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/ 3 September 2010
The KZN health department’s awarding of a tender for the supply of the Tara KLamp, has been obscured by a cloud of mystery.
Walter Sisulu University academics hone in on
indigenous knowledge.
An artist’s book that went missing in 1988 was recently rediscovered in the basement of a book binder in Johannesburg and will be launched next week.
Since the 2010 World Cup ended in a burst of red confetti, I’ve transferred my allegiances to local football, writes <b>Lionel Faull</b>.
The Walter Sisulu University is hosting its third international research conference in Mthatha from August 18 to 20.
Will the much publicised "engagement" between the DA and the ID at the DA Federal Congress last week result in a coalition, merger, or partnership?
The TAC has raised concerns around the Tara KLamp, a disposable device that Malaysian manufacturers claim makes circumcisions quicker and safer.
ANC leaders have until August to submit details of their financial interests to Luthuli House after a decision by the national executive committee.
More than 16 000 soccer fans — the majority of them Zimbabweans — attended the inaugural Ubuntu Derby at the Johannesburg Stadium on Sunday.
Had Mugabe been assassinated, would Zimbabwe be any different today? That’s a question implicit in Jason Wallace’s <i>Out of Shadows</i>.
Zimbabwe human rights group Gays and Lesbians of Zimbabwe (Galz) have denied that they are advocating for same-sex marriage in a new constitution.
Doctors are concerned that the government is using a circumcision device, the Tara KLamp, that has not been approved by the World Health Organisation.
Tata Madiba turns 92 on Sunday, and will hopefully enjoy a long lie-in, a lazy brunch, and an afternoon with his grandchildren.
Civil society organisations are mobilising to ensure there is no repeat of the large-scale xenophobic violence which scarred SA in 2008.
Professor capitalises on the death-defying properties of a plant species to assist crop farming in the future.
On October 1 1987 a wage dispute at the Sasol 1 petroleum refinery in Sasolburg turned ugly.
The Presidency intends appealing a judgement ordering the government to release to the <i>M&G</i> a report on the 2002 Zimbabwe election.
Taxpayers foot the bill for more than 2 000 employees at empty World Cup courts.
In a victory for the <I>M&G</I> and access to information in SA, a judge has ordered a secret report on the 2002 Zimbabwe election be released.
Water care award, commendation: <b>XStrata Coal South Africa</b>.
The Elders met with African youth leaders in Newtown on the weekend in an encounter they described as "the high point" of a working visit to SA.
The Promotion of Access to Information Act does not apply to records of the Cabinet and its committees, the Presidency argued on Tuesday.
UJ considers cutting ties with Israel’s Ben-Gurion University in protest against Ben Gurion’s alleged association with Palestinian rights abuses.
Business school director wants to shed the conservative image, writes <b>Lionel Faull</b>.
Kulula.com has responded to negative pre-World Cup coverage in the UK tabloids with a well-aimed whack at a jittery public’s funny bone.
Chief Rabbi Warren Goldstein declined this week to meet Justice Richard Goldstone to discuss the report on the 2008 Israeli invasion of Gaza.
South Africa leads effort to raise cash for campaign to fight the disease.
The cloud of volcanic ash hanging over northern Europe has cost the South African economy more than R100-million.
Zionists have threatened to picket the Sandton shul during the bar mitzvah in protest against the Goldstone-headed 2009 United Nations report.
MOVIE OF THE WEEK: Lionel Faull reviews <em>Kick-Ass</em>, about a teenager who becomes a superhero.
With her third book, Michela Wrong has cemented her position as a niche investigative journalist.
MOVIE OF THE WEEK: <i>Lionel Faull</i> reviews <em>The Cove</em>, a documentary about Japan’s annual dolphin hunt.