Lonmin
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Government offers to compensate victims of 2012 police shooting at Marikana mine that left 34 workers dead
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Amid protests on fifth anniversary of Marikana deaths, Loomin says low metal prices mean housebuilding has been slow
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On 16 August 2012 during a strike by workers at the Lonmin-owned Marikana mine north-west of Johannesburg, police shot and killed 34 miners and wounded dozens more. It was the worst police violence in South Africa since the end of apartheid. But as people mark the anniversary, little seems to have changed – as AFP reporter Susan Njanji and photographer Mujahid Safodien found outGallery
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For a few hours it appeared as if JP Morgan, HSBC and Standard Bank might end up with significant stakes in the company
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Industry body fails to reflect different opinions of UK businesses but heckling the PM at CBI conference misses the mark
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London-listed mining groups to shed 12,000 workers as China slowdown and forecast US interest rate rise dents prices
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Guardian Africa network 'The Marikana massacre is a tale of utter shame for South Africa'
Ranjeni Munusamy for the Daily Maverick, part of the Guardian Africa networkInjustice and suffering have prevailed after report fails to hold a single person accountable for the deaths of 34 striking miners, writes Ranjeni Munusamy
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Leading shares higher despite poor Chinese data but will see a fall over the month
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Observer business agenda Standard Chartered’s far eastern charm offensive may not save Sands
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Leading index falls for second day but recovers from worst levels as Wall Street rises
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National Association of Pension Funds lists eight companies that have had standoffs with investors for two successive years
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Deputy president of South Africa seeks to ease white farmers' anxieties as opponents say ANC is abandoning country's poor
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Actors use song and dance to take an unflinching look at the post-apartheid killing of 34 strikers near Rustenburg in 2012
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