NFD play-offs face postponement


The PSL’s Promotion/Relegation Play-offs are scheduled to kick off on Wednesday, but face postponement because of the threat of court action by Blackburn Rovers and Dynamos. 

The first fixture in the mini-league between Thanda Royal Zulu and Santos has been set down for a 4pm kick-off in Richards Bay on Wednesday, but could be postponed while legal attempts are made to dispute the outcome of the National First Division.
 
Interdicts against the Play-offs have been threatened by Blackburn Rovers and Dynamos, according to PSL sources.
 
They are expected to be filed on Tuesday, seeking an urgent postponement of the Play-offs.
 
Blackburn missed out on the Play-offs after a surprise home loss to Bay United on the final day of the First Division season on Sunday, while Dynamos were relegated to the Vodacom League after losing 7-2 at Carara Kicks.
 
Both have told the PSL they intend challenging the validity of player registrations. The identities of the disputed players are not known, but the two clubs claim players have been fraudulently registered by Chippa United and one other as yet unknown club.

A statement is expected to be released on the matter by the PSL in the next 24 hours. 

Mzansi Football and KickOff.com

Khoza to unveil Masuku, Phungwayo


As reported by KickOff.com, Orlando Pirates will unveil Khethowakhe Masuku and Patrick Phungwayo as new signings before the end of the week, while Bongani Ndulula is set to leave for Cape Town. 

Midfielder Masuku has not seen much game-time at Black Leopards since signing a pre-contract with Pirates, while Bidvest Wits defender Phungwayo has evaded all questions about his move to Bucs. 
 
Pirates are racing against time to make the announcement about the duo and two other new signings so that fans will get the opportunity to vote for the players ahead of the Carling Black Label Cup tournament on July 28 at Soccer City.
 
Meanwhile, Pirates are likely to sell striker Bongani Ndulula to Ajax Cape Town.
 
Ajax have already made a proposal to Pirates to buy the player for next season. 

Ernest Fakude

Benni: How a prodigal genius won hearts back


Benni McCarthy © Backpagepix

As he made the victory lap in Durban this weekend, Benni McCarthy felt a strong sense of vindication about his decision to come back home.

The Cape-born told reporters that he, at last, feels both loved and respected in his native land: this is no longer the ‘home’ where people often questioned his love for his country nor his desire to play for the senior national side but a home that has embraced him as a football genius and assured him of his status as one of the best players to come out of the country in the present-day era.

“I don’t think I have ever been this popular in South Africa. To be honest, I don’t think it’s overwhelming,” – that was a confession from a man often seen as a rebel who has often led many into believing that people’s opinion about him didn’t matter. Maybe they didn’t matter then, but when he experienced the warmth, McCarthy probably felt a sense of belonging.

Even though he tried his best to clothe his statements in modesty, McCarthy couldn’t resist an opportunity to remind all listening about history.

“I think I’m the first South African to return home and win a championship at let alone at home,” a proud McCarthy reminded reporters as Orlando Pirates paraded their Absa Premiership trophy this weekend.

“When I signed, I had a word with the chairman (Irvin Khoza) and I knew I was joining a championship-winning team. Obviously at the start I didn’t understand how strong these boys in the camp were, but I saw that. They helped me along the way when the chips were down.”

Not only has he been a marvel to watch at Pirates, but he has been inspiration. His marriage with Buccaneers – highly doubted by the media at its initial stages – has yielded results for both himself and the Sea Robbers.

So often a man who polarised opinion in the public courts in the past because of his love-hate relationship with the media and Bafana Bafana, McCarthy has been able to rehabilitate his image in the country. Never before – bar time he returned from Burkina Faso having spearheaded Bafana’s journey to the finals against Egypt – has Beeni been this popular in South Africa.

Act of Brilliance

For Orlando Pirates, his presence has been both beneficial and profitable. At times when individual brilliance was required, he lifted his hand and took responsibility – both in league and Cup games.

