-
Andy Rice
Andy RiceAndy Rice is a founding partner of Yellowwood Future Architects, a marketing strategy consultancy. In his other lives, he is the southern hemisphere's only supporter of Cambridge United Football Club, and was once upon a time the South African National Spoofing Champion. He has played football at Wembley and cricket at Lord's within the same weekend, but troubled the scorer on neither occasion. Things could only go up from here.
-
-
-
-
- 3 June 2010 07:22 (South Africa)
Nothing much seems to be working for Zimbabwe on the political front. So what’s wrong with applying a bit of brand logic instead?
When I first entered the world of marketing, shortly after Madagascar separated from Gondwanaland, brands were every company’s most precious possession. Like your own children, you would never dream of selling them to anyone else; they stayed with you until either you, or the brands, died. Things began to change around the 1980s, when for the first time marketers were able to put a monetary value to their brands, and as soon as they did that the financial vultures saw the potential to cash their brands in, and trouser a tidy little sum. This new opportunity was particularly pleasing to the bean counters because a lot of the brands’ value was accounted for by “intangibles” – things like goodwill and reputation – which meant that they didn’t actually appear to be parting with all that much in exchange for that nice fat cheque.
Before long, trading brands was commonplace. Sellers were able to realise some value from their marketing investments, and buyers could take a short cut to market share instead of all that painstaking brand building from scratch. And throughout, the bulk of the money that changed hands was in recognition of the elusive intangible dimension that is the hallmark of all strong brands.
Nations are brands too. And like brands, a lot of a nation’s strength is derived not from its physical resources, but from the way its people feel about the country. Their pride, their sense of belonging, their patriotism. Their nationhood. And this intangible brand strength can be quantified for nations in much the same way as it is done for regular brands. A few years back Professor Roger Sinclair, founder of brand valuation consultancy BrandMetrics, calculated that Brand South Africa (just the goodwill, remember) was worth around R400 billion, and more recently nation-branding expert Simon Anholt has put the figure at R500 billion. So we have some consensus here.
Now here’s my Big Idea. If brands can be bought and sold, and if nations are brands too, why can’t we buy and sell nations? Well, one particular nation, to be precise. Zimbabwe. Why don’t we mobilise the international donor community to stump up enough money to buy Zimbabwe, and then run the country like any other brand would be – with professional managers applying sound commercial principles to increase the value of the asset, and with a clear exit strategy, consisting of a sale back to the people of Zimbabwe? Then we could fire Mugabe and his cronies in a heartbeat, just like we would fire corrupt and incompetent employees in any normal business.
But hang on, I hear you say, you can’t buy something that’s not for sale. But who says Zimbabwe’s not for sale? Any marketing or brand expert will tell you that brands are only nominally owned by the companies that market them. The true owners are the people who buy the brands, who interact with them, who have a relationship with them. Coca-Cola is only a brand because consumers have made it so; they’ve made it “their Coca-Cola”. So who makes Zimbabwe a brand? Who has the true relationship with Zimbabwe? Not those cynical pillagers in Government House, Harare, that’s for sure. The true owners of the Zimbabwe brand, and therefore of Zimbabwe itself, are the oppressed and distressed millions for whom the international (and especially southern African) community appears to have no regard. Offer them a chance to sell, for just a few years, the Zimbabwe brand to a team of expert managers who will undertake to put the brand back on its feet, and they’ll knock you down in their rush to sign. Not only do they receive an immediate cash injection from the sale, straight into their pockets, but they get to reacquire the brand, in an unrecognisably stronger state some years later, no doubt at a handsome discount to its true value. It’s a no brainer.
So what would all this cost? Well, I’m no financial wizard (my own personal objective is still to get my net assets up to zero), but I reckon it’s affordable. Here are my back-of-a-beermat calculations. Zimbabwe’s GDP was estimated (according to the CIA World Fact Book) at $26bn for 2007. That valued the Zim economy at about 10% of that of South Africa at the time, although it has undoubtedly plummeted downwards since. So if we assume (generously) that Zimbabwe’s brand strength is relatively on a par with South Africa, then it should be worth about 10% of what has been calculated for SA. That makes the Zim brand (intangibles only) worth about R40 billion. A safe rule of thumb is that the full value of a brand is actually about double its intangible value. So that’s R80 billion, or about $10bn, as a fair price to pay for Zimbabwe.
Now compare that figure with some of the sums being distributed by philanthropic donors, albeit not solely in our direction. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has handed out more than $13bn since 1994, and Warren Buffett has recently handed over a cool $30bn more for Mr and Mrs Gates to play with. Foundations like Kellogg and Ford think nothing of donating hundreds of millions of dollars, year in, year out. And in 2009, not a good year for donations, the top 10 American philanthropists alone handed out almost $3 billion. So the absolute amount needed is not beyond reach. And since it would mean an immediate windfall of about $1,500 per adult Zimbabwean (several times the average income per annum per head), it would surely receive a landslide endorsement from the people who count – the ordinary abused citizens of that once magnificent, and potentially rejuvenated, country.
OK, so there may be one or two little administrative issues to sort out along the way. But it’s been done before (the USA’s purchase of Alaska from Russia springs to mind), and down here in southern Africa we’re good at making a plan. So let me be the first to lob in a hundred bucks to set the ball rolling.
-
Andy Rice
Andy RiceAndy Rice is a founding partner of Yellowwood Future Architects, a marketing strategy consultancy. In his other lives, he is the southern hemisphere's only supporter of Cambridge United Football Club, and was once upon a time the South African National Spoofing Champion. He has played football at Wembley and cricket at Lord's within the same weekend, but troubled the scorer on neither occasion. Things could only go up from here.
-
-
-
-


Andy Rice is a founding partner of Yellowwood Future Architects, a marketing strategy consultancy. In his other lives, he is the southern hemisphere's only supporter of Cambridge United Football Club, and was once upon a time the South African National Spoofing Champion. He has played football at Wembley and cricket at Lord's within the same weekend, but troubled the scorer on neither occasion. Things could only go up from here.
- SA crime thrillers and the 'genre snob' debate
- iMaverick, Thursday 10 November
- iMaverick, Monday 17 October
- iMaverick, Thursday 22 September
- Dalai Lama's visit - SA's real integrity test
- Pieter-Dirk Uys: Don't underestimate the enemy, they also have a sense of humour
- iMaverick, Wednesday 14 September
- iMaverick: South Africa, Monday 29 August
- Moeletsi Mbeki on SA's good, bad and nouveau riche
- Capitals: Africa's poorest, world's costliest
- In 'Purgatorio', me, myself and my unbearable love
- Yemeni youth still face uncertain future
- Ouroboros: The story of the dancer, the poet and the heart hidden in a suitcase
- Jonathan Jansen: 'Time to bring back the nuns'
- Peter Godwin on Zimbabwe, South Africa, crimes (against humanity) and a stuffed Mugabe
- Letter to President Zuma: time to stand up to Libya over Hammerl
- The ANC's fast and furious parliamentary deliberation over the Info Bill, going through the motions
- On 60th anniversary of Tibet's incorporation, China 'owns' the history books
- Vusi Mahlasela: a singer, guitarist, storyteller extraordinaire
- Almost 10 years after 9/11, Osama bin Laden is dead
- SA Electioneering Diary - 21 April
- SA Electioneering Diary: 20 April
- Puccini's 'Suor Angelica' and 'Gianni Schicchi', wrapped in a night of operatic delight
- David Attenborough and the beautiful life - life on Earth
- Swazis plan to emulate Tunisia and Egypt on 12 April
- Kotaro Fukuma, light, water and music that will never die
- Cape Town Jazz Fest: Stars, legends, masters and the King
- Cape Town, the jol and all that jazz
- As protest season continues, China gets nervous about Tibet
- Oscar night: And the Whatsithingee goes to...
- 'If Egypt can, we can do it too' - Swaziland United Democratic Front
- The legend of Triumph weaves wonder through Magoebaskloof
- Nigeria’s charitable king of corruption
- Dirty petrol: The story of Benin's benevolent fuel bandits
- Analysis: Robin Hood's legacy is alive and well in Somalia
- Shanghai braking, switching lanes
- Rest in Peace, Madiba. Thank you for everything.
- Yamaha XT1200Z Super Ténéré - A great pretender
- A Decade In Pictures: 2002
- From our vault: John Perlman, SA soccer's real hero
- 2010: A year of new Ad-think
- You're (in)famous and in trouble? Call Max. Max Clifford.
- Liu Xiaobo's contested Nobel Prize party
- Nic Dawes: Why I had to miss The Gathering
- The paradox of South African Youth
- What happened to the men who built China?
