How dreams of workplace equity give way to realistic goals for a multinational organisation, writes <b>Sisonke Msimang</b>.
Recently, the head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organisation, Fereydoun Abbasi Davani, announced plans to triple Iran’s capacity to produce 20% uranium.
The Gautrain will start running between Johannesburg and Pretoria on Tuesday, the transport department says.
Women’s Arts Week, a project of Artscape’s audience development and education department, focuses on issues of particular concern to women.
The chief justice saga, the Hawks’ ICT raid, Cosatu infighting, and the <i>M&G</i>’s Book of Women: don’t miss this week’s paper for all this and more.
Julius Malema has spoken out on reports of a "secret" trust being used to launder bribes, saying he plans to sue <i>City Press</i> for defamation.
Despite Chief Justice Ngcobo’s decision to step down, the Constitutional Court will still rule on whether an extension of his term was constitutional.
A disciplinary hearing has ruled against convicted drug dealer Sheryl Cwele, her lawyer said on Thursday.
Unions in Swaziland have sent their members out into the streets to protest against cuts in civil servants’ salaries as the financial crisis deepen.
Libya’s rebel council has nominated 74-year-old writer Mahmud Nacua as its ambassador to London, after the UK expelled Gaddafi’s envoys.
The unemployment rate increased to 25.7% between the first and second quarters of 2011, says Statistics South Africa.
It’s a well-known fact that Capetonians hibernate in winter. So what is it about El Burro that makes it impossible to get a table, even now?
It’s not everyday one comes across a female butcher who is passionate about her product.
The section of the Act on which Zuma relied on to extend Chief Justice Sandile Ngcobo’s term of office, was "almost certainly unconstitutional".
Two police officers were shot dead in Sebokeng, south of Johannesburg, on Thursday morning, Gauteng police said.
Sobbing and playful laughter echo off the walls at Casa Viva, a rehab centre in Rio that takes in children who have become addicted to crack.
Japan’s retail sales rose in June, marking the first gain since a devastating March quake and tsunami in another signal of recovery in the country.
Investigators are still searching for bodies in the fjord surrounding the island where Anders Behring Breivik killed 68 of his victims last week.
A Brazilian woman eats a dish of savoury meatballs with tomato sauce, only to discover a condom in the tomato can, will be awarded $5 000 in damages.
In a three-way charity putting competition against Mark Boucher and Barry Richards, Jacques Kallis put his colleagues to shame at Simola Golf Estate.
Lock Gerhard Mostert and Patrick Lambie at fullback are set for their first starts in the Springboks’ Tri-Nations Test against the All Blacks.
<i>Star Wars</i> may have been a cinematic blockbuster, but its costumes were never high art — a view now confirmed by the supreme court.
Cracks and the City II, the all-female comedy quartet, returns with a two-week run of a new full-length show.
Serb President Boris Tadic have urged Kosovo Serbs to refrain from violence, hours after ethnic Serbs torched a border crossing in the north.
The Hawks have raided the offices of the department of mineral resources and a company involved in a bitter dispute with a unit of Anglo American.
Ahead of landmark talks with the United States, North Korea said on Wednesday that a US missile defence shield will set off a new nuclear arms race.
As Ceppwawu members head into the third week of their petrol strike, they say that they will not stop until their demands are met.
South Africa’s population has passed 50 million, according to mid-year population estimates released by Stats SA on Wednesday.
Moeletsi Mbeki’s claims that the ANC under President Jacob Zuma is losing popular support are disappointing and baseless, says the presidency.
Daryl Peense, who spilled his drink on President Jacob Zuma at the Durban July horse race last year, has been found guilty of assault.
The small number of service delivery complaints from Mpumalanga is not reflective of a province with 3.6-million people, the Public Protector says.
Ian Grose has won the 2011 Absa L’Atelier Art Award, and Isabel Mertz has been awarded the 2011 Gerard Sekoto Award.