Heritage Day to be celebrated in style at Taung


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BY Obakeng Maje

The 2012 North West Provincial Heritage Day celebrations will be held at Dr. Ruth Segomotsi Mompati District in Taung on September 28.

This year’s theme is “Celebrating the Heroes and Heroines of the Liberation Struggle in South Africa”, which reconnects the nation with its rich and diverse collective liberation heritage. 

The aim of this year’s celebrations is to create awareness through educational programmes, dialogues, and other public activities on the importance of Liberation Heritage as a vehicle to foster social cohesion, nation building, economic development and inclusive citizenship. 

 

“This year we would like to honour our Heroes and Heroines, those who fought for our liberation, people like mme Thandi Modise, Ruth Segomotsi Mompati, Rre Ngaka Modiri Molema and many others,” said MEC for Sport, Arts and Culture, Mme Tebogo Modise. 

 

“As South Africa matures and settles into its post-liberation era, a huge risk exists that the country might forget about the critical liberation milestones that have mapped the way to the freedom that the country and its people currently enjoy” Modise said.

Important information that resides with the custodians, struggle veterans and communities that have experienced historic events, may end up undocumented, if not attended to in the next few years.”

 

The event will feature various arts and culture activities.

The formal programme will be held at Buxton Sports Grounds, from 10h00.

Follow us on Twitter@Taung_DailyNews

 

 

Journalists kicked out of court


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Earlier, certain media houses made applications to be allowed into the court, but reporters were removed after officials insisted that the applications were for individuals and not crews.

 

However, according to a Sapa reporter on the scene, no journalists remained in the court.

 

Pandemonium broke out when the journalists were forcibly removed. One was dragged out by two security guards.

 

eNews Channel Africa reporter Karyn Maughan collapsed outside the court.

 

Riot police were deployed inside the court to keep order.

http://www.thetimelive.co.za

Malema ally and company blacklisted


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Johannesburg – Public Protector Thuli Madonsela has instructed the Limpopo Roads and Transport Department to blacklist Julius Malema’s business partner, Lesiba Gwangwa, from serving as a director in terms of the provisions of the law.

 

In her provisional report into engineering firm On-Point, Madonsela ordered authorities and the department to also blacklist the company for fraudulently misrepresenting its bid for a R52 million project-management unit tender and subsequently benefiting from it improperly.

 

On-Point is an engineering firm that is partly owned by Malema and Gwangwa’s family trusts. Gwangwa is the chief executive. “Commence the process of imposing a restriction penalty on On-Point and Mr Gwangwa in terms of the provisions or clause 23 of the General Conditions of Contract,” Madonsela said.

For more details go to http://www.iol.co.za

Safa postpone Poland friendly


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Bafana Bafana will no longer play Poland on October 12 after the local football association decided to postpone the international friendly in favour of African opponents.

 

Bafana coach Gordon Igesund was against the idea of playing a European side, while the national team is preparing for the 2013 Africa Cup of Nations to be staged on home soil.

 

Igesund believes Bafana will greatly benefit from playing African teams prior to the Afcon and Safa have acceded to his request to postpone the friendly in favour of a match against Angola or Mauritius.

 

Angola and Mauritius are set to replace the Poles for a friendly on October 13 and instead of a friendly against the United Arab Emirates on October 16, Bafana are set to travel to Nairobi to face Kenya.

 

According to Safa, Bafana will still play Poland sometime next year after the Afcon.

For more details go to http://www.kickoff.com

South Africa will host the Afcon from January 19 to February 10.

Sindi Nene show finally kicks off


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by obakeng maje

Aspiring Sindi Nene show kicks off tonight.

The sassy Nene could not hide excitement when talking to our crew.

“I am very delirious to see my the show finally kicking off, it has taken a great deal of preparation with my team to make sure that you don’t only watch the show but you experience it” she said.

The show will be at Katzy’s Live in Rosebank http://www.katzys.co.za and doors will open at 19h00.

