City Press boycott called off


Johannesburg – The boycott of the City Press newspaper has been called off and the Goodman Gallery has agreed to remove the paining The Spear from its website, ANC secretary generalGwede Mantashe said on Tuesday.

“The Goodman Gallery has agreed to remove the painting from the website,” he told protesters outside the gallery in Johannesburg.

“You can also buy the City Press now, just not last week’s copy.”

The ANC and its alliance partners called a boycott of the City Press newspaper last week when it refused to remove a picture of the Brett Murraypainting The Spear from its website.

The newspaper first broke the story when it reviewed Murray’s exhibition Hail to the Thief II. The painting depicts President Jacob Zuma with his genitals exposed.

Its editor-in-chief Ferial Haffajee decided on Monday to remove the image.

“The Spear is down, out of care and fear,” she said in an editorial.

– SAPA

Mphela is staying at Sundowns… for now


BY Tiyani wa ka Mabasa

Katlego Mphela will not be leaving Mamelodi Sundowns, contrary to a rumour doing the rounds.   

According to reports, ‘Killer’ could be joining Kaizer Chiefs but the player’s agent Glyn Binkin has spoken to KickOff.com about the player’s future and he says Mphela is staying in Chloorkop.
 
“Katlego still has two years left on his contract with Sundowns and at this stage there is no discussion over a transfer, because no club has approached Sundowns,” Binkin says.
 
“His first option is to go to Europe, but nothing has come through yet so Katlego will stay with Sundowns,” he adds.
 
Follow me on Twitter @Taung_DailyNews

 

Can we all learn to be psychic?


crystal ball lib

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London – This is a strange way to spend a Thursday morning. I am sitting in a living room in Watford, Hertfordshire, with my eyes closed, trying to summon up my ‘spirit guide’ with the help of Britain’s most accurate medium.

“As you breathe in and out, let any thoughts drift away. Now send a thought asking your spirit guide to step into this quiet place and see if you feel any sense of their presence,” says my teacher. My mind is spinning because after a few seconds, I do feel something – or rather hear something. Out of nowhere the room has filled with the sound of a ferocious wind, whistling around me, even though outside it is a still, sunny day.

“I hear wind!” I exclaim. “Really strong wind, like we’re in the middle of a storm.” I hear a chuckle and open my eyes.

“That’s a passing train, going through a tunnel. They make that noise all the time – quite handy to have near a medium’s house,” jokes my psychic leader.

Oh dear, so it turns out I’m not really in tune with the spirit world – at least not yet. But we can all develop psychic, or intuitive skills, according to medium Gordon Smith, who is renowned for his ability to pinpoint exact names of people, places and even streets important to a person’s life. He’s just written a book called Intuitive Studies: A Complete Course in Mediumship, which promises to help people harness their intuitive powers – and despite having all the psychic powers of a dustbin I am here to get a one-to-one lesson.

‘We all have a sixth sense, times when you just know something; say that your mom is going to call, or that someone in your family isn’t well. This is our intuition – and instead of ignoring it, we should hone it and heighten it. People think that the spirit world is full of creepy ghosts and ghouls, but it’s not. It is tapping in to the higher consciousness of spirits of people who have been here before – a kind of collective intelligence.’

Gordon was just a boy when he started to have visions. When he was seven or eight a friend of his mother’s passed him on the street and had a little chat. When he told his mom she got very upset. “She freaked out and I didn’t know what I’d done wrong, it turned out that this man had died the week before. I had several experiences like this. They never bothered me but because of other people’s reactions, I learnt to shut up about it.”

But then in his early 20s a friend’s brother died in a house fire and the night he died, he appeared in Gordon’s bedroom.

“It was 3am and he just appeared in my room. I was stunned and shocked and before I could say anything he had vanished through the floorboards. I had a horrible sense of foreboding, I knew that I was going to get bad news in the morning – and I did. It turned out he had died at exactly that time.”

Since then, Gordon has been communicating with the spirit world on a daily basis. He used to do readings around his job as a barber, which earned him the nickname ‘The Psychic Barber’ – but now he is a full-time medium. His abilities have been tested by scientists at Glasgow University, and his astonishing accuracy has made him the subject of TV several documentaries.