- Die Antwoord join Picasso, Matisse, Kandinsky at the Guggenheim
- Looking for First Thing? Get today's edition right here
- Such a Long Journey: another book sparks a fundamentalist inferno
- Analysis: Multiculturalism may seem dead, but it's still an ideal worth striving for
- CWG: The games are over, let the reckoning begin
- Scientists pull no punches in teaching robots to do no harm
- Nobel Peace Prize: the official true Chinese version emerges
- Athletes and drugs: an abusive relationship
- Virgin: (Another) small step for man, one giant leap for space tourism
- Um, if we get ET on the line, what will we say?
- Codeine's bad rep: should it be banned?
- Profitability and poverty alleviation: a potentially symbiotic relationship
- Toxic goulash wreaks environmental havoc
- China’s Change’2 rocket reaches for the moon
- IVF pioneer scoops Nobel prize for medicine, gets 4 million best wishes
- Ayodhya judgment may just define India's future harmony
- The great new hope as stem-cell research goes foetus-friendly
- eBooks: what do the children think?
- Viagra, an anti-cancer warrior and good old all-round drug
- Commonwealth Games: Delhi cleans up its act, mostly
- Revealed: the real cause of Kilimanjaro's melting ice cap
- Commonwealth Games: It's not party time for the Indians either
- Bookings open for real space tourism- just five years to go
- The horror scenario No. 23: scary supergenes that make even scarier superbugs
- If Hubble got you all excited, JWST you wait...
- Ancient Greek pills give modern scientists a new high
- China gives the world a sound - and clean - energy wake-up call
- SA's global competitiveness ranking takes a dive
- Love is still beyond the budget, but happiness now has a price-tag
- Soros gives away $100 million, despite the überwealthy getting a little tighter
- CERN looks to profit from particle physics
- Tony Blair, a hated man
- The horror scenario no. 24: Earth's magnetic poles flip completely in the space of a few years
- Global food supply under serious threat
- Let the struggle for free speech continue
- Stephen Hawking still doesn't believe in God, sort of
- Pentagon moves in to stop future Wiki-Leaks
- Medical science turns to illegal drugs for help
- Allergan gets nailed for off-label misuse of Botox, pays $600 million
- Large Hadron Collider shakes off latest court challenge
- Can Apple's iAd deliver on i-promises?
- Help for trapped Chilean miners goes global and scientific
- Youth League's NGC, final day: Malema's triumph
- The Julius Malema Express runs over Andile Lungisa
- Cosatu's fury at the ANC goes white-hot
- Can Victor's 100th cap spur the Boks to a win at Loftus?
- Motlanthe gives the Youth League a big, bear hug
- Ford Focus RS: Better late than never
- Youth League's NGC, day one: Down with old guard, up with new leaders
- Analysis: Are journalism schools to blame for ‘bad’ media?
- Will Coca-Cola’s vitaminwater be the Consumer Protection Act's first scalp?
- Preview: Julius Malema's big week
- Analysis: Vavi's 'scorched earth' threat will come back to haunt him
- Inflation goes all sluggishly, making rate cuts - and currency intervention - likely
- Kevin Bloody Wilson still doesn’t give a f*** - and we love him for it
- Another night, another depressing future-of-the-media debate
- Tiger Woods free to roam again
- UPDATED: Editors block Parliament's secret SABC meeting - for now
- Iran inches closer to getting Armageddon powers
- Two Ladies will rise again: rubble from Athlone towers to be re-used for city development
- Amid strikes and chaos, Cosatu enters media tribunal debate with a home run
- The Stig unmasked? Shock! Horror!
- Analysis: Facebook Places brings geo-location into mainstream
- FrontlineSMS: Mass communication where the Internet ends
- HSBC proposes to Nedbank as Old Mutual beams at the happy couple
- SA’s strike season: The Sunday story
- The most influential Muslim writer of them all
- Book review: M&G reminds ANC of uncomfortable truths
- ANC Youth League's Eastern Cape conference, just another farce in the brawl
- Smit, Boks defeated at the death in Soweto
- Mayor's premature detonation catches Cape Town by surprise
- Analysis: Everything is against a Bok win in Soweto
- Op-Ed: Defend democracy – don’t gag it!
- Analysis: The true meaning of leadership
- Pallo Jordan gives ANC a history lesson, Tutu preaches sedition
- Death knell not yet sounded for new Cell C logo
- Crowdmap - Ushahidi made simpler, faster and free
- Media freedom is about more than just information, US ambassador, Pick 'n Pay chairman agree
- Jaguar XJ: No fat cat, this!
- Analysis: The media freedom debate's new, powerful voice
- As public service unions embark on an indefinite strike, Vavi attacks ANC, SACP over media
- Rod Blagojevich's excellent court adventure
- Joaquin Phoenix: Still more elusive than Andy Kaufman
- SABC, government’s inconvenient truth in the ‘no holy cows’ media debate.
- SA's Press Ombudsman speaks: Stop the madness
- Is Jonathan Franzen leading literature’s comeback?
- Analysis: The ANC's anti-media campaign and its unexpected brilliance
- Political marriages are made on earth, not in heaven
- Analysis: What is a political party anyway?
- May 21, 2011: Judgment Day believers descend on Joburg
- DA and ID announce a slow-mo build-up to a consolidated opposition
- ‘Thriller Live’: Yes, but lacking in real spirit
- Analysis: Sexwale vs BMF on media
- Facts are sacred. Data are compelling.
- SA business, a silent witness to the slaughter of media freedom
- Every North Korean footballer's dream - play for national team, avoid torture
- Mazda6 2.5 Individual: Unsung hero – or irrelevant?
- Cell C re-invented? Brand, social media and legal specialists are not so sure
- Media: We won't negotiate with terrorists. Or about ANC media tribunals.
- Google CEO: online anonymity is 'dangerous'
- 'Mao's Last Dancer' and the universal leitmotif of artistic freedom
- The real Chinese entrepreneurs make their presence felt in Africa
- ANC vs media, the Liliesleaf chapter
- The Hitch: As bravely humorous in sickness as in health
- Analysis: It's striking time again, like we did last summer
- Future of Online, Part Two: Needed - a fundamental re-think
- Kagame will win Rwanda's presidency in a landslide against, well, nobody
- ANC: Editors need help from media tribunal, which ordinary people support
- Charles, Naomi and dinner at Madiba’s: What don’t we know?
- ‘Desperate First Ladies’ – still the Uys in the hole
- Wyclef Jean brings lyrics to life by running for Haitian presidency
- Hiroshima - the moment, the milestone and the meaning
- Analysis: Cell C, Trevor Noah and the cunning stunt that got everyone talking
- The Ground Zero mosque: Is it really Us or Them?
- Mzilikazi wa Afrika gets bail. So what was all that about?
- SA media giants gear up for the social media war
- Mzilikazi wa Afrika and the Shape of Things to Come
- Ariel Dorfman reminds South Africa that it is not different
- Honda CR-Z: Hybrid can be sexy and sporty after all
- Selebi condemns SA in eyes of the world media
- Analysis: Wa Afrika's arrest, a bigger picture
- Gates and Buffett spearhead largest philanthropic pledge in history
- Zille: I know what it's like to be a journalist in the government's crosshairs
- UPDATE: Sunday Times goes to court to force release of journalist
- Reporter's notebook: ANC's Tony Yengeni on corruption
- Reporter's notebook: Mantashe on Youth League case, with a hint of Machiavelli
- Obama meets young African leaders, delivers message of hope and self-reliance
- Sunday Times reporter plucked off the street, may stand accused of anti-government conspiracy
- Newsweek sold to a guy who wants to make joy, not money
- Samasource, a cyber solution to global poverty
- Bheki Cele faces the media over THAT building
- Iraq & Afghanistan: A tale of two countries
- Analysis: Counting the cost of Selebi's conviction
- Analysis: Who are these capitalists and what have they done with the ANC?
- Analysis: US and China draw their strategic lines in the sand
- Chasing the tiger: Panjo and I
- Say, who is head of the Labour Party anyway?
- Analysis: The grim future of global employment
- First Thing: US goes on lockdown in Mexico; ANCYL starts provincial congresses
- The ANC's moment of painful honesty
- When 10 billion people jump
- Fighting Africa's fake-drugs monster
- To potential SA police whistleblowers: look how well it turned out for the Russian guy
- Analysis: Youth League leadership continues its march to mayhem
- New Audi A8: Laying down the luxury car gauntlet
- Wikileaks undermines Obama and Democrats, changes the face of espionage forever
- Arizona's draconian immigration law gets the cotton-wool wrap
- Could a Norwegian author’s libel loss change literature as we know it?
