floodwaters finally recede. ”We tried to stay in our home, but it was too dangerous and we had to go to the relief shelter [in a neighbouring school],” Helena (27) says.

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/ 29 September 2004

Eritreans celebrate highlight of orthodox calendar

Draped in white shawls, thousands of Asmarinos thronged September Square, the largest in the Eritrean capital, to mark the Meskel, the highlight of the orthodox religious calendar, which commemorates the discovery of Christ’s cross by Saint Helen. About half of Eritrea’s four million inhabitants are Orthodox Christians, according to the government.

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/ 29 September 2004

CPIX slows to 3,7%

South Africa’s CPIX inflation (headline inflation excluding mortgage costs) was up 3,7% year-on-year (y/y) for metro and other areas in August compared with 4,8% y/y in July, 5% y/y in June and 4,4% y/y in May, April and March, 4,8% y/y in February, and 4,2% y/y in January, Statistics South Africa (Stats SA) said on Wednesday.

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/ 29 September 2004

A bit of paperwork before tucking in

An exclusive restaurant in London’s Docklands is demanding that customers ordering a rare burger sign a disclaimer that guards against legal action should the customer suffer food poisoning, the British press reported on Wednesday. The current issue of the weekly Lawyer magazine reported that the document also had to be signed by the duty chef and the restaurant supervisor.