People come to him for all sorts of reasons. Most often he acts as a medium, passing consoling messages from the dead to the bereaved – but he is also a psychic too, performing readings for people. So will he be able to tell me when I will meet the love of my life?

Or better still, teach me how to use my intuition to spot him myself? While Gordon believes that his extreme gift is something he was born with, he says “anyone can communicate with the spirit world if they know how to open up”. So could I reach this higher consciousness? The first steps are simple …

SILENCE IS GOLDEN

“You cannot tap into your intuition if your head is busy with a million different thoughts,” says Gordon. “We should all sit in silence for at least an hour once a week. Close your eyes, take deep breaths and relax.”

Sitting on Gordon’s sofa, I give it a go. I close my eyes and try to think of nothing but all I can think about is that fact that I forgot to take my washing out of the machine this morning. “Thoughts will come into your head but you just let them go. With practice you will start to declutter your mind and see things more clearly,” he says.

HEED THOSE VOICES IN YOUR HEAD

When you get used to sitting in silence you will start to hear your inner voice that we so often ignore, says Gordon. “If I’ve trained to do anything in the past 30 years, it’s to listen to my inner voice,” he says. “One night, years ago, I’d been invited to a party but as soon as I stepped into the entrance of the bar, my tummy went ‘boom!’.

“Something felt wrong so I told my friends I wasn’t going in, and we left and went to another bar. We heard the next day that a guy had walked into the party with a knife that night and stabbed two people.” This gives me a shiver.

“This won’t stop everything negative in your life – there are some things you can do nothing about, for example my mom’s dying of cancer at the moment but it can help you avoid certain situations,” he says.

I ask if he knew that his mother was sick before she was diagnosed. “She was a very healthy strong woman but had been complaining of getting tired and having something in her throat. One day I woke up and just knew something was wrong. I phoned home and my brother told me Mom had just got back from the doctor who thought it might be cancer.”

BEFRIEND A ‘SPIRIT GUIDE’

Once you’ve found your inner voice, the next step is to find your spirit guide, says Gordon. He believes that when we die, our spirits remain floating around and that they are always communicating with us, if we’ll listen.

Gordon also thinks that each of us has a spirit guide, like a guardian angel, who is there for us all the time if we need him or her. It sounds nuts, but the way he talks about his spirit guide – an old man, whom he has named Chi – is so matter of fact that it’s like he’s talking about a friend.

I attempt to find mine. Sitting on the chair Gordon tells me to close my eyes and ask for my spirit guide to come to me and to give me a sign. I do. Nothing happens. I wait. Then I see a little sparkling light in the corner of my eye – like a little Tinkerbell – but then I realise that it’s just the sun shining though the window. I feel silly. Gordon, sweetly, tells me this is normal. “Believe me, you’ll know when it happens. And don’t worry if it doesn’t, there are no prizes for any of this,” he says.

FEEL THE AURA

Even if you don’t find – or believe in – a spirit guide, you can use your intuition to tap into other people’s feelings. “We all do this anyway,” says Gordon. “You might be with a loved one and you know that what they are saying is not how they are feeling. People mask their thoughts but you sense their feelings in the atmosphere.”

Gordon asks me to try an exercise in which I read his feelings. The idea is that I stand behind him with my hands hovering over his shoulder while he remembers something that prompts strong emotions. The reason Gordon suggested I hold my hands an inch away from his body is to get in touch with his aura – an energy that comes off all of us. While some people claim to see auras, Gordon says we should start by feeling their presence.

After a minute or so with my hands hovering, I feel nothing at all – except panic that I’m feeling nothing at all. Then the picture of a brown horse flashes into my head, and pops out again. I tell Gordon about the horse and he smiles. “I was thinking about the week my father was dying,” he says. “No horses there.”

We swap places and I remember a time when a male friend died and Gordon picks up “female healing energy”. Oh well. ‘”’m really tired,” he says, not remotely embarrassed. Even professionals have off days.