- Zuma deposes two kings, names six more illegitimate
- First Thing: US wars top $1 trillion; public sector strike update
- 'My Friend the Mercenary': War and the moral battlefield of media ethics
- ANCYL: Media caused divisions (not that there are any), and also, screw the courts
- Protection of Information Bill, a story about a special kind of divorce
- The remarkable life of Julian Assange, founder of Wikileaks
- Bob Dudley, the man with a golden job
- China markets its newest economic zone, Tianjin, to unsuspecting South Africans
- Future of online, Part One: How did we get here?
- M&G editor says the proposed Information Bill "criminalises journalism"
- DA's new federal head, Wilmot James: I will not be 'ceremonial'
- Wikileaks blows apart US military cover-ups in Afghanistan, draws comparisons to Pentagon Papers
- Springboks could use a miracle right about now
- ‘Hello and Goodbye’ and questions of relevance
- First Thing: UN okays Kosovo secession; SA-Swazi water agreement
- Reporter's notebook: Another lekgotla, another meeting with the president
- LiveAid - the kind of help that ultimately harms
- The New Age launches; underestimate it at your peril
- UN court okays Kosovo independence, opens a gigantic can of worms
- First Thing: oil companies gang up on wells; Tutu is making a life change
- BMW M3: One badge, four generations, 25 years
- Analysis: Xenophobia, a sign of our own deep failure
- Clay Shirky on journalists, media dinosaurs and the public interest
- RW Johnson shames himself, disgraces London Review of Books
- Tutu tries to retire, again, but this time he's a little more serious
- First Thing: China battles its own spill; wireless broadband spectrum delay
- Clay Shirky and humanity's cognitive surplus
- Analysis: SA still has shopping talent
- Dear world, meet Piers Morgan, the man who'll (probably) be replacing Larry King
- The Boks have a gigantic mountain to climb
- Icasa kills key broadband spectrum auction at the last minute, but motives remain murky
- First Thing: North Korean politics kills; SAA to release fraud investigation
- The Washington Post reveals a sobering truth about America's post-9/11 counter-intelligence build-up
- Analysis: As Masoga is expelled from ANC Youth League, Malema heads deep into the darkness
- A pre-Olympic bid reality check: You can't just buy a nation's brand
- World's biggest toys flock to Farnborough Airshow
- Lord Black of Crossharbour gets bail, rides again
- First Thing: train crash in India; OECD to pronounce on SA economy
- Le Grand Cirque Fantazie - How do they do it?
- Analysis: Media tribunal, the way it should be
- Obama, Cameron meeting: swan song of the special relationship?
- Mark Twain's memoirs: Still scathing after all these years
- OECD: SA rocks, just hamstring those darned unions
- Happy birthday Madiba, we hope no-one bothers you
- First Thing: mosque attacked in Iran; iPhone fix today
- Analysis: Malema doesn’t feel bound by any settlement
- World Cup happiness, our best chance of beating rabid extremism of all kinds
- Analysis: As Obama wins big Finance Reform Bill, the Democrats' future is still uncertain
- Richard Branson abandons worn-out Virgin brand for something a little better
- Apple tries to smooth over Antennagate with "don't pick on us" attitude
- Faces of Xenophobia: The victims, Part 2
- Obama speaks to South Africans on Al Shabaab, the Sudan, the World Cup and self-reliance
- Meet the Mini Countryman: the Mini maximised
- The Timekeepers – a timely lesson wrapped in a timeless tale
- After the World Cup, Day 2: July 13
- Dan Roodt, SA's only slightly right-of-centre intellectual, gets The Daily Show treatment
- First Thing: Gaza boat diverts; Selebi sentencing starts
- Faces of Xenophobia: The Victims, Part 1
- Reporter’s notebook: ANC leadership draws line in the sand, keeps Youth League inner chaos away from court and public.
- George Steinbrenner, legendary Yankees owner and the man who redefined the term “larger than life”, dies at 80
- Spy vs Spy: case of the poisoned drinking water
- SA, country of flying flags - and marketing campaigns to match
- After the World Cup, Day 1: 12 July
- First Thing: Northern Ireland troubles; back to school
- To Kill a Mockingbird turns 50, becomes a bestseller again
- The final, ultimate and very last World Cup media wrap-up
- Sarkozy downplays Bettencourt scandal, exhorts French to work harder
- Spain win the 2010 World Cup, defend soccer’s honour against the disgraceful Dutch
- The World Cup Day that was: 11 July
- First Thing: World Cup explosions in Uganda; World Cup windup in SA
- The Raoul Moat saga: sick society or plain 'roid rage'?
- SA dodges the World Cup security bullet. Now what?
- Resurgence of the moderates: why SA could still have a positive 2010
- Violence finally strikes the World Cup on the final day - but far away in Uganda instead of SA
- In a gripping match, Germany outlast Uruguay, win 2010 bronze
- All Blacks hammer Boks in Tri-Nations opener
- The World Cup Day that was: July 10
- The World Cup Day that was: July 9
- The World Cup Day that was: 8 July
- First Thing: Oakland riots reprise; more xenophobia plans
- Kagame's Rwanda: Investment magnet or pressure cooker about to burst?
- Acsa's Hlahla and how not to talk to an angry public
- Analysis: Good luck Guptas - The New Age is gonna cost you, big time
- Tri-Nations will set tone for 2011 Rugby World Cup
- Firing of CNN’s Octavia Nasr and the myth of objectivity
- Spanish Armada sinks young German fleet, sails into the World Cup final
- The World Cup Day that was: 7 July
- First Thing: prison gates swing open in Russia, US, Cuba; anti-xenophobia plans
- Analysis: Youth League, waking up from World Cup hibernation
- Mitsubishi Pajero Sport: Going everywhere - competently
- Mobile books the South African way
- Government anti-xenophobia plan: make foreigners toe the line, cite the World Cup
- The World Cup Day that was: 6 July
- First Thing: De Zeeuw survives that face-kick; Cape Town talks property scandal
- Dalai Lama, 75 years of holiness
- Analysis: RIP outcomes-based education and don't come back
- Editors demand zero tolerance on corruption among SA journalists
- Michael Hastings, the next giant name in war reporting?
- Julius Malema shows he isn't dead yet, gains a couple of music fans
- The World Cup Day that was: 5 July
- First Thing: BP turns Iran away; Julius Malema rides again
- Times’ paywall sees Guardian laughing all the way into readers’ affections
- Reporter's Notebook: Mr Zuma goes to Sweetwaters
- Paul O’Sullivan: ‘And I’m also going after Thabo Mbeki.’
- Penultimate World Cup media wrap-up
- North Korea revealed
- The Dutch crush Forlan and co, finally condemning them to history. Oh yes, they also qualify for the World Cup 2010 final
- The World Cup Day that was: 4 July
- First Thing: Dunga gets the boot; civil servant strike looms
- Analysis: Let's not waste the 2010 momentum
- Moral regeneration month – feel it, it is here
- The World Cup Day that was: 3 July
- Uruguay come back from dead, wrest penalty lottery from Ghana
- The World Cup Day that was: 2 July
- Analysis: The end of the road for Selebi
- Germany’s Young Turks (and their Poles, and Ghanaians, and Brazilians and...) pulp the Argentines, advance to semi-finals
- Villa gambit wins Spain the chess game against Paraguay
- The World Cup Day that was: 1 July
- First Thing: Australia neuters mining tax; Julius Malema proxy battle begins
- The judge and the judgment - Day One
- Google's Newspass, another salvo in the battle for paid-for content domination
- Reporter's Notebook: ANC’s ‘media interaction’ forum is anything but
- The Dutch stun Brazil, banish them to World Cup exile
- The World Cup Day that was: 30 June
- Kia Motors: Can an ugly duckling become a sleek swan?
- Naspers continues its mighty march
- Radmann and Hargitay, the men behind Australia's dirty World Cup 2022 bid
- Eskom vs unions: fear vs greed will determine if the lights stay on
- Jubilant Spain finally bring down Portugal's defences
- Paraguay win their trench war against Japan after penalty lottery
- The World Cup Day that was: 29 June
- Rolling Stone's Web illiteracy: What would Hunter have done?
- Analysis: By axing Gama, Transnet fires first in the battle for the soul of parastatals
- Bheki Cele vs the British media, a big scuffle over pretty much nothing
- Dangerous drivers get out of jail free, pre-emptively, again
- The World Cup Day that was: 28 June
- Brazil crush Chile into a fine powder
- A police story: Joburg and Toronto trade reputations
- More than a billion dollars later, G-20 agrees to cut spending
- Vodacom to Icasa: give us your lunch money, or eat a lawyer sandwich
- The FBI, the Russian agents and the questions that just won't go away
- The World Cup Day that was: 27 June
- Just as you started to relax, the Youth League's back
- The problem with photographing 'poor whites'
- Analysis: If the internet is to get a red-light district, governments will have to put on their jackboots
- Springboks pronk over, around and under Italy
- The Dutch, impressive in victory but not in beauty, shake off the Slovakians
- "The forgotten war", 60 years later
- The World Cup Day that was: 26 June
- Germans stun England in Bloemfontein, avenge ghosts of 1966
- In a professional display, the Argentines dispose of Mexico
- The World Cup Day that was: 25 June
- The Human Genome Project, 10 years on
- It’s ‘Hats Off’ to this charmingly daft show
- Cameroon finally show some panache against Dutch
- The World Cup Day that was: 24 June
- The money-spinning spectacle of Michael Jackson's life after death
- Suzuki Swift Sport: It's not hot - but it's tasty!
