SABC “will not disappoint again”


The SABC and Safa have reached an agreement with French sports marketing agency Sportfive to show all South Africa’s away matches, as well as the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations. 

Up next for Bafana are away games against Botswana this weekend, and then Central African Republic and Ethiopia in June next year.

Mazola Molefe of the Times reported on Twitter that SABC CEO Lulama Mokhobo said: “We will never ever disappoint South Africa again. Bafana deserve our support.”

The deal is reportedly worth R28-million over three years. 

Cell C could face legal action


Cell C Logo.

Theo Nkonki 

JOHANNESBURG – South Africa’s third-largest mobile operator could face legal action in a bid to stop further retrenchments, trade union Solidarity said on Thursday.

Some 150 Cell C employees could lose their jobs as the company looks to streamline its business model.

Last week, one worker committed suicide after receiving a retrenchment notice.

Solidarity spokesperson Marius Croucamp said the man worked in senior management for over 10 years.

“The process [of retrenchments] should be completely stopped.”

Cell C was not available for comment.

(Edited by Zethu Zulu)

Fugitive caught after 16 years


IOL wld dec28 prison bars

 

A city employee who evaded prison for 16 years is finally behind bars – after a bitter relative ratted on him to police.

Dharamraj Deoraj Singh, 42, is serving his nine-month sentence at Westville Prison for defeating the ends of justice after he was arrested by uMhlali police at his Red Hill home last week.

Singh had been employed as an assistant accountant at Durban Solid Waste.

eThekwini Municipality spokesman Thabo Mofokeng, said city employees were obliged to disclose if they had a criminal record on their application form.

He said it would be investigated if Singh made his conviction known when he applied for the job with the city.

KwaZulu-Natal police spokesman Colonel Jay Naicker, said a committal warrant had been issued by the Verulam Magistrate’s Court and Singh was arrested on May 29.

“He paid a fine of R3 000 for theft and is serving a nine-month prison sentence for perjury

.”

Naicker said it was alleged that Singh had been harboured by family members for 16 years and was only exposed to authorities by a relative when they had a row.

Whether Singh would face an additional charge of evading arrest, Naicker said they were waiting for further directives from court.

When contacted for comment last week, Singh said he was aware he was a fugitive. He set up several face-to-face meetings with the Daily News but never pitched.

Eventually, he promised to send his side of the story in writing to the Daily News, but failed to do so.

Singh’s arrest came less than a month after the disgruntled relative, who wished to remain anonymous, sent a letter to national detective head Lieutenant-General Vineshkumar Moonoo.

According to correspondence sent to Moonoo’s office, Singh appeared on theft and defeating the ends of justice charges, on January 5, 1996, in the Stanger Magistrate’s Court.

He was found guilty of stealing R30 517.82 from the Shakaskraal Post Office in September 1995 and for making a false statement at the uMhlali police station. He told police he was held up by an unknown armed man in oThongathi and taken to the post office where the man removed the money.

At the time Singh was employed at the post office.

In October 1996, he was sentenced to a fine of R3 000, or nine months imprisonment on the theft charge. An additional 18 months imprisonment was conditionally suspended for five years.

For defeating the ends of justice, he was sentenced to nine months imprisonment.

On October 14 that year, Singh lodged an appeal against his sentence and the following day he was granted R3 000 bail.

However, in February 1998, he sent a notice of withdrawal of his appeal to the clerk of the Stanger court and the registrar of the Pietermaritzburg High Court. The appeal was subsequently withdrawn and the Stanger Magistrate’s Court was informed on March 2, 1998.

But, due to an administrative bungle and/or miscommunication between the court, police and the Department of Correctional Services, Singh was never arrested.

Since then, the courts, the Independent Police Investigative Directorate (Ipid) and police had been alerted to Singh being a fugitive.

The Ipid launched a probe and found that the investigating officer had not been informed that Singh had not served his term of imprisonment. The Ipid recommended that the investigating officer ensure that Singh hand himself over to serve his prison sentence – failing which, a warrant of arrest should be effected.

The spokeswoman for the National Prosecuting Authority Natasha Ramkisson, said their relevant prosecutors had investigated the matter and spoken to uMhlali police.