HOW TO SPOT A FAKE PSYCHIC

This is all very good but can I look into people’s futures? Or can Gordon look into mine? Can he tell me whether I’m going to meet a tall, handsome stranger and move to the South of France? “No,” he says. “Seeing the future is a 50-50 guess based on a feeling that you get from people. You might get it right but you might not.”

So where are fortune tellers and psychics on hotlines getting their information from? “I have no idea,” says Gordon. “If you go to a psychic or a medium who asks you lots of questions, walk away. They should be telling you information, not the other way around.” What Gordon can tell me is that there are no messages from the dead he needs to pass on to me and that actually, “everything is OK in your life”. Which indeed it is. “When things are good, don’t go poking around, just enjoy what you have,” he says, before showing me to the door.

But Gordon gives me some parting words: “Stop looking for Prince Charming, and start looking for Mr Right Here.” Ooh! I do a mental check of all the men in my life – could he be talking about my postman? An overlooked friend? My grumpy neighbour?

I wonder if Gordon can see something in the future or if he is just using old-fashioned common sense – whatever it is, I think we can all learn a little bit from Gordon, the most down-to-earth psychic in the world. And after an hour with him, I left convinced that not only can Gordon communicate with higher powers – perhaps we all can. – Daily Mail

* Intuitive Studies: A Complete Course In Mediumship by Gordon Smith is published by Hay House.

Pitso backs Pienaar to bulge the net


Pienaar_Rustenburg

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Pitso Mosimane has backed his captain Steven Pienaar to find his international goal-scoring touch, as Bafana Bafana prepare to take on Ethiopia in a 2014 World Cup qualifier in Rustenburg on Sunday.

Pienaar has scored a paltry three times in 60 appearances for Bafana, but has had a stellar few months at Everton in the English Premier League, that included key goals against Chelsea, Manchester United and Sunderland.

‘Schillo’, for all his undoubted class, has too often battled for club and country when it comes to hitting the back of the net. But the 29-year-old revealed on Monday that a chat with Everton coach David Moyes has helped him sharpen up, since he re-joined the Toffees on loan from Spurs.

“When I went back to Everton I sat down with the coach and he wanted me to get more into the box and the final third, and to be a bit more selfish. I’ve been working on it in training and I hope I can get more goals for the national team,” said Pienaar on Monday.

Pienaar’s increased capacity to get forward has certainly been noticed by the Bafana coach.

“He’s improved his game, it’s slightly different,” noted Mosimane.

“He goes inside more now, he gets in there, and that is why he scores goals. He takes shots … he takes his chances.”

A battle to bulge the net has been a disease that has ravaged Bafana for some time now, with their failure to score the prominent reason they failed to qualify for the 2012 African Nations Cup, never mind the much publicised rules fiasco.

Mosimane must turn around this goal-shy nature if Bafana are to have any chance of making it to Brazil 2014, starting against lowly Ethiopa, on paper the worst side in a qualifying group also containing Botswana and the Central African Republic.

The return of 34 year-old Siyabonga Nomvethe, on the back of 20 league goals and the PSL Footballer-of-the-Year award, has to be cause for some optimism, as far too much striking pressure has been carried on the shoulders of Katlego Mphela.

“Bhele has been around for so many years, he knows what is expected at the highest level,” said Pienaar.

“It’s good to have him in the team, at the end of the day he’s as sharp as always .. he looks like he’s 20 years old!”

Mosimane, meanwhile, stressed that the burden of scoring should be carried by the whole team.

“It’s not about waiting for Mphela and Nomvethe to score,” he said.

“Pienaar is scoring and has brought that here, Shabba (Siphiwe Tshabalala) is scoring, even (Siyabonga) Sangweni and (Morgan) Gould have been scoring so hopefully it rubs off.”

The whole squad was together for the first time on Monday at the Royal Bafokeng Sport Campus in Phokeng, with Sundowns and SuperSport players joining the fray following the Nedbank Cup. The main absentee was Thulani Serero, who has been given compassionate leave following the passing of his father.