- ‘Soccer south of the Umbilo' - a movie about special football memories
- The off-the-field media wrap up of the World Cup. Week Two.
- Unions promise no Eskom strike – on the weekend. Next week, maybe
- Brazil vs Portugal: World Cup’s most eagerly awaited game is yawn of gigantic proportions
- Spain defeat Chile, set up an Iberian derby in the next round
- The World Cup Day that was: 23 June
- Facebook founder to face death penalty in Pakistan?
- Football and politics, separated at birth
- Toronto goes on lockdown for G20 summit, buys every ad in the New Yorker
- Oz has new prime minister and she ain't named Sheila
- Planning to retire while you're still strong? Don't bank on it
- The ruling World Champions Italy crash out, join France in ignominy
- Japan KO Denmark in great display of skill and deadly free-kicks
- Super Eagles exit the World Cup after inexplicably failing to finish off South Korea
- Argentines bulldoze their way over Greeks in Polokwane, finish atop Group B
- The World Cup Day that was: 22 June
- Analysis: Vavi wins tug o' war against ANC's National Working Committee
- General Stanley McChrystal: dead man walking
- England outclass Slovenia, book place in next round
- Yanks never give up, china!
- Barack Obama red cards General McChrystal
- Aussies defeat Serbs, bow out gracefully from World Cup
- Ghanaians lose to Germany, but... this time for Africa
- The World Cup Day that was: 21 June
- Blaas jou vuvuzela: Welcome to the world’s first R-rated boeremusiek zombie music video
- Fifa to give up prosecuting orange minidresses
- Shock and outrage as Zuma suggests foreigners can outplay Safricans on vuvuzela
- The technology that's seriously upsetting the aid sector, and the man behind it
- Uruguay edge Mexico in Rustenburg, win Group A
- Valiant Bafana out of the World Cup, back in South African hearts
- The World Cup Day that was: 20 June
- First Thing: Colombia gets new President; Zimbabwe blood diamond meet
- The Onion: World Cup as scathing satire
- Analysis: Gautrain's re-mapping of Africa's richest province
- Yuan starts its floating odyssey to global domination
- The Aids stand-off among friends, never a good thing
- Portugal's stars shatter North Korean hopes into thousand pieces. And then some.
- After a great battle, Chile defeat Switzerland, sort of. Yes, you guessed it, referee issues again
- Back to their emphatic ways, the Spaniards outclass Honduras
- The World Cup Day that was: 19 June
- Paraguay whacks Slovakia without breaking a sweat
- New Zealanders' brave hearts hold world champions Italy to a 1:1 draw
- With some help from Hand of God, Hurricane Brazil hits the Ivory Coast
- The World Cup Day that was: 18 June
- The industrious Dutch break Japan’s iron defence, but only just
- Ghana's Black Stars fight boldly, only manage a draw against the 10-man Ozzies
- Cameroon loses to Denmark, crashes out of World Cup
- The World Cup Day that was: 17 June
- The top English fan, revisited
- Analysis: A little advice for Eskom’s new CEO, Brian Dames
- World Cup week one wrap-up, minus the soccer
- Open letter to Budweiser: Please will you sponsor all South African sport? Wholesale rates available
- In shock reversal of first-round fortunes, unsteady Germans lose to unpredictable Serbs
- Yanks force a late draw against Slovenia. Oh, and get robbed of victory
- Algerians frustrate English stars into goalless draw
- The World Cup Day that was: June 16
- The World Cup On Wheels: How to get to the games in style
- BP - Beyond Patching?
- Blatter's Twitter debut reveals Fifa's true nature
- Argentina railroads South Korea with impressive, attack-minded display of great skills
- Greeks outsmart, outfight Nigeria, earn their first-ever World Cup victory
- Superior Mexicans hand a comprehensive lesson to miserable French
- The World Cup Day that was: 15 June
- An American debate: Should journalism be subsidised by government?
- First Thing: Kyrgyzstan violence winds down, Bafana's victory over Uruguay today
- Analysis: Siyabonga Gama, the alpha and omega of what's wrong with SA
- From the Oval Office, Obama pours water on troubled oil
- 48 years and 13 World Cups later, Chile finally wins, without breaking much sweat
- The country that invented the best European football gets whacked by the country that invented the cuckoo clock
- Bafana Bafana’s heart breaks in the cold Pretoria night
- The World Cup Day that was: 14 June
- First Thing: landslide tragedy in China; Bloody Sunday report
- Independent rolls out premium content model - Internet, journalism experts underwhelmed
- A country you never heard of draws against a soccer team you never knew of
- Obama revs up for a defining moment from the Oval Office
- Portugal and Ivory Coast produce, wait for it, another draw
- Brazil, the brilliant, defeats North Korea, the proud
- The World Cup Day that was: 13 June
- First Thing: World Cup protest in Durban; introducing Maverick Monitor
- A rugby supporter's personal journey to the gates of football
- Fahrenheit 2010: The inconvenient truth behind SA's new World Cup stadiums
- Afghanistan now a treasure trove of precious industrial metals. Nobody tell the Taliban, please
- 'Drumstruck' - Go on, give it a bash!
- June 16: Youth Day in SA, Bloomsday everywhere else
- Netherlands defeats Denmark. Okay, but wasn’t the stadium beautiful?
- Mo Ibrahim gives African leaders cold shoulder, again
- Japanese stun Cameroon in Bloemfontein
- Italy and Paraguay draw after a hard, tough battle in the freezing rain
- The World Cup Day that was: 12 June
- Motlanthe, Biden meet, agree on greater cooperation
- Slovenia strikes it lucky as Algeria defeats itself in Polokwane
- Ghana defeats faintly suicidal Serbia, earns first African victory
- Boks add their bit to glorious weekend for SA sport
- Germany wipes out Australia in a most emphatic manner
- The World Cup day that was: 11 June 2010
- Analysis: why Bafana engineered a draw with Mexico, and why we should be grateful they were so smart
- South Koreans deliver a massive blow to Greece's World Cup hopes
- Argentines huff and puff at Nigeria, produce deserved but narrow win
- England disappoints as US earns a tough draw in Rustenburg
- First Thing: teen sailor lost at sea; one Bafana victory coming right up
- Analysis: On the eve of 2010 World Cup, the choice is ours
- Celebrating Captain Cousteau’s centenary
- US vice president Joe Biden - a mensch in Sandton Meet 'n Greet
- The ceremony over, let the soccer games begin
- Bafana Bafana draws the Mexico game, but makes us proud
- Ten-man Uruguay ekes out a draw against lifeless, tired France
- First Thing: Dutch take a step to the right; World Cup kickoff kicks off
- Nissan 370Z Roadster: A ragtop with real attitude
- Cautious optimism as Newsday hits the streets of Zimbabwe
- Internet Solutions starts gnawing at the cellphone pie - and some day your calls will cost less
- Mugabe to attend World Cup opening ceremony
- The fresh new set of UN sanctions against Iran, but no real solution in sight
- First Thing: attack in Pakistan; Bafana start victory celebrations
- Analysis: The Presidency, our anthem and unnecessary rules
- US voters celebrate Women's Day
- High court decision delivers a knockout to Fifa Local Organising Committee
- Best young fiction writers in the world?
- Malawian gay couple's beautiful thing, and its ugly consequences
- Sandton loses its mind as pre-victorious Bafana take a ride
- First Thing: smoothish ride for the Gautrain; World Oceans Day
- The great global swine flu swindle
- Analysis: ANC drops talk of charges against Vavi after crashing into Cosatu wall
- Then what? The Economist's SA correspondent on life beyond the World Cup
- Yet more primary elections test the mood of US voters
- From our vault: John W Campbell, most potent force in science fiction you never heard of, now a centennial man
- Crowds fail to throng to Gautrain on day one
- Zoom with a view: Google's Street View hits .ZA
- First Thing: market trouble thanks to Hungary; Mexicans preview their defeat
- Analysis: Just how much of a VIP is the US VP?
- Zuma's family affairs: how much is too much information?
