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/ 29 May 2006

Two more jailed in Goldin murder case

Another two of the men arrested in connection with the death of actor Brett Goldin and his friend Richard Bloom were jailed on Monday, according to radio station Cape Talk. It said Zubair Davids and Yazeed Eyssen were sentenced to two years’ jail each by a Wynberg regional magistrate after entering into a plea bargain.

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/ 29 May 2006

Travelgate accused to face court in July

The head of South Africa’s National Prosecuting Authority, Vusi Pikoli, on Monday briefed the presiding officers of Parliament and the chief whips of the various political parties on the progress being made in the ”Travelgate” prosecutions. At a briefing to the media afterwards, Pikoli indicated that 30 people will face the court on July 31.

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/ 29 May 2006

V&A Waterfront stake up for sale

Transnet and two of its pension funds have decided to dispose of their share in Cape Town’s V&A Waterfront, billed as South Africa’s most visited tourist destination. The remaining shareholder, the Transnet Retirement Fund, has yet to decide whether it will sell its 22,6% share, or retain it and push it up to 26%.

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/ 26 May 2006

Mbeki: Don’t fear economic volatility

There is no reason why the recent volatility in the stock exchange, the gold price, the value of the rand and the bond market should negatively affect South Africa, said President Thabo Mbeki. Since early May, the rand has lost 8% or 9% of its value and the JSE has lost a similar amount, he said in his weekly newsletter on the African National Congress website.

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/ 26 May 2006

SA Rugby adopts transformation charter

South Africa’s rugby bosses on Friday formally adopted a transformation charter designed to significantly increase the number of black people involved in the sport. South African Rugby Union (Saru) president Oregan Hoskins told a media briefing in Cape Town that Saru’s president’s council had given its blessing to the ”scientifically based” seven page document.

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/ 26 May 2006

DA casts doubt on new minister of land affairs

Democratic Alliance leader Tony Leon on Friday questioned the wisdom of Lulu Xingwana’s appointment as Agriculture and Land Affairs Minister. ”As Deputy Minister of Minerals and Energy, Xingwana achieved little aside from her racist and xenophobic diatribes in Parliament, which were viewed with alarm by both local and foreign investors,” Leon said in his weekly newsletter.

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/ 25 May 2006

Look out for Eskom’s TV ‘power alerts’

Eskom’s ”power alert” messages will be broadcast on South African Broadcasting Corporation television from Thursday night, the electricity utility said in a statement. Meanwhile, the situation at Koeberg nuclear power station will ”return to normal” by August, Minister of Minerals and Energy Lindiwe Hendricks said on Thursday.

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/ 25 May 2006

Minister: SA reviewing petrol liberalisation

Recent global events, including high costs of imported oil, have necessitated a review of South Africa’s planned liberalisation of the petroleum sector, outgoing Minister of Minerals and Energy Lindiwe Hendricks said on Thursday. The minister said that the impact of the increases could result in the slowing down of global economic growth.

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/ 24 May 2006

SA unlikely to meet child-survival goals

South Africa faces a massive task in reaching the Millennium Development Goals for child survival in 2015, with trends showing that the mortality rates of infants and children under the age of five were increasing rather than decreasing. ”Currently, the prospect of having to reduce the child-death figures … by two-thirds by 2015 seems dismal,” a two-day conference heard.

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/ 24 May 2006

W Cape mobilises to become rape-free

The horror stories have become platitudes — a nine-month-old baby allegedly gang-raped, a pensioner raped by her grandson — to make the interminable list lend weight to perceptions of South Africa as a world rape capital. In the Western Cape, police statistics show that rape was the only contact-crime category to increase, by 8,2%, from 2003/04 to 2004/05.

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/ 23 May 2006

Manuel cautious about market imbalances

Minister of Finance Trevor Manuel has taken a cautious stance on what he termed growing imbalances in world markets, noting that South Africa’s rand currency saw "a lot of movement" in one day on Monday. He was addressing the National Assembly finance portfolio committee during the National Treasury budget vote briefing.

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/ 23 May 2006

Resume talking, Mdladlana tells unions

Minister of Labour Membathisi Mdladlana has called on trade unions representing striking security guards and employers to resume negotiations, the government news agency, BuaNews, reported on Tuesday. Mdladlana said he had been asked to intervene in the impasse over wages and working conditions in the security industry. But, he said, according to the law he could not do so.

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/ 23 May 2006

A taste of prison for Travelgate accused

A former boss of one of the travel agencies implicated in the parliamentary travel voucher scam spent an hour-and-a-half behind bars on Monday for his lack of co-operation in a liquidation inquiry. David Phokeng, an ex-director of the now-liquidated Bathong Travel, was detained in the holding cells of the Bellville Magistrate’s Court at the request of the attorney acting for the liquidators, Bernhard Kurz.

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/ 22 May 2006

Zille advises victims of Satawu strike

Cape mayor Helen Zille spent part of Monday afternoon briefing Capetonians on how to seek redress from the South African Transport and Allied Workers’ Union for damage inflicted during a violent march last week. Her spokesperson, Robert Macdonald, said about 150 to 200 people attended the meeting at the Civic Centre.

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/ 22 May 2006

New plan focuses on biodiversity strategies

Biodiversity policies must be integrated into economic decision-making for South Africa’s flora and wildlife to be conserved, says Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism Marthinus van Schalkwyk. He was speaking at the launch of the National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plan in Port Elizabeth on Monday..

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/ 22 May 2006

Battle for Cape Town continues

Official opposition Democratic Alliance leader Tony Leon took to the streets of Mitchells Plain on Monday, where his party is fighting a key by-election against Patricia de Lille’s Independent Democrats in the coloured working-class district of Tafelsig. He argued that voters were being given a chance to vote against De Lille’s flirtation with the African National Congress ”reign of ruin”.

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/ 22 May 2006

Travelgate: Agency director arrested

A director of the liquidated Bathong travel agency, David Phokeng, was arrested on Monday in a bid to make him co-operate with the liquidation inquiry. Bellville magistrate Mannie van Reenen ordered the arrest after the attorney acting for the liquidators, Bernhard Kurz, complained that Phokeng regarded the hearings as a joke.

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/ 19 May 2006

World needs ‘new breed’ of prosecutor

The world needs a new breed of prosecutor and investigator to deal with the challenges of transnational organised crime, the special adviser to National Director of Public Prosecutions Vusi Pikoli said on Friday. Kalyani Pillay was speaking in Cape Town at a PricewaterhouseCoopers conference on economic crime in Africa.

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/ 19 May 2006

Student tuition fee limits on the cards

Government is considering placing an upper limit on student tuition fees in the public higher education system, Education Minister Naledi Pandor said on Friday. Widening access to higher education has led to pressing cost challenges, she told MPs in the National Assembly during debate on her budget vote.

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/ 18 May 2006

Door opened to review floor-crossing

South African President Thabo Mbeki has opened the door to a review of floor-crossing legislation — which allows MPs, members of the provincial legislatures and local government councillors to defect from their political parties — but said the matter was ”eminently political” and should be dealt with by MPs and not the executive.

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/ 18 May 2006

Buses torched as strike gets under way

Two buses were set on fire by a mob and about eight others damaged by stone throwing in Cape Town’s Khayelitsha before dawn on Thursday as the Congress of South African Trade Unions’ national strike got under way. Golden Arrow Bus Services spokesperson Vuyisile Mdoda said the incidents were reported to the company at 6am.