“Thulani must take as much time as he wants during this situation. We understand and support him during these difficult times and send out deepest condolences to Serero and his family,” said Mosimane.

And goalkeeper Moeneeb Josephs, of course, is also not in Phokeng, having announced his decision to retire from international football. Mosimane, however, refused to close the door on Joseph’s future, even suggesting he had until yesterday to show up, to still be considered for Sunday’s game.

“The FA have still not received any official correspondence from the player, and we have also not received any. I have heard about his retirement in the media, but I have yet to meet the player. We need an official stance from Moeneeb,” said Mosimane.

The Bafana coach had no time for the suggestion that Josephs is not getting a proper opportunity to get game-time for the national team.

“Ask Pa (Gaxa) if he gets reasonable game-time against Anele (Ngongca).

“Ask (Siyabonga) Sangweni, when Aaron (Mokoena) was playing, if he was getting reasonable game-time. It’s not for me to say how many minutes you are playing. I read somewhere, look at (Victor) Valdes of Barcelona, he’s won so many cups, more than (Iker) Casillas, but he’s waiting.” – The Star

‘He just kept eating the other guy’


iol pic wld Naked Attacker Shot~1

Authorities in Miami are looking for more witnesses after a police officer fatally shot a naked man who refused to stop chewing on the face of another naked man on a busy downtown highway ramp.

Detective William Moreno said police are looking for people to fill in the blanks on what led to the grisly scene in which a witness reported that a man – later identified by authorities as Rudy Eugene, 31 – savagely chewed on the other man’s face and growled when a police officer kept telling him to stop.

The victim, who has not been identified, has been hospitalised in critical condition.

“We know that there were many people on the MacArthur Causeway and we’re hoping they come forward,” Moreno told The Miami Herald on Monday.

Miami police have released few details about the weekend attack, other than confirming that there was a fatal officer-involved shooting. Messages left on Monday by The Associated Press for a police spokesman were not immediately returned.

Witness Larry Vega was riding his bicycle Saturday afternoon off the MacArthur Causeway that connects downtown Miami with Miami Beach when he saw the savage attack.

“The guy was, like, tearing him to pieces with his mouth, so I told him, ‘Get off!’“ Vega told Miami television station WSVN. “The guy just kept eating the other guy away, like, ripping his skin.”

Vega flagged down a Miami police officer, who he said repeatedly ordered the attacker to get off the victim. The attacker just picked his head up and growled at the officer, Vega said.

As the attack continued, Vega said the officer shot the attacker, who continued chewing the victim’s face. The officer fired again, killing the attacker.

A surveillance video camera from The Miami Herald building nearby captured images of the men’s naked legs lying side by side after the shooting.

Vega said the victim appeared gravely injured.

“It was just a blob of blood,” Vega said. “You couldn’t really see, it was just blood all over the place.” – Sapa-AP

Family mourn after tot dies in Doha fire


iol news pic SA boy Doha fire may 29

Doha, Qatar – Investigators in Qatar have opened a state-ordered probe into a mall fire that killed 19 people, including 13 children, at a daycare centre catering to the Gulf nation’s expatriate communities.

The inquest began on Tuesday amid questions by Qatari commentators and others about permitting such child care centres in commercial buildings.

Rescue crews had to hack through the roof of the vast Villaggio mall on Monday to reach the child care facility.

Among the victims were two-year-old New Zealand triplets, four children from Spain and a 15-month-old toddler from South Africa.

Another South African – Shameega Charles, a 29-year-old teacher from Mitchells Plain in Cape Town – was one of four teachers who died.

Earlier on Tuesday the South African international relations department confirmed the two deaths.

IOL news may 29  Mideast Qatar-Fire~4

The unidentified father of a child killed after a fire took hold of the Villaggio Mall, in Doha’s west end is comforted in the Qatari capital of Doha.

AP

“The two (South Africans were) a female teacher who worked at the mall’s day care centre and a … toddler who was at the day care centre,” said spokesman Nelson Kgwete in a statement.

 “The South African government would like to express its heartfelt condolences to the government and people of Qatar, and especially the families of the deceased…,” Kgwete said.

