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/ 2 November 2006

Lyon, Madrid advance in Europe

Lyon and Real Madrid made it to the second round of the Champions League with 1-0 wins on Wednesday while Kaka’s hat-trick in a 4-1 win over Anderlecht put AC Milan within a point of the knockout phase. Lyon edged Dynamo Kiev, and Real Madrid needed an own-goal against visiting Steaua Bucharest for their 1-0 victories in Group E.

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/ 1 November 2006

Blair: Now not the time for probe into Iraq war

British Prime Minister Tony Blair said on Wednesday that another inquiry could be held into his government’s handling of the Iraq war — but insisted now is not the time for such a probe. Seeking to clarify confusion after surviving a parliamentary vote on the divisive issue on Tuesday, Blair said an inquiry now would send the wrong signals to both the fledgling Iraqi government and insurgents.

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/ 1 November 2006

Disillusioned online daters turn to matchmakers

Online daters, disappointed by potential partners lying about their age, weight or marital status, are turning to professional matchmakers to find love. Rather than risk taking pot luck online, chief executives, entertainers and politicians are among those paying thousands of dollars to matchmakers to discreetly ”headhunt” and vet the perfect partner.

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/ 31 October 2006

Dunne deal for Man City

Richard Dunne scored a 23rd-minute winner as Manchester City beat Middlesbrough 1-0 in the English Premier League on Monday night, surviving two shots off the post by Massimo Maccarone with goalkeeper Nicky Weaver beaten. The goal came when Joey Barton’s far-post corner sailed perfectly for Dunne, who leapt to drive a header into the roof of the goal.

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/ 31 October 2006

CIA tried to gag EU on rendition

The CIA tried to persuade Germany to silence EU protests about the human rights record of one of the United States’s key allies in its clandestine torture flights programme, The Guardian in London reported. According to a secret intelligence report, the CIA offered to let Germany have access to one of its citizens, an al-Qaeda suspect being held in a Moroccan cell.

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/ 30 October 2006

Climate-change report issues wake-up call to world

World leaders must act urgently to avert a looming environmental catastrophe, the author of a major British report, which sounds a wake-up call on climate change, said on Monday. Former World Bank chief economist Sir Nicholas Stern singled out the United States, China and India as economic powerhouses whose backing is crucial for a global solution.

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/ 30 October 2006

AngloGold announces profit

AngloGold Ashanti, the world’s second-largest gold miner, said on Monday it swung to a profit in the third quarter after the price of gold rose. The Johannesburg, South Africa-based company said net income for the three months through to September 30 came to R1,47-billion, compared with a loss of R1,05-billion in the same period a year earlier.

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/ 30 October 2006

HIV treatment should start earlier

Researchers have suggested that treatment of patients with HIV infections in South Africa should start at higher CD4 cell counts. After studying untreated patients in the Cape Town area, they have identified a greater short-term risk of progression to Aids or death in South African patients with CD4 cell counts of 200-350 cells.

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/ 30 October 2006

Chelsea face tough task at Nou Camp

Halfway through the group stage, some teams can already start planning their move into the next round of the Champions League. Chelsea are one of five clubs that need only one point to advance to the next phase, but if they are to get there, the English side will have to earn it at defending champions FC Barcelona on Tuesday.

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/ 29 October 2006

Carroll’s appointment to Anglo ‘encouraging’

The appointment of Cynthia Carroll as chief executive of Anglo American marks a step in the right direction for equality in Britain’s boardrooms as women struggle to break through the glass ceiling, analysts said. The global mining giant, which is registered in Britain but operates mainly in South Africa, announced last week that 49-year-old Carroll would replace Tony Trahar on March 1 2007.

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/ 28 October 2006

Cuckoo-clock pair wound up by time change

Britain puts its clocks back one hour at 2am (1am GMT) on Sunday, giving most people a welcome extra hour in bed — but two cuckoo-clock enthusiasts will have precious little time on their hands. Brothers Roman and Maz Piekarski have more than 500 clocks at their Cuckooland museum in Cheshire, north-west England.

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/ 24 October 2006

US, Russia host most internet child abuse

The United States and Russia host the bulk of the world’s child abuse websites, according to a British-based Internet monitoring group which identifies the United Kingdom as one of the countries with the best enforcement records. The Internet Watch Foundation reported that 51% of child abuse content was traced back to the United States and 20% to Russia.

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/ 24 October 2006

UK royals banished to ghetto in new satire

In a new satire on Britain’s royal family, they are banished to a rundown housing estate to eke out tawdry lives in a republican land that has spurned them. Best-selling author Sue Townsend, poking gentle fun at a dysfunctionally chaotic House of Windsor, has Queen Elizabeth and her rowdy brood living in exile in a specially fenced off exclusion zone for social misfits.

