Chris’s kind gesture to Rihanna


chris and rihanna

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Chris Brown sent champagne to Rihanna when they partied in the same nightclub at the weekend.

 The former couple – who split in 2009 after the ‘Yeah 3x’ singer assaulted his then-girlfriend – sat at different tables at New York’s SL on Saturday (09.06.12) but onlookers say they were very aware of one another inside the club.

 A source told the New York Post newspaper: “After Chris made his way into SL with a group of friends, Rihanna pulled up with her own group of friends. The infamous exes sat far enough from each other to not be able to talk, but close enough to keep an eye on one another.

 “Chris sent Rihanna two bottles of Ace of Spades Champagne. DJ Sinatra had both Rihanna and Chris dancing at their tables.”

 The meeting comes a few weeks after Rihanna came face-to-face with Chris and his current girlfriend Karreueche Tran at Los Angeles club Greystone Manor but things were not so friendly.

 A source said at the time: “Chris and Rihanna sat a few tables away from each other and shot dirty looks at each other all night.

 “No one saw them actually interact. Rihanna was escorted to the bathroom multiple times and walked by Chris’ table each time, not even batting an eyelash.”

 Rihanna and Chris recently worked together on two tracks, ‘Turn Up the Music’ and ‘Birthday Cake’ and Rihanna recently admitted she was surprised about the backlash over the collaboration.

 She said: “I thought people were gonna be surprised that we finally did a record together, but I didn’t see how people could think it was a bad thing. In my mind, it was just music.

 “I mean, if I went back to him [as a girlfriend], then that’s a whole different discussion. And if I ever do, then that’s something that y’all have to talk to me about when – if – that ever happens. Until then, look at it for what it is.” – Bang Showbiz


Boks call up Aplon, Greyling


iol spt june11 Gio2

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The Springboks have called up Gio Aplon and Dean Greyling to camp following injury concerns around Zane Kirchner and Coenie Oosthuizen, respectively.

They will join the team in Johannesburg, where they are currently preparing for the second Test against England at Ellis Park on Saturday.

“We are not going to risk any player that is struggling with injuries and it was decided to call in replacements for both Zane and Coenie,” said Springbok coach Heyneke Meyer, in a statement from the SA Rugby Union on Monday.

Kirchner injured his knee late in the first half of the first Test win in Durban, and underwent a scan on Monday morning.

It was decided that he would not be considered for the second Test and will be re-examined next week.

Oosthuizen experienced some stiffness to his shoulder and neck area on Monday morning, with the national medical team decided on a cautious approach.

He will be sent for a scan in the next 24 hours after which a decision will be made.

Meyer said he was pleased to have Aplon (16 Tests) and Greyling (two Tests), who are familiar with being in the international set up.

“Both Dean and Gio were on our official list of standby players and are fortunate that both of them have played Test rugby for South Africa before,” he said.

“They have also been in good form in Super Rugby and were two of the unlucky players that did not make the initial 32-man squad.

“They also attended our planning camps and should be up to speed with how we want to play.

“I’m looking forward to welcoming them to the squad.” – Sapa


Girl, 15, killed at house party


IOL pic apr15 Bloody Knife

By KEITH GLADDIS

A schoolgirl was stabbed to death at a house party hosted by a boy whose parents were away.

Megan-Leigh Peat, 15, was attacked at the home alone gathering in the early hours of Saturday.

A 19-year-old who was allegedly seen leaving the house covered in blood and with his finger almost severed was being questioned by police last night. It is believed Megan, who wanted to train as a midwife, knew the boy.

Megan’s father David, 39, laid a floral tribute to his daughter at the scene of the murder in Ampthill, Bedfordshire on Sunday.

A card attached to it said: ‘Megan Moosay, miss you more than words can say. You will always be in my thoughts and forever in my heart. Love you forever, Dad.’

Some of the teenagers who attended the party had been seen smoking cannabis in the cellar bar of a nearby pub in the hours before the attack.

It is believed Megan had gone to the house with at least one friend and may have been joined by others later.

Paramedics went to the house at 1.30am after calls saying a girl had been fatally injured. Despite attempts to revive her, she died at the scene.

A few minutes earlier, police had come across a 19-year-old in a street nearby who had a severe injury to one of his fingers.

A trail of blood ran from the house and a neighbour’s Vauxhall Astra had blood spattered on the tyres.

One resident said a woman in her 40s and her teenage son had moved into the rented semi-detached house around three months ago. She said the boy had celebrated his 18th birthday about a month ago, adding: ‘They seem like a nice family. I don’t see much of them but when they moved in they did the front garden up so they are obviously house-proud.

‘The boy has friends round in boy racer cars and you hear the odd blast of loud music but that is all. They have been no trouble.’