“They indicated that once a sentence has been passed, the police files the docket,” she said. “If an appeal has been dismissed or withdrawn, the registrar of the High Court will send out a committal warrant to the prison authorities and it is the prison authorities who will have to locate and commit the accused into custody, if he does not hand himself over.”

Ramkisson said if the prison authorities had a problem in locating the sentenced person they would open up a docket in terms of some contravention of the Prisons Act.

“Police indicated they checked the SAPS systems and there was no record of Singh being circulated on the SAPS wanted list,” she said.

Attempts on Wednesday to contact Nokuthula Zikhali, of the Department of Correctional Services, were unsuccessful.

Khumalo: Questions about me are fair


Khumalo_Ethiopia

As South Africans debated this week what may have gone wrong with Pitso Mosimane’s Bafana Bafana regime, the name of Bongani Khumalo kept creeping up.

The central defender was used by some as an example of Mosimane’s alleged favouritism, with critics claiming he hardly deserved selection, let alone a starting place in the national side given that he hardly plays for Tottenham Hotspur, his English Premiership club.

When Siyabonga Sangweni was injured in the lead-up to Bafana’s opening World Cup qualifier against Ethiopia last week, Mosimane turned to Khumalo to fill the void at centreback, and the sight of the defender struggling to stop Ethiopia’s Ahmed Said from scoring was pinpointed as another blunder by the now sacked Bafana coach.

Speaking on Wednesday ahead of Saturday’s second qualifier against Botswana, Khumalo said he understood the argument of his critics, but warned he was playing in “the best league in the world” and thus could not be overlooked.

“The accusation that perhaps I shouldn’t be here is fair. But you need to look at other factors. I play in England and generally people don’t know what is happening on that side. The English Premiership is the stage where you play the highest level of football, probably the best league in the world.

“I’m playing for a top-four team and this was my first full season there. And the team has so many experienced players. So it was bound to be challenging but I told myself I would stick it out and face the challenge (of not getting regular game time). I’m thankful that I’ve been called up.”

Critics have argued that when Sangweni, the Orlando Pirates defender, suffered an injury which forced him to withdraw from camp, Mosimane should have turned to two-time capped Mulomuwandau Mathoho, of Bloemfontein Celtic, instead of the experienced Khumalo, who played all matches at the 2010 World Cup and has 26 caps.

It was unclear whether Mosimane’s interim replacement, Steve Komphela, would opt for Mathoho as cynics have suggested, in which case this would seem a populist decision.

There hasn’t been a clear indication as to how Komphela will approach Saturday’s game, and even Khumalo himself could not tell on Wednesday if he would start.

“It’s too early to tell who’s going to be in the starting XI, but from what I’ve seen I can’t say there has been a major shift in terms of approach. We are still the same players and I really didn’t expect that there would be a sudden overhaul now that we are under a different coach. Football doesn’t change overnight. There’s a continuation and let’s see how things will pan out.”

Khumalo conceded Bafana didn’t play to their best in that match, and were not helped by Ethiopia’s tactics.

“At this level it’s proving harder and harder to win games. We’ve seen in massive games in the Uefa Champions League teams going all-out to “park a bus” and then winning. Ethiopia used the same tactics but at least we got a point, which does count. We might look like we are not doing anything on the field but at times you must give credit to the opposition.”

Bafana vice-captain Siphiwe Tshabalala says the team underestimated Ethiopia.

“We failed as a team,” Tshabalala said. “It would be unfair to make excuses because we went through a two-week preparation for that game. We analysed them, watched videos and were all eager to perform. But on matchday, the opposite happened.

We underestimated the opponents and we actually got the shock of our lives to see how dedicated they were. We have to apologise to the nation and promise that such a poor performance will not happen again.” – The Star


Surgery on unborn baby


ND Pre and post shunt

An uMhlanga couple’s new baby boy, who developed a potentially fatal rare medical condition, has just undergone a life-saving operation – even before he was born.

It is the first time that the operation has been performed in KwaZulu-Natal, and possibly the first time it has been done in the country.

Still largely experimental, it involved pinhole surgery: inserting an 18cm-long needle through his mother’s stomach and uterine wall, then through the baby’s ribs and into his chest cavity to drain out fluid via his mother’s amniotic fluid.

