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/ 16 March 2007

Court hears of secret microphones in Fidentia case

Three secret microphones and a hidden camera were discovered in Fidentia’s Cape Town boardroom in a sweep for electronic bugs after curators took over the business, the city’s magistrate’s court heard on Friday. This emerged during a bail application by Fidentia boss J Arthur Brown and fellow director and accountant Graham Maddock.

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/ 16 March 2007

No joint probe into arms-deal allegations

As the Democratic Alliance welcomed a decision by the Public Protector, Auditor General and director of public prosecutions to separately investigate new areas of concern around the arms deal, the Independent Democrats said it meant ”absolutely nothing”. Public Protector Lawrence Mushwana, National Prosecuting Authority head Vusi Pikoli and Auditor General Terence Nombembe met on Thursday evening.

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/ 16 March 2007

IMF, World Bank want more aid for Africa

The heads of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank urged developed countries on Friday to boost aid flows to Africa and to do so fairly and predictably. ”There is a need for more aid, but there is also a need for better aid,” IMF managing director Rodrigo de Rato told reporters in Cape Town.

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/ 16 March 2007

Tutu on Zim: Do we really care about human rights?

Africans should hang their heads in shame over what is happening in Zimbabwe, Nobel peace laureate Desmond Tutu said on Friday. ”What an awful blot on our copybook. Do we really care about human rights? Do we care that people of flesh and blood, fellow Africans, are being treated like rubbish, almost worse than they were ever treated by rabid racists?”

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/ 16 March 2007

We must challenge racism, says Mbeki

The challenge of racism still permeating South African society needs to be debated honestly and fearlessly, President Thabo Mbeki said on Friday. Writing in his weekly newsletter on the African National Congress website, Mbeki said racism remains a ”daily feature of our lives, a demon that must be exorcised” to achieve national reconciliation.

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/ 16 March 2007

Leon: Mbeki largely to blame for Zim crisis

President Thabo Mbeki’s ”dithering, inaction and often tacit support” are largely to blame for the current bloody shambles in Zimbabwe, says Democratic Alliance leader Tony Leon. ”Let me put this bluntly: much of the blame for the present lamentable condition of Zimbabwe must be laid at President Mbeki’s door,” he said in his weekly newsletter on Friday.

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/ 16 March 2007

Toxic red tide may affect West Coast shellfish

The Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism has warned the public not to eat any shellfish or lobster liver found on the West Coast, following reports of three people becoming ill after eating shellfish collected in Lamberts Bay. The problem may be a result of a toxic red tide, said the department in a statement on Friday.

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/ 16 March 2007

‘A victory for environmental protection’

Disintegrating boxes of medical waste left out in the rain and rotting waste from abattoirs dumped in ditches in the veld were among the environmental hazards discovered by the ”Green Scorpions” during a nation-wide blitz this week. Inspectors from the environmental police force this week carried out a series of countrywide enforcement inspections.

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/ 16 March 2007

IFP reaffirms call for new probe into Mathe escape

The Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) on Friday reaffirmed its call for an independent judicial inquiry into the escape last year of Annanias Mathe from Pretoria’s C-Max prison. This follows the African National Congress parliamentary caucus decision on Thursday to express its full confidence in the Department of Correctional Services and agencies that probed Mathe’s escape.

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/ 16 March 2007

Manuel: Increased trade important for Africa

Increased trade is beneficial to Africa in that it supports poverty alleviation and is able to create new employment opportunities on the continent, said Finance Minister Trevor Manuel. It promotes regional integration and helps to expand intra-regional trade "while infusing new capital and technology into the continent", he told the Parliamentary Network on the World Bank.

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/ 15 March 2007

Fidentia’s Brown offered to quit

Fidentia boss J Arthur Brown last year offered to quit his position in a bid to stave off curatorship, according to a document handed in at his bail hearing on Thursday. The document, a letter from Fidentia’s lawyers to the Financial Services Board, was attached to an affidavit by Brown setting out the reasons he thought he should be granted bail.

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/ 15 March 2007

Zille to run for DA leadership

Cape Town mayor Helen Zille says she will stand for the post of Democratic Alliance leader at the party’s federal congress in May this year. She made the announcement at a Cape Town Press Club dinner on Thursday evening, a year to the day after being elected mayor of Cape Town.

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/ 15 March 2007

Minister: Local skills will always come first

The government will never overlook qualified South Africans in preference to foreign skills in its ongoing drive for economic transformation, said Labour Minister Membathisi Mdladlana on Thursday. The minister said that ”while the government is trying to address disparities of the past and transform our economy, all South African citizens … are its first priority”.

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/ 15 March 2007

‘Green Scorpions’ launch crackdown

South Africa’s environmental police force, the ”Green Scorpions,” will be out in strength around the country on Thursday in a massive crackdown on polluters and poachers. The Department of Environmental Affairs is to crack down on illegal fishing, the disposal of hazardous waste and the activities of at least one chemical plant.

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/ 14 March 2007

Govt may stash carbon dioxide underground

The government is looking at underground storage of carbon dioxide from coal-fired power stations as a way of reducing the millions of tonnes of greenhouse gases the plants belch into the country’s atmosphere each year, Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism Marthinus van Schalkwyk said on Wednesday.

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/ 14 March 2007

Media believe publications Bill ‘should be withdrawn’

Three media institutions expressed concern on Wednesday that Parliament’s home affairs committee chairperson Patrick Chauke might fast-track the draft Films and Publications Amendment Bill. The South African National Editors’ Forum, the South African chapter of the Media Institute of Southern Africa and the Freedom of Expression Institute issued a joint statement in this regard.

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/ 14 March 2007

Business confidence sinks to two-year low

Though manufacturers are still looking on the bright side, overall business confidence in South Africa is at its lowest in two years, according to the latest Rand Merchant Bank/Bureau for Economic Research index. The index, released on Wednesday, showed a decline from 83 points late last year to 81 in the first quarter of 2007.

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/ 14 March 2007

‘Quiet diplomacy is an abject failure’

As the African National Congress (ANC) and General Council of the Bar in South Africa expressed concern at the situation in Zimbabwe on Wednesday, the Democratic Alliance said the government’s response to the situation is shameful. ”The ANC is concerned about the current situation in Zimbabwe,” party spokesperson Smuts Ngonyama said.

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/ 14 March 2007

IFP highlights increase in cop suicides

South Africa has become one of the most dangerous countries in the world to be a police officer, the Inkatha Freedom Party (IFP) said on Wednesday. Party spokesperson Velaphi Ndlovu said the emotional damage the job causes was shown in the increased number of police-officer suicides in the second half of last year, he said in a statement.

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/ 13 March 2007

Cape Town stadium tender approved

A R2,1-billion contract for the construction of Cape Town’s 2010 Soccer World Cup stadium was on Tuesday awarded to a joint venture between Murray & Roberts and WBHO. The award, made by the city council’s bid adjudication committee, clears the way for the contractors to move on site.