Another said he had heard loud music coming from the house on a number of occasions but had not noticed a party at the property on Friday evening. It was suggested last night that the boy who lived at the house may have been at the pub when the attack took place.

Megan’s friend Chelsie McAneny, 16, said her classmates at Harlington Upper School were planning to release balloons in tribute to her.

She added: ‘She was the hero at school. Everybody loved her and knew her.

‘She would stick up for everyone and was a great friend. She was really funny, sociable and bubbly. I can’t believe what happened and still don’t. It doesn’t feel real.’ Lorraine Adams – mother of Megan’s best friend Dee, who was not at the party – said: ‘She was such a beautiful girl.

‘It has knocked everybody sideways. It’s a great loss to everybody. She was a fantastic person.’

On her Bebo account Megan wrote that she was happiest when she was with ‘my friends or with family or at a party’.

A post mortem examination was due to be carried out by a Home Office pathologist yesterday. – Daily Mail

Gauteng has 3 000 abused kids


iol news child abuse doll

More than 3000 children are listed in the Child Protection Register (CPR) for sexual abuse in Gauteng, Social Development Minister Bathabile Dlamini said on Monday.

“The specified categories of abuse in which the names appear in the CPR are sexual abuse, emotional abuse and deliberate neglect,” she said in a written reply to a parliamentary question.

A total of 1751 sexual abuse victims’ names appeared on the CPR register for the Western Cape. In addition, the province had the highest number of children found to be deliberately neglected, at 2522.

Dlamini said the CPRs of most provinces were compatible, which would enable social workers to access information from other provinces.

The Eastern Cape was the only province using a separate system.

“DSD (the department of social development) is in the process of rebuilding the whole system and in future the provinces will be utilising one CPR system”, Dlamini said. – Sapa


Mubarak slips into coma


Ousted Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak sits inside a cage in a courtroom during his verdict hearing in Cairo on June 2, 2012. Picture: AFP.

Reuters 

CAIRO – Egypt’s Interior Ministry confirmed on Monday that former president Hosni Mubarak is in a coma.

His two sons who face charges of insider trading and money laundering were reportedly at his side in hospital.

The 84-year-old former statesman was sent to a prison hospital in Cairo, after he was sentenced to life behind bars for the killing of pro-democracy demonstrators in 2011. 

Mubarak was already suffering from health problems during sentencing and attended court proceedings on a gurney. 

On Monday, Egypt’s prison authority approved a request to let Hosni Mubarak’s eldest son stay close to him in a prison hospital in response to the former president’s deteriorating health.

Mubarak requested his son Alaa be moved close to him after the authorities earlier agreed to a similar request to have his youngest son Gamal brought next to him.

Citing a security source in the Interior Ministry, the report said the latest decision was in response to “a deterioration in his health”.

Mubarak was jailed for life on 2 June for failing to prevent the killing of protesters who rose up against him, but the acquittal of senior police officers for lack of evidence angered many Egyptians who believe the ex-president may win an appeal.

Since Mubarak was moved to Tora prison hospital from a plush military hospital where he was held during the 10-month trial, speculation has been rife about his state of health. Such rumours also frequently recurred as he aged in office.

Security sources said last week that Mubarak was given artificial respiration five times in one day and doctors recommended he be moved to a military hospital or back to the medical facility he was in prior to his conviction.

He has also reportedly slipped in and out of a coma at times, although prison sources said on Monday he was awake and with his sons.

Gamal, once seen as being groomed for the presidency, and Alaa are also being held in Tora prison pending a trial over a case of alleged stock market manipulation. Corruption charges they had faced with their father in his trial were quashed.

Mubarak’s wife Suzanne and the wives of his two sons also visited the ex-president on Sunday, the state news agency reported, quashing rumours that had briefly swirled suggesting the former president had died.

About 200 supporters of Mubarak protested outside Tora prison on Saturday demanding he be moved to a hospital outside prison.

 

 

SA icon Fugard celebrates 80th birthday


athol fugard

TO CELEBRATE his 80th birthday on Monday, much lauded South African playwright Athol Fugard wants nothing more than a family braai.

Speaking on the weekend by telephone from San Diego, California where he lives with his wife, poet Sheila Fugard, close to their novelist daughter Lisa Fugard, he said he wanted a quiet occasion. This is a far cry from the 80th birthday he imagined for himself thirty years ago when he plotted a birthday party to which he’d invite all the characters in his plays.

“When I was 50 years old there was a manageable gang of people,” he joked. To date he has written more than 20 plays, four film scripts, two memoirs and two books and received awards and nominations including the Tony, Obie, Evening Standard, Drama Desk, and Audie Awards.