A specially-imported shunt was then inserted down through the needle to continue draining out fluid.

The needle was then withdrawn, leaving the shunt in place to continue its life-saving work until the little boy is born by Caesarean section. It will be clamped off just before he is delivered.

The baby’s father, well-known pilot Hayden Ford, 35, who used to work for Netcare911 and SA Red Cross Air Mercy Ambulance – and who has flown countless trips to save the lives of incubated, premature and new-born babies – learnt last week that his own unborn son’s life was in serious danger.

ND baby

Hayden and Tarryn Ford are now expecting a healthy baby boy, thanks to paediatric surgeon, Dr Samad Shaik, of Netcares Parklands Hospital and a team of experts. Picture: Chris botha/ Netcare911

 

Ford and his 32-week pregnant wife, Tarryn, knew that the procedure was their third child’s only chance of survival.

“It was daunting, but we were just happy there was an option on offer,” said Ford, who is now a media company director.

“We knew that if we waited any longer, he would not survive.”

Although nervous about the risky procedure, his 30-year-old wife said there was no debate.

“We had to give the baby the best chance we could,” she said as she recovered at Netcare’s Parklands Hospital in Durban.

With time running out, a medical team of experts was assembled within 24 hours.

It was headed by paediatric surgeon Dr Samad Shaik, of Parklands, and included foetal specialist Dr Ismail Bhorat, and Dr Carlos Hartmann, the mother’s obstetrician.

Six doctors were either involved or were on standby in the theatre and four nurses were called in.

By then, the vital UK-manufactured pleuroamniotic shunt had been flown in.

The shunt can only be used for humanitarian purposes, meaning that the little patient had to fulfil certain criteria before it could be used: his life had to be under major threat and the benefits of the surgery had to outweigh leaving him without the surgery, Shaik explained.

The baby, whose name is being kept under wraps until he is born, had developed a “very rare” condition called chylothorax or pleural effusion, which is associated with hydrops fetalis, which is effectively cardiac failure.

Fluid had developed in his chest cavity which was preventing his lungs from growing. It was also compressing his heart, preventing it from pumping properly.

Ninety percent of babies who developed the condition died before they are born, Shaik said.

The 90-minute procedure took place on Saturday.

“A lot of things could have gone wrong,” Shaik said. “The mother could have gone into premature labour, there could have been a problem with the actual technical operation and the placenta could have been punctured, causing it to separate.”

The operation involved anaesthetist Dr Mark van Staden, who administered an anaesthetic to the mother, which also ensured that the baby did not feel any pain, because the needle that was used was particularly sharp.

Scans taken during the operation showed a large black area in the baby’s chest cavity, which was the fluid that had accumulated. It also showed that the heart was pushed to one side and the lungs were squashed.

The needle was 2.5mm wide and the shunt that had to go down in and inside the baby was 2.1mm wide.

“The shunt is made of a special type of plastic which is coiled at both ends. Once it is inside, the needle is removed and the shunt curls up outside the chest cavity, preventing it from coming out,” Shaik said.

“There are lots of little holes in the shunt which drain the fluid out into the amniotic fluid.”

The procedure was a success and a post-operative scan showed that the baby’s lungs had already expanded and he was out of danger.

The baby’s mother is expected to be discharged from hospital this week and will have to stay in bed for another five or six weeks when she will have a Caesarean.

The shunt will be clamped before the baby is lifted out to prevent him sucking in air through it and stopping his heart from beating.

He will then be taken to the paediatric intensive care unit for monitoring and to enable doctors to work out what had caused his condition.

The Fords have two other children – Jade, 10, and two-year-old Fynn.

“My baby’s life has been saved. He is a little fighter,” his mother said.

Netcare Parklands Hospital manager James van Vught, described the unique operation as “phenomenal”. – Daily News


Professor Phillip Tobias dies


iol news pic Phillip Tobias

During his life palaeo-anthropologist Phillip Tobias changed humans’ understanding of our ancient ancestry.

Born between the two world wars – on October 14, 1925 – he died in Johannesburg at Wits University Donald Gordon Medical Centre on Thursday morning after a three-month illness, said Gauteng Tourism Authority spokesman Anthony Paton.

