Women of all races and politics must set aside their differences and fight patriarchy, Angie Motshekga, president of the ANC Women's League, said in Johannesburg on Sunday.
More than 13 000 people have been killed in Syria since an anti-regime revolt broke out in March 2011, Rami Abdel Rahman of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights told AFP on Sunday.
Eight members of an Afghan family were killed in a Nato airstrike in the eastern province of Paktia, an Afghan official said Sunday, whilst four soldiers with the Nato-led coalition were killed in roadside bomb attacks.
The opposition All Basotho Convention took an early lead in Lesotho's fiercely fought general elections, winning the first eight constituencies announced on Sunday.
More than 1 000 demonstrators marched through Hong Kong Sunday calling for democracy in China ahead of the 23rd anniversary of the Tiananmen Square massacre in Beijing on June 4, according to organisers' estimates.
City Press editor Ferial Haffajee on Sunday apologised for the hurt caused by the paper's publishing of a portrait of President Jacob Zuma with his genitals exposed, but refused to remove the image from the paper's website.
Some 45 schoolgirls fell ill Sunday when poison gas was released in their school in northern Afghanistan, an official said - the second such attack at the school in a week.
A joint operation of law enforcement agencies have discovered more than a ton of hashish as well as a 50-year-old tortoise in a storage facility south of Johannesburg, police said on Sunday.
Unemployment in South Africa is a ticking time bomb and unemployed South Africans are likely to fight for jobs like the youth in Egypt and Tunisia, said Young Communist League secretary Buti Manamela.
Controversial former crime intelligence boss Lt-Gen Richard Mdluli has been suspended from the police, the office of acting national police commissioner Nhlanhla Mkhwanazi said on Sunday.
RECORDS in the Durban Regional Court have revealed how the controversial Cato Manor Organised Crime Unit allegedly used a fire hose and telephone directory to force an SBV employee to confess to a cash-in-transit heist.
AN illegal miner rescued this week from a collapsed tunnel in the Northern Cape is demanding that police return diamonds he claims he collected when he was trapped.
The Investigative Fund at The Nation Institute has extended its deadline for the I.F. Stone Award for emerging journalists — the new deadline is May 25, 2012.
On June 7, 2010, Sergio Adrian Hernandez Guereca, age 15, was shot and killed by US Border Patrol agent Jesus Mesa Jr. According to an FBI spokeswoman, "Subjects surrounded the agent..."
This Monday, news broke that if the independent, Washington-based American Prospect doesn't raise $500,000 by the end of this month, the mag might have to close its doors...
One Georgia county bet its financial future on becoming a regional center for immigrant detention. But harsh immigration politics scared off the very workers farmers depend on for the harvest.
The Investigative Fund is pleased to announce that Kathy Dobie's investigation, "Tiny Little Laws," about unprosecuted sexual violence in Indian Country, has been named a finalist for the Michael Kelly Award...
On March 5, the New York Times reported that Brazilian Blowout, makers of a popular hair straightening service, had agreed to settle a class-action lawsuit for about...
The chief of police in Escondido, CA, insisted I interview him. Chief Jim Maher had "an immigrant-friendly agenda," he said, and was a friend to Latinos. He had done nothing wrong, and the media and activists were just spreading lies...
What happens when outside agitators work with state politicians to pass the nation's most draconian anti-immigrant law yet? The Cotton State learned the hard way.
Tell me again why the New York Times can run stories such as "There Is a Dark Side to Mormonism" on Romney's faith, but we mustn't talk at all about Obama's chosen creed of black liberation theology.
In an establishment clause dispute, there's no need to prove coercion or present empirical evidence of any kind. Speculation will do just fine. Gin up a concealed purpose to endorse religion trampling non-adherents' free exercise rights, and bingo! -- case closed.
Paul Krugman's new book End This Depression Now! is not founded on logic. It offers only the siren-song appeal for ignorant people of easy, sweet-coated medicines that contain economic cyanide.
Three possibilities follow the bombshell discovery that Barack Obama was promoted in 1991 through 2007 by his professional agency as an author "born in Kenya and raised in Indonesia and Hawaii."
Allen West was the latest to get his knuckles rapped for saying there were "about 78 to 81" members of the Democratic Party who are members of the Communist Party.
The Washington Post heralded the election of François Hollande in France as the dawn of a new era, and the birth of a new breed of socialism. It is described as "free-market social democracy -- a pragmatic ideology." Sorry. Not even close.
If Wisconsin voters think Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, in the running to unseat Scott Walker in Wisconsin's upcoming recall elections, is the kind of guy who fights on behalf of the poor against the rich, they need to wise up.
It’s the saddest reading around: the little announcements that dribble out of the Pentagon every day or two -- those terse, relatively uninformative Pentagon death notices...
Here, then, is a simple question that, for some curious reason, no one bothers to ask, no less answer: How much are we spending on national security these days?
But whether President Obama gets his second term or Romney enters the Oval Office, there’s a third candidate no one’s paying much attention to, and that candidate is guaranteed to be the one clear winner of election 2012: the U.S. military and our ever-surging national security state...
If the bonds and associations the Occupy movement has established can be sustained through a long, dark period ahead -- because victory won’t come quickly -- it could prove a significant moment in American history...
The Williams River was so languid and lovely last Saturday morning that it was almost impossible to imagine the violence with which it must have been running on August 28, 2011...
Here’s the “lede” that should have run in every newspaper in America: More than 40 years after the Vietnam War’s Tet Offensive, after more than a decade of war in Afghanistan, even after reviving counterinsurgency doctrine (only to see it crash-and-burn in short order), the U.S. military still doesn’t get it... […]
Anyone who would like to witness a vivid example of modern warfare that adheres to the laws of war -- that corpus of regulations developed painstakingly over centuries by jurists, humanitarians, and soldiers, a body of rules that is now an essential, institutionalized part of the U.S. armed forces and indeed all modern militaries -- should simply click here […]
Take off your hat. Taps is playing. Almost four decades late, the Vietnam War and its post-war spawn, the Vietnam Syndrome, are finally heading for their American grave...