South Africa

Annan, Tutu, Machel to visit Zimbabwe in bid to highlight crisis

Zimbabwe MapJohannesburg - Former United Nations secretary-general Kofi Annan, former US president Jimmy Carter and Mozambican activist Graca Machel will visit Zimbabwe later this month to assess the humanitarian crisis in the country, it was announced Friday.

They will be visiting on behalf of The Elders, a group of leading international statesmen and women that was formed by former South African president Nelson Mandela last year to tackle some of the world's most intractable conflicts.

South African Archbishop emeritus Desmond Tutu and former Irish president Mary Robinson are among some of the other members of the 11-person group.

South Africans to mourn Makeba at weekend public service

South Africans to mourn Makeba at weekend public service Johannesburg  - South Africans have been invited to mourn deceased singer Miriam Makeba at a public memorial service in her native Johannesburg at the weekend, The Star newspaper reported Friday.

Makeba, Africa's first Grammy award winning singer and a leading anti-apartheid activist, died on Sunday in Italy after performing at a concert.

On Wednesday President Kgalema Motlanthe declared national days of mourning leading up to the funeral of the woman, known to her legions of fans worldwide as Mama Africa.

Greenpeace opens first Africa office in Johannesburg

Greenpeace opens first Africa office in JohannesburgJohannesburg - International environmental lobby group Greenpeace opened its first office in Africa on Thursday in Johannesburg.

In a statement Greenpeace said having an office in Africa was part of its commitment "to tackling the most urgent environmental problems facing the continent - climate change, deforestation and overfishing."

Greenpeace also said it would open a second office later this month in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo and a third in Dakar, Senegal in 2009.

Half-price BMW, anyone? South Africa feels the squeeze

Half-price BMW, anyone? South Africa feels the squeezeJohannesburg - When Zafar Wahid, a project manager with Liberty Life insurance company, was relieved of his car at gunpoint in Johannesburg recently, he knew exactly where to go to get a knock-down replacement.

On an unseasonably cold summer's evening, Wahid, still wearing his work trousers and tie, walks past a string of cars in Burchmore's showroom in northern Johannesburg, towards the auction room, where around 200 people are crammed into rows of tiered plastic seats.

Report: Truck smash kills 25 people in South Africa

Johannesburg - Twenty-five people were killed in South Africa's eastern Mpumalanga province Wednesday when two trucks, one of which was taking people to work, collided head-on and overturned, SAfm public radio reported.

The radio report said only two out of 27 people involved in the early-morning crash had survived. It was not clear whether they were injured.

Emergency workers were at the scene to try to remove victims trapped in the wreckage.

Mpumalanga is a busy transit corridor linking Gauteng province, Africa's wealthiest region where Johannesburg is located, with Maputo and Beira ports across the border in Mozambique.

Miriam Makeba's body returns to South Africa

Miriam Makeba's body returns to South AfricaJohannesburg - The body of South African singer and anti-apartheid icon, Miriam Makeba, arrived back in her native Johannesburg Wednesday, three days after her death in Italy.

Makeba, 76, who was known affectionately as Mama Africa, suffered a heart attack shortly after a performance on Sunday evening in southern Italy in support of a campaign against organized crime.

Family members, fellow musicians and Arts and Culture Minister Pallo Jordan were at OR Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg to receive her remains.

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