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/ 22 September 2006

Stunt plane crashes into sea off Cape Town

A pilot who died when his aerobatics aircraft crashed into Table Bay off Milnerton on Friday afternoon was the sole occupant of the two-seater plane, Africa Aerospace and Defence spokesperson Kanthan Pillay said. The pilot’s name would be released once his next of kin had been notified, he said. The aircraft was operated by the Sasol Tiger formation aerobatic team.

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/ 22 September 2006

Cape Town train catches fire

A train caught fire outside Nolungile station in Cape Town on Friday morning, police said. ”Smoke was seen coming from a train en route from Khayelitsha to Cape Town. The smoke came from a coach next to the driver,” said Inspector Bernadine Steyn. The train was halted and all passengers were evacuated safely.

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/ 21 September 2006

Further anti-smoking legislation on the way

The Tobacco Control Bill tabled in Parliament last week is only the first of two pieces of anti-smoking legislation, the Department of Health confirmed on Thursday. A second Bill, which will introduce graphic health warnings on cigarette packets, was with the state law adviser waiting for certification, acting head of health promotion Kgwiti Mahlako said.

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/ 21 September 2006

Cape Town readies for Homeless World Cup

A shy smile creeps up the hardened face of 17-year-old street child Siyabonga Mkhize as he proclaims proudly: ”I am playing soccer for South Africa!” He is one of about 500 people from nearly 50 countries taking part in the fourth Homeless Football World Cup, starting in Cape Town this weekend in an organised attempt to transform their lives.

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/ 20 September 2006

Aids council to be beefed up

Government decision-makers are to be included on the South African National Aids Council (Sanac), it was announced on Wednesday. Deputy President Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka briefed Cabinet on Wednesday on progress the recently established inter-ministerial committee was making in resuscitating Sanac and managing government interaction with the various stakeholders.

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/ 19 September 2006

Suburban bliss

Pinelands, a Cape Town suburb built in the 1920s to emulate a British rural idyll, has become the city’s most racially mixed neighbourhood. If you’re really lucky you might glimpse Pinelands residents Patricia de Lille (Independent Democrats leader) and Pregs Govender (activist and former MP) having their hair done at the same salon.

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/ 19 September 2006

Govt plan for Cape Town a blatant abuse, says Zille

Western Cape provincial minister of local government Richard Dyantyi’s move to change Cape Town’s system of government is a blatant abuse of power with serious implications for South Africa, city mayor Helen Zille said on Tuesday. She was reacting to a letter Dyantyi sent her earlier in the day, announcing that he was considering scrapping the current mayoral committee system.

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/ 19 September 2006

Moves afoot to strip Zille of power

Western Cape provincial minister of local government Richard Dyantyi has taken the first step in his bid to strip Cape Town mayor Helen Zille of her executive powers. He sent a letter to Zille on Tuesday giving her notice of a ”proposed amendment” to the form of government the city has.

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/ 19 September 2006

Lone ANC MP turns up to listen to TAC

Veteran African National Congress (ANC) MP Ben Turok cut a lonely figure outside Parliament on Tuesday as opposition MPs seized on an invitation by HIV/Aids activists to participate in a ”people’s parliament” convened by the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC). ”I am here because I want to listen to the TAC. They are an international, well-known organisation,” said Turok.

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/ 19 September 2006

TAC invites MPs to take up seats outside Parliament

Aids activists will on Tuesday set up hundreds of chairs outside Parliament, hoping to lure MPs to engage with civil society on challenges the country faces in fighting the pandemic. ”In front of Parliament we will have 450 chairs, one for each member of Parliament, to come meet with the public on the issue of HIV. We hope MPs will take up our offer,” the Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) said in a statement.

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/ 18 September 2006

Mbeki to address UN General Assembly

President Thabo Mbeki is to address the 61st Session of the United Nations General Assembly on Tuesday. Mbeki is leading the South African delegation to New York, which includes Minister of Foreign Affairs Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma, her deputy director general George Nene and South Africa’s Permanent Representative to the UN, Dumisani Kumalo.

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/ 18 September 2006

Le Roux wins important court victory

The defence in the fraud trial of former national cricketer Garth le Roux and his accountant won an important victory on Monday with a court ruling that will limit the type of evidence the state’s main witness can give. Wynberg Regional Court magistrate Jackie Redelinghuys ruled that the state could not lead opinion evidence on matters of interpretation of law.

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/ 17 September 2006

Somali refugees fear deadly violence in Cape Town

Refugees who fled war-torn Somalia in search of safety and a better life in South Africa now fear becoming the next victims in a string of murders of their compatriots in the Cape peninsula. ”I ran from the bullet to find violence here,” said Malyun Aden, who ran a clothing store at Masiphumelele, near Cape Town, until it was trashed in mob attacks last month.

