A new phishing scam, using both the Banking Association South Africa logo and the South African Revenue Services (SARS) logo, has been uncovered.
Facebook has agreed to adopt a panic button aimed at improving the online safety of its younger users, a child protection group said on Monday.
Women’s 800m champion Caster Semenya has been left out of the SA team for this month’s African championships despite being cleared to race again.
Gold shines but foreign equities continue to disappoint. Over three years you may have been better off in cash, but resources delivered over 5 years.
Access to antiretrovirals has increased tenfold,
but efforts aimed at prevention must be renewed.
Uruguay’s Diego Forlan received the Golden Ball award as the Player of the Tournament after scoring five goals in seven Soccer World Cup matches.
The man who worked for 16 years to deliver the World Cup in South Africa has claimed it achieved an "image makeover" for the country.
New prime minister, Naoto Kan, concedes plans to raise sales tax a factor in coalition parties losing control of upper chamber.
The South African Broadcasting Corporation on Sunday denied reports that it has banned television and radio coverage of former president Thabo Mbeki.
An Italian judge has ordered Saadi Gadaffi, the third son of Libyan leader Moammar Gadaffi, to pay a €392 000 hotel bill he failed to settle.
We won, but how do we keep winning? That is the question many South Africans will ask on Monday, the first day of LAWC — life after the World Cup.
British journalist Simon Wright is the 19th foreigner declared a prohibited person for offences committed during World Cup.
Does the law have a sense of humour? So asked Justice Albie Sachs in the introduction to his judgment to the Laugh It Off promotions case.
Apple employs 25 000 people in the US but the Chinese company that make its products has 800 000 employees. Time to rethink the model?
An initiative started on Facebook hopes to pull South Africans together in search of a new vision, writes <b>Andile Mngxitama</b>
Imagine how many South Africans could have been spared falling victim to violent crime had the police not been rotting, like a fish, from the head.
Bakkies Botha was on Sunday banned from rugby for nine weeks for headbutting All Blacks halfback Jimmy Cowan.
No one died. No one was stabbed, no one was kidnapped and no one took a wrong turn into the clutches of a gang of garrotters.
Images of war, poverty and famine are being replaced by expanding economies and a new global potential.
A fan who lost his temper on a flight to Durban — prompting the crew to advise the pilot to keep his door locked — received a suspended sentence.
A British tabloid journalist who had been accused of trying to undermine Cup security is considering suing police National Commissioner Bheki Cele.
South Africa lock Bakkies Botha will face a judicial hearing on Sunday after he headbutted All Blacks scrumhalf Jimmy Cowan.
Naomi Campbell will give evidence at the war-crimes trial of former Liberian president Charles Taylor about a "blood diamond" he allegedly gave her.
Broken aid promises by Western governments are depriving millions of African children of promised school places, the United Nations has warned.
Sunday’s final will crown a World Cup that has united a nation. But if SA can deliver a global mega-event, why can’t it tackle its inequality?
A painting depicting Nelson Mandela as a corpse undergoing dissection has provoked disgust and been compared to witchcraft by the ANC.
"It is in bad taste, disrespectful and it is an insult and an affront to values of our society", spokesperson Jackson Mthembu said.
Secretary of the Coordinating Body for Refugees (CBRC) Jacques Kikonga Kamanda has been living in South Africa as a Congolese refugee for the past 12 years. He believes South Africa is a beacon of hope to Africa and the failure to curb xenophobia is a tragedy for the continent as a whole.
Even those whose summertime lust for sauvignon blanc is boundless might want something a little less crisp for white wine drinking in cooler times.
Since the town was declared a wine region, local producers have opened their estates to visitors.
Zuma seems to have replaced the well-known Shaik brothers as his close allies with another influential and wealthy family: the Guptas from India.
The SA Reserve Bank is "likely" to cut the repo rate by 50 basis points at its monetary policy committee meeting on July 22, Standard Chartered said.