"We don't have race problems here. We are fortunate because we have very decent neighbours. You can see by the cars they are driving that they are earning good salaries."Chris Botha, 73, has lived in Seaview for the past 60 years. He remembers when the Southway Mall was nothing but a grove of mango trees, and Indian people were removed from Titren Road in the 1960s.
Read More »Sea ViewShirley Ebrahim does not know where to turn. She owes the eThekwini council R22 000 in arrears in rent and services for the tiny flat that she occupies with her four children, aged from seven to 17.
Read More »BayviewNot a single person in Inanda's Congo area, some 30km from Durban's city centre, lives in a formal house with running water ' let alone a flush toilet.
Read More »Inanda CongoSouth Africa is working against the clock to complete two applications for money from the $2-billion Global Fund to Fight HIV/AIDS, TB and Malaria, Health Minister Dr Manto Tshablala-Msimang announced on Tuesday.
Read More »SA applies to Global AIDS FundA seaweed-based microbicide gel will be tested on 6 000 South African and Batswana women this year in the hope of finding a safe and effective means to protect women from contracting HIV. Microbicides offer an important way in which women can protect themselves from HIV infection even if their partners refuse to use a condom.
Read More »Massive microbicide trial on women in SA & BotswanaThe health department has denied that government does not wish to access money from the multi-billion Global Fund to Fight HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. This comes after comments by finance minister Trevor Manual in New York that money was not the issue in the fight against HIV/AIDS in South Africa, but that it was rather a question of capacity to spend existing budgets.
Read More »Confusion whether SA will access Global AIDS FundSouth Africa has the highest rate of mesothelioma in the world, as we were one of a handful of countries that extensively mined the most dangerous "blue asbestos".
Read More »The dangers of “blue asbestos”A man who was exposed to asbestos fibres as a nine-year old is suing a leading asbestos manufacturer for R7-million for a rare form of cancer which he believes was caused by the exposure.
Read More »Man sues asbestos giant over rare cancerThe newly constituted board of the $1,9-billion Global Fund to Fight AIDS, TB and Malaria yesterday (Tues 29) called for funding proposals from "country partnerships" affected by the three epidemics, saying money would be disbursed from April.
Read More »Global AIDS money available from AprilA company in which government is a major shareholder has this year resolved to offer clients free anti-retroviral drugs if they believe they have been accidentally exposed to HIV.
Read More »Govt-linked company offers anti-AIDS drugsUnless the South African government develops a treatment plan for people with HIV/AIDS, this country is not going to get access to the multi-billion rand Global Fund to Fight HIV/AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. This is according to the Treatment Action Campaign's (TAC) Nathan Geffen.
Read More »SA may lose out on AIDS billionsWith the start of the school year, many parents are once again fearful that their children may contract HIV through playground rough-and-tumble with infected children. However, HIV/AIDS experts stress that the chances of such transmission of the virus are virtually zero.
Read More »‘Zero chance’ of infectionThe British government has given three South African organisations and researchers from five countries a multi-million rand grant to develop vaginal microbicides (a gel that can be used to prevent HIV transmission) over a five-year period.
Read More »Microbicide research gets boostHealth workers and AIDS activists have applauded the Pretoria High Court decision which instructs government to extend their mother-to-child HIV transmission prevention programme throughout the country. In this editorial, Kerry Cullinan welcomes the judgment.
Read More »TAC victory a warning to governmentLaboratory rats deprived of sleep die within two to three weeks. A lack of sleep in humans makes us less productive and more accident prone. Kerry Cullinan takes a look at what researchers do and don't know about getting a good night's sleep. Next time your partner kicks you in his sleep, be tolerant. He may have "restless leg syndrome" ' one of a range of problems causing sleep disorders.
Read More »Searching for a good night’s sleep