When Pirates needed to beat Arrows – the talented Hanover Park man rose to the occasion. When Pirates were cornered by Swallows in the Telkom Knockout few months ago, Benni produced an act of brilliance. These are two moments that have cemented his legend in the Bucs camp.

This week, he could be forgiven for bragging. All has been forgiven – Benni is once again the darling of the Rainbow Nation.

This is a new Benni, he promised the South African media. This Benni cares about how South Africans feel about him. This Benni has brought tears of joy in the eyes of a certain group of people who now refer to themselves as the “Happy People.”

 

 

Artist: Zuma painting not intended to hurt


brett murray

By Zara Nicholson and Baldwin Ndaba

Related Stories

Cape Town artist Brett Murray has spoken out for the first time about his controversial portrait, The Spear – which depicts President Jacob Zuma with his genitals exposed – saying he did not intend to cause any “hurt or to harm the dignity of any person”.

The artist said the work was “an attempt at humorous satire of political power and patriarchy within the context of other artworks in the exhibition and within the broader context of South African discourse”.

In a responding affidavit to Zuma’s application to have the portrait taken down, the owner of the Goodman Gallery, Liza Esser, included a statement from Murray. Until now, he has been silent on the divisive debate.

“In the apartheid years, I created satirical images which attacked abuses of power. For many years I have used, and continue to use, symbols with sexual connotations representative of political power and patriarchy,” Murray said.

Last week Zuma filed an urgent application in the Johannesburg High Court for an order to have the gallery remove the portrait as well as the City Press newspaper remove images of it from its website.

Both have refused, saying this would be censorship.

The matter will be heard on Tuesday.

 

In his affidavit, Zuma said the portrait infringed on his constitutional rights to dignity and privacy.

Zuma said he had felt “shocked, personally offended and violated” when he saw a copy of The Spear for the first time.

He said it depicted him as “a philanderer, a womaniser and one with no respect”.

Murray added: “I continue to create artworks which attack abuses of power and corruption through satire and parody in the exercise of my right to freedom of artistic expression under section 16 of the constitution.” He said the portrait was a parody of the well-known image of Lenin.

Murray said he was affirming his right to express himself artistically without fear or favour.

In her affidavit, Esser said she was opposing the application on the basis that the gallery was known as a neutral space “that embraces voices of dissent, presenting work that confronts the contemporary socio-political climate”.

 

She admitted that Zuma had a right to express his opinion of The Spear and accepted that he might well be outraged by the work.

Esser said the gallery had no intention to cause him or his family any “hurt or offence”.

The Star

Dad accidentally shoots, kills daughter


crime scene_dec 7

Eight-year-old Idie Boshoff, accidentally shot and killed by her father in Centurion during an attempted house robbery, will be buried on Thursday, Beeld reported.

“At this stage, we’re just going through the motions, and sorting out funeral arrangements,” Adele Boshoff, the child’s mother, told Beeld.

“Of course we’re in a terrible state… what happened is not something that we’re going to be able to process very easily.”

Jannie Raath, head of the Hennopspark Primary School, where the child was a pupil, said a memorial service had been arranged for Friday, in the school hall. Raath said Idie’s parents, and especially her father, were shattered.

“I don’t think her parents comprehend the reality of it yet.”

Police are still searching for five or six burglars who broke into the Boshoff’s home in Lyttelton on Friday night and stole a handbag. Idie was shot dead when she tried to open the door to her parents’ bedroom, and her father, mistaking her for one of the burglars, fired a shot through the closed door.

A case of culpable homicide is being investigated, after which the director of public prosecutions will make a decision about whether or not to continue with the case. – Sapa


Girls sell sex for just R25


lolly lounges may 22

By MPILETSO MOTUM

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“Maak ’n move daar (make a move there).” That’s the phrase men use when they see a girl they fancy in a so-called lolly lounge.

They approach the owner of the place and request to have sex with the girls. The girl who is chosen doesn’t know any better because all she wants is a fix to get high.