- Analysis: Will the fake Cope please shut up
- Analysis: Time for Barack Obama to get angry
- Mexican fans celebrate for the last time before inevitable Bafana mauling
- What chances for Diaspora, the anti-Facebook social network?
- @TheDMGlobalPR would never employ a silly Internet meme just to get attention
- Western Cape 'toilet wars' escalate with more mudslinging
- First Thing: Japan gets a new chief; Motlanthe gets the World Cup
- Analysis: An anatomy of Cosatu, a political party
- Fifa, the real master of the universe, gets its claws into SA justice system
- Cracking the SA police conspiracy of silence
- Heartbreak for Ivory Coast, Africa, as Drogba crashes out of World Cup
- First Thing: India wants MTN again; Fifa takes over state
- Larry King's ratings are dead, long live the King
- Anyone for shares in Zimbabwe (Pty) Ltd?
- It’s not rocket science, just Coke and Mentos
- New BMW 5-Series: Does Five count for more than Seven?
- Liquid mountaineering - extreme sport & undercover marketing
- WikiLeaks, scourge of governments and banks, goes mainstream
- Analysis: Japanese Prime Minister Hatoyama falls on his own sword
- The wife, the bodyguard and the cuckolded president. President Jacob Zuma, that is
- First Thing: bad night for BP; Eskom results
- Analysis: ANC's reckless, dangerous Cosatu gambit
- New non-political Taxpayers' Movement wants more train, less gravy
- Al and Tipper Gore reveal their inconvenient truth
- Eskom turns a profit, explains just how bankrupt it is about to become
- First Thing: Al-Qaeda's number three dead; World Cup concert boycott
- Mark Shuttleworth, still fighting the Beast from Redmond, still standing
- Analysis: Could Constitutional Court judges overstay their welcome?
- Analysis: Israelis score astonishing own goal
- Artists, hangers-on call for boycott of World Cup concert, avoid threats of violence, just
- It's official: the vuvuzela will be allowed at World Cup games
- Analysis: World Cup will give SA a serotonin shot, but not much money
- SA's Nobel literature laureates speak to Europe
- First Thing: Israel (reportedly) kills aid sailors; happy 100th, South Africa
- Dennis Hopper, Hollywood's ultimate maverick, takes his final ride at 74
- Cope: the post-mortem
- Happy 100th birthday, South Africa, sort of
- Review: The Boys in the Photograph
- Sport through the ages, always more than just a game
- Sunday Times reflects the world in Fifa World Cup
- Rugby sets the perfect stage for soccer to show its beauty
- The Korean Peninsula: a place that just keeps on giving - in all the wrong ways
- Loud, proud and exuberantly African
- First Thing: 28 May 2010
- Cosatu threatens strikes during World Cup, should Sepp be worried? Nah, not really.
- World Cup 2010: Ray McCauley saves
- Breakthrough for media freedom in Zimbabwe
- Zapiro bares all on Muhammad cartoon in, you guessed it, another cartoon
- Mazda MX-5 Roadster: Freedom on four wheels
- Cope cuts the red wire and the ticking has stopped - for now
- Language Luddites Unite! (hopefully)
- John Vlismas on the post-Fifa apocalypse, Sepp Blatter and Helen Zille
- SA gets Muhammad cartoon controversy (mostly) right
- Delayed, and watered-down, justice for Bhopal victims
- Mandela's great granddaughter dies on way from World Cup kickoff concert
- Teen sailor Abby Sunderland back in radio contact
- Chinese school attacker receives death sentence
- Belgian separatists dominate the elections
- Kenyan president convenes emergency security meeting
- President Obama to emphasise gravity of oil spill by speaking from Oval Office
- Israel sets up commission of inquiry into flotilla raids
- Explosion in Iraq kills one, wounds 27
- Reversing deforestation increases forest fires
- BP expects Gulf spill costs to reach $1.6 billion
- Iran offers escort to next Gaza convoy
- Worrying number of doctors resign from Leratong Hospital
- Pakistan to evacuate citizens from Kyrgyzstan
- 30 Somalis arrested for watching televised soccer matches
- Bangladeshi factories ordered to stop production during World Cup matches
- Live soccer matches to be shown in 3D in SA cinemas
- The Netherlands defeats Denmark 2-0
- Transnet seeks to fire suspended chief Gama
- Uzbekistan threatens to shut Kyrgyzstan border
- Rea Vaya drivers go back to work
- The latest Twitter trend: Cala Boca Galvão
- Somali soccer fans killed for watching World Cup match
- Heavy snow causes road chaos in Eastern Cape
- UN calls for Kyrgyz aid corridor
- World Cup broadcast rights in North Korea sorted out, sort of
- Iranian aid ship to set sail for Gaza later this week
- Mighty matador runs for cover
- Ireland set to expel Israeli diplomat
- Lone bin Laden hunter arrested in Pakistan
- Security stewards protest, again, at Durban stadium
- Slovakia, New Zealand draw after last-minute equaliser by All Whites
- Fitch slashes BP's rating by six notches
- Donors stump up $9.3 million to fund prosecution of Somali pirates
- US General faints during senate session
- Brian Dames appointed as Eskom CEO
- Hopes for a genuine climate change deal wane at Bonn talks
- Aussie prime minister limps in at third place in eBay auction
- Chile wins 1-0 against Honduras
- Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to delist from NYSE
- Striking security guard dies in hospital, allegedly
- Solar-powered soccer screening in Jerico
- NEWSFLASH: Switzerland triumph over Spain
- Oil spill claim fund to cost BP $20 billion
- Nintendo, Microsoft and Sony prepare for gaming battle
- Turkey set to sever ties with Israel
- Mexico tries to clean up its image
- Chavez threatens opposition television network
- Obama criticised for lack of specifics in call for clean energy
- Jackson's doctor asked for life-saving medical gear
- Israel to ease the four-year Gaza blockade
- iPhone 4 sells 600,000 units on first day of pre-orders
- BP rebrands as 'burning petroleum'
- Fifa claims Bavaria imported ambush-marketing organisers
- Zanele Mandela buried at Fourways Cemetery, service at St Stithian's
- Danny Boyle to direct Olympic opening ceremony
- Striking security guards fired
- Swiss parliament backs US-UBS tax deal
- Cahill banned for one match only
- Jordaan tells SA fans to buck up
- Zuma steps out with Malema rival
- VW invests $85 million in SA
- Oprah dishes out iPads, money to staff
- Police accuse security guards of lying about death
- Wimbledon bans vuvuzelas
- Somali pirates get five years of jail time
- Police use stun grenade on protesting security workers
- Family kills man in battle for the remote control
- No end in sight to Kyrgyz violence
- LA Lakers win 16th NBA title
- Ice cream ad immaculately conceived
- Scientists find largest dinosaur bone bed ever in Alberta
- 99 toy balloons scare South Koreans
- Move over Guitar Hero, Vuvuzela Hero could blast its way into your home
- Campbell Soup recalls SpaghettiOs
- Tourist airlifted from Table Mountain
- Gautrain slowed down - airport run will take double the time
- Facebook revenue reaches about $800 million
- Utah murderer executed by firing squad
- James in, Green out for English game this evening
- Fifa counting its World Cup haul, all $3.2 billion of it
- Vuvuzelas don't spread swine flu after all
- The golden age of natural gas may be at hand
- Barton apologises to BP, before apologising for his apology
- North Korea defection rumours circulate
- Estonia set to join Euro zone
- Former Polish president's twin brother contesting election
- Bowman Gilfillan to represent Dutch miniskirt women in court
- BP chief Tony Hayward hands over disaster-management operations
- Federal government to file suit against Arizona law
- Tony Hayward not floating anybody's boat, apart from his own
- Yuan rises after China promises flexibility
- Iran bars nuclear inspectors
- Telkom profit plummets 92%
- Lord of the vuvuzela
- Radioactive gas detected after North Korea nuclear claim
- Australian mining executives' plane disappears
- French sports minister to convene soccer crisis talks
- ANC Youth League criticises Mokoena
- New air conditioning technology casts chill on environmentally unfriendly CFCs
- NEWSFLASH: End of the road for PBMR
- The Cove to be screened in Japan
