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/ 11 July 2005

Four in court over baby murder

Four men appeared briefly in the Wynberg Magistrate’s court on Monday in connection with the murder of a six-month-old baby last month. The court proceedings were held in camera because one of the accused is 16-years-old, said police spokesperson Captain Elliot Sinyangana.

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/ 11 July 2005

Power to the principals, says education minister

Minister of Education Naledi Pandor wishes to introduce legislation early next year giving school principals more power and authority, she said on Monday. School governing bodies have become ”very powerful” and principals do not play a big enough role, she told the seventh International Conference of School Principals in Cape Town.

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/ 11 July 2005

Verimark debuts on JSE

Verimark Holdings (VMK) debuted on the JSE on Monday, opening with an inaugural trade of R3,05 and subsequently trading in a range of R2,99 to R3,01 per share in early dealings. The company develops and retails a range of products including household goods, DIY, beauty and exercise equipment.

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/ 8 July 2005

Cape taximen ‘sabotage’ rail services

Cape Town taximen have been deliberately sabotaging the city’s rail services in order to gain customers, the commission of inquiry into violence in the Western Cape minibus taxi industry heard on Friday. Metrorail’s regional manager handed the commission a document he said contained ”very sensitive information” on the issue.

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/ 8 July 2005

ANC policy-makers correct over Zuma, says Mbeki

The African National Congress’s policy-making body had been correct to express its support for former deputy president Jacob Zuma "during these trying and painful times", wrote President Thabo Mbeki in his internet letter on Friday. "[Zuma] should have an opportunity to defend himself against whatever accusations have been made against him," said Mbeki.

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/ 8 July 2005

Two South Africans injured in London

Two South Africans were among the 700 people injured in Thursday’s bomb blasts in London, the Department of Foreign Affairs said on Friday. One was in a critical condition, the other seriously injured, spokesperson Ronnie Mamoepa said. The identities of the man and woman cannot be released until their families have been informed.

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/ 8 July 2005

Tax man grants another day for returns

Due to the "tremendous response" by taxpayers to meet Friday’s 2005 tax return deadline, offices of the South African Revenue Service will open countrywide on Saturday from 8am to 12.30pm in order to accept returns, Sars said in a statement on Thursday. About two million taxpayers had submitted their tax returns by Thursday.

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/ 6 July 2005

Clash over safety at taxi violence hearing

The head of the commission into Western Cape taxi violence clashed on Wednesday with a senior legal adviser to the City of Cape Town on the issue of witness safety. The confrontation took place in the wake of the slaying at the weekend of a prominent figure in the taxi industry, who only days earlier had testified to the commission.

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/ 6 July 2005

Alleged baby killer granted bail

Alleged baby killer Dina Rodrigues was granted bail of R20 000 in the Wynberg Magistrate’s Court in Cape Town on Wednesday. Magistrate Hafeesa Mohamed said Rodrigues will be placed under 24-hour house arrest for what she described as ”one of the most serious conceivable crimes” the country has seen.

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/ 5 July 2005

R10 000 paid to kill a baby, court told

There were gasps in the Wynberg Magistrate’s Court on Tuesday when it was revealed that the former boyfriend of Cape murder accused Dina Rodrigues will testify that she had paid R10 000 for a contract murder on a baby. ”You told him, ‘I paid R10 000 to sort out the problem,”’ the state prosecutor said.

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/ 5 July 2005

Toll rises in circumcision season

Three more boys have died as a result of botched circumcisions in the Eastern Cape, bringing the death toll over the past few weeks to 12. Last week, the National House of Traditional Leaders called on the government to establish a special task force to deal with deaths in traditional initiation schools.

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/ 5 July 2005

Africa’s private sector has ‘critical role’

British Prime Minister Tony Blair has recognised the critical role to be played by the private sector in combating poverty in Africa, while pledging to push for the "best possible package" for the continent during the summit of the Group of Eight (G8) leading industrialised countries in Gleneagles, Scotland, set to begin on Wednesday.

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/ 4 July 2005

DA hits out at airport advertisement

The Democratic Alliance has accused South African Tourism of discriminating against the Afrikaans language in an airport advertisement. The DA feels the advert, with the words ”nine indigenous languages, 44-million people”, is grossly insensitive and a ”smack in the face of everyone who spoke Afrikaans”.

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/ 1 July 2005

Analysts split over Zuma’s future

Analysts are divided on what effect Jacob Zuma’s retention of the deputy presidency of the African National Congress will have on his bid for the ANC presidency in 2007. While some believe his dismissal as deputy president of the country sounded the death knell for his political career, others feel his retention of his party position is the life raft he needs.

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/ 1 July 2005

British recruitment agencies snare SA teachers

South African teachers are being lured to Britain by unscrupulous British recruitment agencies, a post-graduate dissertation for the IMM Graduate School of Marketing suggests. ”The vast majority of British recruitment companies recruiting in South Africa are guilty of gross unethical misconduct,” said the researcher, Guy Mulvaney.

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/ 29 June 2005

Law to prosecute mercenaries soon

Mercenaries could soon be prosecuted under the about-to-be amended Regulation of Foreign Military Assistance Act, Safety and Security Minister Charles Nqakula said on Wednesday. ”We have information that [South African citizens] are involved in actual fighting in the actual conflict [in foreign countries],” he said.

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/ 29 June 2005

‘Bone-chilling’ cold hits Sutherland

The mercury plunged in the Northern Cape town of Sutherland this week, hitting a near-record minus 15 degrees Celcius on Monday night. Resident Mariana Bernardo, who collects data for the South African Weather Service, said it came close to the lowest temperature ever recorded in South Africa, which was minus 16C, also recorded in Sutherland, on the night of July 21, 2003.

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/ 29 June 2005

Over 17 000 prisoners released

Prisons have released 17 356 sentenced offenders since the special remission of sentence for offenders started on June 13, the government announced in Pretoria on Wednesday. The special amnesty was granted by President Thabo Mbeki in an effort to reduce the pressure caused by overcrowding in prisons.

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/ 28 June 2005

Church’s chicken is coming to SA

Church’s Chicken, the world’s second largest fried chicken franchise, will soon be spreading its wings over the Western Cape. This follows the acquisition by a Stellenbosch-based company, Inkuku Holdings Ltd, of the American rights to establish a minimum of 50 Church’s Chicken outlets over the next five years.

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/ 28 June 2005

Harksen scandal man gets a top DA job

The man who illegally processed cash for the Democratic Alliance that may have come from now-jailed fraudster Jurgen Harksen has been appointed the party’s provincial director in the Western Cape. Erik Marais paid a R10 000 fine in 2003 for violating foreign exchange regulations after his role was exposed in hearings of the Desai commission of inquiry.

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/ 27 June 2005

Manto and Rath hold pow-wow

It has emerged that Health Minister Manto Tshabalala-Msimang held a private one-on-one meeting with controversial vitamin entrepreneur Mathias Rath earlier this year. In reply to a Democratic Alliance question in Parliament, Tshabalala-Msimang also refused to distance herself from Rath’s claims about his vitamins curing Aids.

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/ 27 June 2005

White to stay as coach

After what was described as ”a cordial and constructive meeting” with the South African Rugby Union CEO, Springbok coach Jake White seemed set on Monday to stay on as coach for the foreseeable future. White had threatened to quit on the eve of the second French Test, protesting interference with his team selections.