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/ 24 October 2006

Wolfowitz criticises China over Africa lending

World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz was quoted on Tuesday as saying China and its banks were ignoring human rights and environmental standards when lending to developing countries in Africa. Large Chinese banks ignored the ”Equator Principles”, a voluntary code of conduct under which projects financed by private banks meet social and environmental standards

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/ 23 October 2006

Don’t panic, Iraq tells US and UK

Iraqi Deputy Prime Minister Barham Salih warned against defeatism and panic on Monday as his United States and British allies came under growing pressure to change their Iraq strategy in the face of relentless bloodshed. Salih made clear his anxiety about the change in tone in London and Washington, where senior figures are questioning the current strategy.

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/ 23 October 2006

I was close to being dead, says Top Gear star

Television presenter Richard Hammond has revealed he thought he was going to die after his high-speed smash in a jet-powered car last month. In his first interview since the accident, the Top Gear co-presenter talked about the moments after he crashed his Vampire dragster as he accelerated to 460kph while filming a feature for the BBC show at a Royal Air Force airfield near York.

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/ 23 October 2006

Man United return to top of the log

Paul Scholes and Rio Ferdinand helped put Manchester United back in first place in the English Premier League after a 2-0 victory over Liverpool on Sunday. Scholes, making his 500th appearance for United, scored in the 39th minute and Ferdinand added the second in the 66th as United reclaimed first place above Chelsea.

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/ 22 October 2006

Chelsea notch up win in Premiership

Andriy Shevchenko and Michael Ballack both scored for Chelsea on Saturday, helping the defending champions beat Portsmouth 2-1 in the English Premier League. Also on Saturday, it was: Charlton 0, Watford 0; Everton 2, Sheffield United 0; Wigan 4, Manchester City 0; and Aston Villa 1, Fulham 1.

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/ 20 October 2006

Morse-code SOS makes a comeback

Morse code, the dots-and-dashes signalling system first used at sea on the Titanic and long since consigned to the scrapheap, made a triumphant comeback this week in the rescue of a stranded fisherman. The man had run aground near Hayling Island on the south coast when his boat began taking on water.

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/ 20 October 2006

Opec scepticism pushes oil below $58

Oil prices fell below a barrel on Friday, even though Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) made a deeper output cut than expected, on concerns that some of the group’s members may fail to comply with the curbs. ”There’s still a degree of scepticism over whether they will deliver all the cuts,” said a commodity strategist.

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/ 19 October 2006

Moody’s sees no danger to SA’s credit rating

Recent financial-market turmoil will not impact South Africa’s Baa1 credit rating, which is backed by low external debt ratios and solid fiscal position, Moody’s analyst Kristin Lindow said on Thursday. Lindow said the rating had already taken into account potential exchange-rate volatility and a wide current-account deficit.

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/ 19 October 2006

Oil prices firm as traders eye Opec

Crude futures edged upwards on Thursday as traders awaited an official output decision from a meeting of Organisation of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (Opec) oil ministers in the Qatari capital of Doha. New York’s main contract, light sweet crude for delivery in November, gained 25 cents to ,90 per barrel in pit trading.

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/ 19 October 2006

Complete Darwin works put online

The complete evolutionary works of Charles Darwin have gone online, including the stolen notebook he carried in his pocket around the Galapagos Islands. Tens of thousands of pages of text and pictures and audio files have been made available, including some previously unpublished manuscripts and diaries of the great British scientist.

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/ 19 October 2006

Chelsea, Bayern, Valencia win again

Chelsea, Bayern Munich and Valencia all maintained their 100% records with their third straight wins as the Champions League group phase reached the halfway stage on Wednesday. Chelsea handed European champions Barcelona a 1-0 defeat at Stamford Bridge in Group A where Didier Drogba scored an outstanding individual goal after 47 minutes.

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/ 19 October 2006

The revolution will be monetised

When two twenty-somethings posted a home-made video on <i>YouTube</i> last week they initially attracted more than 1,3-million views, but they didn’t earn a cent for their efforts. This didn’t matter to them because the two in question, Chad Hurley and Steve Chen, owned the company and had just sold it to Google for $1,65-billion.

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/ 18 October 2006

Reuters says third quarter revenue rose by 3,3%

Reuters, a British provider of news and financial information, said on Wednesday revenue grew 3,3% in the third quarter, putting the company on course for full-year growth of 5% to 6%. Revenue for the three months through until September 30 was £631-million, up from £611-million in the same period last year, the company said in a statement.