The UN has released $1.5-billion of seized Libyan assets to be used for emergency aid after the United States and South Africa ended a dispute.
Oscar Pistorius will have to run the first leg of the 4 x 400m relay at the World Championships to "avoid danger to other athletes", says the IAAF.
Was Fanon perhaps right when he said ‘everything needs to be started over again’?
"Governments are terrified of social media… The days of governments sweeping everything under the carpet are gone," says <b>Chris Moerdyk</b>.
Senior management and board positions still male dominated.
The SOS — Support Public Broadcasting Coalition calls for action to revive the SABC.
The humanities in SA will not survive unless we recognise they have sometimes been harnessed to political agendas.
A former teacher has turned her hand to farming with great success.
Legislation offers protection but often only in theory.
Women are beginning to make inroads in the manly world of trucking.
Proposed law should be allowed to prove itself, says expert.
After initial gains women seem to be losing the political edge.
Combining sport and winemaking is not new. But does it work?
Pulitzer prize-winning photographer Greg Marinovich makes an appearance at the Vega School to talk about his work as a creator of images and words.
Government may put restrictions on the sale of land to foreigners as it aims to transfer ownership as part of a drive to correct racial imbalances.
Low on medical staff and much-needed supplies in Libya, Médecins Sans Frontières is appealing to SA to send more doctors to the war-torn country.
Cosatu says it supports the need to change the Constitution to bolster land redistribution, but does not support expropriation without compensation.
Read Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng’s application for the post of chief justice, as well as as his problematic judgments.
Eskom has been given a R980 840 000 loan that it says will go towards financing the 100MW Sere Wind Project in the Western Cape.
At 180 pages, this week’s paper is the <i>M&G</i>’s biggest yet. Catch an early look at some of our stories, from Juju, Mogoeng Mogoeng and sexism to Ramadan and William Kentridge’s new exhibition.
The Cabinet has issued a tacit rebuke of Finance Minister Pravin Gordhan for suggesting SA will have to ease labour laws if it is to create more jobs.
The hunt is still on for the elusive "God particle" but scientists say they believe they can come up with an answer by the end of 2012.
Electricity will be "increasingly tight" until Eskom’s new power stations come onto the grid in 2012, says Public Enterprises Minister Malusi Gigaba.
As ANC Youth League leader Julius Malema’s disciplinary hearing draws nearer, we took to the streets of Johannesburg to find out your thoughts on all things Juju.
Not even a run-in with muggers could distract <b>Anelde Greeff</b> from Buenos Aires’s colourful cuisine.
Jobs are not being created fast enough to absorb the rising labour force, despite two consecutive quarters of job creation in SA, says Ebrahim Patel.
Supporters declare the ex-IMF head <i>blanchi</i> — whitened — after his sex assault charges were dropped, while others believe him to be tarnished.
Under-pressure Arsenal made the Champions League after a battling win over Udinese, while former champions Benfica also reached the group phase.
Veteran journalist and former <i>Sunday Times</i> columnist Gwen Gill died on Wednesday night, according to reports.
Indian investors plan to spend $2.5-billion on acquiring vast tracts of cheap farming land in Ethiopia, Tanzania and Uganda.
As Libya’s new masters meet their Western backers in Turkey on Thursday to secure funds, SA said it had repeatedly asked Nato to stop bombing.
Retief Goosen is heading into the first round of the PGA Tour playoffs even though he is nursing a broken toe in order to keep his season alive.