Three major UK acts appear alongside TV chefs at the DStv festival, now in its second year, at Emmarentia Dam in Johannesburg.
The last of the United States military forces will leave Afghanistan by the end of 2016, 15 years after the September 2001 attacks in New York.
A three-year tender for a school nutrition programme in Mpumalanga has been set aside and referred back to the education department.
The National Lotteries Board allocation of R2.86-million for the production about Nelson Mandela’s life is enough for just three nights on stage.
Malaysia’s government has released the raw satellite data used to track missing Malaysia Airlines flight MH370 in response to pressure from relatives.
A Christian Sudanese woman sentenced to death for apostasy has given birth in jail, effectively giving her a two-year reprieve to nurse her child.
Fashion Weeks in Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi provide a showcase for local designers and are spurring similar events in neighbouring countries.
Discussions between Nigeria’s military chiefs and the president over how to rescue schoolgirls abducted by Boko Haram have reached a stalemate.
The City of Johannesburg’s budget has increased to R47.1-billion. Electricity prices will rise by 7.05% and waste removal services by 6% to 8%.
Service delivery protests are emblematic of a crisis of representation in municipalities and will only stop when citizen participation is embraced.