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The government-initiated Shop Proudly SA online store has three logistics partners, and the Post Office isn’t one of them.
Effective and sensibly designed regulations have loosened the grip of South Africa’s state IT monopoly—and it’s a good sign for the new state of governance in the country.
Just two years after winning the backing of one of the world’s biggest green infrastructure investors, a little-known South ...
Years before returning to politics, Cyril Ramaphosa was part of a group of investors who helped Seacom bypass government ...
Ex-CEO says over R7bn vanished from Post Office financesSAPO needs R6.8bn more despite past bailouts and monopoly rightsGovt ...
KAP Industrial, the owner of polymer manufacturer Safripol, has initiated legal and regulatory proceedings against Sasol, its ...
The ANC and DA are natural bedfellows from an ideas point of view, but clearly not when it comes to personalities or ...
A US federal judge has refused to dismiss a major antitrust lawsuit against Apple, allowing the US government’s case accusing ...
Just two years after winning the backing of one of the world’s biggest green infrastructure investors, a little-known South African company is rapidly redrawing the country’s energy map.
The Energy Council of South Africa is strongly supportive of the goal of launching the initial phase of the South African Wholesale Electricity Market (SAWEM) in early 2026, arguing that the platform ...
SA's democracy masks elite control, not true people powerParty-list system kills accountability, feeds corruptionEthnic divisions and state capture s ...
Open access energy regimes are evolving to deliver reliable and affordable electricity in Africa. Traditional, vertically integrated utilities are giving way to more open, competitive markets, driven ...
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