He was honoured with the 2005 South African Order of Ikhamanga in Silver for his “excellent contribution and achievement in theatre” and is an Honorary Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature. He scoffs at descriptions such as “the greatest active playwright in the English-speaking world” saying it is the worst possible thing to call a writer. “I’m always trying to make people write and think and feel and use their hearts,” he said, describing his life’s work.

Fugard has never considered retiring, writing it is simply what he does.

“I have a great abiding passion for theatre, it’s consumed my whole life. I’m as passionate about theatre as I talk to you now as I was 50 years ago.” Born in Port Elizabeth in 1932, Fugard studied Philosophy and Social Anthropology at the University of Cape Town in 1952, but dropped out in 1953 to hitchhike around North Africa and then travel around east Asia in a steamer ship.

His writing has ranged from stories about specific people to protest theatre, but he has always draws inspiration from real South Africans. He helped to form the Serpent Players in Port Elizabeth in the early 1960s specifically because he was asked to use his voice by black residents of New Brighton: “In working with them I realised that they didn’t want to do plays for entertainment, they wanted to do plays because they were suffocating with silence. The silence in the country was awful.”

“It was with Blood Knot that I discovered my own voice and I knew that I could tell certain stories in a way that nobody else could do it. Once a writer has discovered that, there’s no holding them back.”

It was the 1967 BBC TV production of Blood Knot that led to the confiscation of Fugard’s passport and partially due to international protest on his behalf this was lifted in 1971 when he flew to England to direct Boesman and Lena. The bulk his work since then was performed outside of South Africa, but his post-apartheid work has seen him return home more frequently.

While he spends a great deal of time not living in this country he still regards it as his spiritual home. He has just returned to San Diego after several months in Cape Town working on his latest play, The Blue Iris, which will debut at the National Arts Festival in Grahamstown later this month and then return to The Fugard Theatre. Fugard describes himself as deeply incensed by the recent controversy surround Bret Murray’s The Spear painting.

“What really worries me is that I don’t think people recognise it for what it was. They know it was a big controversy for the day, but it’s past. We are going to look back on the moment as a warning that we were given about the future we’re going into if we don’t do something radical.

“We have to realise that we have a government in power that is prepared to assault our most cherished freedom. They’re trying to do it to the arts and to the media. The bully tactics they used, the whole demonstration of brute force that they displayed, that they [government] were going to shut them [Goodman Gallery] down regardless of what… that you will not use your voice, you will not speak up, you will not speak out. That moment, we will look back on and recognise as significant.”

While he sees similarities with the situation under apartheid, Fugard says a significant difference is that back then there was a sense of community amongst artist that all were in opposition to apartheid. This is in contrast to the fragmented response from the contemporary artistic community.

“It’s so false, almost as if there’s a perception that we’re being disloyal to the ANC if we speak up. You mustn’t be careful about what you say, have the freedom to say anything you like. That sense should never be constricted by loyalty to a political party.”

When questioned about what he would do next Fugard mused aloud in Afrikaans, “Wat is my verpligting?” (What is my duty?). The final word for me is that my country has taught me two of the biggest debts you can have. My country has taught me how to hate and how to love.”

“How do you repay your country for your soul? Met trane of met woorde? (With tears or words?).”


Fuel costs forcing you to travel less


IOL mot jun11 road trip

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Last month we were at the height of a global fuel price surge that saw South African fuel costs rising to R12.22 for 95 unleaded and R10.98 for diesel inland.

We asked you, through our reader poll, whether the fuel prices were forcing you to travel less.

1306 readers voted and the results were depressing to say the least with 1142 (87.44%) of the respondents saying yes, they were travelling less, and only 164 (12.56%) indicating their lives were still the same.

Since then there has been some relief with global economic woes having force crude oil prices down and this month 95 unleaded came down by 55 cents to R11.67 inland while diesel fell by 25 cents to R10.73.

While this has brought with it some relief, chances are it’s still too little too late. Another glimmer of hope is that in recent days global crude oil prices have fallen just below the $100 a barrel mark, from the $120 average that resulted in May’s record price.

This means there should be another price decrease next month.

Youth spreading lies: WCape ANC


iol news pic Songezo Mjongile

Claims that the ANC leadership seeks the reinstatement of expelled ANC Youth League leader Julius Malema were rejected on Monday.

Western Cape provincial secretary Songezo Mjongile blamed a “mischievous group of youth” for “disinformation” on what happened at a provincial general council (PGC) at the weekend.

“The disinformation spread by a mischievous group of youth is devoid of truth and must be rejected outright,” he said in a statement.

“No discussion on Malema took place. The Western Cape ANC denounces all rumour-mongering outside of party structures as they lobby for narrow positions.”

