[00:39.67]The CCTV film shows a police car driving passed the scene second after the incident,
[00:46.45]but prosecutors in Brazil say there is no evidence that the vehicle try to stop the violence or to pursue the killers.
[00:54.09]South Africa's governing party,
[00:56.15]the ANC has accused a newspaper of defiling the memory of 13 South African soldiers killed for fighting rebels in the Central African Republic last month.
[01:05.29]The Mail and Guardian newspaper suggested the troops may have been deployed to protect ANC linked business interests in the CAR.
[01:12.74]Andrew Harding reports from Johannesburg.
[01:15.41]The South African government says that 13 of its soldiers who died in the Central African Republic last month are heroes who are fighting for peace and security.
[01:25.04]But opposition politicians and journalists are raising awkward questions,
[01:29.40]it's been alleged that the soldiers were there as a part of a business deal,
[01:34.17]essentially guarding the country's now ousted president in return for lucrative mining contracts.
[01:40.60]But today the ANC hit back threatening legal action and furiously accusing one newspaper of urinating on the graves of gallant fighters.
[01:51.01]The Sudanese President Omar Al-Bashir has ordered the release of all political prisoners.
[01:56.64]In a speech at the opening session of parliament, President Bashir also called for dialogue with other political parties.