- Rahm Emanuel likely to quit after mid-terms
- Fifa's head referee satisfied with World Cup decisions
- Gold hits record dollar high
- South Africans should congratulate themselves on World Cup, says Tutu
- BP will hang on to Olympic sponsorship
- Plane wreck found in the Republic of Congo, all passengers feared dead
- North Korea's African cash diverted to Kim Jung-Il's slush funds
- White House budget chief set to resign soon
- Former Mazda employee runs over factory workers
- ANC won't charge Vavi
- Fifa threatens PE restaurant owner over window decoration
- BP gets stamp of approval, from Libya
- French minister scolds the boys and makes them cry
- Bacteria can keep carbon dioxide buried safely underground
- Blogs and tweets could be used to predict the future
- Imaginary unicorns result in real legal threats
- Britain's budget ushers in an era of austerity
- Naspers shares slump after Tencent announcement
- US Californian schoolchildren discover Martian cave
- Church and van Schalkwyk settle vuvuzela battle with minimum fuss, noise
- Police arrest Jamaican fugitive Christopher Coke
- Russia reduces gas deliveries to Belarus
- Chicks count from left to right - just like us
- All your location data are belong to Apple
- Two aid workers kidnapped in Darfur
- Virgin America offers free flight to influential tweeters
- Taxi sign language gets stamp(s) of approval from academia
- Judge who ruled in favour of deepwater drilling has interests in oil industry
- Congolese businessman gets R1 million bail, pays it in cash
- Her majesty to grace Wimbledon with her presence
- Chavez to nationalise 11 oil rigs
- Jack Abramoff takes job in pizzeria
- Chinese bank set for record IPO
- US citizens sentenced to jail in Pakistan
- Charlene Wittstock's engagement to Prince Albert makes headlines
- DA councillor fired for skimming the poor
- French soccer team back home to face the music
- Diamond industry regulator deadlocked over Zimbabwe
- Danny Jordaan's brother holds World Cup contract
- Sarah Palin's defence fund declared illegal
- Implementation of new traffic act delayed
- Cameron will avoid Merkel during World Cup clash
- Mosimane set to be new Bafana coach
- Human Rights Commission backs Zapiro on Lady Justice cartoon
- Georgia removes Stalin statue from his home town square
- England dressing room fan's court case postponed to next week
- British soccer fan sentenced after traffic collision
- Compulsory car insurance discussed in Parliament
- Minister to clamp down on illegal initiation schools
- North Korea threatens US over weapons
- Hundreds arrested in G20 protests
- No smokes for Kiwi prisoners
- Gillard announces new cabinet
- Oil from Gulf of Mexico spill spreads to Mississippi
- Senator Byrd hospitalised in Washington
- Iranian aid ship to Gaza delayed
- Obama family plans visit to Indonesia
- US Senator Robert Byrd dead at 92
- Results of Malema tenderpreneur probe to be released soon
- PE stadium could become white elephant after WC
- Icelandic PM becomes world's first head of state in gay marriage
- Another SAA air hostess charged with drug smuggling
- German police recover stolen Caravaggio painting
- Chile hopes Jagger brings them satisfaction
- Tony Hayward is still BP chief
- US puts Mugabe on terror blacklist
- British reporter set up dressing room intruder
- Elon Musk says he's run out of money
- Blatter apologises to England and Mexico for bad refereeing decisions
- Apple achieves record sales with iPhone 4
- Google set to stop rerouting from Chinese site
- Russia wants explanation of spy arrests from US
- China says it is concerned about North Korea
- Beast is back in the Springbok squad
- Pitso will be next Bafana coach - maybe
- Mirror stands by arrested journalist
- Luanda is priciest city for expats
- Fifa's Johannesburg offices robbed
- Teen sailor finally arrives home
- Naspers revenue grows by 5%
- Baha'is being pushed out of Iranian village
- Further strikes disrupt Greece and Spain
- NUM votes for Eskom strike next week
- Australia tries to buy its way into hosting 2022 World Cup
- Aquino sworn in as president of the Philippines
- SA selling weapons to 'problematic' countries
- John Howard won't be batting for the ICC
- ArcelorMittal hit with $336 million fine over European steel cartel
- OR Tambo protesters removed
- Wonder Woman's wardrobe gets a makeover
- Disgraced referees sent home early
- Army deployed in Du Noon over fears of xenophobic violence
- Nepalese Prime Minister resigns
- President withdraws Nigerian soccer team from international competition
- US House of Representatives passes financial reform bill
- US tourist shot in Marlboro
- Petraeus confirmed as new Afghanistan commander
- Chinese news agency launches English television channel
- Author Christopher Hitchens has cancer of the oesophagus
- Russian spy skips bail in Cyprus
- Hurricane Alex disrupts oil spill clean-up efforts
- Sars announces huge improvement in tax compliance
- Pick n Pay leaves Australia
- Head UN nuclear weapons inspector resigns
- Internet access becomes a legal right in Finland
- Actor Gordon Mulholland dies
- Mexican soccer coach resigns
- Hodgson appointed as new Liverpool manager
- PMI declines to 48.4 points
- NEWSFLASH: Paris, she is here
- Stephen Mncube appointed as head of Icasa
- Al Qaeda's English magazine fails to inspire
- Netanyahu says Israel ready to release 1,000 prisoners in exchange for Schalit
- Fifa gives Nigeria 48 hours to reverse suspension
- More Greek strikes set for 8 July
- Russian mathematician refuses $1m prize
- Pepsi served at Durban beach fan park
- Rwandan genocide suspect arrested in Uganda
- More South Africans on welfare than working
- NEWSFLASH: Selebi found guilty
- Merkel to attend Germany quarter final
- Google to cover extra tax for gay couples
- Finance minister says SA will break even on World Cup
- Latest Toyota recall may cost as much as $228 million
- Zuma indicates SA may bid for Olympics
- O'Sullivan thrilled at Selebi's conviction
- Germany may cut off aid to Zimbabwe
- Serena wins 4th Wimbledon title
- Oil spills costs BP $3.12bn and counting
- Strike called off after Eskom ups offer
- Turkey threatens to cut diplomatic ties with Israel
- China sentences US geologist to 8 years in jail
- Outcomes-based education gets the chop
- Federer's ranking falls to number 3
- Shanduka workers go on strike
- Israel changes Gaza blockade restrictions
- Dalai Lama celebrates 75th birthday
- Argentine soccer team decline to meet Kirchner
- Apple missing out in China, claims rival
- Michael Ballack's return in question
- Colombia's president-elect could be arrested, in Ecuador
- Thai government extends state of emergency
- BP denies rumours of strategic investor
- Faster to read a book than on an iPad, study finds
- Gupta Group to launch daily in September
- Psychic octopus calls Spanish win
- OBE will not be scrapped, but will be modified
- Chevrolet's next advert to be crowd-sourced
- Mueller named new head of Porsche
- NEWSFLASH: Malema in meeting with top six ANC officials
- Semenya cleared to compete
- National Arts Festival attendance at 186,000
- Department of Justice challenges Arizona Law
- Saudi investors could buy BP stake
- Eskom threatens to cut off Free State power over non-payment
- Britain pulls troops out of Sangin, Afghanistan
- SA recovery: hesitant, fragile and uneven
- W00t! bills AP $17.50 for quoting from its blog
- Solar-powered plane embarks on test flight
- NEWSFLASH: British journo court case postponed to weekend
- Gay asylum seekers win UK court case
- AOL falls for website spoof
- Noriega gets 7-year jail sentence in France
- Mantashe, Tulelo meeting with Eastern Cape ANCYL
- Russia proposes spy swap
- Germany institutes legal action against Facebook
- Government owes Eskom millions
- Obama administration goes to court to get drilling ban reinstated
- Saxophonist Robbie Jansen dies
- Two gored in Pamplona bull run
- British man finds buried Roman treasure
- Netanyahu calls for peace talks
- IMF increases growth forecast to 4.6%
- Planes still delayed at King Shaka International Airport
- Three suspected Al Qaeda operatives arrested in Norway