 According to the Cape Argus, Charles’s family could not be reached on Tuesday morning. However, online tributes and condolences poured in on social networks.

“I’m still at a loss for words,” reads a blog post from a friend who identified himself as PJ “I can’t believe someone that I have never seen without a beautiful smile on her face is gone for good.

“They say the good die young and Shameega, you were as good as they come. I just pray your son and your mom have the strength to carry on without you.”

Moeneeb Emeran, father of 15-month-old Umar, who died in the fire told the Cape Argus in a brief telephone interview early on Tuesday that he and other family members were at the mortuary in Doha trying to get the bodies of Umar and Charles released.

Emeran, who is from the Bo-Kaap, said he was confident that the bodies would be released, but there was a problem because Charles’s passport had been destroyed in the fire.

He said they had not yet received news about the cause of the blaze.

Emeran told the Cape Argus that his family was coping under the difficult circumstances and were receiving support from the SA embassy in Doha.

Earlier on Tuesday a Cape Times report quoted the father as saying: ”My 18-year-old son and 16-year-old daughter are pretty cut up about it. They are not taking it well. The younger ones, 11 and 10, are immature and haven’t absorbed it yet.

“I’m holding up well, but it is very tough having to identify the body. My wife, on the other hand, is not taking it well. She carried him for nine months and spent a lot of time with Umar.”

Umar had been at the Gympanzee nursery on and off for about 20 days.

According to the Cape Times, Emeran described his son as compassionate and said he would miss his tantrums. The toddler loved hugging his mother.

“One minute he was hugging my wife, the next he is throwing his dummy or bottle on the ground.

“He was fantastic. He was naughty, but everybody loved him.”

 Residents have described the fire as Qatar’s greatest tragedy in recent years.

Of the 17 people injured, 13 remained in the hospital on Monday night.

The Qatari health minister said suffocation due to smoke inhalation caused the deaths.

Thick smoke and heat and malfunctioning sprinkler systems severely inhibited rescue efforts.

Firefighters eventually had to go in through the roof, officials said, adding that rescue teams had not been initially alerted to the fact that many of those trapped inside were children.

“We tried our best, but when we got there, the children were trapped inside. We are sorry for what happened. We tried as much as we could to save these people,” the minister of state said. – IOL

Baby Wade death: doctors to be quizzed


baby wades mother

By ZELDA VENTER

A Pretoria High Court judge will call doctors who were on duty at the Pretoria West Hospital at the time when two-month-old Baby Wade was treated there – a week before he died in another hospital of brain and other injuries – to establish whether his parents could be held responsible for his death.

Judge Cynthia Pretorius wanted to know from accused Marissa Rudman and her former lover Nolan Schoeman whether they blamed that hospital for the death of their son. The judge said she battled to understand the couple’s defence regarding Baby Wade’s injuries.

The baby died in the Steve Biko Hospital. He had such extensive brain injuries that the court was told that part of his brain had already died by the time he was admitted. The baby also had 22 fractured ribs, two broken forearms which were in the process of healing and bruises all over his body.

A doctor who examined the body after his death on April 7, 2009, said the bruises and injuries were so severe and visible that anyone could see them with the naked eye.

Yet both Rudman and Schoeman, who bathed the baby and cared for him, swore under oath they never saw any injuries – apart from a few bruises around his face and head.

They explained that they were under the impression the marks they noticed on the baby’s face were a result of the treatment he had received at Pretoria West Hospital.

The baby was taken to that hospital a week before his death, where he was diagnosed with pneumonia.

Rudman, however, discharged the baby as she believed “the doctors did not know what they were doing”.

The nurses and doctors at one stage held the baby down to enable them to insert a drip into his head, she said.

Judge Pretorius said on Monday that after she had read through all the evidence, it was still unclear whether the parents are blaming the Pretoria West Hospital for their child’s fate.

She asked the counsel for each accused whether their clients felt that the staff at Pretoria West Hospital were to blame for the baby’s “horrendous” injuries, especially the brain damage which caused his death.

