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/ 20 April 2005

Landmark ruling on party funding

The Cape High Court has ruled that political parties in South Africa should not, as a matter of principle, be compelled to disclose details of private donations made to their coffers. In a landmark ruling by Judge BM Griesel on Wednesday, he dismissed the application by the Institute for Democracy in South Africa.

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/ 19 April 2005

Tutu may need more cancer treatment

Anglican Archbishop Desmond Tutu may need further cancer treatment, a statement issued on his behalf said on Tuesday. ”I am fit and healthy at present and my doctors will monitor my condition closely. They may need to introduce further treatment in the future,” the cleric said in the statement.

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/ 18 April 2005

High expectations of Pick ‘n Pay

Listed supermarket group Pick ‘n Pay is expected to report a 21% increase in its headline earnings per share for the year to the end of February this year, to 135 cents from 111,6 cents the previous year, when it announces its final results on Tuesday morning, according to a consensus of seven investment analysts.

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/ 18 April 2005

SA congratulates Zim on anniversary

South African Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Sue van der Merwe on Monday officially congratulated Zimbabwe on its 25th year of independence from Britain, praising it for its role in fighting apartheid. She did not mention the concerns of Zimbabwe’s official opposition about the fairness and freeness of the March parliamentary election.

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/ 18 April 2005

Yacht crew has a lucky escape

Three yacht crew members on a pleasure cruise had a lucky escape when a container ship weighing more than 13 000 tonnes grazed their vessel. The incident on Sunday occurred in clear weather about 10 nautical miles north-west of Robben island, said National Sea Rescue Institute spokesperson Craig Lambinon.

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/ 17 April 2005

Crusaders humiliate Stormers

The Crusaders turned in a powerful second-half performance to humiliate the Stormers 51-23 in their Super 12 clash at Newlands on Saturday evening. After trailing 6-3 at the break, the New Zealanders rattled in seven second-half tries to leave home fans dumbfounded.

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/ 16 April 2005

Mbeki: Afrikaners tied to Africa

Common roots tying them to Africa with an emotional bond make it possible for the ANC and the Afrikanerbond to work together, and for members of the New National Party to join the ANC, President Thabo Mbeki said on Friday. Mbeki said the decision to dissolve the New National Party and the meeting between the ANC and the Afrikanerbond constituted an important stride forward.

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/ 15 April 2005

Max seeks to link De Lille to Travelgate

Former Independent Democrats Western Cape leader Lennit Max on Thursday sought to link the party’s national leader, Patricia de Lille, to the Travelgate affair. De Lille heatedly denied any wrongdoing, and said that as one of a number of clients of one of the implicated travel agencies, she had given her full co-operation to investigators.

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/ 15 April 2005

Taxi violence: ‘Progress has been made’

A planned media briefing on Friday morning to articulate the latest developments surrounding taxi violence in the Western Cape was called off at the last minute to accommodate a march by one of the protagonists, Codeta. Provincial transport minister Mcebisi Skwatsha decided to postpone the meeting to allow all parties a chance to express their concersn.

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/ 14 April 2005

International adoptions in legal limbo

International adoptions of South African children are in a state of legal limbo, with legislation to give effect to an international convention signed in 2003 not yet enacted. ”In effect, we have a legal anomaly. We have acceded to a legal convention, but everything that we are doing is ultra vires because it’s not part of our law … We are operating extra-judicially, can you imagine the implications?” asked a family-law specialist.

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/ 14 April 2005

Fuel ‘boycott’ not the way to go

Campaigners wanting to see lower fuel prices in South Africa should call on the public to use fuel more efficiently, rather than inviting the public to join a "national campaign to reduce the petrol price" by boycotting certain petrol products, according to the South Africa Petroleum Industry Association.

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/ 13 April 2005

Activists call for dismissal of city manager

Child-rights activists on Wednesday called on Western Cape Premier Ebrahim Rasool to ensure controversial Central Karoo municipal manager Truman Prince is removed from office. Prince, who has been embroiled in a series of controversies, including involvement with child prostitutes, was suspended and then reinstated last month.

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/ 13 April 2005

Burger yet to prove fit for Stormers

Stormers coach Gert Smal is giving Schalk Burger until Friday to prove his match fitness for Saturday’s Super 12 clash against the Crusaders at Newlands. The 2004 International Rugby Board player of the year strained a calf muscle in last week’s 15-13 win over the Reds. Smal wants to play him at number eight.

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/ 13 April 2005

Stable credit-rating outlook for SA banks

The creditworthiness of the South African banking system as a whole remains stable despite the socio-economic pressures it faces, global rating agency Standard & Poors (S&P) has concluded in its latest report on the country. At the end of 2004, South Africa had 21 registered banks, two mutual banks and 15 local branches of foreign banks.

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/ 13 April 2005

Rains don’t ease Cape water limits

Water restrictions will remain in place in the Cape metropolis where dams were below their normal levels because of drought when torrential rains struck at the weekend, South African Broadcasting Corporation (SABC) radio reported on Wednesday. This is in spite of good rain in the catchment areas of major dams.

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/ 12 April 2005

Cape taxi men lay siege to the city

A crowd of taxi drivers and operators besieged the Western Cape transport ministry building on Tuesday to protest against a proclamation closing several violence-wracked taxi routes. The proclamation, in effect since midnight on Monday, was issued by the provincial transport minister after months of shootings between rival taxi associations.

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/ 12 April 2005

Govt asked to feed flood victims

The Western Cape government has been asked to airlift food parcels to thousands of families affected by torrential rains in the Overberg region, particularly Arniston and Napier. Rivers burst their banks and towns were cut off from the outside world in Sunday and Monday’s deluge, with Bredasdorp among the worst hit.

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/ 12 April 2005

Jazzman Jansen critical but stable

Jazz musician Robbie Jansen was in a critical but stable condition on Tuesday after he collapsed at home last week from lung problems, his brother said. ”They have been trying to wean him down [from the ventilator] from Saturday, but they put him back on it last night because he is still too weak,” he said.

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/ 12 April 2005

Stormers on the road to wellness

Several Stormers are recovering well from injury. Hanyani Shimange, who has a rib cartilage injury, is expected to be fit for the match against the Blues on April 23. Joe van Niekerk, who has an injury to the cartilage in his left knee, is expected to be fit for the Crusaders game on Saturday.

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/ 11 April 2005

Cape jazz star still in critical condition

Jazz saxophonist Robbie Jansen is still in a critical condition in a Cape Town hospital following his collapse last week, Mountain Records MD Patrick Lee-Thorp said on Monday. ”He is slipping in and out of consciousness. But some eye movement last night was a big breakthrough. It put our hopes up,” Lee-Thorp said.

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/ 11 April 2005

Nederburg auction wine prices jump 90%

Prices commanded by some of South Africa’s top wines at the 2005 Nederburg auction, which took place in Paarl on April 9, have skyrocketed by 90%, boosted by a more restricted, higher quality offering, with the average price per nine-litre case of wine rising to an all-time high of R2 145 from R843,36 in 2004.