The men are allowed to do anything they want to the girls. They are sold for sex for as little as R25.

“It’s like living in a cocoon,” said Nicollette Abrahams, 31, of Waterval, who spoke of the nightmare she had undergone after she had became hooked on drugs.

The recovering addict has been clean for six months and knows all about the drug dens. She started taking drugs at the age of 13, two months after her mother died.

“I started off just smoking weed, then I moved to ecstasy and moved on to crack and crystal meth,” she said on Monday.

Abrahams said the lounges were like dumps – the toilets did not flush and were filled with waste. There was no running water. The floors were filled with pipes, paper and dagga, among other drugs.

She said the rooms often contained just a base and a mattress.

Abrahams said girls ended up in the lounges by chance. “They’re scared to go home. They don’t mean to go forever. They tell themselves they’ll just take one hit and go back home,” she said.

Abrahams said when she went to these places, she would end up becoming nervous for a fix and find herself moving to the next lounge with whoever wanted to take her.

“I would leave my children for a whole month, chasing drugs. It’s like in your head you’re saying, ‘I don’t know where I’m going to, but I know I need a fix,’” she said.

Abrahams said the mistake parents made was to think the girls liked being in those lounges.

“It just goes on and on. The drug tells you not to go home… The men at these lounges even convince you your family doesn’t want you any more,” she said.

Abrahams found herself in the same space as men old enough to be her father. “In theses lounges, you find guys as old as 60 hanging around there. They are husbands and fathers,” she said. “They welcome you so nicely and you just have fun with them and because you are having fun, you bring a buddy the next time around then another one and the cycle continues,” said Abrahams.

She has been raped three times and was drugged up on all three occasions. “The third time it happened, I was sold by a friend,” she said.

After being invited to a party, a friend wanting to buy drugs from someone offered Abrahams as payment. “I didn’t even know I had been sold (for sex),” she said.

Abrahams considers herself lucky. She said girls were killed after they had been raped in some instances.

A lot of the girls choose not to speak of their experience in the lounges. “No girl wants to say that she had five guys sleeping with her, but we all know the truth,” she said.

In Eldorado Park, the dens are called suikerhuisies (sugar houses).

Community police forum chairman Victor Olivier said on Monday that there were at least 10 in the area. Girls as young as 12 and 13 wandered in and out of them. That was how the residents knew.

The girls went in and only came out days later. “From about 2010, it has been getting strong here,” said Olivier. “It’s when the tik thing came to Eldos. That’s where it started.”

And while some children might be abducted, most were running away from home, he said.

“The kids don’t go to school any more,” he said. “Their friends tell them about where the suikerhuisies are and they go smoke for the day. They say it takes them away from Eldos and puts them in a place where they want to be.”

When police raids were conducted on the houses – and they often were, said Olivier – it was only about a week before the girls found their way back to them.

“It’s a big issue in this area,” he said. – Additional reporting by Kristen van Schie.

mpiletso.motumi@inl.co.za

The Star


TRUCK ACCIDENT CLAIMS 15-YEAR-OLD: NORTH WEST PROVINCE


BY Obakeng Maje

RUSTENBURG– On Sunday, 20 May 2012,  at about 16:00, a truck driver drove up the Waterberg extension of Helen Joseph road and came down a steep embankment, at the Waterfall Mall-crossing, near the KFC.

The brakes of the truck allegedly failed and the truck drove over a white Golf GTi and collided with a silver Toyota Hi-Lux LDV.

The driver of the Golf, which are 19-year-old Mr Carlo Engelbrecht were seriously injured and admitted to hospital in ICU. His brother, 15-year-old Luan Engelbrecht died at the scene.

The driver of the Toyota Hi-Lux was also injured and taken to hospital for medical treatment.

“The driver of the truck was allegedly transported from the scene by an ambulance to hospital and disappeared before the Police could arrive at the hospital” Brigadier Thulane Ngubane said.

Police are working around the clock to trace the suspect. A Culpable homicide case is being investigated by Police.