Rudman, through her advocate, said she believed the hospital was responsible for some of the marks on the baby’s face, but not for the other major injuries, such as the brain damage.

Schoeman was vague on this point earlier in his evidence. He claimed he was under the influence of drugs and could not remember everything clearly, but now said he blamed all the injuries on the Pretoria West Hospital.

The judge said she was going to re-call the doctor who treated Baby Wade at the Pretoria West Hospital and any other doctor there who treated him at the time.

This would be to the advantage of the accused, she said, after they had tried in vain to obtain a paediatrician to testify on their behalf that the injuries of the baby were not clearly visible.

Judge Pretorius turned down an application by the State to have two child abuse charges against the couple amended. It emerged that they were charged under the previous Child Care Act.

The judge only gave her ruling and said she would deliver her judgment on this later.

The prosecution will still try to obtain a guilty verdict on these charges. The accusations levelled against the accused basically remained the same as what they would have been under the new act.

The murder charge is not affected.

Members of the Child Abuse Action Group attended Monday’s hearing. Lucy Redivo, spokeswoman for the group, said they would keep an eye on the trial until the end.

“The facts are just shocking and we would like to see justice done,” she said.

The case will resume on Wednesday.

Pretoria News


Uncle of Spear defacer travels for march


defacer Louis Mabokela

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 The uncle of one of the men who defaced The Spear a week ago has travelled from Limpopo to Johannesburg to join the march against the work and was one of the first to arrive at the protest on Tuesday.

Stephen Sefofa, uncle of Louis Mabokela who was caught by television cameras smearing black paint across the work of President Jacob Zuma, said he came to Johannesburg to support the protest.

“An insult is an insult…let us be one,” he said.

Sefofoa was speaking on behalf of his nephew who was with him at the march but deferred to his uncle when questioned by journalists.

Mabokela laid a charge of assualt against the security guard who subdued him in a struggle after he damaged the painting.

Paul Molesiwa, 36, appeared in the Hillbrow Magistrate’s Court on Monday in connection with the assault.

In video footage of the incident Molesiwa can be seen headbutting and flipping Mabokela onto the ground where he cable ties his hands behind his back.

Sefofa said he was glad City Press had withdrawn the work and apologised. A member of the public, Sipho Mweli, said he came from Mpumalanga to join the protest and to support President Jacob Zuma.

Around his neck he had hung a cardboard on which he had written, “Draw your white father naked not our president.”

He said the placard was aimed at Brett Murray and he challenged him to draw a white man in the manner he has drawn Zuma.

Elijah Tauraza, also from Mpumalanga, said the painting was intended to belittle Zuma.

“How do you portray the president exposed when you have not seen him that way, even when he grew up?” he said.

The painting by Murray needed to be destroyed, he said.

“Keeping it in any form was an insult to Zuma and South Africans,” he said.

The crowd at Zoo Lake numbered several hundred mid-morning. The group was singing liberation songs and dancing to music played over speakers on the back of a truck. – Sapa


Bafana Bafana start week two with a full squad of players


BY Obakeng Maje

Bafana Bafana started their second week of camp with a full contingent of 27 players following the arrival of six players from Mamelodi Sundowns and Supersport United who missed the first week of preparations due to the Nedbank Cup final played on Saturday (26 May).

Bafana Bafana will face Ethiopia in a 2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil qualifier on Sunday, 3 June 2012.
Kickoff is at 15h00.

The three players who were on standby – Luvhengo Mungomeni, Lehlohonolo Masalesa and Thami Sangweni – have been released.

Striker Lehlohonolo Majoro, who was a late call-up as a precaution to the non-arrival of Eleazar Rodgers who was involved in the National First Division play-offs, will continue with camp.
Three other players who started camp with niggling injuries – Siyabonga Sangweni, Siyabonga Nomvethe and Oupa Manyisa – have rejoined their teammates at full training after recovering from their injuries.

Bafana Bafana head coach Pitso Mosimane told the media that he was still waiting for an official word from Moeneeb Josephs regarding his non-arrival in camp.