- CNN fires senior editor over Tweet
- HSBC reportedly considering a bid for Nedbank
- Government says sorry about airport delays
- BP confirms that leak will be fixed only in August
- China escapes currency censure, again
- Julius Malema and the case of the mysterious donations
- Petrol price to fall next week
- Suicide bomber in Pakistan kills at least 20 people
- Google found guilty of breaching Australian privacy law
- Stoning of Iranian women overturned
- Mandela autopsy painting stirs controversy
- UAE issues fatwa against vuvuzelas
- Google renews its Web licence for China
- NEWSFLASH: Court interdicts ANCYL Eastern Cape congress
- Hedberg appointed as acting Telkom chief
- Trigger-happy general appointed head of US forces in the Middle East
- Cold-War style spy exchange completed
- US prisoner in North Korea attempts suicide
- No time line for implementation of youth employment subsidy
- Xenophobia hotline to launch on Monday
- SABC bans coverage of Mbeki
- Gaddafi's son ordered to his pay massive hotel bill
- Three police shot in Northern Ireland
- Beijing expands its English programme
- SABC denies Mbeki ban
- Don't panic! Facebook to launch safety button
- Switzerland won't extradite Polanski
- Fidel will go on TV to warn of impending nuclear war
- Police, army move in to Western Cape townships
- Zimbabwean activist granted bail
- Vuvuzela makes the most noise in World Cup lexicon
- Frenchman offers to pay burqa fines
- Unexploded suicide belt found at blast scene in Kampala
- Voters to Obama: we're just not that into you
- Iranian nuclear scientist takes shelter in Pakistani embassy
- New suspect in Russian spy ring
- Hefner wants complete control of Playboy
- Wole Soyinka celebrates 76 years
- ANC Youth League court case to be struck off the roll
- Rwandan journo arrested after comparing president to Hitler
- Moody's cuts Portugal's credit rating
- Israeli military orders Libyan aid vessel to turn back
- Zimbabweans flee SA over fears of violence
- NEWSFLASH: SA to bid for 2020 Olympics
- New York Yankees owner dies
- Naspers buys 28.7% stake in Russian internet firm
- Eskom, unions ink wage agreement
- US, South Korea engaged in nuclear fuel dispute
- State wants to seize Selebi's assets
- Bafana climb up world rankings to 66
- Soccer match-fixing scandal nets betting rings €7.5m
- ET accused granted bail
- Bristol Palin and Levi Johnstone engaged
- Sky News looking to launch Arabic news channel
- Selebi sentencing postponed to August
- SA economy gets R93bn World Cup boost
- Japan's NTT to buy Dimension Data
- 900 unexploded bombs found in Okinawa
- UN hails World Cup success
- Dandala steps down as Cope's parliamentary leader
- Argentina legalises gay marriage
- Al Shabaab says Uganda attacks just the beginning
- Spendthrift government forks out R1.5bn for luxury items
- Ryanair says sorry to easyJet over Pinocchio adverts
- Big, bad BP lobbied UK government about Libya
- Blatter has left the country
- Pitso Mosimane confirmed as new Bafana coach, finally
- BP: the leaking cap (put in place to fix the leaking oil well) is fixed
- Semenya wins comeback race
- Goldman coughs up $550 million to settle fraud case
- Jeff Vuvuzela has a blast at ESPY Awards
- Daewoo cosying up to Zuma (and nephew)
- Zimbabwe allowed to export diamonds again
- Bafana Bafana to play BaGhana BaGhana at Soccer City
- Scientists create malaria-free mosquito
- First the US reform bill passes, then the earth quakes
- Buncefield oil depot explosion firms pay £9 million
- NEWSFLASH: Director-general of Rural Development and Land Reform resigns
- Fifa tightens rules for World Cup bidders
- SA to ask UN to help combat xenophobia
- Teachers threaten to go on strike, maybe
- UK government to use funds from dormant bank accounts for charity
- Gillard leading Australian election polls - by far
- ANCYL disbands Eastern Cape executive committee, illegally
- Moody's cuts Ireland's rating
- Shilowa threatens legal action against Lekota
- IFP to postpone its conference
- Oosthuizen jumps up world golf rankings
- Safa set to account to parliament on R1bn World Cup windfall
- ArcelorMittal threatens to close Saldhana steel plant
- Emirates airline orders 30 Boeing 777s
- Nokia Siemens acquires Motorola network unit for $1.2bn
- Syrian universities ban burqas
- Masoga expelled from ANC Youth League
- ANC calls on Malala to apologise
- Thailand lifts state of emergency in three more provinces
- Microbicide gel halves Aids infections, new study finds
- The "five-second rule" is a myth
- Spider-infested ship denied entry to Guam
- Foreigners injured in Kya Sands attacks
- K'Naan keeps SA flag flying
- US federal grand jury subpoenas Toyota
- BP moots new plan for sealing oil well
- Amazon sells more eBooks than hardcovers
- US troops to patrol Mexican border from August
- SAA to go after Nqula for R31m
- How to predict a viral video outbreak
- Advertising watchdog rules against church
- SA ambassador sent back to Israel
- Numsa wants ArcelorMittal to be nationalised
- Four premier league football clubs ban vuvuzelas
- Army moves in to Kya Sands
- Hillary Clinton visits Korean Demilitarised Zone
- Zanu-PF says 2011 elections are possible, but are they really?
- Peaceful night at Kya Sands
- Hashim Amla wins SA Cricketer of the Year
- US lesbian teen gets $35,000 payout over cancelled prom
- Newsflash: ANC Youth League calls for charges against Ngqula
- French police to question labour minister over Bettencourt scandal
- Depression is so grey
- SA Human Rights Commission slams government's response to xenophobia
- Public service unions threaten strike action
- Jordaan not looking to return as Safa chief
- Kafka papers to be published after court ruling
- Jordaan joins Fifa inspection team
- Lekota's swearing in as an MP delayed over legal wrangle
- Kumba, ArcelorMittal reach interim pricing agreement
- Butana Komphela threatens Bafana Bafana name
- Australian mining houses could resurrect anti-tax adverts
- IMF cancels Haiti debt
- Muralitharan claims 800th wicket
- Newsflash: Tutu to retire from public life
- Zuma advises caution on Nyanda allegations
- CCMA finds against MaNtuli for firing domestic worker
- Oakland legalises marijuana farming
- Newsflash: Interest rate remains stable
- Abbas to decide on peace talks within a week
- Kosovo's independence from Serbia is legal, court rules
- North Korea threatens 'physical response' over US-South Korean military exercises
- De Beers chief executive resigns
- New Khaya Ngqula revelations
- 'Less is more' says wannabe Californian governor (and billionaire), Meg Whitman
- Poisoned rhino horns could stop poaching
- Nupsaw set to join public service strike
- Trafigura fined €1 million
- Gauteng health authorities to investigate baby deaths
- Russia ready to resume Nato ties
- Man jailed for calling Mugabe "old and wrinkled"
- North Korea to set free South Korean fishing boat
- Selebi given leave to appeal
- FDA: Genetically modified salmon is safe
- Tyre cartel uncovered by Competition Commission
- The Sun markets the smell of gutter journalism
- Civil servant strike officially over, for now
- Government formulates acid water drainage plan
- South Africa gets new Zulu-English dictionary
- Charges against Mzilikazi wa Afrika dropped, provisionally
- Al Gore environmental school built on toxic soil
- Damon Galgut shortlisted for Man Booker Prize
- It's official: The Stig is sacked
- Internal BP probe to be released today
- Rice apologies to Boks, cries like a baby
- Mystery shrouds Olivedale clinic deaths
- Sarkozy backtracks on Pension Bill, but still won't change retirement age
- Numsa rejects revised motor industry offer
- Rwanda outraged by UN report
- Swazi youth leader arrested
- Prison Break Africa: Hundreds of prisoners escape in Nigeria
- Zille paid for radio coverage
- Durban is the sole SA candidate to host Olympics
- David Cameron's father passes away
- Cipro involved in company "hijacking"
- Smoking laws to get even tougher now
- Air Zimbabwe workers take strike action
- Goldman hit with £17.5m fine
- Interest rates cut by 50 basis points
- Happy birthday, North Korea!