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/ 16 September 2006

Home affairs reassures Christians on marriage Bill

Home Affairs Department portfolio committee chairperson Patrick Chauke says he will not allow his religious beliefs to interfere with the way he and his committee deal with draft legislation on gay marriages. He was speaking outside Parliament on Saturday, after receiving a memorandum from several thousand Christians to protest against the Civil Unions Bill.

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/ 15 September 2006

Leon: SA owed billions by arms suppliers

South Africa is owed billions of rands in industrial participation agreements signed with international arms suppliers, and the government should explain why this investment has not happened, Democratic Alliance (DA) leader Tony Leon said on Friday. The agreements, termed ”offsets”, were mooted as a primary motive for the arms deal, he said.

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/ 15 September 2006

FW’s spokesperson beaten, robbed

Former president FW de Klerk’s spokesperson Dave Steward believes he and his wife were ”very lucky” to have emerged relatively unscathed from an armed robbery at their Claremont, Cape Town, home. Steward said on Friday that he and his wife Lanice were attacked as they prepared to reverse out of their garage to visit her elderly parents at 6.15pm on Sunday.

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/ 14 September 2006

Embrace homosexuals, says Anglican archbishop

Homosexuals are God’s children, Anglican Archbishop Njongonkulu Ndungane said on Thursday, ahead of a conference in Rwanda with the contentious issue of gays in the church on its agenda. ”We should try to find solutions of living with difference and otherness. Diversity is the creation by the Almighty,” Ndungane told reporters.

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/ 13 September 2006

Assassination plot foiled in Cape Town

Cape Town’s mayoral committee member for safety and security, Dumisani Ximbi, was rushed out of a public meeting last week after a warning of a plot to assassinate him, his office said on Wednesday. Ximbi’s spokesperson Wesley Douglas said the incident happened on Thursday evening, but was kept under wraps until the city’s VIP protection unit had completed a report.

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/ 13 September 2006

Law to crack down further on SA smokers

Smokers who pop outside for a cigarette could still find themselves running foul of the law under new legislation being planned by the South African government, officials said on Wednesday. A Bill drafted by the ministry of health is looking to introduce a new offence of smoking outdoors within a prescribed distance from a window, ventilation outlet, doorway or entrance to a public place.

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/ 12 September 2006

Plan to help seabirds ‘fallen by the wayside’

South Africa, signatory to a treaty to protect the imperilled albatross, has ironically not yet adopted a plan of action to stop endangered seabirds being killed by fishing vessels. ”The national plan of action seems to have fallen by the wayside … ” said Samantha Petersen, manager of the Birdlife and World Wildlife Fund Responsible Fisheries Programme.

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/ 12 September 2006

Clash over testimony in Le Roux case

Stumps were drawn early on Tuesday afternoon in the fraud trial of former national cricketer Garth le Roux and his accountant following legal argument over the testimony of the state’s first witness. The dispute arose as the prosecution was handing in a series of documents from South African Revenue Service files.

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/ 12 September 2006

One in five pregnant women in W Cape is HIV positive

One in five pregnant women are testing HIV positive in the Western Cape’s public health antenatal clinics, according to a survey released by the department provincial health on Tuesday. The HIV prevalence is highest in women aged 25 to 29 years, with an infection rate of 20,1% of the 8 656 people examined at 400 facilities in the province’s 25 health districts.

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/ 12 September 2006

Aids survey hit by snags

The Correctional Services department’s efforts to establish the prevalence of HIV/Aids in prisons is being hamstrung by a lack of co-operation from staff and inmates alike, it emerged on Tuesday. The department’s survey was launched last year with a pilot project in Gauteng, and was completed on May 24 this year.

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/ 11 September 2006

Former cricketer alleges malicious prosecution

The fraud trial of former national fast bowler Garth le Roux and his accountant began in Cape Town’s Wynberg Regional Court on Monday with a claim that he was being prosecuted maliciously. In a plea explanation read into the record by his advocate, Wim Trengove, Le Roux said he had already settled most of the tax issues in the case with the South African Revenue Service.

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/ 11 September 2006

Manuel: SA to focus on stability at G20

South Africa will add two key issues to the agenda of the group of 20 (G20) when it takes over the helm as chair in November from Australia — financial stability and creating fiscal space, said Minister of Finance Trevor Manuel on Monday. He was speaking at a joint press conference at Parliament with Australian Treasurer Peter Costello — who began a three-day visit to South Africa on Sunday.

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/ 11 September 2006

Climate change may hold ‘greater risk’ than believed

The potential impacts of climate change may be far greater than previously believed, Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism Marthinus van Schalkwyk warned on Monday. Speaking at a meeting of working group two of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change in Somerset West, he said climate change in Southern Africa would place ”millions of lives at risk”.

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/ 11 September 2006

Leon: SA keeping bad company

South Africa’s choice of forging close ties with Iran is sending "a clear message to the world" that it has chosen the wrong friends, official opposition Democratic Alliance (DA) leader Tony Leon said on Monday. Leon charged that it "is entirely unclear what national or international interest our diplomatic engagement with Iran is serving".