“This is now an administrative issue, but as the technical team we also have to apply our minds because we have a camp to run. We haven’t received any official correspondence from the Football Association or the player, we only heard about his retirement in the media but would still like to meet the player and get to the bottom of this so we can all move forward. As Bafana Bafana we haven’t closed the door on Moeneeb and he is most welcome to be part of the national team. We need to give him a hearing before we can rule him out. I love Moeneeb’s passion and he always gives his all when he is in the national team,” said Mosimane.

“Today is the official start of camp according to FIFA rules, but should he not be able to arrive, we will not bring in any replacement as we have three goalkeepers. But I need to bring to your attention that this is a very crucial week for us and for the country as we embark on the road to 2014 Brazil, and we would like to focus on players who are in camp as we approach the match against Ethiopia on Sunday. I think that’s where we will leave this issue until we get correspondence from either the player or the Football Association.”

Bafana Bafana captain Steven Pienaar believes the squad now needs to focus as this is the final week before the match.

“The first week of training went very well and now that we have all the players it’s time we focus and go for the maximum six points against Ethiopia and Botswana. We know what lies ahead for the team and the country especially after the failure of 2012 AFCON. Right now we have to enjoy our game and have a smile when we get onto the park so we can leave them on the faces of our supporters following a win,” said Pienaar.

“As for me, I have had a great second half season after moving clubs and I hope it will rub off on the national team. I was rejuvenated after coming back from injury, I came back more hungry. I know Ethiopia will not be an easy side but we know what we need to do, what is expected of us. What makes the game even more difficult is that we go in as favourites, but we know it is 11 v 11 and we are not playing amateurs so we have to work for victory – but we have the capability to do so,” said Pienaar.
On a sad note, midfielder Thulani Serero has been released from camp following the passing away of his father on Sunday (27 May) night.

“Our deepest condolences to Serero during these trying times, and we ask him to stay strong as he deals with his sad loss. Our heartfelt condolences also go to his family and we pray that they find comfort in prayer. Serero has been requested to take as much time as he wants during this difficult time and he has our support because it is not easy to lose someone close to you,” said Bafana Bafana coach Pitso Mosimane.

Brazil cruise to victory over KENYA


BY Obakeng Maje

Kenya proved no match for Brazil as the South Americans cantered to a 4-0 win in an 8-Nation International tournament Group B game played at the Athlone Stadium on Monday night.

It took Brazil just five minutes to turn their early dominance into a goal, when central defender Luan Teixeira got up high to head home a corner kick.

Two minutes later and the South Americans were close to adding a second when midfield playmaker Misael Bueno curled a shot into the cross-bar from 18-yards out.

The team in yellow continued to dominate proceedings, with some very neat triangle football making Kenya work hard, while entertaining the crowd.

The east African side’s task was made all the more difficult after 20 minutes when their numbers were cut to 10 following a second yellow card for Tairus Omondi.
Things got worse for Kenya in the 19th minute when Bueno forced his way through the centre of the Kenya defence.

Goal-keeper Joel Bataro made half a save, but the ball rolled towards goal, where Kenyan defender Vincent Otieno couldn’t do much else than walk the ball into his own net.

Again a near miss followed the goal as from the next attack Bruno Mendes strode forward and sent in a low drive, which was tipped onto the post by Bataro.

There was time in the first half however for a third goal when three minutes before the interval Kenya’s weakness in the air was again exposed as Wellington dos Santos headed home from a free kick.

The second half saw Brazil taking the foot off the pedal somewhat as they made three second half substitutions, the game very much already in the bag.

They dominated most of the possession in the second half, but didn’t get too much in the way of goal chances.
Until the 70th minute, that is, when dos Santos got his second goal of the night, again a header from a free kick.
With 15 minutes to go the Kenyans were reduced to only nine men, this time due to a straight red card for Collins Shivachi.

Brazil was close to a fifth goal when Mendes’ header crashed into the upright.

Unfortunately there was not even to be a consolation goal for the African side when in injury time right back Islam Omar struck an excellent low drive from 30-yards out, but Brazil keeper Mattheus de Oliveira dived across his goal to tip the ball around the post.