“The show will be exciting,so do come through and share this magical experience with me”

“I will be featuring guest artists’ Asanda Bam and GB Collective” Sindi said excitingly.

Follow us on Twitter@Taung_DailyNews

Malema appear in court


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There was barbed wire outside the court and police Nyalas were positioned in various places surrounding the court. Police patrolled the road.

 
Scores of Malema supporters sang and danced outside the courthouse and the crowd was expected to swell as the day progressed.
 
The media had set up equipment on roads leading to the court.
 
Malema was expected to hand himself over to the police before his appearance on charges of money-laundering involving R4 million.
 
Four other people, including Malema’s business associate Lesiba Gwangwa, appeared in court on Tuesday on charges including fraud and corruption.
 
It is alleged that the four misrepresented themselves to the Limpopo department of roads and transport in respect of a R52 million tender, which was awarded to On-Point Engineers.
 

The fraud charges also relate to designs owned by the department.

For more details go to http://www.thetimelive.com

Road freight strike turns uggly


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Durban – A truck driver is in a serious condition after his vehicle was stoned by striking union members in Pinetown on Tuesday morning.

 
The Durban man, who works for Allied Trucking in Westmead, was expected to have surgery on Wednesday morning for injuries to his face caused by a stone thrown through the vehicle’s windscreen.
 
The company’s owner, Rob Mordaunt, told The Mercury that the driver was in Trafford Road when he was attacked. He said all his trucks had to be taken off the road in the interests of his employees’ safety.
 
Metro police spokesman Eugene Msomi confirmed that 150 protesters went through Pinetown business district and attacked trucks.
 
In Richmond Road, the group forced one truck to stop, roughed up the driver, confiscated his keys and told him to leave without the vehicle.
 
No arrests have been made.
 
Meanwhile, hopes of a quick settlement to the nationwide strike by more than 20 000 road freight employees were dashed as Gauteng strikers rejected their employers’ latest offer on Tuesday.
 
“The Gauteng branches have rejected the 8.5 percent offer,” said SA Transport and Allied Workers Union spokesman Vincent Masoga. Their leaders had been told to hold out for a 12 percent increase.
 

Police to be observant during Malema trial


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photo: (by obakeng maje)

Polokwane – Julius Malema – President Jacob Zuma’s most prominent critic and an advocate of mining nationalisation – appears in court on Wednesday on corruption charges that his supporters say are politically motivated.

 

Police said they would close roads for the hearing on Wednesday around the courthouse in Polokwane, the provincial capital of Malema’s native Limpopo, 350km north of Johannesburg, for one of the biggest trials since the end of apartheid in 1994.

 

“No lawlessness will be tolerated and those who break the law will be arrested immediately,” police said in a statement issued before Malema’s supporters began a night vigil on Tuesday.

 

An arrest warrant was issued last week for the former ANC Youth League leader, with local media saying he was facing charges of fraud, corruption and money laundering in the awarding of government contracts in Limpopo.

 

The hearing on Wednesday is expected to last only a few minutes with prosecutors reading out the charges against him. The court is then likely to release him on bail.

 

Hundreds of Malema’s young supporters sang songs during the raucous vigil at Nirvana Civic Centre in Polokwane including one entitled “It’s time to fire Zuma”.

 

They said Malema is being persecuted for calling into question Zuma’s leadership before an ANC vote in December where Zuma is seeking re-election as president of the party that dominates South African politics.

 

“The laying of these charges demonstrates that the bid for President Zuma’s new term as ANC leader has entered a new phase,” Klaas Mabumda, spokesperson for the Limpopo ANC Youth League which still backs Malema, told Reuters.

 

Malema was expelled by the ruling African National Congress in April for causing rifts in the party, but has kept up his anti-Zuma tirades, saying the polygamist president should be removed since he pays more attention to his personal life than to running Africa’s biggest economy.

 

His supporters see him as an eventual leader of the ANC but at 31 he is too young to replace Zuma at the head of the party that has governed South Africa for nearly two decades.