Tobias, who was nominated for a Nobel prize three times, decided to study medicine at 15 after his sister, Val, who was 21, died of diabetes.

He asked the family doctor why his sister and his mother’s mother had the disease, but he and his mother did not. The reply was that there was no one in South Africa suitably qualified in genetics to answer the question.

Tobias enrolled at the University of the Witwatersrand’s Medical School in 1944, later branching into genetics.

“I decided I’d be the first one (to answer his boyhood question),… and I was,” he told Sapa in an interview in 1996.

He later wrote an acclaimed thesis on genetics.

Anger at his sister’s death might have begun Tobias’ study of humans, but love for humankind brought him to spend a lifetime studying its history.

One of his most famous palaeo-anthropological finds was “Little Foot” -four 4.17-million year-old foot bones unearthed at Sterkfontein by Dr Ron Clarke.

Later more of the skeleton was unearthed making Little Foot our oldest, most complete skeleton of a direct ancestor, Tobias explained in 2003 when a new dating technique showed the bones to be considerably older than the first estimate of 3.3 million years.

While Tobias, then 19, was studying genetics under Professor Raymond Dart – famous for his discovery of what became known as the Taung Skull in 1924 – and Professor Joe Gillman, he “fell under the spell” of palaeontology.

Dart’s theory, now accepted, initially shocked scientists across the globe. The skull is now seen as belonging to a child of the humanoid Australopithecus Africanus genus.

This was a new species, a new link in the chain which ends with modern humankind – Homo sapiens sapiens.

Tobias, who was the only person to hold three professorships simultaneously at the University of the Witwatersrand, was always known for being a friendly, outgoing man, eloquent and able to explain his science to anyone.

In 2002 he had his own, popular, TV series, “Tobias’ Bodies”.

The series, presented and narrated by Tobias, consisted of six stand-alone episodes exploring different themes around genetics, anatomy and primatology.

Tobias always had a great love for the palaentological digs at the Sterkfontein Caves outside Krugersdorp on Gauteng’s West Rand where he led a team of researchers.

He participated in almost all the other major digs in southern Africa since 1945 and discovered some 25 archaeological sites in then “Bechuanaland Protectorate”, now Botswana, while on the French Panhard-Capricorn Expedition.

The professor also successfully campaigned for the Sterkfontein Caves to be proclaimed a World Heritage site.

Tobias was instrumental in the process to have the remains of Saartjie Bartmann returned to South Africa. He led negotiations with France on behalf of the South African government.

The remains of the Khoi woman, which were exhibited in Paris as ethnological and sexual curiosities in the 19th century, finally returned home in May 2002.

Tobias was appointed Demonstrator in Histology and Instructor in Physiology at the University of Witwatersrand, in 1945.

He received his Bachelor of Science degrees in Histology and Physiology in 1946-1947, graduated in Medicine (MB, BCh) in 1950, and received his PhD in 1953.

In 1967 he was awarded a DSc for his published work on hominid evolution.

He established the Institute for the Study of Man in Africa (ISMA) in 1956 to advance the study of human ancestry and evolution, heredity and genetic composition and bodily structure in Africa.

In 1959 he became Professor and Head of the Department of Anatomy, a position he held until 1993, after which he became Professor Emeritus and head of the research department at the Sterkfontein Caves.

Tobias was appointed Honorary Professor of Palaeo-anthropology at the Bernard Price Institute for Palaeontological Research in 1977 and Honorary Professor in Zoology in 1981.

He was the recipient of many awards and honours, including honorary degrees from the universities of Pennsylvania, Cambridge, California, Natal, Cape Town, Unisa, Durban-Westville, Western Ontario, Alta, Guelph, and the Witwatersrand. – Sapa


MORULENG & KANANA PUBLIC VIOLENCE WORSENING


BY Obakeng Maje

The latest development with regards to Kanana public violence, the police can confirm that there has been two trucks that were set alight this morning in Kanana Village.

According to the information received from one of the truck drivers, his track was loaded with 25 sets of kitchen furniture. According to him he managed to disconnect the horse (truck head) from the trailer loaded with furniture and escaped the scene.

