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/ 3 August 2004

Confusion over age of school admission

Children are not obliged to attend school in the year they turn six, Education Minister Naledi Pandor said on Monday. Children should be taken to school in the year that they turn seven, unless their parents can provide proof that their child was ready for school at an earlier age, the minister told reporters in Pretoria.

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/ 3 August 2004

Curing nevirapine confusion

The announcement last month by the Medicines Control Council (MCC) that nevirapine should not be used as monotherapy to prevent mother-to-child transmission (PMTCT) of HIV has caused much consternation, both in South Africa and abroad. Despite new doubts about the drug, it has saved the lives of thousands of babies in South Africa.

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/ 3 August 2004

Vive la femme

To coincide with National Woman’s Day, <i>The Media</i> magazine celebrates the remarkable women chosen as South Africa’s "top 10 women in media" for the last year. Each woman listed has made an outstanding contribution to the development of the media industry in an economic, political, social or cultural sense, and each has therefore easily fulfilled the criterion for inclusion.

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/ 3 August 2004

Mazda just keeps on going

Let’s be honest: the first Mazda 323 was not a very exciting car. Enter the modern equivalent. The Mazda3 is to its ancestor what the latest laptop is to an abacus, with sophisticated electronic gimmickry providing comfort and safety levels that would have been unimaginable a few years ago.

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/ 3 August 2004

Sarfu not luring Parkinson back

The purpose of the South Africa Rugby Football Union (Sarfu) board meeting in Johannesburg on Monday was not, as reported earlier, to lure deputy president Keith Parkinson back into the fold. Parkinson resigned last week following a series of recent incidents that have further tainted the image of the sport in South Africa.

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/ 3 August 2004

Global warming in the dock

Eight American states and New York city have launched an unprecedented civil action against five of the United States’s largest power companies, demanding that they cut carbon dioxide emissions because of global warming. Attorneys general from California, Connecticut, Iowa, New Jersey, New York and other states filed a public nuisance lawsuit on July 21 in the federal court in Manhattan.

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/ 3 August 2004

China is obsessed with the West

In city markets across China you will hear the following: ”Look at this beautiful silk shirt, made in America.” ”Look at these, real leather shoes made in Japan.” ”The very best chocolate, made in England!” On a publishers’ tour of China in April, my Western friends asked me what it was that people were shouting. I never knew what to say. If it says ”made in China” on the label, most Chinese don’t want to know.

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/ 3 August 2004

Policing the police

Since the start of a United Nations disarmament programme in Liberia in December 2003, much attention has been paid to the painfully difficult process of reintegrating the country’s rebel troops into society. Another — and equally important — operation is also underway, however: the reform of Liberia’s police force, blamed for a significant number of human rights abuses during the country’s civil war.

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/ 3 August 2004

Scourge of honey laundering

When British honey farmer Willie Robson blew the whistle on a fellow beekeeper, Richard Brodie, for potting Argentine honey and passing it off as Scottish borders honey, the resulting court case exposed some of the tough realities of an intensely competitive international business. Stinging accusations of foul play in the
beekeeping world have exposed the ruthless side of a global trade.

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/ 3 August 2004

‘What about us?’

Children go to bed on empty stomachs because maintenance defaulters shrug off their duty to support them. When women are frustrated in their attempt to access maintenance, their children are denied the only source of income that stands between them and starvation. Too often maintenance becomes a battle between the parents, when it is should be about the rights of the children.