 

The Youth League’s new leaders, who still back Malema, dismissed the charges as a politically motivated gambit to silence Zuma’s most vocal critic.

 

“State institutions must never be used to settle political scores because that will plunge the country into a banana republic and confirms our view that we are becoming a police state,” they said in a statement.

 

The ANC establishment has condemned Malema as an opportunist but has remained mostly silent on the court case.

 

Malema stormed back from the political wilderness in August, blaming Zuma’s administration for the police killing of 34 strikers at a platinum mine – the deadliest security incident since the end of white-minority rule.

 

Malema rose from poverty with populist calls to seize white-owned farmland and for a government takeover of crucial sectors of Africa’s largest economy.

 

Calling himself an “economic freedom fighter”, he has revived a call for nationalisation of the mines, an option shunned so far by the government because it would bankrupt the country. However, the debate unnerves investors as the industry accounts for six percent of national economic output.

 

With a penchant for expensive cars, Swiss watches and parties, Malema has been under investigation by the police’s elite Hawks detective division for alleged corruption relating to government contracts in Limpopo.

 

Malema has also been given a bill for nearly $2-million for unpaid taxes, the South African Revenue Service said at the weekend. – Reuters

Pirates collect three points


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Ajax Cape Town, who have not beaten Orlando Pirates away since 2008, lost again on Tuesday evening.

Classy goals by Sifiso Myeni and Takesure Chinyama made coach Roger de Sa smile as Pirates took all the points off Ajax at Orlando Stadium.

De Sa started with Thulasizwe Mbuyane up front, supported by Myeni, Daine Klate and Tlou Segolela – three wingers in essence – which baffled commentators as to how they were going to line up.

But while Segolela was off form, Myeni – playing more through the middle – and Klate both fired and helped Bucs to the victory.

Myeni’s goal came in the 55th minute and was a great piece of individual skill followed by an excellent strike.

Chinyama’s goal came on the back of him being booed by sections of the crowd, even though he had only come on as a second-half substitute.

 

The big Zimbabwean quickly shut the fans up though, when he turned sharply and powered in a left footed drive in the dying seconds of the game.

 

The opening half lacked quality with both sides giving the ball away too easily.

 

But while the home side dominated, Ajax restricted Pirates to shooting from distance and each time Sander Westerveld came out on top.

 

Bucs should have gone ahead after 22 minutes when Segolela got into space behind the left-back, but while he did very well to go around Westerveld, he was off balance when he shot and Nazeer Allie got back to clear off the line.

for more details go to http://www.kickoff.com

Strikers haul stones at passing trucks in CBD


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Striking truck drivers in the Johannesburg CBD threw stones at passing trucks on Tuesday, metro police said.

 

“The trucks were passing Beyers Naude square, where truck drivers are protesting,” Chief Superintendent Wayne Minnaar said.

 

“Companies are requested to tell their people not to send any trucks into the Joburg CBD in order to avoid further violence and damage to trucks.”

 

Earlier, the SA Transport and Allied Workers’ Union (Satawu) said over 20,000 employees in the road freight sector were on strike over their pay increase on Tuesday.

 

Employees in the road freight sector — which includes truck drivers –were demanding a 12 percent increase. Their employers had offered 8.5 percent.

 

Satawu said the strike came about when wage negotiations deadlocked after protracted discussions since early June at the National Bargaining Council for the Road Freight and Logistics Industry (NBCRFLI).

 

Satawu spokesman Vincent Masoga said no marches were planned for Tuesday, but that workers would gather at Beyers Naude Gardens, opposite the Johannesburg Library, for news.

 

Notice was given for a strike from Monday, but the effects were not immediately visible because it was a public holiday.

 

Minnaar said traffic was being diverted from Simmonds street and Pritchard street as well as at the intersection of Harrison and Pritchard streets and President and Sauer streets.

Go to http://www.drum.co.za