A statement, supposedly by the provincial ANCYL, was sent out on Monday welcoming a decision apparently made by the ANC in the province at the weekend for the reinstatement of Malema, suspended secretary general Sindiso Magaqa, and spokesman Floyd Shivambu.

The statement read: “The ANCYL in the Western Cape impressed on the PGC the urgency that the special ANC national executive committee (NEC) that sits (Monday) resolves the matter through a political solution.”

Mjongile said the PGC dealt with the state of the party leading up to 2014 as well as the formulation of a provincial policy position ahead of the national policy conference at the end of June.

“The PGC has instructed the youth league to focus on building its structures and convene a legitimate conference in order to elect its leadership.

“The focus of the province is to diligently build and unite the ANC in the Western Cape. Thus the PGC dealt with transformation, strengthening the economy, and skills.”

Provincial ANC leader Marius Fransman said at the weekend that there were a few individuals “at all levels” who had begun to involve themselves in divisive behaviour.

The resolutions of the PGC would be released later in the week. – Sapa


Primary school condom plan shock


nov 10 condoms

Education experts in KwaZulu-Natal have expressed concern at the distribution of condoms in primary schools, saying it could send the wrong message to pupils.

They warned that instead of solving the problem of pupils falling pregnant, handing out the contraceptives would encourage them to engage in sexual intercourse.

But teachers at a Eshowe school said the distribution of condoms had dropped the school’s pupil pregnancy rate.

“We cannot shy away from the fact that young children are sexually active. We cannot focus on ethics when the world we are living in is unethical,” said Allen Thompson, deputy president of the National Teachers’ Union (Natu).

The Sunday Times reported on Sunday that teachers at Zibambele Primary School in KZN were distributing condoms to children as young as nine as part of a pilot project by Natu.

Teachers at the school told the Sunday Times that three years ago at least five girls a year fell pregnant, but since the distribution of condoms more than a year ago, not one pupil had fallen pregnant.

Thompson said the 2010 project was aimed at reducing the rocketing pregnancy rate among school pupils.

KZN Department of Education spokesman Muzi Mhlambi, said they welcomed a holistic approach to dealing with the problem of teenage pregnancy. He said the department was constrained by sexual realities and a deeper societal problem.

“We need to balance initiatives at schools with efforts outside schools,” he said.

The annual surveys for ordinary schools for 2009-2010, released by the Department of Basic Education this month, showed that 18 pupils in Grade 3 fell pregnant in KZN in 2008 and 2009 .

During the same period, 27 631 pupils between Grade 3 and Grade 12 fell pregnant in the province. Nationally, the figure was 94 875.

According to the report, KZN has the highest concentration of pregnant pupils.

Thompson said the distribution of condoms in schools was closely monitored and it was not encouraging pupils to have sex.

“We have peer educators in schools who are responsible for the project and also hold talks with pupils about the topic, emphasising the importance of abstinence. We identify a school, talk to the school governing body and principal, and if they agree we talk to the health department at district level and get condoms from hospitals for the school,” Thompson said.

However, experts disagreed with the project.

Congress of South African Students provincial chairwoman, Sizophila Mkhize, said this would give pupils the idea that schools were a “sex zone”.

“Yes, pupils are falling pregnant but there is no need for condoms to be taken to schools,” she said.

Local child and family therapist Professor Manorunjunie Mahabeer, said distributing condoms to primary school pupils was inappropriate.

“There are many other things that a child in primary school should be doing from a development point of view. The condoms are just going to encourage the child to have sex,” she said.

Anthony Pierce, KZN CEO of the National Professional Teachers’ Organisation of SA, said sex education did not go hand in hand with the distribution of condoms. He said it was “dangerous” because it could send out the wrong message”.

Vee Gani, chairman of the KZN Parents’ Association Durban south region, said communities needed to look at whether children were replicating the behaviour of adults and why. – Daily News

Nkosi to decide on Chiefs or Pirates


Former Bafana Bafana midfielder Siyabonga Nkosi will decide later this week on whether to rejoin Kaizer Chiefs or sign for Orlando Pirates. 

Since leaving Golden Arrows earlier this month, Nkosi has been under the radar of a number of PSL clubs, but KickOff.com has learnt that the player has been negotiating with the two Soweto giants.

“He has been speaking to both teams and will definitely make a decision before the end of the week,” says a source close to the player. 

“He has been stalling because he doesn’t want to rush into making a decision. He has been speaking to Maritzburg United as well and doesn’t mind the idea of moving to Port Elizabeth with them. 

“But Maritzburg has an outside chance because Nkosi prefers Chiefs or Pirates. Swallows were in the picture before they went to China, but now they are completely out of the picture.”

Nkosi started his career with Orlando Pirates but left without playing a match.