This incident happed near the Kanana old clinic road and the driver was assaulted.

 

In another incident an empty animal-carrying truck also got burned and the driver managed to escape.

The third truck  had an accident due to the stone that barricaded the road and it hit the tree by the side of the road. Currently out of the 36 Moruleng villages only six have this consistent public violence. 

“They include Manamakgoteng, Velgebal, Lerome, Moruleng, Lesetlheng and Magong.  The Bus company whose bus was damaged is  no longer going in those affected areas”Brigadier Ngubane said.

 

In Magong Village one foreign national shop was looted yesterday and one suspect arrested rising the number of arrests to 20 in Moruleng villages more arrests are expected. Two foreign national shops were also looted in Kanana Village and currently the police as well as the Royal Bafokeng Protectioin Services are recovering some of the groceries back from the community.

 

Today a legal march is starting from Lerome to Moses Kotane Municipality. It is believed that the purpose of the march is concerning the RDP houses and unemployment.

The application was made by the group called Activists for a better life for all, and the permission was granted.  The tensions are high as this march now coincides with these reported public violence and Lerome is among the six that are involved in the public violence.  

COP SHOT AT ATM BOMBING: JOUBERTON


BY Obakeng Maje

Three(3) ATM’s were bombed at a shopping complex in Extension 2, Jouberton by four unknown suspects during the early hours of this morning, 2012-06-07, at about 2:00,.

 

A police member, living close to the shopping complex, heard the loud noise of the explosion and telephonically informed the police station. A Security guard on duty also managed to press a  panic button, when he was overpowered by the suspects.

 

The first members of police that arrived on the scene, called for back-up, as they were shot at with an AK 47 rifle. Two additional police vehicles arrived at the crime scene and one member, Cst Tshepo Bandjies (aged 29-years) was shot in the head. He was transported to a local hospital in a serious, but stable condition.

 

“The suspects managed to escape the scene in their Honda Civic and a Ford Ranger, that they hijacked from a Security Guard Supervisor, who also arrived on the scene. The Ford Ranger was found just after the incident, abandoned close to the crime scene”Brigadier Ngubane said.

 

The Provincial Commissioner of the North West , Lt Gen Zukiswa Mbombo requested the Community to assist the police by coming forward with information that can assist in arresting the suspects. She also condemned  Police attacks.

 

POLICE NEED THE ASSISTANCE OF THE COMMUNITY ON HARTBEESFONTEIN MURDER


BY Obakeng Maje

On 29 May 2012 at about 07:00 Police found the body of a 55-year-old woman and her 12-year-old son that were brutally killed inside their house in Tigane, Hartbeesfontein.

 

Dipuo Kolobe was found tied with a brown belt around the neck and her throat was cut off. Her son, Lebogang Kolobe, was found in the sleeping room, his throat was also cut off.

 

The police followed up all possible leads but no arrests could be made up to now.

 

The police  request the community to assist  with any information that can lead to the arrest of the perpetrators.

 

Anybody with any information that can lead to the arrest can contactD/CAPTAIN THABANENG AT 082 373 7658 OR D/CONSTABLE name of the constable 072 777 2896

WIFE ADMITS TO KILLING POLICE HUSBAND IN RUSTERNBURG


On the 6 June 2012, the deceased’s wife Moipone Elizabeth Lesele (47) along with her boyfriend Jerry Olebogeng Tsime (48) briefly appeared before Tlhabane Magistrate’s Court. Their murder case was postponed to the 13 July 2012, for legal aid and possible bail application. The suspects will remain in custody on charges of murder. They were arrested after experts’ examinations were carried out at the scene where the body of the late Warrant Officer, Patrick Lesele (53)  was found lifeless. Crime scene experts suspected foul-play in Elizabeth’s statement and also found loose ends on the crime scene. 

After police took the wife through an interview session, police suspicions were confirmed. This led to the arrest of the deceased police’s wife along with her boyfriend on 5 June 2012. Eventually suspects realised that there was no room for hiding, the two suspects confessed to the charges laid against them.

 

The Provincial Commissioner of North West, Lieutenant General Zukiswa Mbombo appreciated the efforts made by the members of the South African Police Service to speedily resolve the case in no time.