- Bill for free education could be R18bn
- Serbia backs down on Kosovo
- China tells Japan to back down
- Court bid to stop Joburg Bible-burner
- Qur'an burning controversy claims its first victim
- Iran to release female hiker
- NFVF chooses Life, Above All as SA's foreign film entry for Oscars
- Regulators agree on stricter rules for Basel III
- Report: Mugabe and Tsvangirai agree on 2011 elections
- Chilean miners get cigarettes - but no alcohol
- Taxi driver arrested for bribing metro cop with R20
- Health workers in Zimbabwe get bail
- Blair to get Liberty Medal in the US
- Patricia de Lille sworn in as WC MEC
- Benni McCarthy's weighty fines
- Second Marange diamond auction goes ahead
- Czech Republic cracks down on Street View
- Presidential hotline celebrates first birthday
- Bono's African dream is realised in China
- SABC hearing open to public
- New Age launch delayed until October
- France passes burqa ban
- Japanese teacher in trouble for "deadly" maths question
- BMF disputes JSE BEE numbers
- Godonwana to meet with bakkie driver
- Goodluck Jonathan announces presidential bid on Facebook and Twitter
- African Union condemns protection of information bill
- Fuel sector reaches wage deal
- Netcare charged in organs syndicate
- Guinea postpones presidential elections, again
- Four accused of lesbian murder escape
- Mercedes-Benz offices raided in price-fixing probe
- Pope Benedict XVI arrives in UK
- Gordhan: nationalisation is not government policy
- Andrew Flintoff quits cricket
- Woman who inspired Sybil Fawlty dies
- DA calls Cosatu education policies "defeatist"
- "Borat" to play Freddie Mercury
- MDC: make illegal Zimbabweans SA citizens
- UN dumps SA soldiers in DRC rebel territory
- Zuma labels succession debate premature
- Pakistan accuses England of throwing match
- The phrase "sub-Saharan Africa" must go, says Celebrate Africa Foundation
- Mexican paper scales down reporting on drug war
- SA's economic freedom plunges
- Police clash with Hout Bay informal dwellers
- Mantashe decries media leaks, says offenders must be punished
- ANC gains 127,000 members
- 83 female activists arrested in Zimbabwe
- Last travelgate accused pleads guilty
- Delhi bridge collapses in latest setback for Commonwealth Games
- Vatican raided in money-laundering investigation
- Koeberg workers exposed to radiation
- New protest breaks out at Australian immigration centre
- Summers resigns as White House economic advisor
- False ceiling collapses at Commonwealth Games stadium
- Court orders arrest of Sadtu leaders
- Ozzie teenager cause of Twitter chaos
- Charges dropped against 30 Hangberg protesters
- Prisoners try escape from South Gauteng High Court
- Tottenham Hotspurs want Bongani Khumalo
- UK arrests six men for burning Qur'an
- ANC to meet on rationalising provinces
- Gupta arrested after threatening cops
- Walmart in talks to buy Massmart - for R30bn
- CWG: The accommodation obstacle course
- Gold hits record high of $1,300
- Chavez loses two-thirds majority in parliamentary elections
- Segway firm owner dies in freak accident involving, you guessed it, a Segway
- SAA air hostess given 7 years for drug smuggling
- China affirms commitment to one-child policy
- Facebook to set stage for Aids rape documentary
- Judge Hlope's son found guilty of fraud
- MacArthur "genius" grants announced
- More than half of Gulf of Mexico oil not yet cleaned up
- S&P warns Ireland, again
- New unit to investigate state corruption to be launched in November
- Medvedev fires Moscow mayor
- Zim judge sues Bennett for defamation
- Gunmen seize 15 schoolchildren in Nigeria
- Solar Park proposed for Upington
- Exxaro denies link to Julius Malema
- Rhino poachers resort to poison
- Task team to advise UJ on relations with Israeli university
- First Aboriginal MP in Australia wins over parliament
- Hofmeyr calls media 'epitome of fascism', supports tribunal
- David Miliband retires to the back benches
- Contador tests positive for dope, could lose Tour de France title
- Cricketer Nel caught in, or rather under, the covers
- BMF calls for Manyi's resignation
- Home Affairs facing R6.8bn in lawsuits
- Actor Tony Curtis dies of cardiac arrest
- Holy Ayodhya site should be split in three, Indian court rules
- No springbok emblem on chest at rugby WC
- Military junta promises to free Suu Kyi, lawyers sceptical
- Kidnapped Nigerian school children released unharmed
- New Dutch ruling coalition to ban burqas
- ANCYL supports Malema for a second term
- Petrol price to rise by 4c and 5c
- Nigerian blasts kills 7 on independence day
- CWG: SA 4x100m relay team through to final
- Anti-burqa ban protest, French style: niqabs and mini-shorts
- Gambian president takes second wife
- Test-tube pioneer wins Nobel Prize for medicine
- CWG: Le Clos wins South Africa's first gold medal
- NEWFLASH: General Monty gets his revenge as Europe win the Ryder Cup
- Japan's central bank cuts interest rate to zero, almost
- Fifa suspends Nigerian Football Federation
- Ex-trader Kerviel found guilty of breach of trust
- Geim and Novoselov win Nobel physics prize
- Filipinos must sing anthem properly, or cough up
- Eight terror suspects arrested in France
- Hungary declares state of emergency after toxic spill
- Times Square bomber gets life
- EU gives Libya €50m to stem migration
- Zim X Factor contestant must return home from UK
- Molecule builders win Nobel chemistry prize
- Liverpool to be sold, but not if Hicks and Gillet have their way
- Smoking chimpanzee dies
- MDC not taking home affairs to court
- Clinton-Biden job swap not on the cards
- Government to investigate allowing rhino horn trade
- Naked Cowboy announces US presidential bid
- Mario Vargas Llosa wins Nobel literature prize
- Cell C to contest ASA ruling
- CWG: SA swimmers shine
- Obama lauds Tutu
- Gordhan suggests that rand is too strong
- Dubai Sheikh cuts racehorse spending, drastically
- NEWSFLASH: China's Liu Xiaobo wins Nobel peace prize
- Surplus maize for biofuels, says minister
- It's official: Kim Jong Un to lead North Korea
- Bacteria-infected mosquitoes to fight dengue fever
- CWG: 100m gold medallist fails drug test
- London bombing inquests to start, finally
- SABC fails to broadcast Bafana match, plays blame game instead
- Banksy tags Springfield
- Trio share Nobel economics prize
- Newsweek in merger talks with The Daily Beast
- Iceland tops gender equality list
- Local journalist arrested in Zimbabwe
- Former Rwandan rebel leader arrested in France
- Former matron of Oprah school found not guilty
- British media petitions against Murdoch's BSkyB deal
- Sibling rivalry hits North Korean succession plan
- Computer beats human at Japanese chess for the first time
- Ethiopia signs peace deal with rebel group
- Cele sues Sowetan for defamation
- CWG: Indian athlete tests positive for drugs
- Egypt regulates mass SMSes
- World Cup boosts South Africa's international reputation
- Malema loses bodyguards
- Khoisan X dies of stroke
- Peruvian police arrest Maoist rebel leader
- Metropolitan-Momentum merger gets go-ahead
- Pakistan flood bill comes in at $9.7bn
- HSBC-Nedbank deal off, probably
- Rinderpest is dead, long live our cattle!
- Skype, Facebook announce new connection
- Mugabe limits lifespan of unity government
- SA second last in citizen safety index
- Fifa rocked by vote-selling claims
- Facebook apps leak private info
- Pentagon prepares for WikiLeaks' Iraq release
- Shilowa removed as Cope chief whip and accounting officer
- Chinese vice-president strengthens his position
- Al Shabaab bans cellphone money transfers
- The Simpsons are Catholic, d'oh
- Tender process of Malaysia's $258m palace questioned
- The sage of Omaha's biggest mistake: buying Berkshire Hathaway
- Gordhan wary of 'competitive devaluation'
- China hikes interest rates
- Eastern Cape ANC spends R5m in legal fees
- Christians threaten to boycott Woolies
- US to investigate China's rare earth shipments
- SA 38th in media freedom index
- UK to slash public spending by £81bn
- Public servants sign wage deal
- Toyota recalls 1.5 million cars over leaking break fluid
- Somalia: Freed aid worker to be reunited with family
- Cuban hunger striker wins EU human rights prize
- Majali arrested for Kalahari 'corporate hijacking'
- Majali in custody until Tuesday
- Update: Wayne Rooney stays at Manchester United
- Singapore bids for Australian stock exchange
- Pick n Pay strike set for Friday
- Imminent volcanic eruption threatens Indonesia
- UPDATE: Roger Kebble dodges testimony - again
- Southern Sudan chooses Freedom anthem, Idols style
- Kalahari bail hearing postponed til Friday
- Saddam Hussein's right-hand man sentenced to death
- Supersport United, Tottenham reach pre-contract agreement on Khumalo
- NEWSFLASH: Paul the octopus has died
- Arundhati Roy to be charged with sedition, perhaps
- New Zealand to remain Middle Earth studio
- Soros donates $1m to marijuana campaign
- Limpopo: armed gang steal rhino horns from vet
- May the Darth Vader costume be with you
- Former Argentinean president dies
- Hotel Rwanda hero implicated in terror plot, denies allegations
- World Cup 2018 bid: England and Russia go to war, sort of
- Absa applies for liquidation of Majali's firm
- NEWFLASH: Kalahari hijackers ordered to undergo mental observation
- New Tshwane, Ekurhuleni mayors appointed
- Report advocates a smoke-free New Zealand by 2025
- Arrest warrant issued for Zimbabwean editor
- Agliotti case postponed, again
- Explosion kills 50 people in Pakistan
- NEWFLASH: SA in 110th place in 2010 Human Development Index
- US may remove Sudan from state-sponsored terrorism list
- Suspend Zulu, says Cosatu
- Australia to hold referendum on acknowledging Aborigines
- Obama supports India in bid for permanent UN security council seat
- Gunman takes hostages at BMW in France
- Pakistani cricketer Haider flees to UK
- Dubya defends waterboarding in memoir
- France passes pension reform law
- African liberal political parties meet with DA in Cape Town
- Zimbabwe cracks down on access to information
- Chiliboy and Bjorn Basson fail dope test
- Selebi granted leave to appeal sentencing
- Prince William to marry Kate Middleton next year
- Obama's children's book is poor competition for Dubya's memoirs
- Military rebels claim coup in Madagascar
- NEWFLASH: Repo rate falls by 50 basis points
- Martitzburg United coach accuses PSL of Soweto Derby conspiracy

